California State and County Data Volume 1 • Geographic Area Series • Part 5 AC-12-A-5 Issued May 2014 United States Department of Agriculture Tom Vilsack, Secretary National Agricultural Statistics Service Cynthia Z.F. Clark, Administrator Acknowledgments The U.S. Department of Agriculture's National Agricultural Statistics Service (NASS) conducted the 2012 Census of Agriculture, analyzed the data, and prepared this and other reports. The census provides a comprehensive picture of American agriculture in 2012, 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. Recognizing that participating in the census is their responsibility and gives them a voice in their future, agricultural producers took the time to provide the information requested. We are grateful to every producer who participated in the 2012 Census of Agriculture. Also essential were the many partners who communicated about the census and encouraged producers to respond. Farm organizations, stakeholder groups, agricultural media, community-based organizations, and land grant and other universities helped to 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, Indiana. To learn more about the Census of Agriculture, visit www.agcensus.usda.gov, where you can access new and historic data through the Quick Stats database. To learn about other NASS reports and activities, visit www.nass.usda.gov. You can also send an inquiry to nass@nass.usda.gov or call (800) 727-9540. The U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) prohibits discrimination against its customers, employees, and applicants for employment on the bases of race, color, national origin, age, disability, sex, gender identity, religion, reprisal, and where applicable, political beliefs, marital status, familial or parental status, sexual orientation, or all or part of an individual's income is derived from any public assistance program, or protected genetic information in employment or in any program or activity conducted or funded by the Department. (Not all prohibited bases will apply to all programs and/or employment activities.) To file a complaint of discrimination, write to us by mail at U.S. Department of Agriculture, Director, Office of Adjudication, 1400 Independence Avenue, S.W., Washington, D.C. 20250-9410; by fax at (202) 690-7442; or by email at program.intake@usda.gov. If you require alternative means of communication for program information (e.g., Braille, large print, audiotape, etc.) please contact USDA's TARGET Center at (202) 720-2600 (voice and TDD). Introduction United States Map FIGURES 1. Profile of the State's Agriculture 2. Farms by Size 3. Farms by Market Value of Agricultural Products Sold 4. Market Value of Agricultural Products Sold 5. Average Market Value per Farm 6. Selected Farm Production Expenses 7. Selected Farm Production Expenses - Percent of Total 8. Farms by Legal Status - Percent of Total 9. Principal Operator by Primary Occupation - Percent of Total TABLES CHAPTER 1. State Data 1. Historical Highlights: 2012 and Earlier Census Years 2. Market Value of Agricultural Products Sold Including Landlord's Share and Direct Sales: 2012 and 2007 3. Economic Class of Farms by Market Value of Agricultural Products Sold and Government Payments: 2012 and 2007 4. Farm Production Expenses: 2012 and 2007 5. Net Cash Farm Income of the Operations and Operators: 2012 and 2007 6. Federal Government Payments and Commodity Credit Corporation Loans: 2012 and 2007 7. Income From Farm-Related Sources: 2012 and 2007 8. Land: 2012 and 2007 9. Land in Farms, Harvested Cropland, and Irrigated Land, by Size of Farm: 2012 and 2007 10. Irrigation: 2012 and 2007 11. Selected Characteristics of Irrigated and Nonirrigated Farms: 2012 and 2007 12. Cattle and Calves - Inventory: 2012 and 2007 13. Cattle and Calves - Sales: 2012 and 2007 14. Cattle and Calves Herd Size by Inventory and Sales: 2012 15. Cow Herd Size by Inventory and Sales: 2012 16. Beef Cow Herd Size by Inventory and Sales: 2012 17. Milk Cow Herd Size by Inventory and Sales: 2012 18. Cattle and Calves - Number Sold Per Farm by Sales: 2012 19. Hogs and Pigs - Inventory: 2012 and 2007 20. Hogs and Pigs - Sales: 2012 and 2007 21. Hogs and Pigs Herd Size by Inventory and Sales: 2012 22. Hogs and Pigs - Inventory and Sales by Number Sold Per Farm: 2012 23. Hogs and Pigs - Inventory by Type of Producer: 2012 24. Hogs and Pigs - Number Sold by Type of Producer: 2012 25. Hogs and Pigs - Inventory by Type of Operation: 2012 26. Hogs and Pigs - Number Sold by Type of Operation: 2012 27. Sheep and Lambs - Inventory, Wool Production, and Number Sold: 2012 and 2007 28. Sheep and Lambs - Inventory, Wool Production, and Sales by Size of Flock: 2012 29. Ewes 1 Year Old or Older - Inventory, Wool Production, and Sales by Size of Ewe Flock: 2012 30. Goats, Kids, and Mohair - Inventory, Mohair Production, and Sales: 2012 and 2007 31. Equine - Inventory and Sales: 2012 32. Poultry - Inventory and Number Sold: 2012 and 2007 33. Aquaculture Sales: 2012 and 2007 34. Other Animals and Animal Products - Inventory: 2012 and 2007 35. Other Animals and Animal Products - Sales: 2012 and 2007 36. Specified Crops Harvested - Yield per Acre Irrigated and Nonirrigated: 2012 37. Specified Crops by Acres Harvested: 2012 and 2007 38. Vegetables, Potatoes, and Melons Harvested for Sale: 2012 and 2007 39. Specified Fruits and Nuts by Acres: 2012 and 2007 40. Berries by Acres: 2012 and 2007 41. Nursery, Greenhouse, Floriculture, Sod, Mushrooms, Vegetable Seeds, and Propagative Materials Grown for Sale: 2012 and 2007 42. Woodland Crops: 2012 and 2007 43. Grain Storage Capacity: 2012 and 2007 44. Farms by Concentration of Market Value of Agricultural Products Sold: 2012 45. Commodities Raised and Delivered Under Production Contracts: 2012 and 2007 46. Value of Land and Buildings: 2012 and 2007 47. Value of Machinery and Equipment on Operation: 2012 and 2007 48. Selected Machinery and Equipment on Operation: 2012 and 2007 49. Fertilizers and Chemicals Applied: 2012 and 2007 50. Land Use Practices by Size of Farm: 2012 51. Selected Characteristics of Farms by North American Industry Classification System: 2012 52. Energy: 2012 53. Institutional, Research, Experimental, and American Indian Reservation Farms: 2012 and 2007 54. Organic Agriculture: 2012 55. Selected Operator Characteristics for Principal, Second, and Third Operator: 2012 56. Women Principal Operators - Selected Farm Characteristics: 2012 and 2007 57. Women Operators - Selected Operator Characteristics: 2012 and 2007 58. Spanish, Hispanic, or Latino Origin Principal Operators - Selected Farm Characteristics: 2012 and 2007 59. Spanish, Hispanic, or Latino Origin Operators - Selected Operator Characteristics: 2012 and 2007 60. Selected Farm Characteristics by Race of Principal Operator: 2012 and 2007 61. Selected Farm Characteristics by Race: 2012 62. Selected Principal Operator Characteristics by Race: 2012 and 2007 63. Selected Operator Characteristics by Race: 2012 64. Summary by Size of Farm: 2012 65. Summary by Market Value of Agricultural Products Sold: 2012 66. Summary by Combined Government Payments and Market Value of Agricultural Products Sold: 2012 67. Summary by Legal Status for Tax Purposes: 2012 68. Summary by North American Industry Classification System: 2012 69. Summary by Age and Primary Occupation of Principal Operator: 2012 70. Summary by Tenure of Principal Operator and by Operators on Farm: 2012 CHAPTER 2. County Data 1. County Summary Highlights: 2012 2. Market Value of Agricultural Products Sold Including Direct Sales: 2012 and 2007 3. Farm Production Expenses: 2012 and 2007 4. Net Cash Farm Income of the Operations and Operators: 2012 and 2007 5. Federal Government Payments and Commodity Credit Corporation Loans: 2012 and 2007 6. Income From Farm-Related Sources: 2012 and 2007 7. Hired Farm Labor - Workers and Payroll: 2012 8. Farms, Land in Farms, Value of Land and Buildings, and Land Use: 2012 and 2007 9. Harvested Cropland by Size of Farm and Acres Harvested: 2012 and 2007 10. Irrigation: 2012 and 2007 11. Cattle and Calves - Inventory and Sales: 2012 and 2007 12. Hogs and Pigs - Inventory and Sales: 2012 and 2007 13. Sheep and Lambs - Inventory, Wool Production, and Sales: 2012 and 2007 14. All Goats - Inventory and Sales: 2012 and 2007 15. Milk Goats - Inventory and Sales: 2012 and 2007 16. Angora Goats - Inventory and Sales: 2012 and 2007 17. Meat Goats - Inventory and Sales: 2012 and 2007 18. Equine - Inventory and Sales: 2012 and 2007 19. Poultry - Inventory and Sales: 2012 and 2007 20. Miscellaneous Poultry - Inventory and Sales: 2012 and 2007 21. Colonies of Bees - Inventory and Honey Sales: 2012 and 2007 22. Aquaculture Sales: 2012 and 2007 23. Miscellaneous Livestock and Animal Specialties - Inventory and Sales: 2012 and 2007 24. Selected Crops Harvested: 2012 25. Field Crops: 2012 and 2007 26. Field Seeds, Grass Seeds, Hay, Forage, and Silage: 2012 and 2007 27. Other Crops: 2012 and 2007 28. Land Used for Vegetables and Vegetables Harvested for Sale: 2012 and 2007 29. Vegetables, Potatoes, and Melons Harvested for Sale: 2012 and 2007 30. Land in Orchards: 2012 and 2007 31. Fruits and Nuts: 2012 and 2007 32. Land in Berries: 2012 and 2007 33. Berries: 2012 and 2007 34. Nursery, Greenhouse, Floriculture, Sod, Mushrooms, Vegetable Seeds, and Propagative Materials Grown for Sale: 2012 and 2007 35. Cut Christmas Trees: 2012 and 2007 36. Short Rotation Woody Crops: 2012 and 2007 37. Maple Syrup: 2012 and 2007 38. Grain Storage Capacity: 2012 and 2007 39. Commodities Raised and Delivered Under Production Contracts: 2012 40. Machinery and Equipment on Operation: 2012 and 2007 41. Fertilizers and Chemicals Applied: 2012 and 2007 42. Organic Agriculture: 2012 43. Selected Practices: 2012 44. Farms by North American Industry Classification System: 2012 45. Selected Operation and Operator Characteristics: 2012 and 2007 46. Women Principal Operators - Selected Farm Characteristics: 2012 47. Women Operators: 2012 48. Women Principal Operators - Tenure: 2012 49. Spanish, Hispanic, or Latino Origin Operators: 2012 50. American Indian or Alaska Native Operators: 2012 51. Asian Operators: 2012 52. Black or African American Operators: 2012 53. Native Hawaiian or Other Pacific Islander Operators: 2012 54. White Operators: 2012 55. Operators Reporting More Than One Race: 2012 APPENDICES A. Census of Agriculture Methodology B. General Explanation and Census of Agriculture Report Form Introduction HISTORY The 2012 Census of Agriculture is the 28th Federal census of agriculture and the fourth 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 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 being conducted in 1925, 1935, and 1945. The agriculture census continued to be taken 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 changed the 5-year data collection cycle to years ending in 2 and 7 to coincide with other economic censuses. That 5-year cycle continues to this day. USES OF CENSUS DATA The census of agriculture provides a detailed picture of U.S. farms and ranches every five years. It is the only source of uniform, comprehensive agricultural data for every State and county or county equivalent. Census of agriculture data are routinely used by farm 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. The 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 we produce; • 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. AUTHORITY The 2012 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 each State, Puerto Rico, Guam, the U.S. Virgin Islands, the Commonwealth of Northern Mariana Islands, and American Samoa. FARM DEFINITION The 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 has been used in each subsequent agriculture census. 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 data are comparable between the 2012 and 2007 censuses. A few changes were made to the 2012 census that affect comparability for some data items. See Appendix B, General Explanation and Census of Agriculture Report Form, Data Changes for a detailed discussion of these 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. REFERENCE PERIOD Reference periods for the 2012 Census of Agriculture were similar to those used in the 2007 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, and machinery and equipment inventories, market value of land and buildings, and grain storage capacity 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 1982 census and tables 2 through 63 show detailed State-level data usually accompanied by historical data from the 2007 census. Tables 64 through 70 show detailed State-level data cross-tabulated by several categories for the 2012 census only. Chapter 2. County-level data are presented in 55 tables in 2 different table formats - county and county summary. Most tables include 2007 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 State. Table B provides reliability estimates of State totals for selected items. Table C summarizes coverage, nonresponse, and misclassification adjustment for selected items at the county level. Table D provides total number of American Indian or Alaska Native farm operators both on and off reservations by county. 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 operators. These activities included, but were not limited to: • Obtaining mail lists from organizations likely to contain names and addresses of minority farm operators; • Conducting pre-census promotion activities that targeted women, American Indian and Alaska Native, Black and African American, and Spanish, Hispanic, or Latino origin farm operators; • Special emphasis was placed on collecting data from individual operators on American Indian reservations in three States. SPECIAL STUDIES AND CUSTOM TABULATIONS Special studies such as the 2013 Farm and Ranch Irrigation Survey and the 2013 Census of Aquaculture are part of the census program and provide supplemental information to the 2012 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 studies and custom tabulations are subject to a thorough disclosure review prior to release to prevent the disclosure of any individual respondent data. Requests for custom tabulations can be submitted via the internet from the NASS home page, by mail, or by e-mail to: DataLab National Agricultural Statistics Service Room 6436A, Stop 2054 1400 Independence Avenue, S.W. Washington, D.C. 20250 - 2054 or Datalab@nass.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. (L) Coefficient of variation is less than 0.05 percent or the standard error is less than 0.05 percent of the mean. (IC) Independent city. (NA) Not available. (X) Not applicable. (Z) Less than half of the unit shown. cwt Hundredweight. sq ft Square feet. Table 1. Historical Highlights: 2012 and Earlier Census Years [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ : : : : : Not adjusted for coverage : : : : :------------------------------------------------------------------- All farms : 2012 : 2007 : 2002 : 1997 : 1997 : 1992 : 1987 : 1982 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Farms ......................................number: 77,857 81,033 79,631 87,991 74,126 77,669 83,217 82,463 Land in farms ...............................acres: 25,569,001 25,364,695 27,589,027 28,795,834 27,698,779 28,978,997 30,598,178 32,156,894 Average size of farm ....................acres: 328 313 346 327 374 373 368 390 : Estimated market value of : land and buildings 1/: : Average per farm ......................dollars: 2,061,792 2,005,768 1,206,822 839,126 941,170 820,063 583,668 746,577 Average per acre ......................dollars: 6,278 6,408 3,526 2,643 2,605 2,213 1,575 1,918 : Estimated market value of all : machinery and equipment 1/ ................$1,000: 9,709,545 8,761,575 6,325,990 5,463,053 5,155,473 4,363,190 4,081,738 3,873,341 Average per farm ......................dollars: 124,720 108,145 81,933 62,129 69,590 56,485 49,223 47,361 : Farms by size: : 1 to 9 acres ...................................: 24,637 25,278 21,827 27,151 20,662 21,485 22,697 22,951 10 to 49 acres .................................: 25,811 28,080 27,307 28,613 24,250 26,089 28,498 28,203 50 to 179 acres ................................: 13,056 12,939 14,356 14,874 13,288 13,883 15,017 14,873 180 to 499 acres ...............................: 6,649 7,014 7,741 8,055 7,270 7,512 8,028 7,636 500 to 999 acres ...............................: 3,230 3,267 3,604 3,912 3,572 3,702 3,804 3,635 1,000 to 1,999 acres ...........................: 2,040 2,194 2,374 2,683 2,439 2,411 2,544 2,435 2,000 acres or more ............................: 2,434 2,261 2,422 2,703 2,645 2,587 2,629 2,730 : Total cropland ..............................farms: 57,731 61,215 61,810 70,231 62,269 64,417 68,266 67,916 acres: 9,591,783 9,464,647 10,994,161 11,062,811 10,803,804 10,479,268 10,894,503 11,257,374 Harvested cropland ........................farms: 53,372 53,000 54,115 62,031 55,590 56,785 59,259 59,048 acres: 8,007,461 7,633,173 8,466,321 8,676,242 8,543,159 7,760,773 7,676,287 8,764,808 Irrigated land ..............................farms: 53,546 53,400 55,596 63,226 55,920 56,546 58,868 58,389 acres: 7,861,964 8,016,159 8,709,353 8,886,693 8,712,893 7,571,313 7,596,091 8,460,508 : Market value of agricultural : products sold (see text) ..................$1,000: 42,627,472 33,885,064 25,737,173 23,280,110 23,032,259 17,051,912 13,922,234 12,491,442 Average per farm ......................dollars: 547,510 418,164 323,205 264,574 310,718 219,546 167,300 151,479 : Crops, including nursery : and greenhouse crops ....................$1,000: 30,366,898 22,903,021 19,152,722 17,201,736 17,033,714 11,747,474 9,269,389 8,158,494 Livestock, poultry, and : their products ..........................$1,000: 12,260,574 10,982,043 6,584,451 6,078,374 5,998,545 5,304,438 4,652,845 4,332,948 : Farms by value of sales 2/: : Less than $2,500 ...............................: 19,986 23,965 23,362 28,871 19,473 22,692 23,187 25,513 $2,500 to $4,999 ...............................: 5,736 6,548 6,038 7,470 6,516 7,160 8,661 8,871 $5,000 to $9,999 ...............................: 7,718 7,208 7,262 7,560 6,498 7,417 8,512 8,515 $10,000 to $24,999 .............................: 10,137 10,481 9,455 9,685 8,621 9,324 11,028 10,178 $25,000 to $49,999 .............................: 7,043 7,578 7,131 7,360 6,747 6,899 7,863 7,218 $50,000 to $99,999 .............................: 6,679 6,212 6,798 6,909 6,544 6,360 6,895 6,423 $100,000 to $499,999 ...........................: 11,039 10,461 11,426 12,159 11,823 11,143 11,430 10,675 $500,000 or more ...............................: 9,519 8,580 8,159 7,977 7,904 6,674 5,641 4,990 : Farms by legal status for tax : purposes (see text): : Family or individual ...........................: 59,732 64,001 64,442 69,154 56,755 60,187 64,928 65,482 Partnership ....................................: 8,984 9,552 8,953 11,836 10,813 11,350 12,127 11,360 Corporation ....................................: 6,361 5,750 5,070 5,504 5,252 5,067 5,367 4,849 Other-cooperative, estate : or trust, institutional, etc ..................: 2,780 1,730 1,166 1,497 1,306 1,065 795 772 : Principal operator by days of work : off farm 3/: : None ...........................................: 31,311 26,322 40,223 35,359 31,588 32,118 32,051 29,641 Any ............................................: 46,546 54,711 39,408 47,362 37,919 41,278 47,085 47,387 200 days or more .............................: 27,947 30,510 26,037 30,644 24,012 26,681 30,948 31,587 : Principal operator by primary occupation: : Farming ........................................: 42,469 40,910 49,132 43,783 39,267 40,215 41,906 40,633 Other ..........................................: 35,388 40,123 30,499 44,208 34,859 37,454 41,311 41,830 : Average age of principal operator ...........years: 60.1 58.4 56.8 55.7 56.5 55.2 53.6 51.8 : Total farm production : expenses 1/ ...............................$1,000: 35,455,667 26,962,641 20,527,198 17,085,533 16,817,253 13,804,983 10,917,593 (NA) : Selected farm production : expenses 1/: : Livestock and poultry purchased : or leased ...............................$1,000: 1,254,286 1,264,818 949,697 774,047 759,223 935,152 776,540 855,311 Feed purchased ...........................$1,000: 6,069,374 4,274,263 2,494,806 2,616,926 2,588,982 2,108,719 1,707,608 1,721,393 Fertilizer, lime, and soil : conditioners purchased 4/ 5/ ............$1,000: 1,806,062 1,314,175 834,536 757,065 746,325 568,772 427,924 427,823 Gasoline, fuels, and oils purchased ......$1,000: 1,552,328 1,124,340 610,228 500,700 488,226 414,984 332,166 449,759 Hired farm labor .........................$1,000: 5,877,973 5,015,513 4,317,078 3,435,777 3,392,577 2,922,390 2,385,242 1,819,323 Interest expense 6/ ......................$1,000: 1,217,781 1,099,536 930,722 978,929 958,431 738,910 697,449 938,913 Chemicals purchased 4/ ...................$1,000: 2,190,674 1,369,132 1,102,974 970,316 957,006 694,549 544,779 468,604 : Livestock and poultry: : Cattle and calves : inventory ................................farms: 16,764 16,638 17,379 21,522 17,335 19,097 22,119 26,579 number: 5,370,531 5,498,025 5,234,177 5,121,933 4,968,679 4,702,114 4,570,667 4,612,967 Beef cows ...............................farms: 10,925 11,827 12,497 15,172 12,158 13,105 14,966 17,199 number: 583,594 662,423 735,045 959,772 890,805 862,971 906,006 952,164 Milk cows ...............................farms: 1,931 2,165 2,793 2,922 2,650 3,124 3,631 4,638 number: 1,815,655 1,840,730 1,644,692 1,406,884 1,403,217 1,249,038 1,070,366 946,201 : Cattle and calves sold ....................farms: 12,594 12,681 12,897 19,134 16,007 17,205 20,486 22,947 number: 3,671,078 3,553,530 3,157,013 3,191,996 3,107,562 2,993,538 3,097,084 3,338,619 : Hogs and pigs inventory ...................farms: 1,437 1,389 1,521 2,351 1,593 2,221 2,699 4,800 number: 111,893 153,983 163,465 221,174 212,088 258,130 150,931 184,577 Hogs and pigs sold ........................farms: 1,163 1,267 1,513 1,638 1,193 1,761 2,297 3,769 number: 290,488 296,378 308,769 396,891 373,352 481,270 303,406 281,733 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 1. Historical Highlights: 2012 and Earlier Census Years (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ : : : : : Not adjusted for coverage : : : : :------------------------------------------------------------------- All farms : 2012 : 2007 : 2002 : 1997 : 1997 : 1992 : 1987 : 1982 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Livestock and poultry: - Con. : : Layers inventory (see text) ...............farms: 6,744 5,098 3,244 (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) number: 19,000,779 21,091,629 22,768,304 (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) Broilers and other meat- : type chickens sold .......................farms: 421 229 338 323 240 298 298 411 number: 273,277,272 280,512,754 260,447,483 244,056,157 237,723,294 225,074,862 209,376,014 123,778,881 : Selected crops harvested: : Corn for grain ............................farms: 733 606 592 987 958 (NA) (NA) (NA) acres: 180,672 189,965 168,354 258,501 256,292 (NA) (NA) (NA) bushels: 31,922,610 34,602,626 28,395,621 42,632,526 42,230,303 (NA) (NA) (NA) Corn for silage or greenchop ..............farms: 1,895 1,975 2,012 2,046 1,985 (NA) (NA) (NA) acres: 487,570 460,614 393,694 317,367 314,357 (NA) (NA) (NA) tons: 12,575,973 12,019,578 10,117,296 7,533,442 7,451,051 (NA) (NA) (NA) Wheat for grain, all ......................farms: 1,503 1,191 1,573 2,107 2,065 2,236 2,841 3,429 acres: 491,846 354,165 410,369 581,692 581,071 569,044 562,302 928,713 bushels: 42,955,324 30,224,394 33,590,674 42,544,545 42,372,177 39,456,581 40,004,786 63,130,854 Winter wheat for grain ..................farms: 1,020 879 1,228 (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) acres: 316,109 249,704 313,495 (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) bushels: 26,032,499 20,157,552 23,935,058 (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) Durum wheat for grain ...................farms: 375 239 321 360 353 (NA) (NA) (NA) acres: 135,540 (D) 88,399 136,155 134,710 (NA) (NA) (NA) bushels: 13,529,651 7,821,257 8,963,903 12,635,526 12,490,437 (NA) (NA) (NA) Spring wheat for grain ..................farms: 179 114 83 (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) acres: 40,197 (D) 8,475 (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) bushels: 3,393,174 2,245,585 691,713 (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) Oats for grain ............................farms: 240 299 429 206 193 (NA) (NA) (NA) acres: 25,065 25,993 34,319 24,762 24,167 (NA) (NA) (NA) bushels: 2,246,420 2,595,144 2,798,145 2,033,506 1,991,198 (NA) (NA) (NA) Barley for grain ..........................farms: 264 161 343 584 574 933 1,431 2,261 acres: 81,954 44,125 74,721 129,524 129,549 204,119 269,845 582,708 bushels: 5,312,595 2,872,476 5,266,774 7,630,739 7,475,447 12,183,472 14,560,411 31,980,247 Sorghum for grain .........................farms: 74 58 66 77 76 (NA) (NA) (NA) acres: 13,908 10,909 10,676 13,322 13,568 (NA) (NA) (NA) bushels: 1,263,924 909,160 807,824 977,600 990,634 (NA) (NA) (NA) Sorghum for silage or greenchop ...........farms: 239 195 68 11 12 (NA) (NA) (NA) acres: 41,953 30,085 6,020 2,219 2,259 (NA) (NA) (NA) tons: 634,648 536,162 94,009 41,424 42,584 (NA) (NA) (NA) Soybeans for beans ........................farms: 2 - - (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) acres: (D) - - (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) bushels: (D) - - (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) Dry edible beans, excluding limas .........farms: 308 239 385 440 413 (NA) (NA) (NA) acres: 39,511 34,002 58,420 60,933 60,153 (NA) (NA) (NA) cwt: 955,995 709,841 1,234,989 1,189,658 1,173,449 (NA) (NA) (NA) Cotton, all ...............................farms: 630 855 1,393 1,872 1,833 2,351 3,037 3,002 acres: 367,766 471,378 694,653 1,043,208 1,036,316 1,066,060 1,083,811 1,312,569 bales: 1,201,860 1,418,751 2,056,964 2,559,842 2,543,194 2,792,443 2,619,934 2,872,637 : Forage-land used for all hay and : haylage, grass silage, and greenchop : (see text) ...............................farms: 7,903 7,411 8,273 (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) acres: 1,670,027 1,723,147 1,952,522 (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) tons, dry: 9,363,421 10,642,531 11,202,962 (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) Rice ......................................farms: 1,392 1,304 1,473 1,567 1,544 1,575 1,654 1,322 acres: 561,968 531,075 531,314 514,281 514,081 401,194 399,193 566,914 cwt: 46,692,580 43,018,947 43,581,796 41,474,551 41,457,650 31,865,036 28,566,209 36,672,135 Sunflower seed, all .......................farms: 197 111 154 143 135 (NA) (NA) (NA) acres: 49,749 27,913 18,129 (D) 23,780 (NA) (NA) (NA) pounds: 68,792,639 29,776,645 21,455,613 (D) 29,689,822 (NA) (NA) (NA) Sugarbeets for sugar ......................farms: 58 155 228 456 449 (NA) (NA) (NA) acres: 27,193 42,984 55,692 104,354 103,611 (NA) (NA) (NA) tons: 1,179,753 1,539,394 2,063,080 2,947,634 2,924,151 (NA) (NA) (NA) Peanuts for nuts ..........................farms: 15 11 16 3 3 (NA) (NA) (NA) acres: 27 14 22 (D) (D) (NA) (NA) (NA) pounds: 84,093 28,000 38,600 (D) (D) (NA) (NA) (NA) Vegetables harvested for sale : (see text) 7/ ............................farms: 6,055 3,868 3,858 5,105 4,490 3,713 3,787 4,053 acres: 1,175,249 1,169,786 1,197,481 1,228,721 1,209,259 1,016,744 882,741 894,573 Potatoes ................................farms: 441 224 269 354 304 (NA) (NA) (NA) acres: 42,660 37,858 48,217 44,343 43,503 (NA) (NA) (NA) Sweet potatoes ..........................farms: 188 92 133 109 100 (NA) (NA) (NA) acres: 18,189 13,644 10,007 7,112 7,010 (NA) (NA) (NA) Land in orchards ..........................farms: 38,098 39,484 38,693 43,957 38,747 40,298 41,021 39,801 acres: 3,138,943 2,826,291 2,871,626 2,652,993 2,582,084 2,245,781 2,152,664 2,158,404 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 1/ Data for 2002 and prior years are based on a sample of farms. 2/ Data for 1982 exclude abnormal farms. 3/ Data for 1997 and prior years do not include imputation for item nonresponse. 4/ Data for 1982 exclude cost of custom applications. 5/ Data for 1997 and prior years exclude cost of lime and manure. 6/ Data for 1982 do not include imputation for item nonresponse. 7/ Data for 2002 and prior years exclude potatoes, sweet potatoes, and ginseng. Table 2. Market Value of Agricultural Products Sold Including Landlord's Share and Direct Sales: 2012 and 2007 [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : : Percent of : :: : : Percent of : Item : 2012 :total in 2012 : 2007 :: Item : 2012 :total in 2012 : 2007 --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Total sales (see text) ................farms: 77,857 100.0 81,033 :: Total sales (see text) - Con. : $1,000: 42,627,472 100.0 33,885,064 :: Value of sales by commodity : Average per farm ................dollars: 547,510 (X) 418,164 :: or commodity group - Con. : : :: Crops, including nursery : By value of sales: : :: and greenhouse crops - Con. : Less than $1,000 (see text) .......farms: 15,396 19.8 18,111 :: Nursery, greenhouse, floriculture, : $1,000: 1,673 (Z) 2,219 :: and sod (see text) .............farms: 3,890 5.0 3,634 $1,000 to $2,499 ..................farms: 4,590 5.9 5,854 :: $1,000: 2,547,307 6.0 3,647,057 $1,000: 7,596 (Z) 9,652 :: : $2,500 to $4,999 ..................farms: 5,736 7.4 6,548 :: Cut Christmas trees and short : $1,000: 20,356 (Z) 23,510 :: rotation woody crops ...........farms: 328 0.4 322 : :: $1,000: 2,706 (Z) 5,704 $5,000 to $9,999 ..................farms: 7,718 9.9 7,208 :: Cut Christmas trees ...........farms: 301 0.4 (NA) $1,000: 53,701 0.1 51,093 :: $1,000: 2,499 (Z) (NA) $10,000 to $19,999 ................farms: 7,455 9.6 7,761 :: Short rotation woody crops ....farms: 38 (Z) (NA) $1,000: 103,217 0.2 108,885 :: $1,000: 206 (Z) (NA) $20,000 to $24,999 ................farms: 2,682 3.4 2,720 :: : $1,000: 58,665 0.1 59,120 :: Other crops and hay (see text) ..farms: 5,744 7.4 5,265 $25,000 to $39,999 ................farms: 4,780 6.1 5,081 :: $1,000: 1,467,274 3.4 1,068,522 $1,000: 148,840 0.3 158,823 :: Maple syrup (see text) ........farms: - - (NA) : :: $1,000: - - (NA) $40,000 to $49,999 ................farms: 2,263 2.9 2,497 :: : $1,000: 99,296 0.2 108,929 :: Livestock, poultry, and : $50,000 to $99,999 ................farms: 6,679 8.6 6,212 :: their products ...................farms: 21,531 27.7 23,192 $1,000: 469,861 1.1 435,855 :: $1,000: 12,260,574 28.8 10,982,043 $100,000 to $249,999 ..............farms: 6,922 8.9 6,544 :: Poultry and eggs ................farms: 3,758 4.8 4,114 $1,000: 1,103,202 2.6 1,026,860 :: $1,000: 1,663,919 3.9 1,536,763 : :: Cattle and calves ...............farms: 12,594 16.2 12,681 $250,000 to $499,999 ..............farms: 4,117 5.3 3,917 :: $1,000: 3,259,325 7.6 2,536,571 $1,000: 1,444,378 3.4 1,361,005 :: Milk from cows (see text) .......farms: 1,554 2.0 (NA) $500,000 to $999,999 ..............farms: 3,186 4.1 2,938 :: $1,000: 6,945,102 16.3 (NA) $1,000: 2,245,124 5.3 2,080,888 :: Hogs and pigs ...................farms: 1,163 1.5 1,267 $1,000,000 or more ................farms: 6,333 8.1 5,642 :: $1,000: 51,526 0.1 34,188 $1,000: 36,871,564 86.5 28,458,225 :: : $1,000,000 to $2,499,999 ........farms: 2,998 3.9 2,889 :: Sheep, goats, wool, mohair, and : $1,000: 4,700,623 11.0 4,584,886 :: milk (see text) ................farms: 4,376 5.6 (NA) $2,500,000 to $4,999,999 ........farms: 1,467 1.9 1,399 :: $1,000: 108,136 0.3 (NA) $1,000: 5,211,446 12.2 4,921,291 :: Horses, ponies, mules, burros, : $5,000,000 or more ..............farms: 1,868 2.4 1,354 :: and donkeys ....................farms: 3,050 3.9 3,937 $1,000: 26,959,495 63.2 18,952,048 :: $1,000: 62,241 0.1 72,433 : :: : Value of sales by commodity : :: Aquaculture .....................farms: 229 0.3 217 or commodity group: : :: $1,000: 103,016 0.2 102,228 Crops, including nursery : :: : and greenhouse crops .............farms: 49,253 63.3 48,901 :: Other animals and other animal : $1,000: 30,366,898 71.2 22,903,021 :: products (see text) ...........farms: 1,766 2.3 1,583 : :: $1,000: 67,309 0.2 58,798 Grains, oilseeds, dry beans, : :: : and dry peas ...................farms: 4,757 6.1 4,261 :: Value of landlord's share of : $1,000: 1,727,708 4.1 1,105,369 :: total sales (see text) .............farms: 2,147 2.8 2,048 Corn ..........................farms: 1,796 2.3 1,811 :: $1,000: 266,275 0.6 210,423 $1,000: 419,544 1.0 309,402 :: : Wheat .........................farms: 1,499 1.9 1,188 :: : $1,000: 341,702 0.8 155,566 :: Value of agricultural products sold : Soybeans ......................farms: 2 (Z) 15 :: directly to individuals for human : $1,000: (D) (D) 326 :: consumption (see text) .............farms: 8,588 11.0 7,068 Sorghum .......................farms: 200 0.3 150 :: $1,000: 169,915 0.4 162,896 $1,000: (D) (D) 7,909 :: Average per farm ..............dollars: 19,785 (X) 23,047 Barley ........................farms: 261 0.3 160 :: : $1,000: 29,212 0.1 11,146 :: By value of sales: : Rice ..........................farms: 1,391 1.8 1,305 :: : $1,000: 782,644 1.8 501,046 :: $1 to $499 ......................farms: 1,965 2.5 1,530 Other grains, oilseeds, : :: $1,000: 426 (Z) 327 dry beans, and dry peas ......farms: 953 1.2 967 :: $500 to $999 ....................farms: 1,077 1.4 954 $1,000: 138,816 0.3 119,976 :: $1,000: 722 (Z) 628 : :: : Tobacco .........................farms: - - - :: $1,000 to $4,999 ................farms: 2,927 3.8 2,244 $1,000: - - - :: $1,000: 6,687 (Z) 5,084 Cotton and cottonseed ...........farms: 630 0.8 854 :: $5,000 to $9,999 ................farms: 881 1.1 635 $1,000: 655,094 1.5 586,267 :: $1,000: 5,876 (Z) 4,332 Vegetables, melons, potatoes, : :: $10,000 to $24,999 ..............farms: 817 1.0 741 and sweet potatoes .............farms: 6,155 7.9 3,958 :: $1,000: 12,634 (Z) 11,484 $1,000: 6,327,838 14.8 5,435,521 :: $25,000 to $49,999 .............farms: 362 0.5 448 : :: $1,000: 12,597 (Z) 15,157 Fruits, tree nuts, and berries ..farms: 36,574 47.0 38,034 :: $50,000 or more ................farms: 559 0.7 516 $1,000: 17,638,972 41.4 11,054,581 :: $1,000: 130,974 0.3 125,885 Fruits and tree nuts ..........farms: 35,526 45.6 (NA) :: : $1,000: 15,655,703 36.7 (NA) :: : Berries .......................farms: 1,701 2.2 (NA) :: : $1,000: 1,983,269 4.7 (NA) :: : --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Table 3. Economic Class of Farms by Market Value of Agricultural Products Sold and Government Payments: 2012 and 2007 [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : 2012 : 2007 :----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : 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: 77,857 77,857 7,593 81,033 81,033 7,444 $1,000: 42,774,392 42,627,472 146,919 34,125,307 33,885,064 240,242 Average per farm ..................dollars: 549,397 547,510 19,349 421,129 418,164 32,273 : By economic class: : : Less than $1,000 ....................farms: 14,629 14,629 162 17,330 17,330 194 $1,000: 1,729 1,652 77 2,274 2,198 76 $1,000 to $2,499 ....................farms: 4,718 4,718 214 5,999 5,999 236 $1,000: 7,802 7,491 312 9,879 9,564 315 $2,500 to $4,999 ....................farms: 5,904 5,904 279 6,617 6,617 207 $1,000: 21,010 20,156 853 23,766 23,234 532 $5,000 to $9,999 ....................farms: 7,846 7,846 337 7,383 7,383 381 $1,000: 54,638 53,168 1,470 52,406 50,660 1,745 $10,000 to $24,999 ..................farms: 10,265 10,265 563 10,642 10,642 528 $1,000: 164,131 160,031 4,100 170,687 166,881 3,806 : $25,000 to $49,999 ..................farms: 7,150 7,150 603 7,651 7,651 521 $1,000: 251,973 247,254 4,719 270,597 265,404 5,193 $50,000 to $99,999 ..................farms: 6,698 6,698 682 6,237 6,237 531 $1,000: 471,323 465,802 5,521 437,585 430,992 6,592 $100,000 to $249,999 ................farms: 6,951 6,951 981 6,561 6,561 949 $1,000: 1,108,388 1,096,809 11,579 1,030,123 1,010,133 19,990 $250,000 to $499,999 ................farms: 4,132 4,132 894 3,964 3,964 922 $1,000: 1,453,434 1,437,184 16,250 1,383,094 1,356,038 27,056 $500,000 to $999,999 ................farms: 3,197 3,197 791 2,956 2,956 893 $1,000: 2,255,552 2,233,215 22,337 2,103,499 2,063,817 39,682 : $1,000,000 or more ..................farms: 6,367 6,367 2,087 5,693 5,693 2,082 $1,000: 36,984,412 36,904,710 79,701 28,641,398 28,506,144 135,253 $1,000,000 to $2,499,999 ..........farms: 3,015 3,015 990 2,909 2,909 1,085 $1,000: 4,727,954 4,692,202 35,752 4,618,318 4,559,762 58,556 $2,500,000 to $4,999,999 ..........farms: 1,480 1,480 549 1,419 1,419 564 $1,000: 5,253,561 5,233,343 20,218 4,981,856 4,941,766 40,090 $5,000,000 or more ................farms: 1,872 1,872 548 1,365 1,365 433 $1,000: 27,002,896 26,979,165 23,731 19,041,224 19,004,616 36,607 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Table 4. Farm Production Expenses: 2012 and 2007 [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : 2012 : 2007 :--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : : Expenses : : Expenses Item : Farms : ($1,000) : Farms : ($1,000) ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Total farm production expenses 1/ .....................farms: 77,857 (X) 81,033 (X) $1,000: (X) 35,455,667 (X) 26,962,641 Average per farm ................................dollars: (X) 455,395 (X) 332,737 : Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 ...........................................: 9,641 28,796 11,404 32,989 $5,000 to $9,999 .......................................: 11,098 81,567 11,981 88,497 $10,000 to $24,999 .....................................: 17,425 284,536 18,551 303,203 $25,000 to $49,999 .....................................: 11,115 396,345 11,643 413,236 $50,000 to $99,999 .....................................: 8,585 605,568 8,592 605,392 : $100,000 to $249,999 ...................................: 7,539 1,207,519 7,546 1,191,276 $250,000 to $499,999 ...................................: 4,157 1,475,651 3,739 1,326,692 $500,000 or more .......................................: 8,297 31,375,685 7,577 23,001,356 $500,000 to $999,999 .................................: 2,978 2,092,163 2,810 2,006,585 $1,000,000 to $2,499,999 .............................: 2,590 4,006,963 2,658 4,169,580 $2,500,000 or more ...................................: 2,729 25,276,558 2,109 16,825,191 : Fertilizer, lime, and soil conditioners : purchased ..........................................farms: 38,958 (X) 48,395 (X) $1,000: (X) 1,806,062 (X) 1,314,175 percent of total: (X) 5.1 (X) 4.9 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $499 ...........................................: 9,602 1,993 12,376 2,576 $500 to $999 .........................................: 4,325 2,850 5,822 3,859 $1,000 to $4,999 .....................................: 10,707 25,041 13,859 31,715 $5,000 to $9,999 .....................................: 3,483 23,316 4,527 30,405 $10,000 to $24,999 ...................................: 3,829 60,352 4,787 73,444 $25,000 to $49,999 ...................................: 2,319 80,291 2,560 88,522 $50,000 to $99,999 ...................................: 1,782 122,668 1,953 135,020 $100,000 or more .....................................: 2,911 1,489,552 2,511 948,634 : Chemicals purchased .................................farms: 44,536 (X) 44,599 (X) $1,000: (X) 2,190,674 (X) 1,369,132 percent of total: (X) 6.2 (X) 5.1 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $499 ...........................................: 13,573 2,580 12,765 2,506 $500 to $999 .........................................: 4,367 2,837 4,469 2,905 $1,000 to $4,999 .....................................: 10,119 23,993 11,049 26,501 $5,000 to $9,999 .....................................: 3,959 26,838 4,341 29,619 $10,000 to $24,999 ...................................: 4,485 70,035 4,727 73,020 $25,000 to $49,999 ...................................: 2,676 93,347 2,668 92,114 $50,000 or more ......................................: 5,357 1,971,043 4,580 1,142,467 $50,000 to $99,999 .................................: 2,192 152,987 2,000 138,452 $100,000 or more ...................................: 3,165 1,818,056 2,580 1,004,015 : Seeds, plants, vines, and trees purchased ...........farms: 27,527 (X) 26,247 (X) $1,000: (X) 1,317,934 (X) 991,450 percent of total: (X) 3.7 (X) 3.7 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $499 ...........................................: 8,007 1,622 7,441 1,544 $500 to $999 .........................................: 3,374 2,205 3,300 2,184 $1,000 to $4,999 .....................................: 6,676 15,032 6,534 14,901 $5,000 to $9,999 .....................................: 2,354 15,979 2,352 16,203 $10,000 to $24,999 ...................................: 2,803 43,232 2,682 41,487 $25,000 or more ......................................: 4,313 1,239,865 3,938 915,132 $25,000 to $49,999 .................................: 1,473 51,179 1,461 50,725 $50,000 or more ....................................: 2,840 1,188,685 2,477 864,407 : Livestock and poultry purchased : or leased ..........................................farms: 12,585 (X) 10,881 (X) $1,000: (X) 1,254,286 (X) 1,264,818 percent of total: (X) 3.5 (X) 4.7 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $999 ...........................................: 3,720 1,302 3,024 1,129 $1,000 to $4,999 .....................................: 4,183 10,256 3,775 8,805 $5,000 to $9,999 .....................................: 1,509 10,325 1,372 9,232 $10,000 to $24,999 ...................................: 1,441 21,716 1,011 15,030 $25,000 to $49,999 ...................................: 488 16,877 449 15,392 : $50,000 to $99,999 ...................................: 507 32,241 371 25,893 $100,000 to $249,999 .................................: 335 53,279 394 62,812 $250,000 or more .....................................: 402 1,108,291 485 1,126,525 $250,000 to $499,999 ...............................: 188 64,243 209 71,977 $500,000 to $999,999 ...............................: 106 73,507 124 83,999 $1,000,000 or more .................................: 108 970,541 152 970,549 : Breeding livestock purchased : or leased ........................................farms: 6,850 (X) 5,951 (X) $1,000: (X) 255,730 (X) 186,901 percent of total: (X) 0.7 (X) 0.7 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $999 .........................................: 1,818 745 1,499 611 $1,000 to $4,999 ...................................: 2,445 6,014 2,249 5,288 $5,000 to $9,999 ...................................: 807 5,326 836 5,539 $10,000 to $24,999 .................................: 892 12,962 635 9,556 $25,000 to $49,999 .................................: 294 10,196 256 8,644 : $50,000 to $99,999 .................................: 364 20,936 196 13,635 $100,000 to $249,999 ...............................: 137 21,346 150 22,777 $250,000 or more ...................................: 93 178,206 130 120,851 $250,000 to $499,999 .............................: 55 18,241 68 22,476 $500,000 to $999,999 .............................: 18 12,254 37 25,569 $1,000,000 or more ...............................: 20 147,710 25 72,805 : Other livestock and poultry purchased : or leased (see text) .............................farms: 7,673 (X) 6,356 (X) $1,000: (X) 998,556 (X) 1,077,917 percent of total: (X) 2.8 (X) 4.0 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $999 .........................................: 2,934 882 2,313 772 $1,000 to $4,999 ...................................: 2,464 5,854 1,950 4,430 $5,000 to $9,999 ...................................: 703 4,878 641 4,281 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 4. Farm Production Expenses: 2012 and 2007 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : 2012 : 2007 :--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : : Expenses : : Expenses Item : Farms : ($1,000) : Farms : ($1,000) ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Total farm production expenses - Con. : Livestock and poultry purchased : or leased - Con. : Other livestock and poultry purchased : or leased (see text) - Con. : Farms with expenses of- Con. : : $10,000 to $24,999 .................................: 613 9,558 408 5,996 $25,000 to $49,999 .................................: 232 8,001 219 7,660 : $50,000 to $99,999 .................................: 209 14,596 195 13,657 $100,000 to $249,999 ...............................: 212 34,171 267 43,665 $250,000 or more ...................................: 306 920,617 363 997,455 $250,000 to $499,999 .............................: 130 45,580 147 51,079 $500,000 to $999,999 .............................: 88 60,133 94 63,279 $1,000,000 or more ...............................: 88 814,904 122 883,096 : Feed purchased ......................................farms: 30,014 (X) 29,596 (X) $1,000: (X) 6,069,374 (X) 4,274,263 percent of total: (X) 17.1 (X) 15.9 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $999 ...........................................: 4,965 2,452 4,708 2,265 $1,000 to $4,999 .....................................: 11,226 29,098 11,437 30,079 $5,000 to $9,999 .....................................: 5,293 36,360 5,642 38,051 $10,000 to $24,999 ...................................: 4,124 58,474 3,849 57,106 $25,000 to $49,999 ...................................: 1,336 45,958 1,233 41,390 : $50,000 to $99,999 ...................................: 706 47,367 559 37,650 $100,000 or more .....................................: 2,364 5,849,665 2,168 4,067,721 $100,000 to $249,999 ...............................: 596 92,893 408 65,368 $250,000 to $499,999 ...............................: 330 118,673 312 109,837 $500,000 to $999,999 ...............................: 295 215,749 448 323,852 $1,000,000 or more .................................: 1,143 5,422,351 1,000 3,568,665 : Gasoline, fuels, and oils purchased .................farms: 70,844 (X) 78,163 (X) $1,000: (X) 1,552,328 (X) 1,124,340 percent of total: (X) 4.4 (X) 4.2 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $999 ...........................................: 30,541 10,868 35,171 12,039 $1,000 to $4,999 .....................................: 21,433 48,622 23,094 52,475 $5,000 to $9,999 .....................................: 5,880 38,754 6,762 45,722 $10,000 to $24,999 ...................................: 5,302 82,330 5,958 91,694 $25,000 to $49,999 ...................................: 2,745 96,381 2,902 100,539 $50,000 or more ......................................: 4,943 1,275,372 4,276 821,871 : Utilities ...........................................farms: 60,680 (X) 55,511 (X) $1,000: (X) 1,684,343 (X) 1,231,547 percent of total: (X) 4.8 (X) 4.6 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $499 ...........................................: 9,035 2,227 8,309 2,064 $500 to $999 .........................................: 7,669 5,173 7,093 4,833 $1,000 to $4,999 .....................................: 23,136 54,003 20,563 47,719 $5,000 to $9,999 .....................................: 6,220 42,001 6,377 43,479 $10,000 to $24,999 ...................................: 6,055 95,121 5,759 88,655 $25,000 or more ......................................: 8,565 1,485,818 7,410 1,044,797 $25,000 to $49,999 .................................: 3,178 109,821 3,031 105,625 $50,000 or more ....................................: 5,387 1,375,997 4,379 939,172 : Repairs, supplies, and maintenance costs ............farms: 63,106 (X) 74,487 (X) $1,000: (X) 2,042,434 (X) 1,782,730 percent of total: (X) 5.8 (X) 6.6 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $999 ...........................................: 19,133 7,668 24,294 9,625 $1,000 to $4,999 .....................................: 22,801 51,616 25,796 58,512 $5,000 to $9,999 .....................................: 6,224 41,015 8,010 53,871 $10,000 to $24,999 ...................................: 5,970 91,518 7,451 112,259 $25,000 to $49,999 ...................................: 3,091 108,702 3,341 116,858 $50,000 or more ......................................: 5,887 1,741,916 5,595 1,431,605 $50,000 to $99,999 .................................: 2,354 161,951 2,422 166,174 $100,000 or more ...................................: 3,533 1,579,964 3,173 1,265,431 : Hired farm labor ....................................farms: 33,955 (X) 29,661 (X) $1,000: (X) 5,877,973 (X) 5,015,513 percent of total: (X) 16.6 (X) 18.6 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $999 ...........................................: 3,251 1,576 3,520 1,599 $1,000 to $4,999 .....................................: 6,429 16,095 5,934 14,744 $5,000 to $9,999 .....................................: 3,608 25,152 2,595 17,810 $10,000 to $24,999 ...................................: 5,038 81,937 4,242 68,693 $25,000 to $49,999 ...................................: 4,500 156,551 3,337 117,748 : $50,000 to $99,999 ...................................: 3,511 243,858 3,173 222,221 $100,000 or more .....................................: 7,618 5,352,804 6,860 4,572,698 $100,000 to $249,999 ...............................: 3,496 539,786 3,248 511,957 $250,000 to $499,999 ...............................: 1,839 645,023 1,639 571,585 $500,000 or more ...................................: 2,283 4,167,995 1,973 3,489,157 : Contract labor ......................................farms: 25,067 (X) 22,586 (X) $1,000: (X) 3,378,012 (X) 2,265,515 percent of total: (X) 9.5 (X) 8.4 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $999 ...........................................: 2,190 1,133 2,231 1,134 $1,000 to $4,999 .....................................: 5,812 15,040 5,688 14,577 $5,000 to $9,999 .....................................: 3,403 23,486 3,233 22,405 $10,000 to $24,999 ...................................: 4,422 69,366 4,141 65,311 $25,000 to $49,999 ...................................: 2,941 103,112 2,447 85,757 $50,000 or more ......................................: 6,299 3,165,876 4,846 2,076,332 $50,000 to $99,999 .................................: 2,360 161,931 1,918 133,460 $100,000 or more ...................................: 3,939 3,003,945 2,928 1,942,871 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 4. Farm Production Expenses: 2012 and 2007 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : 2012 : 2007 :--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : : Expenses : : Expenses Item : Farms : ($1,000) : Farms : ($1,000) ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Total farm production expenses - Con. : : Customwork and custom hauling .......................farms: 19,644 (X) 15,667 (X) $1,000: (X) 1,258,384 (X) 860,315 percent of total: (X) 3.5 (X) 3.2 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $999 ...........................................: 3,589 1,604 2,731 1,222 $1,000 to $4,999 .....................................: 4,990 12,270 4,152 10,155 $5,000 to $9,999 .....................................: 2,420 16,805 1,931 13,490 $10,000 to $24,999 ...................................: 2,964 46,869 2,422 38,183 $25,000 to $49,999 ...................................: 1,859 64,919 1,498 52,231 $50,000 or more ......................................: 3,822 1,115,917 2,933 745,035 $50,000 to $99,999 .................................: 1,504 105,090 1,216 84,695 $100,000 or more ...................................: 2,318 1,010,828 1,717 660,340 : Cash rent for land, buildings, : and grazing fees ...................................farms: 15,007 (X) 13,299 (X) $1,000: (X) 1,511,985 (X) 1,013,008 percent of total: (X) 4.3 (X) 3.8 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $499 ...........................................: 1,002 199 984 218 $500 to $999 .........................................: 690 475 726 496 $1,000 to $4,999 .....................................: 3,549 9,261 2,927 7,449 $5,000 to $9,999 .....................................: 1,649 11,482 1,619 11,449 $10,000 to $24,999 ...................................: 2,878 47,612 2,163 34,727 $25,000 to $49,999 ...................................: 1,451 51,803 1,446 51,771 $50,000 or more ......................................: 3,788 1,391,153 3,434 906,897 : Rent and lease expenses for machinery, : equipment, and farm share of : vehicles ..........................................farms: 7,895 (X) 6,623 (X) $1,000: (X) 400,054 (X) 216,265 percent of total: (X) 1.1 (X) 0.8 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $499 ...........................................: 1,196 285 1,018 235 $500 to $999 .........................................: 718 482 662 437 $1,000 to $4,999 .....................................: 2,150 5,146 1,670 3,978 $5,000 to $9,999 .....................................: 962 6,490 871 5,989 $10,000 to $24,999 ...................................: 1,028 16,097 1,037 16,393 $25,000 to $49,999 ...................................: 567 19,883 508 17,948 $50,000 or more ......................................: 1,274 351,671 857 171,284 : Interest expense ....................................farms: 26,459 (X) 23,854 (X) $1,000: (X) 1,217,781 (X) 1,099,536 percent of total: (X) 3.4 (X) 4.1 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $999 ...........................................: 2,229 1,022 1,841 857 $1,000 to $4,999 .....................................: 5,906 16,101 4,704 12,776 $5,000 to $9,999 .....................................: 4,455 31,401 3,649 26,219 $10,000 to $24,999 ...................................: 6,593 104,958 5,959 95,512 $25,000 to $49,999 ...................................: 3,294 112,053 3,471 120,435 $50,000 to $99,999 ...................................: 1,835 127,622 2,139 147,669 $100,000 or more .....................................: 2,147 824,623 2,091 696,068 : Secured by real estate ............................farms: 20,307 (X) 18,896 (X) $1,000: (X) 941,302 (X) 773,509 percent of total: (X) 2.7 (X) 2.9 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $999 .........................................: 1,166 541 1,103 512 $1,000 to $4,999 ...................................: 4,137 11,734 3,601 9,917 $5,000 to $9,999 ...................................: 3,540 25,212 3,146 22,569 $10,000 to $24,999 .................................: 5,736 90,723 5,147 82,165 $25,000 to $49,999 .................................: 2,690 91,902 2,806 96,969 $50,000 to $99,999 .................................: 1,429 97,868 1,655 112,487 $100,000 or more ...................................: 1,609 623,322 1,438 448,889 : Not secured by real estate ........................farms: 13,273 (X) 12,843 (X) $1,000: (X) 276,479 (X) 326,028 percent of total: (X) 0.8 (X) 1.2 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $999 .........................................: 2,988 1,316 3,195 1,361 $1,000 to $4,999 ...................................: 4,701 11,457 3,948 9,716 $5,000 to $9,999 ...................................: 1,898 12,406 1,760 12,069 $10,000 to $24,999 .................................: 1,616 25,224 1,751 27,167 $25,000 to $49,999 .................................: 835 28,183 897 31,145 $50,000 to $99,999 .................................: 621 44,088 624 42,278 $100,000 or more ...................................: 614 153,806 668 202,291 : Property taxes paid .................................farms: 71,398 (X) 72,181 (X) $1,000: (X) 827,587 (X) 638,682 percent of total: (X) 2.3 (X) 2.4 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $499 ...........................................: 4,785 1,090 5,954 1,436 $500 to $999 .........................................: 5,092 3,759 6,497 4,776 $1,000 to $4,999 .....................................: 35,260 93,164 35,937 92,362 $5,000 to $9,999 .....................................: 12,923 88,293 11,833 80,194 $10,000 to $24,999 ...................................: 7,776 117,579 7,437 112,139 $25,000 or more ......................................: 5,562 523,701 4,523 347,775 : All other production expenses (see text) ............farms: 43,111 (X) 44,163 (X) $1,000: (X) 3,066,456 (X) 2,501,352 percent of total: (X) 8.6 (X) 9.3 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $999 ...........................................: 9,048 3,901 9,272 4,096 $1,000 to $4,999 .....................................: 13,816 32,912 14,123 34,117 $5,000 to $9,999 .....................................: 5,276 35,917 5,495 37,509 $10,000 to $24,999 ...................................: 5,691 89,582 5,757 89,756 : $25,000 to $49,999 ...................................: 2,928 103,036 3,424 120,511 $50,000 to $99,999 ...................................: 2,313 159,232 2,387 166,476 $100,000 or more .....................................: 4,039 2,641,876 3,705 2,048,887 $100,000 to $249,999 ...............................: 2,014 306,753 2,032 311,793 $250,000 or more ...................................: 2,025 2,335,123 1,673 1,737,094 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 4. Farm Production Expenses: 2012 and 2007 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : 2012 : 2007 :--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : : Expenses : : Expenses Item : Farms : ($1,000) : Farms : ($1,000) ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Production expenses paid by : landlords 1/ .........................................farms: 1,305 (X) 1,026 (X) $1,000: (X) 54,690 (X) 45,760 percent of total: (X) 0.2 (X) 0.2 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $499 .............................................: 159 39 56 14 $500 to $999 ...........................................: 82 57 32 22 $1,000 to $4,999 .......................................: 378 914 250 646 $5,000 to $9,999 .......................................: 154 1,122 193 1,406 $10,000 to $24,999 .....................................: 206 3,275 217 3,396 $25,000 or more ........................................: 326 49,283 278 40,276 $25,000 to $49,999 ...................................: 157 5,526 122 4,274 $50,000 to $99,999 ...................................: 65 4,646 78 5,467 $100,000 or more .....................................: 104 39,111 78 30,535 : Depreciation expenses claimed .........................farms: 39,342 (X) 37,834 (X) $1,000: (X) 2,256,892 (X) 1,800,646 percent of total: (X) 6.4 (X) 6.7 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $499 .............................................: 1,870 466 2,261 553 $500 to $999 ...........................................: 2,109 1,420 2,130 1,476 $1,000 to $4,999 .......................................: 10,058 26,176 10,208 26,387 $5,000 to $9,999 .......................................: 6,351 43,212 6,174 42,498 $10,000 to $24,999 .....................................: 7,480 116,800 6,946 108,405 $25,000 or more ........................................: 11,474 2,068,818 10,115 1,621,327 $25,000 to $49,999 ...................................: 4,349 150,587 3,880 134,643 $50,000 to $99,999 ...................................: 2,940 201,416 2,628 183,982 $100,000 or more .....................................: 4,185 1,716,814 3,607 1,302,701 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1/Landlord production expenses are included within total farm production expenses. Table 5. Net Cash Farm Income of the Operations and Operators: 2012 and 2007 [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : 2012 : 2007 :----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : : Income : : Income Item : Farms : ($1,000) : Farms : ($1,000) -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Net cash farm income of the operations (see text) ......: 77,857 8,523,285 81,033 7,983,228 Average per farm ............................dollars: (X) 109,474 (X) 98,518 : Farms with net gains 1/ ..............................: 36,283 11,394,897 35,095 9,904,894 Average per farm ..........................dollars: (X) 314,056 (X) 282,231 : Farms with gains of- : less than $1,000 .................................: 1,602 762 2,028 954 $1,000 to $4,999 .................................: 4,785 13,480 5,232 14,497 $5,000 to $9,999 .................................: 3,597 26,156 3,567 25,959 $10,000 to $24,999 ...............................: 5,723 95,178 5,792 95,323 $25,000 to $49,999 ...............................: 4,813 173,881 4,443 159,895 $50,000 or more ..................................: 15,763 11,085,441 14,033 9,608,267 : Farms with net losses ................................: 41,574 2,871,613 45,938 1,921,666 Average per farm ..........................dollars: (X) 69,072 (X) 41,832 : Farms with losses of- : less than $1,000 .................................: 1,982 1,004 2,626 1,290 $1,000 to $4,999 .................................: 8,924 26,202 10,484 30,850 $5,000 to $9,999 .................................: 7,815 57,166 9,022 65,613 $10,000 to $24,999 ...............................: 10,269 164,982 11,115 179,418 $25,000 to $49,999 ...............................: 5,478 192,542 5,866 204,678 $50,000 or more ..................................: 7,106 2,429,717 6,825 1,439,817 : Net cash farm income of operators (see text) ...........: 77,857 8,177,199 81,033 7,746,152 Average per farm ............................dollars: (X) 105,028 (X) 95,593 : Farm operators reporting net gains 1/ ................: 36,052 11,136,098 34,860 9,704,279 Average per farm ..........................dollars: (X) 308,890 (X) 278,379 : Farms with gains of- : less than $1,000 .................................: 1,605 764 2,020 952 $1,000 to $4,999 .................................: 4,774 13,450 5,242 14,532 $5,000 to $9,999 .................................: 3,610 26,231 3,577 26,009 $10,000 to $24,999 ...............................: 5,758 95,875 5,786 95,105 $25,000 to $49,999 ...............................: 4,811 173,736 4,447 160,067 $50,000 or more ..................................: 15,494 10,826,042 13,788 9,407,615 : Farm operators reporting net losses ..................: 41,805 2,958,899 46,173 1,958,128 Average per farm ..........................dollars: (X) 70,779 (X) 42,409 : Farms with losses of- : less than $1,000 .................................: 2,006 1,012 2,639 1,298 $1,000 to $4,999 .................................: 8,944 26,288 10,495 30,906 $5,000 to $9,999 .................................: 7,798 57,022 9,041 65,737 $10,000 to $24,999 ...............................: 10,315 165,747 11,157 180,020 $25,000 to $49,999 ...............................: 5,518 194,032 5,893 205,701 $50,000 or more ..................................: 7,224 2,514,798 6,948 1,474,465 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 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: 2012 and 2007 [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : 2012 : 2007 :: : 2012 : 2007 :-----------------------------------------------:: :----------------------------------------------- : : Value : : Value :: : : Value : : Value Item : Farms : ($1,000) : Farms : ($1,000) :: Item : Farms : ($1,000) : Farms : ($1,000) ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Government payments ....................: 7,593 146,919 7,444 240,242 :: Government payments - Con. : Average per farm ............dollars: (X) 19,349 (X) 32,273 :: : : :: Amount from other federal : : :: farm programs .......................: 7,310 143,304 7,084 232,714 Farms with receipts of- : :: Average per farm ..........dollars: (X) 19,604 (X) 32,851 $1 to $999 .........................: 923 458 908 401 :: : $1,000 to $4,999 ...................: 1,839 4,793 1,676 4,492 :: Farms with receipts of- : $5,000 to $9,999 ...................: 1,101 7,904 1,085 7,735 :: $1 to $999 .......................: 911 450 881 387 $10,000 to $24,999 .................: 1,818 28,919 1,374 22,298 :: $1,000 to $4,999 .................: 1,710 4,496 1,591 4,263 $25,000 to $49,999 .................: 1,179 42,133 1,108 39,784 :: $5,000 to $9,999 .................: 1,052 7,559 982 6,967 $50,000 or more ....................: 733 62,712 1,293 165,531 :: $10,000 to $24,999 ...............: 1,755 27,895 1,316 21,501 : :: $25,000 or more ..................: 1,882 102,904 2,314 199,595 : :: : : :: Commodity Credit Corporation : Amount from Conservation Reserve, : :: Loans (see text) ......................: 521 122,036 1,098 181,426 Wetlands Reserve, Farmable : :: Average per farm ............dollars: (X) 234,234 (X) 165,233 Wetlands, or Conservation : :: : Reserve Enhancement Programs ........: 470 3,615 668 7,528 :: Farms with receipts of- : Average per farm ..........dollars: (X) 7,692 (X) 11,270 :: $1 to $999 .........................: 13 4 74 14 : :: $1,000 to $4,999 ...................: 6 7 70 168 : :: $5,000 to $9,999 ...................: 12 89 30 213 Farms with receipts of- : :: $10,000 to $19,999 .................: 25 382 62 950 $1 to $999 .......................: 93 41 132 68 :: $20,000 to $24,999 .................: 10 208 16 352 $1,000 to $4,999 .................: 211 530 242 651 :: $25,000 to $49,999 .................: 36 1,309 91 3,271 $5,000 to $9,999 .................: 70 485 110 792 :: $50,000 or more ....................: 419 120,037 755 176,457 $10,000 to $24,999 ...............: 65 1,027 101 1,559 :: : $25,000 or more ..................: 31 1,532 83 4,457 :: Amount spent to repay CCC loans .farms: 228 47,734 (NA) (NA) ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Table 7. Income From Farm - Related Sources: 2012 and 2007 [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : 2012 : 2007 :: : 2012 : 2007 :---------------------------------------------------:: :--------------------------------------------------- : : Value : : Value :: : : Value : : Value Item : Farms : ($1,000) : Farms : ($1,000) :: Item : Farms : ($1,000) : Farms : ($1,000) ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Total income from farm-related sources, : :: Total income from farm-related sources, : gross before taxes and expenses : :: gross before taxes and expenses : (see text) ............................: 23,685 1,204,560 16,846 820,562 :: (see text) - Con. : Average per farm ............dollars: (X) 50,857 (X) 48,710 :: Agri-tourism and recreational : : :: services (see text) - Con. : Farms with receipts of- : :: Farms with receipts of - Con. : $1 to $999 .........................: 4,594 1,583 2,520 993 :: : $1,000 to $4,999 ...................: 5,722 14,470 4,127 10,309 :: $5,000 to $9,999 .................: 288 1,908 103 663 $5,000 to $9,999 ...................: 2,872 19,829 2,141 14,815 :: $10,000 to $24,999 ...............: 329 5,003 166 2,420 $10,000 to $24,999 .................: 3,765 60,479 2,845 44,308 :: $25,000 or more ..................: 301 56,440 186 31,404 $25,000 to $49,999 .................: 2,330 81,767 1,762 62,098 :: : $50,000 or more ....................: 4,402 1,026,431 3,451 688,039 :: Patronage dividends and refunds : : :: from cooperatives ...................: 7,469 171,066 5,381 113,546 Customwork and other agricultural : :: Average per farm ..........dollars: (X) 22,903 (X) 21,101 services ............................: 5,255 383,434 3,869 257,785 :: : Average per farm ............dollars: (X) 72,966 (X) 66,628 :: Farms with receipts of- : : :: $1 to $999 .......................: 2,482 678 1,582 523 Farms with receipts of- : :: $1,000 to $4,999 .................: 1,979 5,043 1,562 3,820 $1 to $999 .......................: 563 246 368 163 :: $5,000 to $9,999 .................: 851 5,875 612 4,309 $1,000 to $4,999 .................: 1,081 2,677 737 1,829 :: $10,000 to $24,999 ...............: 872 14,198 784 12,137 $5,000 to $9,999 .................: 588 4,078 438 3,000 :: $25,000 or more ..................: 1,285 145,272 841 92,757 $10,000 to $24,999 ...............: 938 14,699 699 10,854 :: : $25,000 to $49,999 ...............: 683 23,030 473 16,368 :: Crop and livestock insurance : $50,000 or more ..................: 1,402 338,705 1,154 225,570 :: payments ............................: 1,568 62,457 1,511 63,418 : :: Average per farm ............dollars: (X) 39,833 (X) 41,971 Gross cash rent or : :: : share payments ......................: 6,000 256,997 4,652 170,043 :: Farms with receipts of- : Average per farm ..........dollars: (X) 42,833 (X) 36,553 :: $1 to $999 .......................: 143 62 96 45 : :: $1,000 to $4,999 .................: 397 948 333 925 Farms with receipts of- : :: $5,000 to $9,999 .................: 225 1,583 249 1,762 $1 to $999 .......................: 774 346 554 252 :: $10,000 to $24,999 ...............: 354 5,490 330 5,072 $1,000 to $4,999 .................: 1,600 3,986 1,483 3,716 :: $25,000 or more ..................: 449 54,374 503 55,614 $5,000 to $9,999 .................: 969 6,751 712 4,902 :: : $10,000 to $24,999 ...............: 1,043 16,881 771 11,965 :: Amount from state and local : $25,000 or more ..................: 1,614 229,032 1,132 149,208 :: government agricultural : : :: program payments ....................: 343 4,218 223 2,460 Sales of forest products, excluding : :: Average per farm ............dollars: (X) 12,297 (X) 11,032 Christmas trees, short rotation : :: : woody crops, and maple products .....: 862 27,613 546 9,408 :: Farms with receipts of- : Average per farm ..........dollars: (X) 32,033 (X) 17,231 :: $1 to $999 .......................: 182 98 64 26 : :: $1,000 to $4,999 .................: 41 89 55 130 Farms with receipts of- : :: $5,000 to $9,999 .................: 20 151 31 209 $1 to $999 .......................: 444 134 190 81 :: $10,000 to $24,999 ...............: 45 712 50 823 $1,000 to $4,999 .................: 238 536 169 398 :: $25,000 or more ..................: 55 3,168 23 1,272 $5,000 to $9,999 .................: 61 407 60 389 :: : $10,000 to $24,999 ...............: 37 557 53 854 :: Other farm-related income : $25,000 or more ..................: 82 25,979 74 7,686 :: sources (see text) ..................: 5,192 234,255 3,875 169,021 : :: Average per farm ..........dollars: (X) 45,118 (X) 43,618 Agri-tourism and recreational : :: : services ............................: 1,699 64,520 685 34,880 :: Farms with receipts of- : Average per farm ..........dollars: (X) 37,975 (X) 50,920 :: $1 to $999 .......................: 941 384 572 233 : :: $1,000 to $4,999 .................: 1,525 3,909 903 2,272 Farms with receipts of- : :: $5,000 to $9,999 .................: 541 3,716 527 3,609 $1 to $999 .......................: 314 105 84 35 :: $10,000 to $24,999 ...............: 744 12,520 688 10,939 $1,000 to $4,999 .................: 467 1,065 146 358 :: $25,000 or more ..................: 1,441 213,727 1,185 151,968 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Table 8. Land: 2012 and 2007 [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : 2012 : :: : 2012 : :---------------------------: :: :---------------------------: : : Percent : :: : : Percent : : :of total : :: : :of total : All farms : Total : in 2012 : 2007 :: All farms : Total : in 2012 : 2007 ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- LAND USE : :: LAND USE - Con. : : :: : Farms .................................number: 77,857 100.0 81,033 :: Total cropland - Con. : Land in farms ..........................acres: 25,569,001 100.0 25,364,695 :: Other cropland - Con. : : :: : Total cropland .........................farms: 57,731 74.2 61,215 :: Cropland in cultivated : acres: 9,591,783 37.5 9,464,647 :: summer fallow .....................farms: 1,477 1.9 1,435 Harvested cropland ...................farms: 53,372 68.6 53,000 :: acres: 210,958 0.8 190,328 acres: 8,007,461 31.3 7,633,173 :: : Farms by acres harvested: : :: Total woodland .........................farms: 7,345 9.4 6,913 1 to 49 acres .........................: 38,391 49.3 38,193 :: acres: 1,575,520 6.2 1,270,720 1 to 9 acres ........................: 23,534 30.2 22,216 :: Woodland pastured ....................farms: 3,519 4.5 3,520 10 to 19 acres ......................: 7,128 9.2 7,442 :: acres: 855,116 3.3 782,561 20 to 29 acres ......................: 3,563 4.6 4,009 :: Woodland not pastured ................farms: 4,610 5.9 4,083 30 to 49 acres ......................: 4,166 5.4 4,526 :: acres: 720,404 2.8 488,159 : :: : 50 to 99 acres ........................: 4,412 5.7 4,326 :: Permanent pasture and rangeland, : 100 to 199 acres ......................: 3,567 4.6 3,399 :: other than cropland and woodland : 200 to 499 acres ......................: 3,538 4.5 3,620 :: pastured (see text) ...................farms: 21,886 28.1 21,348 500 to 999 acres ......................: 1,780 2.3 1,819 :: acres: 13,036,448 51.0 13,275,042 1,000 to 1,999 acres ..................: 950 1.2 1,021 :: : 2,000 acres or more ...................: 734 0.9 622 :: Land in farmsteads, buildings, : : :: livestock facilities, ponds, : Other pasture and grazing land that : :: roads, wasteland, etc .................farms: 41,259 53.0 34,169 could have been used for crops without : :: acres: 1,365,250 5.3 1,354,286 additional improvement (see text)....farms: 2,879 3.7 10,890 :: : acres: 492,270 1.9 800,204 :: CONSERVATION AND CROP : : :: INSURANCE : Other cropland .......................farms: 9,329 12.0 9,372 :: : acres: 1,092,052 4.3 1,031,270 :: Land enrolled in Conservation Reserve, : : :: Wetlands Reserve, Farmable Wetlands, : Cropland idle or used for : :: or Conservation Reserve Enhancement : cover crops or soil-improvement : :: Programs ..............................farms: 470 (X) 668 but not harvested and not : :: acres: 105,504 (X) 254,013 pastured or grazed ................farms: 6,204 8.0 6,118 :: : acres: 674,022 2.6 667,291 :: Land enrolled in crop insurance : Cropland on which all crops failed : :: programs ..............................farms: 13,813 (X) 14,236 or were abandoned .................farms: 2,425 3.1 2,631 :: acres: 4,929,132 (X) 4,018,816 acres: 207,072 0.8 173,651 :: : ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Table 9. Land in Farms, Harvested Cropland, and Irrigated Land, by Size of Farm: 2012 and 2007 [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ : Farms : Land in farms (acres) : Harvested cropland (acres) : Irrigated land (acres) :------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- All farms : 2012 : 2007 : 2012 : 2007 : 2012 : 2007 : 2012 : 2007 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Land in farms ..........................: 77,857 81,033 25,569,001 25,364,695 8,007,461 7,633,173 7,861,964 8,016,159 Farms by size: : 1 to 9 acres .......................: 24,637 25,278 95,670 100,816 47,435 48,197 48,555 47,640 10 to 49 acres .....................: 25,811 28,080 584,643 637,914 279,832 309,862 277,751 297,094 50 to 69 acres .....................: 3,700 3,776 212,480 217,567 106,190 107,665 100,629 102,227 70 to 99 acres .....................: 3,601 3,678 294,439 300,943 153,014 148,849 149,309 143,394 100 to 139 acres ...................: 3,222 3,067 369,985 353,529 179,277 164,950 171,412 166,382 : 140 to 179 acres ...................: 2,533 2,418 398,520 381,684 188,404 171,762 179,907 176,842 180 to 219 acres ...................: 1,477 1,626 292,751 321,033 153,270 153,602 146,234 158,398 220 to 259 acres ...................: 1,189 1,305 282,281 310,154 145,206 156,291 137,641 159,057 260 to 499 acres ...................: 3,983 4,083 1,428,792 1,461,559 748,857 762,434 720,848 771,942 500 to 999 acres ...................: 3,230 3,267 2,244,264 2,280,819 1,152,032 1,187,402 1,125,266 1,208,174 : 1,000 to 1,999 acres ...............: 2,040 2,194 2,800,180 2,999,788 1,285,858 1,391,250 1,250,285 1,418,462 2,000 to 4,999 acres ...............: 1,466 1,382 4,409,751 4,123,273 1,619,098 1,537,078 1,538,933 1,586,682 5,000 acres or more ................: 968 879 12,155,245 11,875,616 1,948,988 1,493,831 2,015,194 1,779,865 : Farms with harvested cropland ..........: 53,372 53,000 15,815,009 14,734,170 8,007,461 7,633,173 7,594,312 7,578,384 Farms by size: : 1 to 9 acres .......................: 16,772 15,948 64,180 62,978 47,435 48,197 42,798 39,320 10 to 49 acres .....................: 17,517 18,425 401,187 426,259 279,832 309,862 252,308 259,440 50 to 69 acres .....................: 2,659 2,647 153,174 152,643 106,190 107,665 96,363 93,730 70 to 99 acres .....................: 2,576 2,526 210,607 206,285 153,014 148,849 142,870 132,297 100 to 139 acres ...................: 2,247 1,991 257,590 230,306 179,277 164,950 165,178 155,290 : 140 to 179 acres ...................: 1,714 1,525 269,674 240,132 188,404 171,762 175,213 167,190 180 to 219 acres ...................: 1,085 1,078 215,025 212,701 153,270 153,602 143,282 147,791 220 to 259 acres ...................: 867 899 205,555 213,351 145,206 156,291 134,124 153,709 260 to 499 acres ...................: 2,829 2,899 1,017,875 1,040,828 748,857 762,434 704,708 748,429 500 to 999 acres ...................: 2,255 2,306 1,570,206 1,621,291 1,152,032 1,187,402 1,099,641 1,181,993 : 1,000 to 1,999 acres ...............: 1,389 1,479 1,914,424 2,028,658 1,285,858 1,391,250 1,225,641 1,376,952 2,000 to 4,999 acres ...............: 934 848 2,810,202 2,536,002 1,619,098 1,537,078 1,506,631 1,529,400 5,000 acres or more ................: 528 429 6,725,310 5,762,736 1,948,988 1,493,831 1,905,555 1,592,843 : Farms with irrigated land ..............: 53,546 53,400 16,039,761 16,231,930 7,753,480 7,465,841 7,861,964 8,016,159 Farms by size: : 1 to 9 acres .......................: 16,781 15,614 66,770 64,627 43,274 39,954 48,555 47,640 10 to 49 acres .....................: 17,952 18,690 404,192 425,367 254,089 264,609 277,751 297,094 50 to 69 acres .....................: 2,579 2,560 148,423 147,489 97,414 94,956 100,629 102,227 70 to 99 acres .....................: 2,555 2,462 208,811 201,347 144,277 132,812 149,309 143,394 100 to 139 acres ...................: 2,193 2,038 251,511 235,891 168,807 155,607 171,412 166,382 : 140 to 179 acres ...................: 1,650 1,608 259,457 253,698 175,996 166,986 179,907 176,842 180 to 219 acres ...................: 1,045 1,117 207,286 220,633 145,292 148,124 146,234 158,398 220 to 259 acres ...................: 834 932 197,555 221,291 135,854 153,785 137,641 159,057 260 to 499 acres ...................: 2,810 2,977 1,008,650 1,066,498 719,170 749,865 720,848 771,942 500 to 999 acres ...................: 2,267 2,401 1,581,585 1,683,415 1,123,243 1,178,494 1,125,266 1,208,174 : 1,000 to 1,999 acres ...............: 1,400 1,563 1,927,359 2,149,305 1,256,344 1,378,687 1,250,285 1,418,462 2,000 to 4,999 acres ...............: 936 934 2,801,298 2,795,905 1,579,058 1,524,205 1,538,933 1,586,682 5,000 acres or more ................: 544 504 6,976,864 6,766,464 1,910,662 1,477,757 2,015,194 1,779,865 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Table 10. Irrigation: 2012 and 2007 [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Farms with irrigation : 2012 : 2007 :: Farms with irrigation : 2012 : 2007 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Farms ......................................number: 53,546 53,400 :: Irrigated land - Con. : Proportion of farms .................percent: 68.8 65.9 :: Acres irrigated - Con. : : :: : Irrigated land ..............................acres: 7,861,964 8,016,159 :: 500 to 999 acres ........................farms: 1,751 1,899 Average per farm ......................acres: 147 150 :: acres: 1,217,766 1,319,141 : :: 1,000 to 1,999 acres ....................farms: 936 1,050 Acres irrigated: : :: acres: 1,280,298 1,450,980 1 to 9 acres ............................farms: 24,270 22,775 :: 2,000 acres or more .....................farms: 730 656 acres: 82,661 81,164 :: acres: 3,093,745 2,881,211 10 to 49 acres ..........................farms: 14,670 15,623 :: : acres: 325,504 346,528 :: Irrigated land use: : 50 to 99 acres ..........................farms: 4,243 4,156 :: Harvested cropland ........................farms: 47,972 45,412 acres: 296,155 287,682 :: acres: 7,371,411 7,274,248 : :: Pastureland and other land ................farms: 7,884 10,546 100 to 199 acres ........................farms: 3,458 3,524 :: acres: 490,553 741,911 acres: 476,854 491,282 :: Land in irrigated farms .....................acres: 16,039,761 16,231,930 200 to 499 acres ........................farms: 3,488 3,717 :: Cropland ..................................acres: 8,692,927 8,507,216 acres: 1,088,981 1,158,171 :: Harvested cropland ......................acres: 7,753,480 7,465,841 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Table 11. Selected Characteristics of Irrigated and Nonirrigated Farms: 2012 and 2007 [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ : : Irrigated farms : : :-------------------------------------------------------: : : : All harvested : : : : cropland : : All farms : Any land irrigated : irrigated : Nonirrigated farms :--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Characteristics : 2012 : 2007 : 2012 : 2007 : 2012 : 2007 : 2012 : 2007 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Farms ........................................................number: 77,857 81,033 53,546 53,400 44,399 41,678 24,311 27,633 Land in farms .................................................acres: 25,569,001 25,364,695 16,039,761 16,231,930 10,720,728 11,417,202 9,529,240 9,132,765 Estimated market value of land and buildings: : Average per farm ........................................dollars: 2,061,792 2,005,768 2,394,707 2,431,374 2,367,394 2,639,655 1,328,533 1,183,296 Average per acre ........................................dollars: 6,278 6,408 7,994 7,999 9,804 9,636 3,389 3,580 : Irrigated land ................................................acres: 7,861,964 8,016,159 7,861,964 8,016,159 6,639,977 6,934,207 (X) (X) : Land in farms according to use: : Total cropland ..............................................farms: 57,731 61,215 48,860 48,102 44,399 41,678 8,871 13,113 acres: 9,591,783 9,464,647 8,692,927 8,507,216 7,124,919 7,425,012 898,856 957,431 Harvested cropland ........................................farms: 53,372 53,000 48,276 45,769 44,399 41,678 5,096 7,231 acres: 8,007,461 7,633,173 7,753,480 7,465,841 6,485,987 6,711,881 253,981 167,332 : Pastureland, excluding woodland pastured ....................farms: 23,736 30,098 11,535 15,458 5,200 7,053 12,201 14,640 acres: 13,528,718 14,075,246 5,998,187 6,630,443 2,578,297 3,122,438 7,530,531 7,444,803 : Land enrolled in Conservation Reserve, Wetlands : Reserve, Farmable Wetlands, or Conservation : Reserve Enhancement Programs .................................farms: 470 668 134 245 80 160 336 423 acres: 105,504 254,013 20,864 77,960 12,722 42,386 84,640 176,053 : Owned and rented land in farms: : Owned land in farms .........................................farms: 69,982 73,620 48,057 48,318 39,639 37,449 21,925 25,302 acres: 14,281,177 14,395,527 9,086,067 9,349,629 6,569,436 6,950,799 5,195,110 5,045,898 Rented or leased land in farms ..............................farms: 17,365 17,256 12,436 12,381 9,985 9,644 4,929 4,875 acres: 11,287,824 10,969,168 6,953,694 6,882,301 4,151,292 4,466,403 4,334,130 4,086,867 : Market value of agricultural products sold (see text) ........$1,000: 42,627,472 33,885,064 37,327,971 29,586,599 32,869,267 27,205,056 5,299,501 4,298,465 Average per farm ........................................dollars: 547,510 418,164 697,120 554,056 740,315 652,744 217,988 155,556 : Crops, including nursery and greenhouse crops ...............farms: 49,253 48,901 45,052 42,519 41,573 38,786 4,201 6,382 $1,000: 30,366,898 22,903,021 30,075,685 22,626,748 27,292,020 21,048,725 291,213 276,274 Livestock, poultry, and their products ......................farms: 21,531 23,192 9,515 10,711 4,634 4,760 12,016 12,481 $1,000: 12,260,574 10,982,043 7,252,286 6,959,851 5,577,246 6,156,331 5,008,288 4,022,192 : Total farm production expenses................................$1,000: 35,455,667 26,962,641 30,233,225 23,015,562 26,304,453 20,933,388 5,222,442 3,947,079 Average per farm ........................................dollars: 455,395 332,737 564,622 431,003 592,456 502,265 214,818 142,839 : Fertilizer, lime, and soil conditioners purchased ...........farms: 38,958 48,395 36,025 41,521 32,314 36,459 2,933 6,874 $1,000: 1,806,062 1,314,175 1,793,731 1,294,928 1,597,271 1,189,507 12,331 19,247 Chemicals purchased .........................................farms: 44,536 44,599 39,526 37,638 35,097 32,453 5,010 6,961 $1,000: 2,190,674 1,369,132 2,171,784 1,347,595 1,942,140 1,257,965 18,889 21,537 Seeds, plants, vines, and trees purchased ...................farms: 27,527 26,247 24,052 22,746 21,131 19,722 3,475 3,501 $1,000: 1,317,934 991,450 1,305,195 982,554 1,169,328 887,990 12,739 8,897 Livestock and poultry purchased or leased ...................farms: 12,585 10,881 5,777 5,517 3,022 2,745 6,808 5,364 $1,000: 1,254,286 1,264,818 423,317 536,414 306,380 424,806 830,969 728,404 : Feed purchased ..............................................farms: 30,014 29,596 12,449 12,898 6,231 5,532 17,565 16,698 $1,000: 6,069,374 4,274,263 3,516,399 2,582,967 2,784,373 2,292,280 2,552,975 1,691,296 Gasoline, fuels, and oils purchased .........................farms: 70,844 78,163 48,641 51,867 39,973 40,295 22,203 26,296 $1,000: 1,552,328 1,124,340 1,402,954 998,021 1,202,934 894,752 149,374 126,318 Utilities ...................................................farms: 60,680 55,511 45,618 43,951 38,323 35,090 15,062 11,560 $1,000: 1,684,343 1,231,547 1,571,566 1,132,624 1,393,160 1,037,791 112,777 98,923 Repairs, supplies, and maintenance costs ....................farms: 63,106 74,487 45,077 50,906 37,605 39,937 18,029 23,581 $1,000: 2,042,434 1,782,730 1,835,011 1,553,967 1,596,660 1,404,783 207,424 228,763 : Hired farm labor ............................................farms: 33,955 29,661 26,936 23,996 23,433 20,390 7,019 5,665 $1,000: 5,877,973 5,015,513 5,435,598 4,656,846 4,744,016 4,255,996 442,375 358,666 Contract labor ..............................................farms: 25,067 22,586 21,822 19,195 19,836 17,033 3,245 3,391 $1,000: 3,378,012 2,265,515 3,289,251 2,203,717 3,075,189 2,094,332 88,761 61,798 Customwork and custom hauling ...............................farms: 19,644 15,667 16,081 13,327 13,999 11,544 3,563 2,340 $1,000: 1,258,384 860,315 1,167,746 816,657 1,020,336 761,880 90,638 43,658 Cash rent for land, buildings, and grazing fees .............farms: 15,007 13,299 10,547 9,704 8,277 7,613 4,460 3,595 $1,000: 1,511,985 1,013,008 1,377,006 935,621 1,185,088 822,467 134,978 77,387 : Rent and lease expenses for machinery, : equipment, and farm share of vehicles ......................farms: 7,895 6,623 6,664 5,657 5,812 4,914 1,231 966 $1,000: 400,054 216,265 377,521 207,425 332,320 193,929 22,533 8,840 Interest expense ............................................farms: 26,459 23,854 19,300 18,039 16,167 14,613 7,159 5,815 $1,000: 1,217,781 1,099,536 1,090,165 954,283 927,355 849,313 127,616 145,254 Property taxes paid .........................................farms: 71,398 72,181 49,180 48,117 40,622 37,621 22,218 24,064 $1,000: 827,587 638,682 709,422 527,063 612,363 459,925 118,166 111,619 All other production expenses (see text) ....................farms: 43,111 44,163 29,647 31,493 23,815 24,790 13,464 12,670 $1,000: 3,066,456 2,501,352 2,766,558 2,284,880 2,415,539 2,105,671 299,898 216,472 : Commodity Credit Corporation loans (see text) .................farms: 521 1,098 513 1,037 469 938 8 61 $1,000: 122,036 181,426 121,883 180,479 111,735 165,444 153 947 Government payments received ..................................farms: 7,593 7,444 5,973 5,810 4,980 4,893 1,620 1,634 $1,000: 146,919 240,242 126,727 219,284 105,016 197,476 20,193 20,958 Income from farm-related sources (see text) ...................farms: 23,685 16,846 17,028 12,233 14,316 9,911 6,657 4,613 $1,000: 1,204,560 820,562 945,843 657,465 817,925 563,555 258,717 163,096 Estimated market value of all machinery : and equipment.................................................farms: 77,851 81,017 53,544 53,391 44,397 41,669 24,307 27,626 $1,000: 9,709,545 8,761,575 8,372,795 7,246,159 7,052,387 6,263,570 1,336,750 1,515,416 Average per farm ........................................dollars: 124,720 108,145 156,372 135,719 158,848 150,317 54,994 54,855 : Livestock inventory: : Cattle and calves ...........................................farms: 16,764 16,638 7,451 8,341 3,284 3,575 9,313 8,297 number: 5,370,531 5,498,025 3,553,534 3,697,747 2,623,533 3,034,375 1,816,997 1,800,278 Milk cows .................................................farms: 1,931 2,165 1,241 1,505 888 1,195 690 660 number: 1,815,655 1,840,730 1,431,561 1,466,530 1,132,919 1,338,404 384,094 374,200 Hogs and pigs ...............................................farms: 1,437 1,389 539 622 297 286 898 767 number: 111,893 153,983 20,505 49,951 13,426 44,328 91,388 104,032 Sheep and lambs .............................................farms: 4,224 4,063 1,728 1,834 770 777 2,496 2,229 number: 668,517 596,163 375,194 308,188 197,134 227,858 293,323 287,975 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Table 12. Cattle and Calves - Inventory: 2012 and 2007 [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : 2012 : 2007 :: : 2012 : 2007 :-----------------------------------------------------:: :----------------------------------------------------- Item : Farms : Number : Farms : Number :: Item : Farms : Number : Farms : Number ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Cattle and calves ......................: 16,764 5,370,531 16,638 5,498,025 :: Cattle and calves - Con. : Farms with- : :: Cows and heifers that calved - Con. : 1 to 9 .............................: 7,396 31,252 6,106 27,344 :: : 10 to 19 ...........................: 2,451 32,475 2,681 35,601 :: Milk cows ..........................: 1,931 1,815,655 2,165 1,840,730 20 to 49 ...........................: 2,236 67,476 2,719 81,339 :: Farms with- : 50 to 99 ...........................: 1,128 78,554 1,187 81,470 :: 1 to 9 .........................: 457 954 433 1,015 100 to 199 .........................: 914 126,681 942 129,392 :: 10 to 19 .......................: 26 305 22 244 200 to 499 .........................: 896 283,466 1,049 338,760 :: 20 to 49 .......................: 36 1,158 36 933 500 to 999 .........................: 565 400,051 728 516,481 :: 50 to 99 .......................: 52 3,558 43 2,874 1,000 to 2,499 .....................: 665 1,053,025 753 1,169,561 :: 100 to 199 .....................: 110 15,428 101 14,630 2,500 to 4,999 .....................: 313 1,072,690 285 964,582 :: 200 to 499 .....................: 258 84,334 427 143,051 5,000 or more ......................: 200 2,224,861 188 2,153,495 :: 500 to 999 .....................: 350 247,102 510 355,366 : :: 1,000 or more ..................: 642 1,462,816 593 1,322,617 : :: 1,000 to 2,499 ...............: 456 705,415 424 641,289 Cows and heifers that calved .........: 12,566 2,399,249 13,544 2,503,153 :: 2,500 or more ................: 186 757,401 169 681,328 Farms with- : :: : 1 to 9 ...........................: 6,407 23,135 5,709 23,060 :: Other cattle (see text) ..............: 13,380 2,971,282 13,149 2,994,872 10 to 19 .........................: 1,304 17,047 1,954 25,553 :: Farms with- : 20 to 49 .........................: 1,443 44,024 1,907 56,764 :: 1 to 9 ...........................: 6,751 25,859 6,226 24,106 50 to 99 .........................: 837 57,192 892 59,850 :: 10 to 19 .........................: 1,793 23,273 1,862 24,146 100 to 199 .......................: 635 86,863 760 102,162 :: 20 to 49 .........................: 1,668 49,083 1,672 49,331 200 to 499 .......................: 721 221,432 962 298,453 :: 50 to 99 .........................: 790 53,830 771 51,993 500 to 999 .......................: 500 346,713 681 466,965 :: 100 to 199 .......................: 591 79,732 671 91,252 1,000 to 2,499 ...................: 519 792,740 498 745,068 :: 200 to 499 .......................: 711 219,260 877 270,356 2,500 or more ....................: 200 810,103 181 725,278 :: 500 to 999 .......................: 465 325,768 500 345,124 : :: 1,000 to 2,499 ...................: 411 618,231 382 567,064 : :: 2,500 or more ....................: 200 1,576,246 188 1,571,500 Beef cows ..........................: 10,925 583,594 11,827 662,423 :: : Farms with- : :: Cattle on feed (see text) ..............: 97 488,131 264 571,541 1 to 9 .........................: 6,173 22,566 5,613 22,706 :: Farms with- : 10 to 19 .......................: 1,280 16,727 1,934 25,251 :: 1 to 19 ............................: 5 67 163 750 20 to 49 .......................: 1,424 43,410 1,902 56,680 :: 20 to 49 ...........................: 11 291 22 617 50 to 99 .......................: 801 54,765 896 59,875 :: 50 to 99 ...........................: 27 1,573 24 1,608 100 to 199 .....................: 542 73,119 674 89,397 :: 100 to 199 .........................: 18 2,343 13 1,628 200 to 499 .....................: 479 141,855 555 161,965 :: 200 to 499 .........................: 16 5,148 12 3,864 500 to 999 .....................: 149 98,818 172 112,133 :: 500 to 999 .........................: 3 (D) 7 4,702 1,000 to 2,499 .................: 65 88,541 70 95,850 :: 1,000 to 2,499 .....................: 1 (D) 5 7,774 2,500 or more ..................: 12 43,793 11 38,566 :: 2,500 or more ......................: 16 475,639 18 550,598 ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Table 13. Cattle and Calves - Sales: 2012 and 2007 [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ : 2012 : 2007 :------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Number sold : Farms : Number : Value ($1,000) : Farms : Number : Value ($1,000) ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Cattle and calves ............................: 12,594 3,671,078 3,259,325 12,681 3,553,530 2,536,571 Farms by number sold- : 1 to 9 ...................................: 5,363 20,318 17,326 5,050 19,154 13,175 10 to 19 .................................: 1,622 21,604 17,985 1,601 21,282 13,978 20 to 49 .................................: 1,733 52,943 43,628 1,799 54,099 37,625 50 to 99 .................................: 977 68,117 57,243 1,097 75,928 47,952 100 to 199 ...............................: 784 108,889 99,278 1,002 138,712 91,910 200 to 499 ...............................: 939 290,442 245,658 1,092 343,024 212,158 500 to 999 ...............................: 517 353,149 282,838 544 379,341 222,659 1,000 to 2,499 ...........................: 468 700,942 517,883 333 500,779 294,393 2,500 to 4,999 ...........................: 119 403,299 296,186 106 357,425 204,543 5,000 or more ............................: 72 1,651,375 1,681,299 57 1,663,786 1,398,178 : Cattle, including calves weighing 500 : pounds or more ............................: 11,228 2,418,258 (NA) 11,122 2,200,178 (NA) Farms by number sold- : 1 to 9 .................................: 5,020 18,160 (NA) 4,750 16,564 (NA) 10 to 19 ...............................: 1,455 19,157 (NA) 1,394 18,263 (NA) 20 to 49 ...............................: 1,471 45,070 (NA) 1,577 47,955 (NA) 50 to 99 ...............................: 854 58,623 (NA) 1,018 68,895 (NA) 100 to 199 .............................: 769 106,347 (NA) 886 119,463 (NA) 200 to 499 .............................: 857 263,139 (NA) 883 270,989 (NA) 500 to 999 .............................: 441 298,233 (NA) 347 233,503 (NA) 1,000 to 2,499 .........................: 278 403,037 (NA) 185 275,001 (NA) 2,500 to 4,999 .........................: 43 144,856 (NA) 45 147,358 (NA) 5,000 or more ..........................: 40 1,061,636 (NA) 37 1,002,187 (NA) : Cattle on feed (see text) ................: 262 712,651 (NA) 711 744,262 (NA) Farms by number sold- : 1 to 19 ..............................: 43 581 (NA) 526 2,165 - 20 to 49 .............................: 50 1,607 (NA) 65 1,985 (NA) 50 to 99 .............................: 31 2,191 (NA) 38 2,452 (NA) 100 to 199 ...........................: 54 7,433 (NA) 25 3,372 (NA) 200 to 499 ...........................: 47 16,396 (NA) 24 7,728 (NA) 500 to 999 ...........................: 10 6,847 (NA) 7 5,142 (NA) 1,000 to 2,499 .......................: 12 17,984 (NA) 8 12,204 (NA) 2,500 to 4,999 .......................: 3 10,737 (NA) 3 9,452 (NA) 5,000 or more ........................: 12 648,875 (NA) 15 699,762 (NA) : Calves weighing less than 500 pounds .......: 5,347 1,252,820 (NA) 6,174 1,353,352 (NA) Farms by number sold- : 1 to 9 .................................: 2,408 8,168 (NA) 2,611 9,946 (NA) 10 to 19 ...............................: 661 8,586 (NA) 744 9,629 (NA) 20 to 49 ...............................: 698 20,674 (NA) 840 25,343 (NA) 50 to 99 ...............................: 377 25,337 (NA) 558 36,988 (NA) 100 to 199 .............................: 311 40,842 (NA) 433 57,510 (NA) 200 to 499 .............................: 402 123,832 (NA) 563 170,715 (NA) 500 to 999 .............................: 260 174,246 (NA) 235 155,114 (NA) 1,000 or more ..........................: 230 851,135 (NA) 190 888,107 (NA) ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Table 14. Cattle and Calves Herd Size by Inventory and Sales: 2012 [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : Cattle and calves inventory : :-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------: : : Cows and heifers : : : Total : that calved : Other cattle (see text) : Cattle and calves sales :----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : : : : : : : : : Value Herd size : Farms : Number : Farms : Number : Farms : Number : Farms : Number : ($1,000) -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Total ............................................: 16,764 5,370,531 12,566 2,399,249 13,380 2,971,282 11,364 3,368,557 3,062,089 Farms with herd size of- : 1 to 9 .......................................: 7,396 31,252 4,944 14,934 4,981 16,318 3,421 18,988 15,518 10 to 19 .....................................: 2,451 32,475 1,892 15,118 2,086 17,357 1,735 16,562 14,588 20 to 49 .....................................: 2,236 67,476 1,691 33,564 1,913 33,912 1,805 40,535 35,779 50 to 99 .....................................: 1,128 78,554 932 42,529 1,030 36,025 1,019 48,796 44,173 100 to 199 ...................................: 914 126,681 758 67,871 871 58,810 859 82,674 74,789 200 to 499 ...................................: 896 283,466 747 150,123 844 133,343 850 176,225 158,495 500 to 999 ...................................: 565 400,051 492 213,098 527 186,953 538 209,327 170,592 1,000 to 2,499 ...............................: 665 1,053,025 638 598,442 625 454,583 636 488,837 365,864 2,500 to 4,999 ...............................: 313 1,072,690 302 572,491 304 500,199 305 534,905 385,012 5,000 or more ................................: 200 2,224,861 170 691,079 199 1,533,782 196 1,751,708 1,797,280 : No cattle and calves herd, as of Dec. 31, 2012 ...: (X) (X) (X) (X) (X) (X) 1,230 302,521 197,236 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Table 15. Cow Herd Size by Inventory and Sales: 2012 [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : Cattle and calves inventory : :-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------: : : Cows and heifers : : : Total : that calved : Other cattle (see text) : Cattle and calves sales :----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : : : : : : : : : Value Cow herd 1/ : Farms : Number : Farms : Number : Farms : Number : Farms : Number : ($1,000) -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Total ............................................: 12,566 4,464,070 12,566 2,399,249 9,182 2,064,821 9,072 2,098,631 1,645,162 Farms with cow herd size of- : 1 to 9 .......................................: 6,407 80,276 6,407 23,135 3,992 57,141 3,465 68,583 66,592 10 to 19 .....................................: 1,304 31,047 1,304 17,047 939 14,000 1,049 13,753 11,549 20 to 49 .....................................: 1,443 74,663 1,443 44,024 1,120 30,639 1,250 36,666 31,248 50 to 99 .....................................: 837 104,076 837 57,192 739 46,884 803 59,788 52,819 100 to 199 ...................................: 635 161,926 635 86,863 592 75,063 615 95,748 87,635 200 to 499 ...................................: 721 398,188 721 221,432 669 176,756 708 207,128 178,771 500 to 999 ...................................: 500 613,799 500 346,713 462 267,086 481 260,863 208,156 1,000 to 2,499 ...............................: 519 1,477,189 519 792,740 479 684,449 504 711,443 555,642 2,500 or more ................................: 200 1,522,906 200 810,103 190 712,803 197 644,659 452,750 : No cow herd, as of Dec. 31, 2012 .................: 4,198 906,461 (X) (X) 4,198 906,461 3,522 1,572,447 1,614,163 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1/ Cow herd includes beef cows, milk cows, and heifers that calved. Table 16. Beef Cow Herd Size by Inventory and Sales: 2012 [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ : Cattle and calves inventory :--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : : Cows and heifers that calved : : :----------------------------------------------------------: : : : : : Total : Total : Beef cows : Other cattle (see text) :--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : : : : : : : : Beef cow herd : Farms : Number : Farms : Number : Farms : Number : Farms : Number ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Total ............................................: 10,925 1,324,558 10,925 691,562 10,925 583,594 7,765 632,996 Farms with beef cow herd size of- : 1 to 9 .......................................: 6,173 64,432 6,173 33,299 6,173 22,566 3,859 31,133 10 to 19 .....................................: 1,280 49,978 1,280 28,147 1,280 16,727 923 21,831 20 to 49 .....................................: 1,424 99,308 1,424 59,700 1,424 43,410 1,101 39,608 50 to 99 .....................................: 801 137,312 801 77,300 801 54,765 715 60,012 100 to 199 ...................................: 542 186,844 542 88,529 542 73,119 507 98,315 200 to 499 ...................................: 479 305,280 479 166,276 479 141,855 447 139,004 500 to 999 ...................................: 149 201,171 149 102,552 149 98,818 143 98,619 1,000 to 2,499 ...............................: 65 191,898 65 91,166 65 88,541 58 100,732 2,500 or more ................................: 12 88,335 12 44,593 12 43,793 12 43,742 : No beef cow herd, as of Dec. 31, 2012 ............: 5,839 4,045,973 1,641 1,707,687 (X) (X) 5,615 2,338,286 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ : Cattle and calves sales :--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : : Cattle : : :---------------------------------------------------: : : : Cattle on feed : : Total : Total : (see text) : Calves :--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : : : Value : : : : : : Beef cow herd : Farms : Number : ($1,000) : Farms : Number : Farms : Number : Farms : Number ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Total ............................................: 7,664 787,672 761,345 6,890 644,349 121 57,072 3,107 143,323 Farms with beef cow herd size of- : 1 to 9 .......................................: 3,392 31,645 28,066 2,937 23,628 13 (D) 1,205 8,017 10 to 19 .....................................: 1,040 21,982 15,799 934 14,917 8 157 419 7,065 20 to 49 .....................................: 1,233 45,150 35,854 1,097 33,237 26 909 534 11,913 50 to 99 .....................................: 773 74,505 62,321 728 55,886 19 1,119 403 18,619 100 to 199 ...................................: 530 129,768 115,954 511 82,988 18 6,626 248 46,780 200 to 499 ...................................: 473 178,059 161,799 461 149,873 18 3,619 209 28,186 500 to 999 ...................................: 149 124,342 124,045 148 109,444 8 2,958 61 14,898 1,000 to 2,499 ...............................: 62 123,991 147,068 62 (D) 9 39,519 24 (D) 2,500 or more ................................: 12 58,230 70,439 12 (D) 2 (D) 4 (D) : No beef cow herd, as of Dec. 31, 2012 ............: 4,930 2,883,406 2,497,980 4,338 1,773,909 141 655,579 2,240 1,109,497 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Table 17. Milk Cow Herd Size by Inventory and Sales: 2012 [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ : Cattle and calves inventory :--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : : Cows and heifers that calved : : :----------------------------------------------------------: : Total : Total : Milk cows : Other cattle (see text) :--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Milk cow herd : Farms : Number : Farms : Number : Farms : Number : Farms : Number ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Total ............................................: 1,931 3,380,453 1,931 1,836,622 1,931 1,815,655 1,617 1,543,831 : Farms with milk cow herd size of- : 1 to 9 .......................................: 457 41,266 457 5,303 457 954 274 35,963 10 to 19 .....................................: 26 735 26 475 26 305 15 260 20 to 49 .....................................: 36 2,491 36 1,485 36 1,158 33 1,006 50 to 99 .....................................: 52 6,613 52 3,826 52 3,558 41 2,787 100 to 199 ...................................: 110 33,880 110 16,757 110 15,428 100 17,123 200 to 499 ...................................: 258 149,130 258 86,490 258 84,334 237 62,640 500 to 999 ...................................: 350 424,614 350 252,353 350 247,102 319 172,261 1,000 or more ................................: 642 2,721,724 642 1,469,933 642 1,462,816 598 1,251,791 1,000 to 2,499 .............................: 456 1,295,017 456 710,429 456 705,415 421 584,588 2,500 or more ..............................: 186 1,426,707 186 759,504 186 757,401 177 667,203 : No milk cow herd, as of Dec. 31, 2012 ............: 14,833 1,990,078 10,635 562,627 (X) (X) 11,763 1,427,451 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ : Cattle and calves sales : :-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------: : Total : Cattle : Calves : Milk sales :--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : : : Value : : : : : : Value Milk cow herd : Farms : Number : ($1,000) : Farms : Number : Farms : Number : Farms : ($1,000) ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Total ............................................: 1,609 1,426,049 971,079 1,442 699,716 1,231 726,333 1,479 6,852,029 : Farms with milk cow herd size of- : 1 to 9 .......................................: 201 (D) (D) 155 2,804 95 (D) 22 99 10 to 19 .....................................: 15 375 324 14 157 4 218 13 681 20 to 49 .....................................: 36 2,312 (D) 30 1,636 24 676 36 4,692 50 to 99 .....................................: 46 (D) 2,243 41 (D) 26 (D) 52 14,526 100 to 199 ...................................: 102 (D) 11,295 97 (D) 76 (D) 110 63,179 200 to 499 ...................................: 251 (D) 28,241 230 20,870 196 (D) 257 335,333 500 to 999 ...................................: 331 142,308 91,451 293 70,882 275 71,426 350 938,208 1,000 or more ................................: 627 1,174,501 790,898 582 592,071 535 582,430 639 5,495,310 1,000 to 2,499 .............................: 444 590,344 409,370 409 293,341 376 297,003 454 2,684,562 2,500 or more ..............................: 183 584,157 381,529 173 298,730 159 285,427 185 2,810,748 : No milk cow herd, as of Dec. 31, 2012 ............: 10,985 2,245,029 2,288,246 9,786 1,718,542 4,116 526,487 75 93,074 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Table 18. Cattle and Calves - Number Sold Per Farm by Sales: 2012 [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : : Cattle, including calves weighing 500 pounds or more : : :---------------------------------------------------------: : : : Cattle on feed : Calves weighing less than : Cattle and calves : Total : (see text) : 500 pounds :-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : : : Value : : : : : : Number sold : Farms : Number : ($1,000) : Farms : Number : Farms : Number : Farms : Number ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Total ............................................: 12,594 3,671,078 3,259,325 11,228 2,418,258 262 712,651 5,347 1,252,820 : Farms by number of cattle : and calves sold - : 1 to 9 .......................................: 5,363 20,318 17,326 4,548 15,659 - - 1,650 4,659 10 to 19 .....................................: 1,622 21,604 17,985 1,449 16,201 28 386 692 5,403 20 to 49 .....................................: 1,733 52,943 43,628 1,579 39,796 41 1,217 807 13,147 50 to 99 .....................................: 977 68,117 57,243 897 50,198 33 1,769 492 17,919 100 to 199 ...................................: 784 108,889 99,278 762 84,846 38 4,337 373 24,043 200 to 499 ...................................: 939 290,442 245,658 873 207,211 38 8,495 542 83,231 500 to 999 ...................................: 517 353,149 282,838 498 232,589 23 7,428 327 120,560 1,000 to 2,499 ...............................: 468 700,942 517,883 451 433,940 37 23,961 326 267,002 2,500 or more ................................: 191 2,054,674 1,977,485 171 1,337,818 24 665,058 138 716,856 ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Table 19. Hogs and Pigs - Inventory: 2012 and 2007 [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : 2012 : 2007 :: : 2012 : 2007 :-----------------------------------------------:: :----------------------------------------------- Hogs and pigs : Farms : Number : Farms : Number :: Hogs and pigs : Farms : Number : Farms : Number ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Total hogs and pigs ....................: 1,437 111,893 1,389 153,983 :: Total hogs and pigs - Con. : Farms with- : :: Hogs and pigs used or to be : 1 to 24 ............................: 1,228 6,370 1,203 5,600 :: used for breeding - Con. : 25 to 49 ...........................: 95 3,117 84 2,845 :: Farms with - Con. : 50 to 99 ...........................: 52 3,446 45 3,190 :: : 100 to 199 .........................: 39 5,041 26 3,858 :: 100 to 199 .......................: 7 980 4 546 200 to 499 .........................: 11 3,626 14 3,790 :: 200 to 499 .......................: 3 (D) 9 2,220 500 to 999 .........................: 4 2,570 6 3,570 :: 500 or more ......................: 1 (D) 5 13,309 1,000 to 1,999 .....................: 4 (D) 5 (D) :: : 2,000 to 4,999 .....................: 2 (D) 1 (D) :: Other hogs and pigs ..................: 1,179 103,571 1,119 132,619 5,000 or more ......................: 2 (D) 5 120,140 :: Farms with- : : :: 1 to 24 ..........................: 1,031 5,215 982 4,651 Hogs and pigs used or to be : :: 25 to 49 .........................: 58 1,937 60 (D) used for breeding ...................: 732 8,322 654 21,364 :: 50 to 99 .........................: 46 2,936 31 2,023 Farms with- : :: 100 to 199 .......................: 24 2,930 20 2,700 1 to 24 ..........................: 671 3,395 578 2,669 :: 200 to 499 .......................: 9 2,730 15 4,854 25 to 49 .........................: 32 1,115 34 1,116 :: 500 to 999 .......................: 3 2,010 1 (D) 50 to 99 .........................: 18 1,032 24 1,504 :: 1,000 or more ....................: 8 85,813 10 115,531 ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Table 20. Hogs and Pigs - Sales: 2012 and 2007 [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ : 2012 : 2007 :------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Hogs and pigs : Farms : Number : Value ($1,000) : Farms : Number : Value ($1,000) ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Total hogs and pigs sold ...............: 1,163 290,488 51,526 1,267 296,378 34,188 Farms with sales of- : 1 to 24 ............................: 918 5,332 885 989 5,096 562 25 to 49 ...........................: 78 2,651 375 89 2,995 217 50 to 99 ...........................: 48 3,376 571 82 5,464 456 100 to 199 .........................: 61 7,695 947 34 4,169 (D) 200 to 499 .........................: 28 9,076 1,066 42 12,002 1,160 500 to 999 .........................: 16 12,044 2,420 9 5,369 315 1,000 to 1,999 .....................: 3 3,600 287 2 (D) (D) 2,000 to 4,999 .....................: 4 12,501 1,720 10 (D) 2,744 5,000 or more ......................: 7 234,213 43,256 10 230,062 27,943 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Table 21. Hogs and Pigs Herd Size by Inventory and Sales: 2012 [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ : Hogs and pigs inventory : :-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------: : Total :Used or to be used for breeding: Other hogs and pigs : Hogs and pigs sales :--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : : : : : : : : : Value Herd size : Farms : Number : Farms : Number : Farms : Number : Farms : Number : ($1,000) ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Total inventory ..................................: 1,437 111,893 732 8,322 1,179 103,571 958 285,407 50,507 Farms with- : 1 to 24 ......................................: 1,228 6,370 553 2,067 980 4,303 765 13,730 2,236 25 to 49 .....................................: 95 3,117 78 947 89 2,170 87 5,550 538 50 to 99 .....................................: 52 3,446 48 861 50 2,585 51 5,745 1,117 100 to 199 ...................................: 39 5,041 35 1,491 37 3,550 32 49,878 9,405 200 to 499 ...................................: 11 3,626 10 886 11 2,740 11 6,990 1,291 500 to 999 ...................................: 4 2,570 3 160 4 2,410 4 (D) 404 1,000 to 1,999 ...............................: 4 (D) 3 (D) 4 (D) 4 21,635 (D) 2,000 to 4,999 ...............................: 2 (D) 1 (D) 2 (D) 2 (D) (D) 5,000 or more ................................: 2 (D) 1 (D) 2 (D) 2 (D) (D) No hogs or pigs on : Dec. 31, 2012 ...................................: (X) (X) (X) (X) (X) (X) 205 5,081 1,018 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Table 22. Hogs and Pigs - Inventory and Sales by Number Sold Per Farm: 2012 [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ : Hogs and pigs inventory : :-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------: : Total :Used or to be used for breeding: Other hogs and pigs : Hogs and pigs sales :--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : : : : : : : : : Value Hogs and pigs : Farms : Number : Farms : Number : Farms : Number : Farms : Number : ($1,000) ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Total sold .......................................: 958 109,183 552 7,323 801 101,860 1,163 290,488 51,526 Farms with sales of- : 1 to 24 ......................................: 733 5,591 360 1,468 604 4,123 918 5,332 885 25 to 49 .....................................: 76 2,202 64 612 61 1,590 78 2,651 375 50 to 99 .....................................: 44 1,909 42 517 38 1,392 48 3,376 571 100 to 199 ...................................: 53 3,814 52 1,336 48 2,478 61 7,695 947 200 to 499 ...................................: 26 4,461 22 869 24 3,592 28 9,076 1,066 500 to 999 ...................................: 12 1,393 5 261 12 1,132 16 12,044 2,420 1,000 to 1,999 ...............................: 3 (D) 1 (D) 3 (D) 3 3,600 287 2,000 to 4,999 ...............................: 4 4,180 3 610 4 3,570 4 12,501 1,720 5,000 or more ................................: 7 (D) 3 (D) 7 (D) 7 234,213 43,256 None sold ........................................: 479 2,710 180 999 378 1,711 (X) (X) (X) ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Table 23. Hogs and Pigs - Inventory by Type of Producer: 2012 [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 ........................: 1,411 111,514 24 (D) 2 (D) Farms with- : 1 to 24 ............................: 1,204 (D) 24 (D) - - 25 to 49 ...........................: 95 3,117 - - - - 50 to 99 ...........................: 52 3,446 - - - - 100 to 199 .........................: 37 (D) - - 2 (D) 200 to 499 .........................: 11 3,626 - - - - 500 to 999 .........................: 4 2,570 - - - - 1,000 to 1,999 .....................: 4 (D) - - - - 2,000 to 4,999 .....................: 2 (D) - - - - 5,000 or more ......................: 2 (D) - - - - ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Table 24. Hogs and Pigs - Number Sold by Type of Producer: 2012 [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 ...............: 1,138 246,287 23 (D) 2 (D) Farms with- : 1 to 24 ............................: 898 5,251 20 81 - - 25 to 49 ...........................: 75 (D) 3 (D) - - 50 to 99 ...........................: 48 3,376 - - - - 100 to 199 .........................: 61 7,695 - - - - 200 to 499 .........................: 28 9,076 - - - - 500 to 999 .........................: 16 12,044 - - - - 1,000 to 1,999 .....................: 3 3,600 - - - - 2,000 to 4,999 .....................: 4 12,501 - - - - 5,000 or more ......................: 5 (D) - - 2 (D) ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Table 25. Hogs and Pigs - Inventory by Type of Operation: 2012 [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 ....................: 191 6,614 399 89,694 373 6,583 164 6,171 14 69 296 2,762 Farms with- : 1 to 24 ........................: 157 1,332 320 1,612 358 1,655 112 801 14 69 267 901 25 to 49 .......................: 21 665 31 971 5 137 25 929 - - 13 415 50 to 99 .......................: 3 188 20 1,519 5 322 18 1,029 - - 6 388 100 to 199 .....................: 9 (D) 13 1,712 2 (D) 5 (D) - - 10 1,058 200 to 499 .....................: - - 8 (D) 1 (D) 2 (D) - - - - 500 to 999 .....................: - - 3 (D) - - 1 (D) - - - - 1,000 to 1,999 .................: - - 2 (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) - - - - 2,000 to 4,999 .................: 1 (D) - - 1 (D) - - - - - - 5,000 or more ..................: - - 2 (D) - - - - - - - - ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Table 26. Hogs and Pigs - Number Sold by Type of Operation: 2012 [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 ...........: 165 19,459 331 188,131 346 62,162 150 16,996 6 60 165 3,680 Farms with- : 1 to 24 ........................: 116 1,171 259 1,404 309 1,398 87 679 6 60 141 620 25 to 49 .......................: 21 740 27 897 10 362 10 326 - - 10 326 50 to 99 .......................: 13 827 6 497 6 435 18 1,330 - - 5 287 100 to 199 .....................: 11 (D) 13 1,480 8 (D) 27 3,501 - - 2 (D) 200 to 499 .....................: 3 (D) 12 3,855 3 770 3 800 - - 7 (D) 500 to 999 .....................: - - 8 5,684 6 (D) 2 (D) - - - - 1,000 to 1,999 .................: - - 1 (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) - - - - 2,000 to 4,999 .................: - - 2 (D) - - 2 (D) - - - - 5,000 or more ..................: 1 (D) 3 (D) 3 52,000 - - - - - - ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Table 27. Sheep and Lambs - Inventory, Wool Production, and Number Sold: 2012 and 2007 [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : 2012 : 2007 :: : 2012 : 2007 :---------------------------------------------:: :--------------------------------------------- Item : Farms : Number : Farms : Number :: Item : Farms : Number : Farms : Number ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Sheep and lambs inventory ..............: 4,224 668,517 4,063 596,163 :: Sheep and lambs inventory - Con. : Farms with- : :: : 1 to 24 ............................: 2,932 25,398 2,893 26,692 :: Ewes 1 year old or older .............: 3,222 306,987 3,413 286,544 25 to 99 ...........................: 889 40,489 844 38,224 :: : 100 to 299 .........................: 253 39,733 195 29,644 :: : 300 to 999 .........................: 63 32,549 53 26,839 :: Wool production (pounds) ...............: 3,362 3,500,611 1,841 2,992,710 1,000 to 2,499 .....................: 26 42,013 19 30,775 :: : 2,500 to 4,999 .....................: 19 76,955 30 108,866 :: Sheep and lambs sold ...................: 2,593 440,092 2,466 380,852 5,000 or more ......................: 42 411,380 29 335,123 :: : ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Table 28. Sheep and Lambs - Inventory, Wool Production, and Sales by Size of Flock: 2012 [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : Sheep and lambs inventory : : :-----------------------------------------------------------: : : Total : Ewes 1 year old or older : Wool production : Sheep and lambs sold :----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : : : : : : : Value : : : Value Sheep and lambs inventory : Farms : Number : Farms : Number : Farms : Pounds : ($1,000) : Farms : Number : ($1,000) ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Total ..................................: 4,224 668,517 3,222 306,987 3,229 3,461,488 2,716 2,442 433,933 83,590 Farms with inventory of- : 1 to 24 ............................: 2,932 25,398 2,069 13,295 2,226 149,926 19 1,297 9,465 1,599 25 to 99 ...........................: 889 40,489 783 22,548 660 199,519 64 742 19,508 3,547 100 to 299 .........................: 253 39,733 231 22,048 206 194,528 139 253 40,039 6,602 300 to 999 .........................: 63 32,549 61 18,032 52 145,598 132 63 20,754 3,196 1,000 to 2,499 .....................: 26 42,013 24 22,570 24 219,832 155 26 23,318 4,578 2,500 to 4,999 .....................: 19 76,955 16 32,244 19 381,746 361 19 40,938 8,789 5,000 or more ......................: 42 411,380 38 176,250 42 2,170,339 1,847 42 279,911 55,278 : No sheep and lambs as of : Dec. 31, 2012 .........................: (X) (X) (X) (X) 133 39,123 8 151 6,159 1,227 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Table 29. Ewes 1 Year Old or Older - Inventory, Wool Production, and Sales by Size of Ewe Flock: 2012 [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : Sheep and lambs inventory : : :-----------------------------------------------------------: : : Total : Ewes 1 year old or older : Wool production : Sheep and lambs sold :----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : : : : : : : Value : : : Value Ewes 1 year old or older inventory : Farms : Number : Farms : Number : Farms : Pounds : ($1,000) : Farms : Number : ($1,000) ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Total ..................................: 3,222 568,644 3,222 306,987 2,373 2,896,179 2,281 2,057 318,257 57,654 Farms with inventory of- : 1 to 24 ............................: 2,423 33,806 2,423 18,784 1,737 173,759 34 1,321 12,899 2,198 25 to 99 ...........................: 549 39,718 549 24,048 413 173,070 76 486 22,659 3,928 100 to 199 .........................: 128 26,680 128 17,060 106 110,797 106 128 16,882 2,616 200 to 499 .........................: 36 22,679 36 9,979 34 129,236 93 36 18,072 2,868 500 to 999 .........................: 26 27,714 26 16,992 23 106,450 95 26 12,419 2,192 1,000 to 2,499 .....................: 23 87,841 23 43,507 23 405,198 257 23 50,130 11,465 2,500 to 4,999 .....................: 26 185,316 26 93,017 26 878,763 922 26 88,996 15,213 5,000 or more ......................: 11 144,890 11 83,600 11 918,906 698 11 96,200 17,175 : No ewes 1 year old or older as of : Dec. 31, 2012 .........................: 1,002 99,873 (X) (X) 989 604,432 443 536 121,835 27,162 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Table 30. Goats, Kids, and Mohair - Inventory, Mohair Production, and Sales: 2012 and 2007 [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : Inventory : Sales :----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : 2012 : 2007 : 2012 : 2007 :----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : : : : : : : Value : : Item : Farms : Number : Farms : Number : Farms : Number :($1,000) : Farms : Number ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Goats, all .............................: 4,474 140,042 4,985 130,823 2,133 62,844 8,539 1,898 42,270 Angora goats and kids ................: 314 3,219 262 3,400 60 3,100 689 78 641 Milk goats and kids ..................: 1,416 43,252 1,402 39,198 643 14,134 2,571 494 7,255 Meat goats and other goats and kids ..: 3,330 93,571 4,016 88,225 1,611 45,610 5,279 1,531 34,374 : Mohair clipped1/ .................pounds: (X) (X) (X) (X) 103 7,106 9 119 19,567 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1/2007 data for pounds sold are for farms with production, not necessarily sold. Table 31. Equine - Inventory and Sales: 2012 [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 ................: 14,932 142,555 (X) :: Owned horses and ponies (see text) .....: 2,959 10,452 62,000 Farms with- : :: Farms by number sold- : 1 to 24 ............................: 13,875 81,329 (X) :: 1 to 24 ............................: 2,938 9,420 50,130 25 to 49 ...........................: 699 22,651 (X) :: 25 to 49 ...........................: 14 504 6,911 50 to 99 ...........................: 241 15,951 (X) :: 50 to 99 ...........................: 5 (D) (D) 100 or more ........................: 117 22,624 (X) :: 100 or more ........................: 2 (D) (D) : :: : Owned horses and ponies (see text) ...: 14,353 107,774 (X) :: Total mules, burros, and donkeys .......: 150 461 241 Farms with- : :: Farms by number sold- : 1 to 24 ..........................: 13,757 75,010 (X) :: 1 to 24 ............................: 150 461 241 25 to 49 .........................: 415 13,062 (X) :: 25 to 49 ...........................: - - - 50 to 99 .........................: 125 7,894 (X) :: 50 or more .........................: - - - 100 or more ......................: 56 11,808 (X) :: : : :: : Total mules, burros, and donkeys .......: 2,102 6,698 (X) :: : Farms with- : :: : 1 to 24 ............................: 2,080 6,001 (X) :: : 25 to 49 ...........................: 22 697 (X) :: : 50 or more .........................: - - (X) :: : ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Table 32. Poultry - Inventory and Number Sold: 2012 and 2007 [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : 2012 : 2007 :: : 2012 : 2007 :---------------------------------------------------------:: :--------------------------------------------------------- Item : Farms : Number : Farms : Number :: Item : Farms : Number : Farms : Number --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- INVENTORY : :: NUMBER SOLD - Con. : : :: : Layers (see text) .................: 6,744 19,000,779 5,098 21,091,629 :: Pullets for laying : Farms with inventory of- : :: flock replacement ................: 86 3,508,788 84 3,855,640 1 to 49 .......................: 6,069 87,898 4,553 61,148 :: Farms by number sold- : 50 to 99 ......................: 339 21,176 265 16,183 :: 1 to 1,999 ....................: 70 6,040 68 10,448 100 to 399 ....................: 245 39,795 159 27,267 :: 2,000 to 15,999 ...............: 6 53,646 4 28,500 400 to 3,199 ..................: 39 38,972 48 49,040 :: 16,000 to 29,999 ..............: - - 1 (D) 3,200 to 9,999 ................: 4 25,700 4 18,428 :: 30,000 to 59,999 ..............: 2 (D) 2 (D) 10,000 to 19,999 ..............: 4 63,200 9 130,932 :: 60,000 to 99,999 ..............: 2 (D) 1 (D) 20,000 to 49,999 ..............: 5 162,000 15 520,200 :: 100,000 or more ...............: 6 3,225,800 8 3,628,692 50,000 to 99,999 ..............: 8 535,830 8 566,000 :: : 100,000 or more ...............: 31 18,026,208 37 19,702,431 :: Broilers and other meat-type : : :: chickens .........................: 421 273,277,272 229 280,512,754 Pullets for laying : :: Farms by number sold- : flock replacement ................: 873 4,633,558 724 4,613,085 :: 1 to 1,999 ....................: 336 45,293 153 12,547 : :: 2,000 to 15,999 ...............: 18 101,500 3 14,200 : :: 16,000 to 29,999 ..............: 5 113,402 2 (D) Broilers and other meat-type : :: 30,000 to 59,999 ..............: 3 119,000 - - chickens .........................: 829 42,268,482 374 44,384,231 :: 60,000 to 99,999 ..............: - - 7 606,000 : :: 100,000 to 199,999 ............: 18 2,706,000 15 2,113,000 Turkeys (see text) ................: 682 4,532,307 469 6,703,230 :: 200,000 to 299,999 ............: 4 895,000 3 (D) : :: 300,000 to 499,999 ............: 10 3,822,710 11 4,299,560 Chukars............................: 30 98,146 (NA) (NA) :: 500,000 or more ...............: 27 265,474,367 35 272,737,447 : :: : Ducks .............................: 599 1,399,187 850 802,076 :: Turkeys (see text) ................: 302 15,384,675 218 16,151,754 : :: Farms by number sold- : Emus ..............................: 141 1,670 243 1,770 :: 1 to 1,999 ....................: 264 (D) 144 3,779 : :: 2,000 to 7,999 ................: - - 2 (D) Geese .............................: 355 7,079 672 8,084 :: 8,000 to 15,999 ...............: 5 58,134 2 (D) : :: 16,000 to 29,999 ..............: - - 12 269,105 Guineas ...........................: 221 3,085 (NA) (NA) :: 30,000 to 59,999 ..............: 1 (D) 4 183,200 : :: 60,000 to 99,999 ..............: 6 474,011 9 671,017 Hungarian partridge ...............: - - (NA) (NA) :: 100,000 or more ...............: 26 14,796,246 45 14,988,229 : :: : Ostriches .........................: 23 142 74 1,860 :: Chukars ...........................: 27 264,422 (NA) (NA) : :: : Peacocks or peahens ...............: 179 1,422 (NA) (NA) :: Ducks .............................: 129 3,468,262 160 6,222,352 : :: : Pheasants .........................: 94 255,694 183 217,584 :: Emus ..............................: 8 76 40 410 : :: : Pigeons or squabs .................: 177 170,461 326 170,473 :: Geese .............................: 71 (D) 76 1,844 : :: : Quail .............................: 117 392,894 152 261,032 :: Guineas ...........................: 45 1,418 (NA) (NA) : :: : Rheas .............................: 9 40 (NA) (NA) :: Hungarian partridge ...............: - - (NA) (NA) : :: : Roosters ..........................: 344 12,461 (NA) (NA) :: Ostriches .........................: 2 (D) 13 569 : :: : Other poultry (see text) ..........: 102 47,293 969 149,888 :: Peacocks or peahens ...............: 29 181 (NA) (NA) : :: : : :: Pheasants .........................: 49 432,478 74 532,765 NUMBER SOLD : :: : : :: Pigeons or squabs .................: 90 523,461 126 657,592 Layers (see text) .................: 831 8,195,242 667 8,786,250 :: : Farms by number sold- : :: Quail .............................: 54 576,039 44 531,423 1 to 99 .......................: 706 12,505 534 (D) :: : 100 to 399 ....................: 58 (D) 55 10,151 :: Rheas .............................: 5 22 (NA) (NA) 400 to 3,199 ..................: 26 22,504 32 32,720 :: : 3,200 to 9,999 ................: 5 35,700 5 27,320 :: Roosters ..........................: 65 9,321 (NA) (NA) 10,000 to 19,999 ..............: 7 95,495 2 (D) :: : 20,000 to 49,999 ..............: 1 (D) 9 269,357 :: Other poultry (see text) ..........: 33 (D) 187 401,313 50,000 to 99,999 ..............: 5 351,000 7 489,529 :: : 100,000 or more ...............: 23 7,637,343 23 7,919,542 :: Poultry hatched (see text) ........: 1,146 291,277,897 853 357,300,976 --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Table 33. Aquaculture Sales: 2012 and 2007 [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : 2012 : 2007 :: : 2012 : 2007 :---------------------------------------------:: :--------------------------------------------- : : Value : : Value :: : : Value : : Value Item : Farms : ($1,000) : Farms : ($1,000) :: Item : Farms : ($1,000) : Farms : ($1,000) ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Catfish.................................: 60 10,593 58 12,529 :: Mollusks................................: 27 17,369 23 11,724 : :: : Trout...................................: 49 17,749 43 17,913 :: Ornamental fish.........................: 46 5,302 55 13,415 : :: : Other food fish (see text)..............: 49 28,218 32 20,200 :: Sport or game fish......................: 8 4,937 27 3,871 : :: : Baitfish................................: 6 (D) 10 (D) :: Other aquaculture products (see text)...: 36 18,709 20 13,835 : :: : Crustaceans.............................: 1 (D) 4 (D) :: : ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Table 34. Other Animals and Animal Products - Inventory: 2012 and 2007 [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : 2012 : 2007 :: : 2012 : 2007 :---------------------------------------------:: :--------------------------------------------- Item : Farms : Number : Farms : Number :: Item : Farms : Number : Farms : Number ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Colonies of bees .......................: 1,890 945,589 1,155 655,817 :: Llamas .................................: 763 3,824 1,386 6,868 : :: : Bison ..................................: 87 1,465 168 2,441 :: Mink, live .............................: - - (NA) (NA) : :: : Deer in captivity ......................: 25 663 27 1,339 :: Rabbits, live ..........................: 378 20,869 (NA) (NA) : :: : Elk in captivity .......................: - - - - :: Other livestock (see text) .............: 151 (X) 598 (X) : :: : Alpacas ................................: 468 7,229 466 7,801 :: : ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Table 35. Other Animals and Animal Products - Sales: 2012 and 2007 [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : 2012 : 2007 :-------------------------------------------------------------------------- : : : Value : : Item : Farms : Number : ($1,000) : Farms : Number ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Honey collected (pounds) (see text)1/ ..: 991 12,088,653 20,485 573 15,059,214 Milk from sheep and goats ..............: 284 (NA) 12,048 (NA) (NA) Bison ..................................: 18 195 466 38 433 Deer in captivity ......................: 6 66 47 15 324 Elk in captivity .......................: - - - - - Alpacas ................................: 110 588 1,147 126 638 Llamas .................................: 57 223 184 154 557 Mink, live (see text) ..................: - - - (NA) (NA) Rabbits, live (see text) ...............: 149 20,777 414 (NA) (NA) Other livestock (see text) .............: 71 (X) 29,275 167 (X) Other livestock products1/ .............: 702 (X) 15,290 368 (X) ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1/Data are for farms with production, not necessarily sold. Table 36. Specified Crops Harvested - Yield per Acre Irrigated and Nonirrigated: 2012 [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) .............: 128 43,253 84.4 16 1,566 2,256 42.2 120 34,879 43.0 Corn for grain (bushels) ...............: 719 172,686 177.0 14 3,177 4,809 169.1 - - - Corn for silage or greenchop (tons) ....: 1,719 440,116 25.8 83 21,782 13,108 26.3 93 12,564 24.0 Cotton, all (bales) ....................: 630 367,766 3.3 - - - - - - - Upland cotton (bales) ................: 404 142,094 3.5 - - - - - - - Pima cotton (bales) ..................: 341 225,672 3.1 - - - - - - - Dry edible beans, excluding limas (cwt) : 263 35,981 24.7 6 885 570 19.0 39 2,075 18.3 Oats for grain (bushels) ...............: 137 15,700 104.5 8 201 343 86.3 95 8,821 63.4 Peanuts for nuts (pounds) ..............: 15 27 3,114.6 - - - - - - - Rice (cwt) .............................: 1,392 561,968 83.1 - - - - - - - Sorghum for grain (bushels) ............: 59 10,245 87.5 3 752 19 123.2 12 2,892 94.3 Soybeans for beans (bushels) ...........: 1 (D) (D) - - - - 1 (D) (D) Sugarbeets for sugar (tons) ............: 55 25,819 43.5 3 748 626 41.2 - - - Sugarcane for sugar (tons) .............: - - - - - - - - - - Tobacco (pounds) .......................: - - - - - - - - - - Wheat for grain, all (bushels) .........: 1,060 365,959 95.4 63 16,999 21,593 76.7 380 87,295 58.1 Winter wheat for grain (bushels) .....: 645 201,357 92.8 49 13,523 14,440 81.5 326 86,789 58.5 Durum wheat for grain (bushels) ......: 373 (D) (D) 2 (D) (D) (D) - - - Other Spring wheat for : grain (bushels) .....................: 109 32,913 90.7 5 266 (D) (D) 65 (D) (D) : Forage - land used for all hay and all : haylage, grass silage, and greenchop : (tons, dry equivalent) (see text) .....: 4,591 1,087,197 (X) 907 259,469 133,658 (X) 2,405 189,703 (X) Alfalfa hay (tons, dry) ................: 2,862 779,751 6.5 173 52,107 23,054 6.4 208 19,225 3.8 Small grain hay (tons, dry) ............: 1,293 184,595 4.5 266 15,082 23,351 2.6 1,735 147,667 2.1 Tame hay other than alfalfa, small : grain, and wild hay (tons, dry) .......: 1,104 135,897 4.7 113 19,157 8,800 3.2 482 48,384 2.0 Wild hay (tons, dry) ...................: 175 21,200 2.1 27 727 1,532 1.4 353 21,671 1.4 Haylage or greenchop from alfalfa or : alfalfa mixtures (tons, green) ........: 339 74,345 6.9 18 1,961 586 6.1 45 4,681 5.3 All other haylage, grass silage, : and greenchop (tons, green) ...........: 707 161,001 14.2 52 9,253 4,843 10.9 217 24,760 11.2 : Land in vegetables (see text) ..........: 6,053 (D) (X) 2 (D) (D) (X) - - (X) Land in orchards (see text) ............: 32,895 3,008,946 (X) 1,685 63,299 7,808 (X) 3,518 58,890 (X) Land in berries (see text) .............: 1,985 52,626 (X) - - - (X) - - (X) ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Table 37. Specified Crops by Acres Harvested: 2012 and 2007 [Totals may not add due to rounding. For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : 2012 : 2007 :----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : : : : Irrigated land : : : : Irrigated land : : : :-----------------------: : : :---------------------- Crop : Farms : Acres : Quantity : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Quantity : Farms : Acres ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- FIELD CROPS : : Barley for grain (bushels) ...............................: 264 81,954 5,312,595 144 44,819 161 44,125 2,872,476 111 23,999 1 to 14 acres ..........................................: 48 263 10,436 29 92 11 42 1,947 5 11 15 to 24 acres .........................................: 12 246 12,268 3 57 11 197 12,216 9 153 25 to 49 acres .........................................: 37 1,316 94,482 18 628 14 495 38,591 10 340 50 to 99 acres .........................................: 22 1,377 95,630 13 782 40 2,815 223,778 27 1,817 100 to 249 acres .......................................: 68 9,999 703,774 43 5,579 47 7,076 607,219 34 4,966 250 to 499 acres .......................................: 30 10,596 718,262 12 4,163 13 4,553 407,542 10 3,186 500 to 999 acres .......................................: 26 16,826 844,647 11 6,755 13 9,541 589,252 10 6,377 1,000 acres or more ....................................: 21 41,331 2,833,096 15 26,763 12 19,406 991,931 6 7,149 : Canola (pounds) ..........................................: 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) 4 16 24,200 4 16 : Corn for grain (bushels) .................................: 733 180,672 31,922,610 733 175,863 606 189,965 34,602,626 606 189,965 1 to 14 acres ..........................................: 129 419 23,073 129 419 40 186 21,893 40 186 15 to 24 acres .........................................: 34 631 99,092 34 631 14 275 37,144 14 275 25 to 49 acres .........................................: 79 2,884 496,418 79 2,884 48 1,689 269,313 48 1,689 50 to 99 acres .........................................: 132 9,248 1,582,734 132 9,248 104 7,229 1,296,601 104 7,229 100 to 249 acres .......................................: 152 23,947 4,522,322 152 23,869 176 27,670 5,200,692 176 27,670 250 to 499 acres .......................................: 103 35,168 6,892,883 103 33,711 114 38,711 7,045,659 114 38,711 500 to 999 acres .......................................: 63 40,305 7,026,119 63 39,825 80 55,395 9,833,138 80 55,395 1,000 acres or more ....................................: 41 68,070 11,279,969 41 65,276 30 58,810 10,898,186 30 58,810 1,000 to 1,999 acres .................................: 33 42,855 7,209,113 33 42,580 23 27,039 5,382,074 23 27,039 2,000 to 2,999 acres .................................: 5 11,162 1,742,456 5 8,643 4 8,339 1,525,770 4 8,339 3,000 to 4,999 acres .................................: 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) - - - - - 5,000 acres or more ..................................: 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) 3 23,432 3,990,342 3 23,432 : Corn for silage or greenchop (tons) ......................: 1,895 487,570 12,575,973 1,802 461,898 1,975 460,614 12,019,578 1,975 460,514 1 to 14 acres ..........................................: 120 836 19,057 113 791 86 722 17,590 86 722 15 to 24 acres .........................................: 129 2,428 61,894 114 (D) 141 2,585 63,175 141 2,585 25 to 49 acres .........................................: 194 6,879 171,984 186 6,597 218 7,815 203,235 218 7,815 50 to 99 acres .........................................: 344 24,493 615,353 330 23,382 361 25,080 654,933 361 25,080 100 to 249 acres .......................................: 512 81,380 2,053,171 479 75,798 576 91,244 2,428,210 576 91,174 250 to 499 acres .......................................: 329 114,433 2,978,364 315 106,294 355 122,330 3,153,497 355 122,300 500 to 999 acres .......................................: 180 120,993 3,099,591 178 (D) 180 118,042 3,117,634 180 118,042 1,000 acres or more ....................................: 87 136,128 3,576,559 87 132,634 58 92,796 2,381,304 58 92,796 : Cotton, all (bales) ......................................: 630 367,766 1,201,860 630 367,766 855 471,378 1,418,751 855 471,378 1 to 14 acres ..........................................: 16 109 342 16 109 22 240 604 22 240 15 to 24 acres .........................................: 15 298 1,004 15 298 7 142 435 7 142 25 to 49 acres .........................................: 35 1,272 3,973 35 1,272 40 1,410 3,881 40 1,410 50 to 99 acres .........................................: 67 4,785 15,192 67 4,785 107 8,088 23,526 107 8,088 100 to 249 acres .......................................: 180 29,154 96,969 180 29,154 232 39,887 125,826 232 39,887 250 to 499 acres .......................................: 153 54,715 177,949 153 54,715 197 73,132 229,280 197 73,132 500 to 999 acres .......................................: 90 61,083 206,856 90 61,083 170 119,867 361,711 170 119,867 1,000 acres or more ....................................: 74 216,350 699,575 74 216,350 80 228,612 673,488 80 228,612 1,000 to 1,999 acres .................................: 55 71,023 244,539 55 71,023 62 83,535 243,823 62 83,535 2,000 to 2,999 acres .................................: 7 16,971 59,245 7 16,971 8 19,588 51,886 8 19,588 3,000 to 4,999 acres .................................: 6 22,268 80,272 6 22,268 5 17,066 54,663 5 17,066 5,000 acres or more ..................................: 6 106,088 315,519 6 106,088 5 108,423 323,116 5 108,423 : Upland cotton (bales) ..................................: 404 142,094 499,302 404 142,094 588 211,990 677,794 588 211,990 1 to 14 acres ........................................: 15 101 313 15 101 14 156 371 14 156 15 to 24 acres .......................................: 15 300 1,112 15 300 6 122 375 6 122 25 to 49 acres .......................................: 28 1,000 3,291 28 1,000 40 1,431 3,971 40 1,431 50 to 99 acres .......................................: 59 4,262 14,371 59 4,262 84 6,250 18,644 84 6,250 100 to 249 acres .....................................: 133 21,500 74,945 133 21,500 178 29,653 97,250 178 29,653 250 to 499 acres .....................................: 90 32,399 106,333 90 32,399 148 53,467 171,565 148 53,467 500 to 999 acres .....................................: 36 24,696 86,697 36 24,696 86 60,155 192,335 86 60,155 1,000 acres or more ..................................: 28 57,836 212,240 28 57,836 32 60,756 193,283 32 60,756 1,000 to 1,999 acres ...............................: 18 24,081 88,805 18 24,081 24 30,249 96,437 24 30,249 2,000 to 2,999 acres ...............................: 6 (D) (D) 6 (D) 5 12,080 33,556 5 12,080 3,000 to 4,999 acres ...............................: 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) 5,000 acres or more ................................: 3 16,031 (D) 3 16,031 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) : Pima cotton (bales) ....................................: 341 225,672 702,558 341 225,672 424 259,388 740,957 424 259,388 1 to 14 acres ........................................: 5 56 185 5 56 12 123 303 12 123 15 to 24 acres .......................................: 4 81 232 4 81 3 57 218 3 57 25 to 49 acres .......................................: 19 704 2,132 19 704 20 767 2,080 20 767 50 to 99 acres .......................................: 36 2,658 7,704 36 2,658 55 4,070 11,231 55 4,070 100 to 249 acres .....................................: 92 14,674 45,228 92 14,674 121 19,546 55,879 121 19,546 250 to 499 acres .....................................: 101 35,036 112,747 101 35,036 96 34,343 102,246 96 34,343 500 to 999 acres .....................................: 51 34,107 112,434 51 34,107 77 52,113 145,818 77 52,113 1,000 acres or more ..................................: 33 138,356 421,896 33 138,356 40 148,369 423,182 40 148,369 1,000 to 1,999 acres ...............................: 24 30,499 102,357 24 30,499 32 41,073 110,293 32 41,073 2,000 to 2,999 acres ...............................: 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) 3,000 to 4,999 acres ...............................: 4 (D) (D) 4 (D) 3 (D) (D) 3 (D) 5,000 acres or more ................................: 3 88,818 251,537 3 88,818 3 92,677 268,120 3 92,677 : Dry edible beans, excluding limas (cwt) ..................: 308 39,511 955,995 269 36,866 239 34,002 709,841 237 30,134 1 to 14 acres ..........................................: 78 (D) 3,188 55 110 46 178 3,441 44 170 15 to 24 acres .........................................: 17 328 (D) 15 (D) 7 126 2,936 7 (D) 25 to 49 acres .........................................: 36 1,317 28,679 31 1,121 37 (D) (D) 37 1,287 50 to 99 acres .........................................: 57 3,979 101,373 55 (D) 46 3,196 82,836 46 3,196 100 to 249 acres .......................................: 69 11,090 260,216 65 10,296 60 9,405 198,316 60 9,284 250 to 499 acres .......................................: 38 12,974 302,574 35 11,679 30 9,860 173,033 30 8,907 500 to 999 acres .......................................: 11 7,096 209,786 11 6,970 12 7,650 178,077 12 7,107 1,000 to 1,999 acres ...................................: 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) - - - - - 2,000 acres or more ....................................: - - - - - 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) : Dry edible peas (cwt) ....................................: 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) : Flaxseed (bushels) .......................................: 4 4 28 2 (D) - - - - - : Hops (pounds) ............................................: 5 7 6,058 5 7 - - - - - : Mint for oil, all (pounds of oil) ........................: 15 3,037 258,819 15 3,037 25 4,083 299,559 25 3,973 : Oats for grain (bushels) .................................: 240 25,065 2,246,420 145 15,901 299 25,993 2,595,144 198 18,141 1 to 14 acres ..........................................: 56 (D) (D) 29 162 56 (D) (D) 31 251 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 37. Specified Crops by Acres Harvested: 2012 and 2007 (continued) [Totals may not add due to rounding. For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : 2012 : 2007 :----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : : : : Irrigated land : : : : Irrigated land : : : :-----------------------: : : :---------------------- Crop : Farms : Acres : Quantity : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Quantity : Farms : Acres ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- FIELD CROPS - Con. : : Oats for grain (bushels) - Con. : : 15 to 24 acres .........................................: 30 578 49,119 16 315 47 902 62,600 24 397 25 to 49 acres .........................................: 37 1,287 133,802 23 795 49 1,793 160,305 33 1,255 50 to 99 acres .........................................: 38 2,539 258,227 26 1,718 68 4,627 469,963 55 3,728 100 to 249 acres .......................................: 54 7,961 703,480 33 4,824 55 7,710 797,805 41 5,948 250 to 499 acres .......................................: 16 5,600 475,154 12 3,766 17 5,210 502,578 10 2,870 500 to 999 acres .......................................: 7 4,106 395,357 5 (D) 5 2,807 288,688 2 (D) 1,000 acres or more ....................................: 2 (D) (D) 1 (D) 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) : Peanuts for nuts (pounds) ................................: 15 27 84,093 15 27 11 14 28,000 11 14 : Popcorn (pounds, shelled) ................................: 10 (D) 1,933,604 8 (D) 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) : Proso millet (bushels) ...................................: 2 (D) (D) 1 (D) - - - - - : Rice (cwt) ...............................................: 1,392 561,968 46,692,580 1,392 561,968 1,304 531,075 43,018,947 1,304 531,075 1 to 14 acres ..........................................: 25 172 15,154 25 172 6 39 3,528 6 39 15 to 24 acres .........................................: 24 488 38,026 24 488 11 225 19,495 11 225 25 to 49 acres .........................................: 82 3,030 245,106 82 3,030 52 1,807 154,218 52 1,807 50 to 99 acres .........................................: 150 11,126 930,779 150 11,126 110 7,996 654,066 110 7,996 100 to 249 acres .......................................: 385 65,195 5,435,216 385 65,195 339 58,327 4,605,501 339 58,327 250 to 499 acres .......................................: 366 127,233 10,488,975 366 127,233 433 148,183 12,030,905 433 148,183 500 to 999 acres .......................................: 257 173,871 14,148,241 257 173,871 267 175,327 14,247,469 267 175,327 1,000 acres or more ....................................: 103 180,853 15,391,083 103 180,853 86 139,171 11,303,765 86 139,171 1,000 to 1,999 acres .................................: 69 92,129 7,936,836 69 92,129 69 90,680 7,364,433 69 90,680 2,000 to 2,999 acres .................................: 23 52,658 4,532,129 23 52,658 11 28,320 2,190,923 11 28,320 3,000 to 4,999 acres .................................: 11 36,066 2,922,118 11 36,066 6 20,171 1,748,409 6 20,171 5,000 acres or more ..................................: - - - - - - - - - - : Rye for grain (bushels) ..................................: 19 1,794 46,991 4 (D) 14 427 13,992 1 (D) : Safflower (pounds) .......................................: 138 50,265 98,801,370 63 29,411 255 47,550 112,031,287 159 29,892 1 to 14 acres ..........................................: 10 59 54,908 5 18 8 48 66,500 3 (D) 15 to 24 acres .........................................: 4 70 96,938 1 (D) 6 102 237,600 2 (D) 25 to 49 acres .........................................: 18 676 1,128,258 13 482 19 (D) (D) 9 290 50 to 99 acres .........................................: 26 1,847 3,239,062 14 886 47 3,334 7,557,752 26 1,715 100 to 249 acres .......................................: 41 7,001 14,271,835 20 2,894 112 17,283 39,678,164 73 11,180 250 to 499 acres .......................................: 22 7,662 16,390,228 5 1,886 50 15,985 41,500,755 38 11,944 500 to 999 acres .......................................: 10 5,945 10,608,007 1 (D) 11 7,336 17,026,286 7 (D) 1,000 acres or more ....................................: 7 27,005 53,012,134 4 (D) 2 (D) (D) 1 (D) : Sorghum for grain (bushels) ..............................: 74 13,908 1,263,924 62 10,997 58 10,909 909,160 53 9,705 : Sorghum for silage or greenchop (tons) ...................: 239 41,953 634,648 217 38,324 195 30,085 536,162 189 29,457 : Soybeans for beans (bushels) .............................: 2 (D) (D) 1 (D) - - - - - : Sugarbeets for sugar (tons) ..............................: 58 27,193 1,179,753 58 26,567 155 42,984 1,539,394 155 42,984 1 to 14 acres ..........................................: 3 3 120 3 3 3 (D) (D) 3 (D) 15 to 24 acres .........................................: - - - - - 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) 25 to 49 acres .........................................: - - - - - 6 242 8,454 6 242 50 to 99 acres .........................................: 6 417 15,600 6 383 28 2,127 71,105 28 2,127 100 to 249 acres .......................................: 7 956 43,503 7 956 63 10,452 380,814 63 10,452 250 to 499 acres .......................................: 12 4,055 170,732 12 4,055 30 10,393 342,959 30 10,393 500 to 999 acres .......................................: 27 17,802 763,318 27 17,210 18 11,933 448,539 18 11,933 1,000 to 1,999 acres ...................................: 3 3,960 186,480 3 3,960 6 7,811 286,614 6 7,811 2,000 acres or more ....................................: - - - - - - - - - - : Sunflower seed, all (pounds) .............................: 197 49,749 68,792,639 152 34,815 111 27,913 29,776,645 98 23,937 1 to 14 acres ..........................................: 32 128 125,617 17 86 14 94 98,572 13 93 15 to 24 acres .........................................: 10 179 207,540 10 159 3 58 45,880 3 58 25 to 49 acres .........................................: 23 807 975,877 18 659 8 307 241,279 5 173 50 to 99 acres .........................................: 29 2,150 2,702,376 24 1,616 23 1,613 2,161,641 21 1,513 100 to 249 acres .......................................: 43 7,099 9,258,941 38 6,094 32 5,137 6,389,354 28 4,515 250 to 499 acres .......................................: 31 11,462 14,824,264 25 8,905 17 5,968 6,052,392 16 5,376 500 to 999 acres .......................................: 18 12,224 18,090,094 14 8,591 7 4,314 4,281,284 6 3,566 1,000 acres or more ....................................: 11 15,700 22,607,930 6 8,705 7 10,422 10,506,243 6 8,643 : Sunflower seed - oil varieties (pounds) ................: 163 46,521 64,652,781 127 33,303 76 24,481 25,580,856 67 21,023 1 to 14 acres ........................................: 15 (D) (D) 8 68 5 (D) (D) 5 (D) 15 to 24 acres .......................................: 8 (D) (D) 7 (D) 2 (D) (D) 1 (D) 25 to 49 acres .......................................: 11 389 427,428 8 (D) 4 164 116,232 2 (D) 50 to 99 acres .......................................: 27 1,990 2,518,876 22 1,456 12 899 1,263,941 12 899 100 to 249 acres .....................................: 49 8,390 11,295,617 41 6,715 25 4,208 5,197,637 22 3,691 250 to 499 acres .....................................: 27 10,239 13,329,712 22 7,682 15 5,132 5,019,591 14 4,832 500 to 999 acres .....................................: 15 9,589 14,267,641 13 (D) 6 3,574 3,421,284 5 2,826 1,000 acres or more ..................................: 11 15,700 22,607,930 6 8,705 7 10,422 10,506,243 6 8,643 : Sunflower seed - non-oil varieties (pounds) ............: 47 3,228 4,139,858 30 1,512 40 3,432 4,195,789 35 2,914 : Wheat for grain, all (bushels) ...........................: 1,503 491,846 42,955,324 1,123 382,958 1,191 354,165 30,224,394 1,000 300,284 1 to 14 acres ..........................................: 92 460 31,763 50 253 46 359 28,986 33 272 15 to 24 acres .........................................: 72 1,288 74,586 34 591 33 649 46,318 25 476 25 to 49 acres .........................................: 162 5,846 489,212 112 3,913 111 4,029 308,365 76 2,706 50 to 99 acres .........................................: 265 18,551 1,528,604 193 13,325 216 15,608 1,381,399 187 13,391 100 to 249 acres .......................................: 430 68,146 5,910,754 339 54,262 383 60,434 5,365,142 326 50,209 250 to 499 acres .......................................: 220 76,095 6,977,660 173 58,235 231 78,189 6,790,476 200 65,334 500 to 999 acres .......................................: 152 101,801 9,049,795 137 86,068 108 69,836 6,081,395 95 59,178 1,000 acres or more ....................................: 110 219,659 18,892,950 85 166,311 63 125,061 10,222,313 58 108,718 1,000 to 1,999 acres .................................: 69 91,578 7,722,574 54 69,024 39 50,820 4,391,015 38 45,632 2,000 to 2,999 acres .................................: 25 54,516 3,991,422 15 28,046 16 36,437 3,226,637 13 29,282 3,000 to 4,999 acres .................................: 12 46,038 4,442,306 12 41,714 7 (D) (D) 6 (D) 5,000 acres or more ..................................: 4 27,527 2,736,648 4 27,527 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) : Winter wheat for grain (bushels) .......................: 1,020 316,109 26,032,499 694 214,880 879 249,704 20,157,552 686 196,420 1 to 14 acres ........................................: 51 289 21,233 29 128 34 268 21,452 21 181 15 to 24 acres .......................................: 56 1,019 59,191 22 403 29 565 40,103 21 392 25 to 49 acres .......................................: 113 4,107 358,420 75 2,634 87 3,141 221,125 51 1,776 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 37. Specified Crops by Acres Harvested: 2012 and 2007 (continued) [Totals may not add due to rounding. For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : 2012 : 2007 :----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : : : : Irrigated land : : : : Irrigated land : : : :-----------------------: : : :---------------------- Crop : Farms : Acres : Quantity : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Quantity : Farms : Acres ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- FIELD CROPS - Con. : : Wheat for grain, all (bushels) - Con. : Winter wheat for grain (bushels) - Con. : : 50 to 99 acres .......................................: 190 13,302 1,057,580 124 8,467 160 11,659 981,435 130 9,382 100 to 249 acres .....................................: 295 45,094 3,775,303 209 32,031 274 43,425 3,748,686 216 33,157 250 to 499 acres .....................................: 155 52,580 4,759,769 116 37,202 175 57,697 4,729,897 144 44,867 500 to 999 acres .....................................: 94 61,822 5,249,433 81 48,640 77 50,012 4,204,503 65 40,071 1,000 acres or more ..................................: 66 137,896 10,751,570 38 85,375 43 82,937 6,210,351 38 66,594 1,000 to 1,999 acres ...............................: 35 46,711 3,073,540 19 23,884 27 34,866 2,970,171 26 29,678 2,000 to 2,999 acres ...............................: 20 41,987 2,895,806 8 16,617 10 (D) (D) 7 14,876 3,000 to 4,999 acres ...............................: 8 29,459 2,736,371 8 25,135 5 (D) (D) 4 (D) 5,000 acres or more ................................: 3 19,739 2,045,853 3 19,739 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) : Durum wheat for grain (bushels) ........................: 375 135,540 13,529,651 375 134,899 239 (D) 7,821,257 239 (D) 1 to 14 acres ........................................: 14 (D) (D) 14 (D) 6 (D) (D) 6 (D) 15 to 24 acres .......................................: 7 (D) (D) 7 (D) 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) 25 to 49 acres .......................................: 24 830 60,895 24 830 19 667 68,206 19 667 50 to 99 acres .......................................: 63 4,522 416,972 63 4,522 30 2,027 205,306 30 2,027 100 to 249 acres .....................................: 121 20,165 2,008,457 121 20,104 95 15,100 1,488,369 95 15,100 250 to 499 acres .....................................: 63 22,049 2,066,733 63 22,049 46 16,357 1,649,472 46 16,357 500 to 999 acres .....................................: 48 32,284 3,191,477 48 31,704 27 17,082 1,715,699 27 17,082 1,000 acres or more ..................................: 35 55,486 5,771,363 35 55,486 14 28,394 2,686,208 14 28,394 1,000 to 1,999 acres ...............................: 31 39,908 (D) 31 39,908 8 10,595 946,216 8 10,595 2,000 to 2,999 acres ...............................: 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) 4 (D) (D) 4 (D) 3,000 to 4,999 acres ...............................: 3 (D) 1,312,735 3 (D) 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) 5,000 acres or more ................................: - - - - - - - - - - : Other Spring wheat for grain (bushels) .................: 179 40,197 3,393,174 114 33,179 114 (D) 2,245,585 111 (D) : HAY, FORAGE, AND FIELD AND GRASS SEEDS : : Field and grass seed crops, all ..........................: 209 71,921 (X) 202 71,053 176 68,948 (X) 167 68,197 1 to 14 acres ..........................................: 27 149 (X) 27 149 5 21 (X) 4 20 15 to 24 acres .........................................: 11 200 (X) 10 (D) 9 165 (X) 7 125 25 to 49 acres .........................................: 13 493 (X) 11 (D) 17 604 (X) 15 537 50 to 99 acres .........................................: 30 2,038 (X) 29 (D) 24 1,666 (X) 22 1,546 100 to 249 acres .......................................: 56 9,367 (X) 54 (D) 59 9,342 (X) 57 9,099 250 to 499 acres .......................................: 35 12,429 (X) 34 (D) 28 9,855 (X) 28 9,855 500 to 999 acres .......................................: 19 13,148 (X) 19 13,148 13 9,468 (X) 13 9,468 1,000 to 1,999 acres ...................................: 13 17,969 (X) 13 17,969 14 18,319 (X) 14 18,039 2,000 acres or more ....................................: 5 16,128 (X) 5 16,128 7 19,508 (X) 7 19,508 : Alfalfa seed (pounds) ..................................: 144 39,927 24,688,177 144 39,927 114 36,625 19,083,458 114 36,625 1 to 14 acres ........................................: 15 50 28,039 15 50 3 15 9,000 3 15 15 to 24 acres .......................................: 6 115 29,600 6 115 7 125 85,600 7 125 25 to 49 acres .......................................: 9 355 118,200 9 355 13 473 298,284 13 473 50 to 99 acres .......................................: 28 1,954 962,048 28 1,954 15 1,064 460,697 15 1,064 100 to 249 acres .....................................: 45 7,429 5,126,112 45 7,429 33 4,966 2,727,425 33 4,966 250 to 499 acres .....................................: 20 6,830 5,518,257 20 6,830 27 8,887 4,679,452 27 8,887 500 to 999 acres .....................................: 18 12,366 6,503,940 18 12,366 8 5,713 2,282,760 8 5,713 1,000 acres or more ..................................: 3 10,828 6,401,981 3 10,828 8 15,382 8,540,240 8 15,382 : Fescue seed (pounds) ...................................: - - - - - 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) : Ryegrass seed (pounds) .................................: - - - - - 1 (D) (D) - - : Forage - land used for all hay and all : haylage, grass silage, and greenchop (tons, : dry equivalent) (see text) ..............................: 7,903 1,670,027 9,363,421 5,498 1,346,666 7,411 1,723,147 10,642,531 5,954 1,554,197 1 to 14 acres ..........................................: 1,725 12,704 33,123 969 6,595 1,375 10,363 33,339 964 6,922 15 to 24 acres .........................................: 896 16,537 49,935 506 8,802 819 15,207 53,436 569 10,059 25 to 49 acres .........................................: 1,113 38,416 121,430 652 21,310 1,069 37,041 144,951 783 25,500 50 to 99 acres .........................................: 1,161 80,072 327,865 833 53,415 1,096 74,905 361,125 858 57,035 100 to 249 acres .......................................: 1,435 219,922 1,101,569 1,132 161,808 1,398 216,103 1,179,485 1,206 178,246 250 to 499 acres .......................................: 728 251,794 1,417,060 621 197,772 781 271,404 1,667,112 720 241,301 500 to 999 acres .......................................: 487 325,905 1,890,886 445 265,157 512 352,436 2,292,487 496 323,243 1,000 acres or more ....................................: 358 724,677 4,421,553 340 631,807 361 745,688 4,910,595 358 711,891 1,000 to 1,999 acres .................................: 250 335,126 2,004,011 237 294,483 226 303,378 2,066,398 223 285,867 2,000 to 2,999 acres .................................: 55 128,512 803,806 52 113,811 74 175,846 1,145,980 74 167,576 3,000 to 4,999 acres .................................: 39 145,570 868,555 37 (D) 46 168,182 1,076,643 46 161,266 5,000 acres or more ..................................: 14 115,469 745,181 14 (D) 15 98,282 621,574 15 97,182 : Hay - All hay including alfalfa, other tame, : small grain, and wild (tons, dry) (see text) ............: 7,228 1,502,200 7,749,069 4,944 1,208,516 6,723 1,528,198 8,850,559 5,369 1,385,186 1 to 14 acres ..........................................: 1,636 12,147 31,053 897 6,178 1,284 9,794 30,404 888 6,464 15 to 24 acres .........................................: 816 15,047 41,212 452 7,803 760 14,112 46,991 519 9,108 25 to 49 acres .........................................: 1,047 36,327 110,118 601 19,880 1,008 34,939 125,443 732 23,904 50 to 99 acres .........................................: 1,052 73,306 273,919 750 48,434 986 67,539 299,098 767 50,500 100 to 249 acres .......................................: 1,294 197,902 922,289 1,016 146,316 1,241 191,019 978,475 1,078 158,872 250 to 499 acres .......................................: 642 225,071 1,116,757 545 174,375 685 237,824 1,391,600 635 212,492 500 to 999 acres .......................................: 414 276,415 1,456,350 374 224,314 434 298,161 1,804,407 425 274,666 1,000 acres or more ....................................: 327 665,985 3,797,371 309 581,216 325 674,810 4,174,141 325 649,180 1,000 to 1,999 acres .................................: 223 291,124 1,581,435 210 250,731 203 274,128 1,726,354 203 264,093 2,000 to 2,999 acres .................................: 52 120,693 746,957 49 (D) 65 153,613 911,143 65 148,372 3,000 to 4,999 acres .................................: 38 141,305 772,981 36 (D) 44 158,641 983,286 44 152,885 5,000 acres or more ..................................: 14 112,863 695,998 14 104,733 13 88,428 553,358 13 83,830 : Alfalfa hay (tons, dry) ................................: 3,243 874,137 5,607,210 3,035 831,858 3,587 986,982 7,057,014 3,488 963,086 1 to 14 acres ........................................: 373 2,706 12,509 336 2,352 396 3,208 17,544 367 2,956 15 to 24 acres .......................................: 251 4,708 24,239 227 4,246 293 5,477 31,680 276 5,131 25 to 49 acres .......................................: 423 14,984 72,105 378 13,223 474 16,825 99,650 448 15,858 50 to 99 acres .......................................: 527 36,614 199,243 485 33,202 560 38,918 255,207 553 38,226 100 to 249 acres .....................................: 778 120,551 748,449 742 113,410 807 126,561 883,764 796 122,789 250 to 499 acres .....................................: 421 146,758 928,899 400 138,299 515 177,818 1,252,446 510 172,532 500 to 999 acres .....................................: 282 190,190 1,267,324 279 182,620 333 225,321 1,628,046 329 218,378 1,000 acres or more ..................................: 188 357,626 2,354,442 188 344,506 209 392,854 2,888,677 209 387,216 1,000 to 1,999 acres ...............................: 137 178,634 1,139,399 137 172,081 148 198,957 1,503,742 148 195,475 2,000 to 2,999 acres ...............................: 29 66,939 485,950 29 65,450 36 82,876 588,396 36 81,420 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 37. Specified Crops by Acres Harvested: 2012 and 2007 (continued) [Totals may not add due to rounding. For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : 2012 : 2007 :----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : : : : Irrigated land : : : : Irrigated land : : : :-----------------------: : : :---------------------- Crop : Farms : Acres : Quantity : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Quantity : Farms : Acres ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- HAY, FORAGE, AND FIELD AND GRASS SEEDS - Con. : : Hay - All hay including alfalfa, other tame, : small grain, and wild (tons, dry) (see text) - Con. : Alfalfa hay (tons, dry) - Con. : : 3,000 to 4,999 acres ...............................: 12 42,244 331,217 12 42,216 19 63,864 474,409 19 63,864 5,000 acres or more ................................: 10 69,809 397,876 10 64,759 6 47,157 322,130 6 46,457 : Small grain hay (tons, dry) ............................: 3,294 370,695 1,242,459 1,559 199,677 2,488 252,097 652,287 1,477 181,178 1 to 14 acres ........................................: 836 6,407 14,612 297 2,043 537 4,019 8,925 268 1,982 15 to 24 acres .......................................: 441 8,145 17,703 169 2,841 383 7,192 16,438 207 3,596 25 to 49 acres .......................................: 587 20,112 50,081 267 8,586 469 16,199 36,507 271 8,536 50 to 99 acres .......................................: 515 35,141 97,820 276 16,994 447 29,253 70,397 267 16,142 100 to 249 acres .....................................: 574 83,618 260,414 348 46,793 413 60,530 161,169 272 38,148 250 to 499 acres .....................................: 196 67,961 202,383 113 35,732 151 51,158 147,320 109 35,284 500 to 999 acres .....................................: 98 66,147 217,220 60 33,621 61 40,289 102,029 56 34,633 1,000 acres or more ..................................: 47 83,164 382,226 29 53,067 27 43,457 109,502 27 42,857 : Other tame hay (tons, dry) .............................: 1,699 212,238 821,999 1,217 155,054 1,619 248,401 1,078,499 1,315 214,774 1 to 14 acres ........................................: 577 4,094 9,800 424 2,951 464 3,389 8,280 359 2,534 15 to 24 acres .......................................: 192 3,612 8,386 136 2,444 164 3,081 7,195 131 2,470 25 to 49 acres .......................................: 276 9,485 24,519 179 5,978 276 9,580 27,592 210 7,041 50 to 99 acres .......................................: 233 16,241 46,512 177 11,716 244 16,915 49,273 201 13,439 100 to 249 acres .....................................: 231 36,244 117,916 161 25,120 239 36,328 114,105 198 29,000 250 to 499 acres .....................................: 96 31,686 113,381 65 19,733 114 38,029 156,744 102 33,282 500 to 999 acres .....................................: 52 35,192 136,611 38 24,155 61 38,809 196,102 58 35,250 1,000 acres or more ..................................: 42 75,684 364,874 37 62,957 57 102,270 519,208 56 91,758 1,000 to 1,999 acres ...............................: 32 44,228 170,508 28 37,125 37 47,903 246,354 36 44,889 2,000 to 2,999 acres ...............................: 5 11,592 34,546 5 (D) 14 32,625 163,601 14 28,625 3,000 to 4,999 acres ...............................: 5 19,864 159,820 4 (D) 6 21,742 109,253 6 18,244 5,000 acres or more ................................: - - - - - - - - - - : Wild hay (tons, dry) ...................................: 555 45,130 77,401 202 21,927 455 40,718 62,759 188 26,148 1 to 14 acres ........................................: 209 1,324 2,369 67 364 153 1,051 1,531 70 (D) 15 to 24 acres .......................................: 96 1,787 3,165 31 434 80 1,476 2,231 27 409 25 to 49 acres .......................................: 80 2,710 4,244 25 747 72 2,510 3,502 21 647 50 to 99 acres .......................................: 78 5,316 7,351 26 1,752 72 4,619 8,551 20 1,177 100 to 249 acres .....................................: 60 8,281 11,336 31 4,110 52 7,190 13,555 31 4,396 250 to 499 acres .....................................: 19 6,332 11,069 13 4,482 14 4,839 6,398 10 3,325 500 to 999 acres .....................................: 5 2,993 4,669 3 (D) 4 2,805 3,926 1 (D) 1,000 acres or more ..................................: 8 16,387 33,198 6 (D) 8 16,228 23,065 8 15,228 1,000 to 1,999 acres ...............................: 5 6,887 14,446 5 5,645 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) 2,000 to 2,999 acres ...............................: 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) 6 (D) (D) 6 (D) 3,000 to 4,999 acres ...............................: 2 (D) (D) - - - - - - - 5,000 acres or more ................................: - - - - - - - - - - : All haylage, grass silage, and greenchop : (tons, green) ...........................................: 1,268 281,430 3,266,000 1,026 246,560 1,329 305,816 3,625,272 1,147 271,934 1 to 14 acres ..........................................: 131 812 5,163 99 579 116 729 4,511 91 562 15 to 24 acres .........................................: 125 2,295 20,690 83 1,529 90 1,698 16,330 68 1,254 25 to 49 acres .........................................: 135 4,829 46,585 98 3,226 131 4,617 48,561 110 3,828 50 to 99 acres .........................................: 228 15,434 160,877 181 11,954 231 15,657 169,379 198 13,188 100 to 249 acres .......................................: 316 49,285 529,619 259 39,204 382 59,643 653,013 336 51,775 250 to 499 acres .......................................: 183 63,104 764,071 163 54,334 212 73,145 836,128 191 65,928 500 to 999 acres .......................................: 98 66,677 847,848 94 62,770 125 81,596 964,904 116 74,898 1,000 acres or more ....................................: 52 78,994 891,147 49 72,964 42 68,731 932,446 37 60,501 : Haylage or greenchop from alfalfa or alfalfa : mixtures (tons, green) ................................: 402 81,573 556,353 357 76,306 373 82,812 544,721 343 78,944 1 to 14 acres ........................................: 35 187 1,085 28 (D) 27 185 1,410 24 182 15 to 24 acres .......................................: 34 661 5,379 26 503 24 464 2,705 17 326 25 to 49 acres .......................................: 37 1,325 9,834 30 1,078 42 1,419 10,414 39 1,339 50 to 99 acres .......................................: 71 4,748 29,004 65 4,289 65 4,320 29,947 60 3,990 100 to 249 acres .....................................: 112 17,131 111,654 99 14,811 118 18,636 116,245 110 17,013 250 to 499 acres .....................................: 77 26,935 171,372 74 25,660 54 19,656 114,118 52 19,077 500 to 999 acres .....................................: 25 17,272 136,219 24 (D) 36 23,954 187,654 34 22,839 1,000 acres or more ..................................: 11 13,314 91,806 11 13,314 7 14,178 82,228 7 14,178 : Other haylage, grass silage, and greenchop, : excluding corn and sorghum silage (tons, green) .......: 976 199,857 2,709,647 759 170,254 1,049 223,004 3,080,551 885 192,990 1 to 14 acres ........................................: 103 651 4,658 78 (D) 93 573 3,346 70 408 15 to 24 acres .......................................: 93 1,671 15,299 58 1,045 74 1,381 14,480 58 1,054 25 to 49 acres .......................................: 117 4,179 41,458 84 2,677 103 3,687 45,754 84 2,969 50 to 99 acres .......................................: 176 11,772 142,548 132 8,575 191 12,983 152,461 162 10,805 100 to 249 acres .....................................: 248 38,294 471,885 195 29,834 304 47,257 596,371 262 40,252 250 to 499 acres .....................................: 134 45,804 712,721 113 38,187 170 58,216 794,879 150 51,328 500 to 999 acres .....................................: 72 48,596 697,192 68 45,457 88 57,887 808,608 77 50,775 1,000 acres or more ..................................: 33 48,890 623,886 31 (D) 26 41,020 664,652 22 35,399 : OTHER SPECIFIED CROPS : : Land in vegetables (see text) ...........................: 6,055 985,735 (X) 6,055 985,731 3,868 969,013 (X) 3,868 968,965 0.1 to 0.9 acres .......................................: 1,860 696 (X) 1,860 696 684 259 (X) 684 259 1.0 to 4.9 acres .......................................: 1,807 3,604 (X) 1,807 3,600 964 1,953 (X) 964 1,953 5.0 to 14.9 acres ......................................: 742 5,869 (X) 742 5,869 526 4,134 (X) 526 4,134 15.0 to 24.9 acres .....................................: 206 3,796 (X) 206 3,796 170 3,208 (X) 170 3,208 25.0 to 49.9 acres .....................................: 232 7,933 (X) 232 7,933 197 6,886 (X) 197 6,838 50.0 to 99.9 acres .....................................: 162 11,360 (X) 162 11,360 165 11,854 (X) 165 11,854 100.0 to 249.9 acres ...................................: 312 49,088 (X) 312 49,088 363 59,251 (X) 363 59,251 250.0 to 499.9 acres ...................................: 256 91,910 (X) 256 91,910 300 106,745 (X) 300 106,745 500.0 to 749.9 acres ...................................: 132 79,475 (X) 132 79,475 158 96,748 (X) 158 96,748 750.0 to 999.9 acres ...................................: 93 80,554 (X) 93 80,554 87 75,537 (X) 87 75,537 1,000.0 acres or more ..................................: 253 651,450 (X) 253 651,450 254 602,437 (X) 254 602,437 1,000.0 to 1,999.9 acres .............................: 150 210,890 (X) 150 210,890 158 221,545 (X) 158 221,545 2,000.0 to 2,999.9 acres .............................: 45 107,742 (X) 45 107,742 51 123,439 (X) 51 123,439 3,000.0 to 4,999.9 acres .............................: 32 113,338 (X) 32 113,338 26 99,973 (X) 26 99,973 5,000.0 acres or more ................................: 26 219,481 (X) 26 219,481 19 157,480 (X) 19 157,480 : Land in orchards (see text) ..............................: 38,098 3,138,943 (X) 34,580 3,072,245 39,484 2,826,291 (X) 32,908 2,728,176 0.1 to 0.9 acres .......................................: 2,232 1,075 (X) 1,436 (D) 1,704 851 (X) 1,234 621 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 37. Specified Crops by Acres Harvested: 2012 and 2007 (continued) [Totals may not add due to rounding. For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : 2012 : 2007 :----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : : : : Irrigated land : : : : Irrigated land : : : :-----------------------: : : :---------------------- Crop : Farms : Acres : Quantity : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Quantity : Farms : Acres ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- OTHER SPECIFIED CROPS - Con. : : Land in orchards (see text) - Con. : : 1.0 to 4.9 acres .......................................: 11,031 24,102 (X) 9,851 21,234 11,247 25,146 (X) 8,625 19,070 5.0 to 14.9 acres ......................................: 7,765 65,211 (X) 7,044 57,978 8,606 72,576 (X) 6,906 56,607 15.0 to 24.9 acres .....................................: 4,329 80,356 (X) 4,018 73,262 4,858 90,631 (X) 4,118 74,787 25.0 to 49.9 acres .....................................: 4,139 145,441 (X) 3,859 134,215 4,623 162,034 (X) 3,957 134,890 50.0 to 99.9 acres .....................................: 3,217 223,858 (X) 3,086 213,634 3,258 226,176 (X) 2,911 199,443 100.0 to 249.9 acres ...................................: 2,969 461,494 (X) 2,908 450,941 2,923 457,111 (X) 2,892 451,341 250.0 to 499.9 acres ...................................: 1,271 442,009 (X) 1,238 430,283 1,303 453,049 (X) 1,303 452,699 500.0 to 749.9 acres ...................................: 439 264,364 (X) 435 261,816 415 250,378 (X) 415 250,378 750.0 to 999.9 acres ...................................: 217 186,115 (X) 217 186,032 178 153,733 (X) 178 153,733 1,000.0 acres or more ..................................: 489 1,244,919 (X) 488 (D) 369 934,607 (X) 369 934,607 1,000.0 to 1,999.9 acres .............................: 289 385,281 (X) 289 385,279 233 316,532 (X) 233 316,532 2,000.0 to 2,999.9 acres .............................: 97 231,195 (X) 96 (D) 58 138,266 (X) 58 138,266 3,000.0 acres or more ................................: 103 628,443 (X) 103 628,442 78 479,809 (X) 78 479,809 : Land in berries (see text) ...............................: 1,985 52,626 (X) 1,985 52,626 1,411 42,081 (X) 1,411 42,081 0.1 to 0.9 acres .......................................: 952 253 (X) 952 253 514 142 (X) 514 142 1.0 to 4.9 acres .......................................: 498 985 (X) 498 985 373 795 (X) 373 795 5.0 to 14.9 acres ......................................: 194 1,520 (X) 194 1,520 173 1,387 (X) 173 1,387 15.0 to 24.9 acres .....................................: 63 1,195 (X) 63 1,195 78 1,456 (X) 78 1,456 25.0 to 49.9 acres .....................................: 71 2,449 (X) 71 2,449 104 3,409 (X) 104 3,409 50.0 to 99.9 acres .....................................: 68 4,943 (X) 68 4,943 60 4,184 (X) 60 4,184 100.0 acres or more ....................................: 139 41,282 (X) 139 41,282 109 30,708 (X) 109 30,708 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Table 38. Vegetables, Potatoes, and Melons Harvested for Sale: 2012 and 2007 [Totals may not add due to rounding. For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : 2012 : :-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------: : : Harvested for : Harvested for : 2007 : Total harvested : processing : fresh market : total harvested :------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Crop : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Vegetables harvested for sale (see text) .........: 6,055 1,175,249 1,198 375,739 5,641 799,510 3,868 1,169,786 0.1 to 0.9 acres ...............................: 1,754 726 118 26 1,731 700 670 281 1.0 to 4.9 acres ...............................: 1,856 3,725 263 221 1,828 3,504 959 2,056 5.0 to 14.9 acres ..............................: 781 6,275 93 414 768 5,861 533 4,327 15.0 to 24.9 acres .............................: 205 3,759 43 363 193 3,397 169 3,208 25.0 to 49.9 acres .............................: 230 7,870 56 1,084 212 6,786 191 6,679 50.0 to 99.9 acres .............................: 172 12,154 48 2,353 144 9,802 158 11,229 100.0 to 249.9 acres ...........................: 288 45,465 130 17,277 193 28,188 341 56,090 250.0 to 499.9 acres ...........................: 238 85,125 142 37,889 157 47,237 288 103,115 500.0 to 749.9 acres ...........................: 129 78,834 85 40,853 81 37,981 153 91,433 750.0 to 999.9 acres ...........................: 96 83,149 43 24,273 79 58,877 100 87,430 1,000.0 acres or more ..........................: 306 848,165 177 250,987 255 597,178 306 803,938 1,000.0 to 1,999.9 acres .....................: 170 236,850 103 84,368 138 152,482 174 242,594 2,000.0 to 2,999.9 acres .....................: 51 124,359 29 40,725 42 83,634 55 134,540 3,000.0 to 4,999.9 acres .....................: 48 175,825 24 39,357 43 136,468 49 182,425 5,000.0 acres or more ........................: 37 311,132 21 86,537 32 224,595 28 244,379 : Artichokes (excluding Jerusalem) .................: 134 7,296 11 21 132 7,275 83 9,612 : Asparagus, bearing age ...........................: 140 10,587 10 1,877 134 8,710 115 20,211 0.1 to 0.9 acres ...............................: 66 16 3 (D) 63 (D) 26 5 1.0 to 4.9 acres ...............................: 26 38 - - 26 38 12 23 5.0 to 14.9 acres ..............................: 8 60 3 9 8 51 6 56 15.0 to 24.9 acres .............................: 4 73 - - 4 73 4 80 25.0 to 49.9 acres .............................: 6 217 1 (D) 6 (D) 10 373 50.0 to 99.9 acres .............................: 4 275 - - 4 275 7 517 100.0 acres or more ............................: 26 9,909 3 1,866 23 8,043 50 19,157 : Beans, green limas ...............................: 106 7,160 42 6,770 74 390 71 7,802 : Beans, snap (bush and pole) ......................: 652 9,419 56 3,645 635 5,774 374 5,474 0.1 to 0.9 acres ...............................: 432 107 12 1 429 106 200 45 1.0 to 4.9 acres ...............................: 126 242 17 21 125 221 86 167 5.0 to 14.9 acres ..............................: 34 272 4 21 32 251 34 281 15.0 to 24.9 acres .............................: 19 349 6 64 17 286 15 291 25.0 to 49.9 acres .............................: 11 386 4 104 9 283 14 526 50.0 to 99.9 acres .............................: 10 689 4 213 8 476 8 563 100.0 to 249.9 acres ...........................: 12 1,893 5 (D) 8 (D) 14 2,270 250.0 to 499.9 acres ...........................: 5 1,514 3 (D) 5 (D) 2 (D) 500.0 acres or more ............................: 3 3,966 1 (D) 2 (D) 1 (D) : Beets ............................................: 437 2,730 25 143 421 2,587 198 979 : Broccoli .........................................: 617 104,268 43 8,759 600 95,508 416 106,271 0.1 to 0.9 acres ...............................: 288 76 2 (D) 286 (D) 129 31 1.0 to 4.9 acres ...............................: 94 (D) 8 (D) 92 178 49 (D) 5.0 to 14.9 acres ..............................: 36 (D) - - 36 (D) 16 131 15.0 to 24.9 acres .............................: 13 (D) 3 (D) 10 191 11 202 25.0 to 49.9 acres .............................: 12 429 - - 12 429 17 602 50.0 to 99.9 acres .............................: 24 1,698 - - 24 1,698 26 1,961 100.0 to 249.9 acres ...........................: 43 7,062 10 1,290 35 5,772 60 9,721 250.0 to 499.9 acres ...........................: 43 14,606 4 (D) 42 (D) 42 14,294 500.0 to 749.9 acres ...........................: 18 10,049 3 (D) 18 (D) 26 15,323 750.0 to 999.9 acres ...........................: 13 (D) 2 (D) 12 (D) 7 (D) 1,000.0 acres or more ..........................: 33 58,554 11 5,218 33 53,336 33 57,733 : Brussels sprouts .................................: 71 7,299 11 2,101 71 5,198 51 3,617 : Cabbage, Chinese .................................: 155 3,412 14 25 154 3,387 111 5,593 : Cabbage, head ....................................: 255 9,812 6 39 253 9,773 177 14,099 0.1 to 0.9 acres ...............................: 137 30 2 (D) 135 (D) 75 16 1.0 to 4.9 acres ...............................: 43 82 - - 43 82 23 36 5.0 to 14.9 acres ..............................: 22 169 2 (D) 22 (D) 8 64 15.0 to 24.9 acres .............................: 4 71 - - 4 71 7 129 25.0 to 49.9 acres .............................: 13 431 - - 13 431 17 602 50.0 to 99.9 acres .............................: 7 483 - - 7 483 12 882 100.0 to 249.9 acres ...........................: 15 2,172 2 (D) 15 (D) 15 2,099 250.0 to 499.9 acres ...........................: 10 3,791 - - 10 3,791 11 3,558 500.0 acres or more ............................: 4 2,583 - - 4 2,583 9 6,714 : Cabbage, mustard .................................: 2 (D) (X) (X) 2 (D) - - : Cantaloupes and muskmelons .......................: 1,184 37,419 8 360 1,182 37,058 626 38,489 0.1 to 0.9 acres ...............................: 813 205 (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) 330 97 1.0 to 4.9 acres ...............................: 205 360 (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) 133 238 5.0 to 14.9 acres ..............................: 32 216 (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) 34 282 15.0 to 24.9 acres .............................: 10 161 (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) 4 80 25.0 to 49.9 acres .............................: 10 358 (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) 15 554 50.0 to 99.9 acres .............................: 23 1,754 (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) 15 1,078 100.0 to 249.9 acres ...........................: 42 6,320 (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) 51 8,283 250.0 to 499.9 acres ...........................: 31 11,341 (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) 24 7,959 500.0 acres or more ............................: 18 16,703 (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) 20 19,919 : Carrots ..........................................: 511 65,400 54 9,625 483 55,775 326 56,263 0.1 to 0.9 acres ...............................: 283 65 13 1 276 64 130 32 1.0 to 4.9 acres ...............................: 74 132 - - 74 132 36 59 5.0 to 14.9 acres ..............................: 15 120 - - 15 120 9 70 15.0 to 24.9 acres .............................: 6 109 - - 6 109 12 230 25.0 to 49.9 acres .............................: 15 496 4 70 14 426 21 749 50.0 to 99.9 acres .............................: 25 1,777 6 390 19 1,387 26 1,866 100.0 to 249.9 acres ...........................: 42 6,643 17 2,058 33 4,585 37 6,135 250.0 to 499.9 acres ...........................: 19 7,217 9 2,660 14 4,557 31 10,884 500.0 acres or more ............................: 32 48,843 5 4,447 32 44,396 24 36,238 : Cauliflower ......................................: 262 34,369 21 1,764 256 32,605 194 32,277 0.1 to 0.9 acres ...............................: 107 35 2 (D) 105 (D) 45 13 1.0 to 4.9 acres ...............................: 31 57 1 (D) 31 (D) 20 36 5.0 to 14.9 acres ..............................: 11 102 - - 11 102 11 111 15.0 to 24.9 acres .............................: 10 (D) 1 (D) 9 162 7 121 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 38. Vegetables, Potatoes, and Melons Harvested for Sale: 2012 and 2007 (continued) [Totals may not add due to rounding. For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : 2012 : :-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------: : : Harvested for : Harvested for : 2007 : Total harvested : processing : fresh market : total harvested :------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Crop : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Cauliflower - Con. : : 25.0 to 49.9 acres .............................: 11 (D) 3 (D) 10 327 8 (D) 50.0 to 99.9 acres .............................: 19 1,295 2 (D) 19 (D) 23 1,643 100.0 to 249.9 acres ...........................: 22 3,540 3 433 20 3,107 37 6,199 250.0 to 499.9 acres ...........................: 32 10,820 6 812 32 10,008 24 8,010 500.0 acres or more ............................: 19 (D) 3 (D) 19 (D) 19 (D) : Celery ...........................................: 201 27,039 16 1,228 196 25,812 128 24,769 : Chicory ..........................................: 25 (D) (X) (X) 25 (D) 23 2,085 : Collards .........................................: 91 633 1 (D) 91 (D) 42 183 : Cucumbers and pickles ............................: 718 7,884 49 4,120 681 3,764 435 6,999 0.1 to 0.9 acres ...............................: 552 (D) 28 (D) 534 114 285 (D) 1.0 to 4.9 acres ...............................: 101 205 2 (D) 99 (D) 95 167 5.0 to 14.9 acres ..............................: 32 248 5 45 28 203 19 131 15.0 to 24.9 acres .............................: 9 171 2 (D) 7 (D) 6 113 25.0 to 49.9 acres .............................: 6 231 1 (D) 5 (D) 7 234 50.0 to 99.9 acres .............................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - 7 501 100.0 to 249.9 acres ...........................: 6 930 4 508 3 422 10 1,502 250.0 to 499.9 acres ...........................: 6 1,898 3 1,076 3 822 1 (D) 500.0 acres or more ............................: 5 3,994 3 (D) 2 (D) 5 3,956 : Daikon ...........................................: 139 670 1 (D) 138 (D) 83 389 : Eggplant .........................................: 528 1,156 38 70 515 1,086 306 1,191 : Escarole and endive ..............................: 23 1,258 (X) (X) 23 1,258 28 1,974 : Garlic ...........................................: 422 20,875 61 10,791 386 10,084 280 22,177 : Ginseng ..........................................: - - - - - - 2 (D) : Herbs, fresh cut .................................: 385 2,176 (X) (X) 385 2,176 262 4,908 : Honeydew melons ..................................: 128 9,031 (X) (X) 128 9,031 88 13,303 : Horseradish ......................................: 26 (D) 4 (D) 25 51 3 (D) : Kale .............................................: 390 1,680 26 37 379 1,643 96 1,077 : Lettuce, all .....................................: 1,486 232,842 (X) (X) 1,486 232,842 753 227,515 0.1 to 0.9 acres ...............................: 906 (D) (X) (X) (NA) (NA) 286 90 1.0 to 4.9 acres ...............................: 244 512 (X) (X) (NA) (NA) 104 201 5.0 to 14.9 acres ..............................: 51 427 (X) (X) (NA) (NA) 47 421 15.0 to 24.9 acres .............................: 22 433 (X) (X) (NA) (NA) 16 309 25.0 to 49.9 acres .............................: 24 (D) (X) (X) (NA) (NA) 32 1,069 50.0 to 99.9 acres .............................: 27 (D) (X) (X) (NA) (NA) 35 2,490 100.0 to 249.9 acres ...........................: 51 (D) (X) (X) (NA) (NA) 60 9,983 250.0 to 499.9 acres ...........................: 46 16,837 (X) (X) (NA) (NA) 42 15,016 500.0 to 749.9 acres ...........................: 32 18,831 (X) (X) (NA) (NA) 44 26,239 750.0 to 999.9 acres ...........................: 17 14,613 (X) (X) (NA) (NA) 24 20,265 1,000.0 acres or more ..........................: 66 (D) (X) (X) (NA) (NA) 63 151,432 : Lettuce, head ..................................: 798 111,503 (X) (X) 798 111,503 414 118,676 0.1 to 0.9 acres .............................: 486 111 (X) (X) (NA) (NA) 142 36 1.0 to 4.9 acres .............................: 99 175 (X) (X) (NA) (NA) 35 59 5.0 to 14.9 acres ............................: 17 142 (X) (X) (NA) (NA) 12 95 15.0 to 24.9 acres ...........................: 15 272 (X) (X) (NA) (NA) 6 115 25.0 to 49.9 acres ...........................: 10 358 (X) (X) (NA) (NA) 21 692 50.0 to 99.9 acres ...........................: 27 1,857 (X) (X) (NA) (NA) 30 2,040 100.0 to 249.9 acres .........................: 39 6,480 (X) (X) (NA) (NA) 48 7,457 250.0 to 499.9 acres .........................: 27 9,927 (X) (X) (NA) (NA) 43 14,983 500.0 to 749.9 acres .........................: 25 14,504 (X) (X) (NA) (NA) 25 14,636 750.0 to 999.9 acres .........................: 15 12,689 (X) (X) (NA) (NA) 9 7,553 1,000.0 acres or more ........................: 38 64,988 (X) (X) (NA) (NA) 43 71,009 : Lettuce, leaf ..................................: 1,104 49,063 (X) (X) 1,104 49,063 520 44,068 : Lettuce, romaine ...............................: 750 72,276 (X) (X) 750 72,276 414 64,771 : Mustard greens ...................................: 157 736 8 19 155 717 87 1,902 : Okra .............................................: 193 415 - - 193 415 108 254 : Onions, dry ......................................: 561 38,128 102 20,257 475 17,870 380 43,255 0.1 to 0.9 acres ...............................: 291 71 6 (D) 290 (D) 159 40 1.0 to 4.9 acres ...............................: 65 101 1 (D) 64 (D) 39 64 5.0 to 14.9 acres ..............................: 20 155 4 34 16 121 17 114 15.0 to 24.9 acres .............................: 14 267 4 80 10 187 9 174 25.0 to 49.9 acres .............................: 18 561 6 177 13 384 15 538 50.0 to 99.9 acres .............................: 34 2,409 10 789 24 1,620 23 1,634 100.0 to 249.9 acres ...........................: 73 11,356 42 6,435 33 4,922 53 8,366 250.0 to 499.9 acres ...........................: 34 11,990 21 6,826 18 5,165 45 15,196 500.0 acres or more ............................: 12 11,217 8 5,915 7 5,302 20 17,130 : Onions, green ....................................: 262 3,131 11 803 259 2,328 128 2,061 : Parsley ..........................................: 129 2,241 16 594 118 1,647 63 2,265 : Peas, Chinese (sugar, snow) ......................: 217 2,157 10 102 213 2,055 145 2,241 : Peas, green (excluding southern) .................: 138 821 - - 138 821 68 826 : Peas, green southern (cowpeas) - : blackeyed, crowder, etc .........................: 40 713 4 (D) 37 (D) 25 (D) ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 38. Vegetables, Potatoes, and Melons Harvested for Sale: 2012 and 2007 (continued) [Totals may not add due to rounding. For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : 2012 : :-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------: : : Harvested for : Harvested for : 2007 : Total harvested : processing : fresh market : total harvested :------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Crop : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Peppers, Bell (excluding pimientos) ..............: 580 19,168 51 3,306 552 15,862 367 21,098 0.1 to 0.9 acres ...............................: 387 81 17 2 383 78 190 42 1.0 to 4.9 acres ...............................: 73 135 8 11 65 124 39 65 5.0 to 14.9 acres ..............................: 18 128 2 (D) 17 115 20 168 15.0 to 24.9 acres .............................: 17 334 2 (D) 16 302 9 179 25.0 to 49.9 acres .............................: 13 510 2 (D) 11 446 18 660 50.0 to 99.9 acres .............................: 19 1,339 5 291 17 1,047 25 1,747 100.0 acres or more ............................: 53 16,642 15 2,893 43 13,749 66 18,236 : Peppers, other than Bell (including chile) .......: 556 7,029 45 3,799 526 3,230 385 5,617 0.1 to 0.9 acres ...............................: 397 86 23 3 383 83 222 50 1.0 to 4.9 acres ...............................: 75 142 2 (D) 75 141 74 131 5.0 to 14.9 acres ..............................: 30 213 6 (D) 25 165 34 262 15.0 to 24.9 acres .............................: 14 244 - - 14 244 12 240 25.0 to 49.9 acres .............................: 19 687 7 248 13 440 16 571 50.0 to 99.9 acres .............................: 8 532 1 (D) 7 478 9 657 100.0 acres or more ............................: 13 5,125 6 3,445 9 1,680 18 3,706 : Potatoes .........................................: 441 42,660 36 14,436 426 28,224 224 37,858 0.1 to 0.9 acres ...............................: 287 75 10 1 283 74 88 26 1.0 to 4.9 acres ...............................: 58 95 - - 58 95 39 65 5.0 to 14.9 acres ..............................: 12 99 1 (D) 12 (D) 10 85 15.0 to 24.9 acres .............................: 5 84 - - 5 84 4 78 25.0 to 49.9 acres .............................: 6 191 1 (D) 6 (D) 5 178 50.0 to 99.9 acres .............................: 14 987 4 (D) 13 (D) 17 1,103 100.0 to 249.9 acres ...........................: 16 2,454 3 431 13 2,023 28 4,505 250.0 to 499.9 acres ...........................: 12 4,102 5 1,236 10 2,866 10 3,628 500.0 to 749.9 acres ...........................: 8 4,893 3 255 8 4,638 6 3,546 750.0 to 999.9 acres ...........................: 11 8,898 2 (D) 9 (D) 8 6,969 1,000.0 acres or more ..........................: 12 20,781 7 10,811 9 9,970 9 17,675 1,000.0 to 1,999.9 acres .....................: 9 12,579 4 2,609 9 9,970 6 9,191 2,000.0 to 2,999.9 acres .....................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - 1 (D) 3,000.0 acres or more ........................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - 2 (D) : Pumpkins .........................................: 519 6,175 23 71 506 6,104 359 5,106 : Radishes .........................................: 150 1,926 10 2 150 1,924 76 1,705 : Rhubarb ..........................................: 54 52 3 (Z) 51 52 17 4 : Spinach ..........................................: 278 27,156 31 4,754 262 22,401 174 25,843 : Squash, all ......................................: 1,270 7,798 58 846 1,238 6,953 706 5,535 0.1 to 0.9 acres ...............................: 784 208 (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) 357 97 1.0 to 4.9 acres ...............................: 281 566 (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) 197 379 5.0 to 14.9 acres ..............................: 98 769 (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) 72 540 15.0 to 24.9 acres .............................: 38 699 (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) 26 484 25.0 to 49.9 acres .............................: 39 1,331 (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) 22 714 50.0 to 99.9 acres .............................: 11 694 (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) 18 1,233 100.0 acres or more ............................: 19 3,531 (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) 14 2,089 : Squash, summer .................................: 1,021 4,439 35 268 1,003 4,171 580 3,523 : Squash, winter .................................: 575 3,359 28 577 556 2,782 252 2,012 : Sweet corn .......................................: 441 32,667 12 561 438 32,106 330 24,866 0.1 to 0.9 acres ...............................: 248 64 - - 248 64 125 31 1.0 to 4.9 acres ...............................: 80 148 6 (D) 80 (D) 77 144 5.0 to 14.9 acres ..............................: 35 261 - - 35 261 39 305 15.0 to 24.9 acres .............................: 6 111 1 (D) 5 (D) 11 205 25.0 to 49.9 acres .............................: 9 296 - - 9 296 13 421 50.0 to 99.9 acres .............................: 8 565 - - 8 565 16 1,069 100.0 acres or more ............................: 55 31,221 5 535 53 30,686 49 22,691 100.0 to 249.9 acres .........................: 21 2,920 2 (D) 19 (D) 22 3,284 250.0 to 499.9 acres .........................: 12 3,658 1 (D) 12 (D) 13 4,704 500.0 to 749.9 acres .........................: 9 5,499 2 (D) 9 (D) 7 3,959 750.0 to 999.9 acres .........................: 9 7,393 - - 9 7,393 4 3,404 1,000.0 acres or more ........................: 4 11,751 - - 4 11,751 3 7,341 : Sweet potatoes ...................................: 188 18,189 27 2,571 183 15,618 92 13,644 0.1 to 0.9 acres ...............................: 80 20 - - 80 20 8 3 1.0 to 4.9 acres ...............................: 22 (D) - - 22 (D) 10 22 5.0 to 14.9 acres ..............................: 1 (D) - - 1 (D) 12 98 15.0 to 24.9 acres .............................: 11 180 2 (D) 11 (D) 11 212 25.0 to 49.9 acres .............................: 17 635 6 (D) 17 (D) 10 390 50.0 to 99.9 acres .............................: 9 561 3 (D) 8 (D) 6 411 100.0 to 249.9 acres ...........................: 22 3,058 8 (D) 18 (D) 19 3,070 250.0 to 499.9 acres ...........................: 19 6,226 5 950 19 5,276 12 4,868 500.0 acres or more ............................: 7 7,455 3 700 7 6,755 4 4,570 : Tomatoes in the open .............................: 3,176 295,247 631 256,051 2,759 39,196 1,782 335,133 0.1 to 0.9 acres ...............................: 1,939 486 125 23 1,899 463 740 200 1.0 to 4.9 acres ...............................: 593 1,042 94 102 570 940 348 620 5.0 to 14.9 acres ..............................: 140 1,248 24 169 130 1,079 82 607 15.0 to 24.9 acres .............................: 20 384 6 88 17 296 21 392 25.0 to 49.9 acres .............................: 34 1,143 12 378 24 765 38 1,351 50.0 to 99.9 acres .............................: 46 3,353 24 1,605 24 1,748 49 3,644 100.0 acres or more ............................: 404 287,590 346 253,686 95 33,904 504 328,320 100.0 to 249.9 acres .........................: 129 20,023 96 (D) 37 (D) 154 24,819 250.0 to 499.9 acres .........................: 113 39,538 105 33,430 28 6,108 166 58,531 500.0 to 749.9 acres .........................: 67 39,665 56 32,497 13 7,168 69 41,838 750.0 to 999.9 acres .........................: 26 21,912 22 (D) 8 (D) 31 26,110 1,000.0 acres or more ........................: 69 166,452 67 (D) 9 (D) 84 177,023 : Turnip greens ....................................: 38 71 - - 38 71 9 (D) : Turnips ..........................................: 103 386 4 2 101 384 44 246 : Watercress .......................................: 20 229 (X) (X) 20 229 17 151 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 38. Vegetables, Potatoes, and Melons Harvested for Sale: 2012 and 2007 (continued) [Totals may not add due to rounding. For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : 2012 : :-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------: : : Harvested for : Harvested for : 2007 : Total harvested : processing : fresh market : total harvested :------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Crop : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Watermelons ......................................: 381 13,360 4 100 377 13,260 276 10,977 0.1 to 0.9 acres ...............................: 200 65 (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) 127 33 1.0 to 4.9 acres ...............................: 102 209 (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) 52 109 5.0 to 14.9 acres ..............................: 17 130 (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) 32 213 15.0 to 24.9 acres .............................: 9 166 (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) 8 145 25.0 to 49.9 acres .............................: 11 388 (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) 8 248 50.0 to 99.9 acres .............................: 12 838 (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) 13 958 100.0 to 249.9 acres ...........................: 12 2,059 (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) 23 3,380 250.0 to 499.9 acres ...........................: 12 4,293 (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) 8 2,859 500.0 acres or more ............................: 6 5,212 (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) 5 3,034 : Other vegetables (see text) ......................: 1,154 48,325 108 14,914 1,117 33,411 540 21,031 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Table 39. Specified Fruits and Nuts by Acres: 2012 and 2007 [Totals may not add due to rounding. For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : Total : Bearing age acres : Nonbearing age acres :-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Crop : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Noncitrus fruit, all (see text) ..............2012: 23,941 1,346,040 22,327 1,217,426 7,367 128,614 2007: 24,910 1,312,993 23,669 1,190,005 7,817 122,989 : Apples .....................................2012: 2,527 18,205 1,984 15,988 980 2,217 2007: 2,074 22,184 1,850 20,954 536 1,230 2012 acres: : 0.1 to 0.9 acres ...........................: 1,316 346 887 234 588 112 1.0 to 4.9 acres ...........................: 734 1,445 631 1,159 237 286 5.0 to 14.9 acres ..........................: 271 2,048 260 1,806 77 241 15.0 to 24.9 acres .........................: 65 1,223 65 1,029 27 194 25.0 to 49.9 acres .........................: 70 2,476 70 2,295 18 181 50.0 to 99.9 acres .........................: 32 2,164 32 1,963 16 201 100.0 acres or more ........................: 39 8,504 39 7,503 17 1,001 100.0 to 249.9 acres .....................: 28 4,030 28 3,784 11 246 250.0 to 499.9 acres .....................: 10 (D) 10 (D) 6 755 500.0 to 749.9 acres .....................: - - - - - - 750.0 to 999.9 acres .....................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - 1,000.0 acres or more ....................: - - - - - - : 2007 acres: : 0.1 to 0.9 acres ...........................: 832 234 679 182 235 53 1.0 to 4.9 acres ...........................: 740 1,510 682 1,343 168 167 5.0 to 14.9 acres ..........................: 265 2,029 254 1,795 73 234 15.0 to 24.9 acres .........................: 72 1,329 71 1,254 18 74 25.0 to 49.9 acres .........................: 69 2,379 68 2,137 22 243 50.0 to 99.9 acres .........................: 50 3,303 50 3,133 10 170 100.0 acres or more ........................: 46 11,399 46 11,110 10 290 100.0 to 249.9 acres .....................: 32 5,097 32 (D) 8 (D) 250.0 to 499.9 acres .....................: 10 3,123 10 (D) 1 (D) 500.0 to 749.9 acres .....................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - 750.0 to 999.9 acres .....................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - 1,000.0 acres or more ....................: 1 (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) : Apricots ...................................2012: 703 10,751 595 9,503 242 1,248 2007: 775 11,290 670 10,683 221 607 : Avocados ...................................2012: 5,602 59,814 5,238 52,026 1,834 7,789 2007: 6,230 74,767 5,906 65,453 2,322 9,314 2012 acres: : 0.1 to 0.9 acres ...........................: 903 367 731 288 289 79 1.0 to 4.9 acres ...........................: 2,669 5,701 2,538 4,833 833 867 5.0 to 14.9 acres ..........................: 1,206 9,900 1,153 8,494 414 1,405 15.0 to 24.9 acres .........................: 368 6,833 363 6,035 123 798 25.0 to 49.9 acres .........................: 251 8,497 248 7,712 85 785 50.0 to 99.9 acres .........................: 109 7,220 109 6,230 51 990 100.0 acres or more ........................: 96 21,297 96 18,432 39 2,864 100.0 to 249.9 acres .....................: 75 10,283 75 9,494 28 789 250.0 to 499.9 acres .....................: 15 5,418 15 5,027 7 391 500.0 acres or more ......................: 6 5,596 6 3,911 4 1,684 : 2007 acres: : 0.1 to 0.9 acres ...........................: 647 290 572 233 174 57 1.0 to 4.9 acres ...........................: 2,954 6,523 2,762 5,330 1,104 1,193 5.0 to 14.9 acres ..........................: 1,515 12,189 1,465 10,567 560 1,622 15.0 to 24.9 acres .........................: 510 9,375 504 7,879 224 1,496 25.0 to 49.9 acres .........................: 333 11,049 332 9,718 146 1,331 50.0 to 99.9 acres .........................: 150 9,658 150 8,658 65 1,000 100.0 acres or more ........................: 121 25,684 121 23,069 49 2,615 100.0 to 249.9 acres .....................: 91 12,652 91 11,570 30 1,082 250.0 to 499.9 acres .....................: 22 6,536 22 6,185 13 351 500.0 acres or more ......................: 8 6,496 8 5,315 6 1,182 : Bananas ....................................2012: 11 14 11 (D) 1 (D) 2007: 15 44 4 (D) 11 (D) : Cherries, sweet ............................2012: 1,226 37,944 975 32,786 531 5,158 2007: 1,291 30,433 1,115 24,091 450 6,341 2012 acres: : 0.1 to 0.9 acres ...........................: 309 84 170 51 164 33 1.0 to 4.9 acres ...........................: 253 563 207 448 105 115 5.0 to 14.9 acres ..........................: 207 1,894 170 1,438 75 456 15.0 to 24.9 acres .........................: 138 2,572 124 2,096 53 476 25.0 to 49.9 acres .........................: 131 4,538 119 3,567 60 971 50.0 to 99.9 acres .........................: 85 5,952 83 5,111 30 841 100.0 acres or more ........................: 103 22,341 102 20,075 44 2,266 100.0 to 249.9 acres .....................: 80 12,220 79 10,730 36 1,491 250.0 to 499.9 acres .....................: 16 5,397 16 (D) 7 (D) 500.0 acres or more ......................: 7 4,724 7 (D) 1 (D) : 2007 acres: : 0.1 to 0.9 acres ...........................: 309 78 230 58 104 21 1.0 to 4.9 acres ...........................: 303 706 260 559 91 147 5.0 to 14.9 acres ..........................: 271 2,447 237 1,964 97 483 15.0 to 24.9 acres .........................: 128 2,482 119 2,140 29 341 25.0 to 49.9 acres .........................: 129 4,366 125 3,794 52 572 50.0 to 99.9 acres .........................: 77 5,353 74 4,244 38 1,109 100.0 acres or more ........................: 74 15,001 70 11,332 39 3,669 100.0 to 249.9 acres .....................: 60 8,738 56 6,480 31 2,258 250.0 to 499.9 acres .....................: 11 4,005 11 (D) 6 (D) 500.0 acres or more ......................: 3 2,259 3 (D) 2 (D) : Cherries, tart .............................2012: 44 28 21 13 36 16 2007: 38 19 28 13 14 7 : Dates ......................................2012: 169 7,257 148 6,090 91 1,167 2007: 151 6,315 124 5,131 85 1,184 : Figs .......................................2012: 325 6,787 240 6,071 133 716 2007: 302 9,384 240 9,069 85 315 : Grapes .....................................2012: 11,462 940,177 10,842 864,831 2,751 75,347 2007: 11,623 868,329 11,115 809,281 3,020 59,048 ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 39. Specified Fruits and Nuts by Acres: 2012 and 2007 (continued) [Totals may not add due to rounding. For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : Total : Bearing age acres : Nonbearing age acres :-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Crop : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Noncitrus fruit, all (see text) - Con. : Grapes - Con. : : 2012 acres: : 0.1 to 0.9 acres ...........................: 1,357 450 1,051 350 440 101 1.0 to 4.9 acres ...........................: 2,509 5,525 2,345 4,896 523 629 5.0 to 14.9 acres ..........................: 2,165 18,345 2,102 16,912 432 1,432 15.0 to 24.9 acres .........................: 1,374 25,673 1,342 24,125 238 1,548 25.0 to 49.9 acres .........................: 1,340 47,004 1,318 43,772 284 3,231 50.0 to 99.9 acres .........................: 1,094 75,613 1,076 70,154 282 5,459 100.0 acres or more ........................: 1,623 767,567 1,608 704,621 552 62,947 100.0 to 249.9 acres .....................: 907 139,156 897 130,418 243 8,738 250.0 to 499.9 acres .....................: 359 123,336 357 116,086 107 7,249 500.0 acres or more ......................: 357 505,076 354 458,117 202 46,960 500.0 to 749.9 acres ...................: 122 74,500 119 67,672 60 6,828 750.0 to 999.9 acres ...................: 71 60,783 71 54,182 38 6,601 1,000.0 to 1,499.9 acres ...............: 75 91,412 75 82,530 47 8,881 1,500.0 acres or more ..................: 89 278,382 89 253,733 57 24,649 : 2007 acres: : 0.1 to 0.9 acres ...........................: 880 321 719 259 221 63 1.0 to 4.9 acres ...........................: 2,473 5,675 2,282 4,926 566 749 5.0 to 14.9 acres ..........................: 2,347 20,210 2,264 18,168 586 2,042 15.0 to 24.9 acres .........................: 1,622 30,455 1,585 27,761 431 2,693 25.0 to 49.9 acres .........................: 1,582 55,425 1,562 51,321 391 4,104 50.0 to 99.9 acres .........................: 1,122 77,894 1,113 72,297 304 5,597 100.0 acres or more ........................: 1,597 678,349 1,590 634,549 521 43,800 100.0 to 249.9 acres .....................: 893 138,972 888 131,050 245 7,922 250.0 to 499.9 acres .....................: 398 136,501 397 128,657 138 7,844 500.0 acres or more ......................: 306 402,876 305 374,842 138 28,034 500.0 to 749.9 acres ...................: 127 77,715 126 72,222 52 5,493 750.0 to 999.9 acres ...................: 53 45,354 53 42,550 24 2,803 1,000.0 to 1,499.9 acres ...............: 58 70,348 58 65,429 29 4,919 1,500.0 acres or more ..................: 68 209,460 68 194,641 33 14,819 : Guavas .....................................2012: 111 268 98 (D) 27 (D) 2007: 127 270 112 247 26 23 : Kiwifruit ..................................2012: 205 4,309 182 3,683 56 626 2007: 265 4,375 244 4,200 54 175 : Mangoes ....................................2012: 23 (D) 16 (D) 12 12 2007: 19 (D) 13 (D) 9 (D) : Nectarines .................................2012: 535 19,555 453 17,154 202 2,401 2007: 743 28,430 674 25,508 230 2,923 : Olives .....................................2012: 1,937 49,737 1,706 37,954 574 11,783 2007: 1,660 38,142 1,455 29,986 483 8,156 : Papayas ....................................2012: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - 2007: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - : Passion fruit ..............................2012: 20 31 18 28 6 3 2007: 5 (D) 5 (D) 2 (D) : Peaches, all (see text) ....................2012: 2,201 51,948 1,741 46,044 889 5,904 2007: 2,005 66,408 1,834 57,546 632 8,862 2012 acres: : 0.1 to 0.9 acres ...........................: 1,011 254 623 153 477 101 1.0 to 4.9 acres ...........................: 413 854 362 688 159 166 5.0 to 14.9 acres ..........................: 271 2,264 258 1,987 67 277 15.0 to 24.9 acres .........................: 108 2,024 108 1,781 40 243 25.0 to 49.9 acres .........................: 140 4,955 136 4,540 35 415 50.0 to 99.9 acres .........................: 116 8,108 116 7,477 44 631 100.0 acres or more ........................: 142 33,489 138 29,418 67 4,072 100.0 to 249.9 acres .....................: 114 17,401 110 14,728 54 2,673 250.0 to 499.9 acres .....................: 20 6,859 20 6,307 7 552 500.0 to 749.9 acres .....................: 4 (D) 4 2,470 3 (D) 750.0 to 999.9 acres .....................: 1 (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) 1,000.0 acres or more ....................: 3 5,647 3 (D) 2 (D) : 2007 acres: : 0.1 to 0.9 acres ...........................: 614 161 506 126 156 35 1.0 to 4.9 acres ...........................: 426 947 392 835 99 111 5.0 to 14.9 acres ..........................: 281 2,517 267 2,230 75 287 15.0 to 24.9 acres .........................: 169 3,188 163 2,874 58 315 25.0 to 49.9 acres .........................: 189 6,505 187 5,874 71 631 50.0 to 99.9 acres .........................: 142 10,172 135 8,588 73 1,584 100.0 acres or more ........................: 184 42,918 184 37,020 100 5,898 100.0 to 249.9 acres .....................: 138 20,484 138 17,943 72 2,540 250.0 to 499.9 acres .....................: 32 10,955 32 9,274 22 1,681 500.0 to 749.9 acres .....................: 9 5,351 9 (D) 4 (D) 750.0 to 999.9 acres .....................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - 1,000.0 acres or more ....................: 4 (D) 4 (D) 2 (D) : Peaches, Clingstone ......................2012: 1,084 25,866 844 22,890 413 2,975 2007: 904 30,909 811 26,620 287 4,289 2012 acres: : 0.1 to 0.9 acres .........................: 558 (D) 344 (D) 253 43 1.0 to 4.9 acres .........................: 132 276 120 223 37 53 5.0 to 14.9 acres ........................: 106 (D) 100 (D) 29 142 15.0 to 24.9 acres .......................: 55 1,028 53 890 16 138 25.0 to 49.9 acres .......................: 81 (D) 77 (D) 18 296 50.0 to 99.9 acres .......................: 71 5,037 71 4,610 24 427 100.0 acres or more ......................: 81 15,588 79 13,711 36 1,877 100.0 to 249.9 acres ...................: 71 10,221 69 8,701 31 1,520 250.0 to 499.9 acres ...................: 7 2,537 7 (D) 4 (D) 500.0 to 749.9 acres ...................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - 750.0 to 999.9 acres ...................: 1 (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) 1,000.0 acres or more ..................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 39. Specified Fruits and Nuts by Acres: 2012 and 2007 (continued) [Totals may not add due to rounding. For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : Total : Bearing age acres : Nonbearing age acres :-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Crop : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Noncitrus fruit, all (see text) - Con. : Peaches, all (see text) - Con. : Peaches, Clingstone - Con. : : 2007 acres: : 0.1 to 0.9 acres .........................: 297 63 239 49 76 14 1.0 to 4.9 acres .........................: 121 269 103 222 33 47 5.0 to 14.9 acres ........................: 116 1,045 105 882 33 163 15.0 to 24.9 acres .......................: 69 1,276 69 1,167 20 109 25.0 to 49.9 acres .......................: 111 3,857 111 3,566 32 291 50.0 to 99.9 acres .......................: 101 7,247 95 6,025 46 1,222 100.0 acres or more ......................: 89 17,152 89 14,709 47 2,443 100.0 to 249.9 acres ...................: 70 10,208 70 8,731 34 1,477 250.0 to 499.9 acres ...................: 16 5,107 16 (D) 12 (D) 500.0 to 749.9 acres ...................: 3 1,837 3 (D) 1 (D) 750.0 to 999.9 acres ...................: - - - - - - 1,000.0 acres or more ..................: - - - - - - : Peaches, Freestone .......................2012: 1,474 26,082 1,149 23,154 610 2,928 2007: 1,399 35,499 1,295 30,926 413 4,573 2012 acres: : 0.1 to 0.9 acres .........................: 707 (D) 426 (D) 352 72 1.0 to 4.9 acres .........................: 324 659 292 550 110 109 5.0 to 14.9 acres ........................: 189 (D) 180 (D) 48 158 15.0 to 24.9 acres .......................: 69 1,325 69 1,182 27 143 25.0 to 49.9 acres .......................: 71 (D) 70 (D) 22 201 50.0 to 99.9 acres .......................: 56 3,740 56 3,492 22 247 100.0 acres or more ......................: 58 16,163 56 14,166 29 1,998 100.0 to 249.9 acres ...................: 42 6,658 40 5,521 21 1,137 250.0 to 499.9 acres ...................: 11 3,683 11 3,586 3 97 500.0 to 749.9 acres ...................: 3 (D) 3 (D) 3 (D) 750.0 to 999.9 acres ...................: - - - - - - 1,000.0 acres or more ..................: 2 (D) 2 (D) 2 (D) : 2007 acres: : 0.1 to 0.9 acres .........................: 484 120 410 97 118 24 1.0 to 4.9 acres .........................: 335 741 319 675 71 67 5.0 to 14.9 acres ........................: 206 1,757 202 1,600 54 157 15.0 to 24.9 acres .......................: 128 2,439 122 2,171 49 267 25.0 to 49.9 acres .......................: 99 3,385 97 2,995 41 390 50.0 to 99.9 acres .......................: 63 4,253 61 3,626 33 627 100.0 acres or more ......................: 84 22,803 84 19,762 47 3,041 100.0 to 249.9 acres ...................: 59 8,701 59 7,734 33 967 250.0 to 499.9 acres ...................: 14 4,822 14 4,196 9 626 500.0 to 749.9 acres ...................: 6 (D) 6 2,993 3 (D) 750.0 to 999.9 acres ...................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - 1,000.0 acres or more ..................: 4 4,989 4 (D) 2 (D) : Pears, all .................................2012: 681 11,907 525 11,398 268 509 2007: 739 15,859 631 14,818 203 1,041 2012 acres: : 0.1 to 0.9 acres ...........................: 380 95 253 65 183 30 1.0 to 4.9 acres ...........................: 169 304 140 242 60 62 5.0 to 14.9 acres ..........................: 37 280 37 241 10 39 15.0 to 24.9 acres .........................: 12 221 12 (D) 1 (D) 25.0 to 49.9 acres .........................: 31 1,021 31 (D) 2 (D) 50.0 to 99.9 acres .........................: 27 1,901 27 (D) 4 (D) 100.0 acres or more ........................: 25 8,086 25 (D) 8 (D) 100.0 to 249.9 acres .....................: 11 1,472 11 (D) 2 (D) 250.0 to 499.9 acres .....................: 8 2,549 8 2,399 4 150 500.0 acres or more ......................: 6 4,064 6 (D) 2 (D) : 2007 acres: : 0.1 to 0.9 acres ...........................: 356 83 262 (D) 123 (D) 1.0 to 4.9 acres ...........................: 206 355 195 312 48 42 5.0 to 14.9 acres ..........................: 56 474 55 451 7 23 15.0 to 24.9 acres .........................: 16 313 14 267 9 46 25.0 to 49.9 acres .........................: 32 1,064 32 (D) 2 (D) 50.0 to 99.9 acres .........................: 34 2,208 34 2,127 5 81 100.0 acres or more ........................: 39 11,364 39 10,564 9 800 100.0 to 249.9 acres .....................: 19 2,699 19 2,566 3 133 250.0 to 499.9 acres .....................: 15 4,727 15 (D) 4 (D) 500.0 acres or more ......................: 5 3,938 5 (D) 2 (D) : Pears, Bartlett ..........................2012: 303 8,900 252 8,636 88 264 2007: 369 11,313 327 10,627 85 687 2012 acres: : 0.1 to 0.9 acres .........................: 157 35 114 (D) 67 (D) 1.0 to 4.9 acres .........................: 51 90 43 (D) 9 (D) 5.0 to 14.9 acres ........................: 19 143 19 119 4 23 15.0 to 24.9 acres .......................: 10 194 10 (D) 1 (D) 25.0 to 49.9 acres .......................: 21 758 21 (D) 1 (D) 50.0 to 99.9 acres .......................: 25 1,819 25 (D) 3 (D) 100.0 acres or more ......................: 20 5,862 20 (D) 3 (D) 100.0 to 249.9 acres ...................: 11 1,938 11 1,938 - - 250.0 to 499.9 acres ...................: 6 2,087 6 (D) 2 (D) 500.0 acres or more ....................: 3 1,837 3 (D) 1 (D) : 2007 acres: : 0.1 to 0.9 acres .........................: 178 36 141 (D) 48 (D) 1.0 to 4.9 acres .........................: 68 139 65 124 17 16 5.0 to 14.9 acres ........................: 27 223 27 221 3 2 15.0 to 24.9 acres .......................: 10 190 8 151 5 39 25.0 to 49.9 acres .......................: 26 896 26 (D) 2 (D) 50.0 to 99.9 acres .......................: 30 2,002 30 1,926 4 76 100.0 acres or more ......................: 30 7,827 30 7,308 6 519 100.0 to 249.9 acres ...................: 19 3,227 19 (D) 3 (D) 250.0 to 499.9 acres ...................: 8 2,693 8 (D) 1 (D) 500.0 acres or more ....................: 3 1,908 3 (D) 2 (D) : Pears, other than Bartlett ...............2012: 451 3,007 339 2,762 188 245 2007: 500 4,546 418 4,191 140 354 ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 39. Specified Fruits and Nuts by Acres: 2012 and 2007 (continued) [Totals may not add due to rounding. For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : Total : Bearing age acres : Nonbearing age acres :-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Crop : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Noncitrus fruit, all (see text) - Con. : Pears, all - Con. : Pears, other than Bartlett - Con. : : 2012 acres: : 0.1 to 0.9 acres .........................: 264 (D) 174 (D) 125 (D) 1.0 to 4.9 acres .........................: 125 222 103 176 48 46 5.0 to 14.9 acres ........................: 26 (D) 26 (D) 6 15 15.0 to 24.9 acres .......................: 10 166 10 166 - - 25.0 to 49.9 acres .......................: 14 434 14 406 3 28 50.0 to 99.9 acres .......................: 6 397 6 (D) 3 (D) 100.0 acres or more ......................: 6 1,506 6 1,446 3 59 100.0 to 249.9 acres ...................: 4 (D) 4 (D) 3 59 250.0 to 499.9 acres ...................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - 500.0 acres or more ....................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - : 2007 acres: : 0.1 to 0.9 acres .........................: 257 59 184 42 91 16 1.0 to 4.9 acres .........................: 150 254 142 227 34 27 5.0 to 14.9 acres ........................: 46 388 45 367 6 21 15.0 to 24.9 acres .......................: 7 137 7 (D) 1 (D) 25.0 to 49.9 acres .......................: 19 622 19 (D) 2 (D) 50.0 to 99.9 acres .......................: 13 973 13 903 4 70 100.0 acres or more ......................: 8 2,114 8 (D) 2 (D) 100.0 to 249.9 acres ...................: 6 (D) 6 (D) 1 (D) 250.0 to 499.9 acres ...................: - - - - - - 500.0 acres or more ....................: 2 (D) 2 (D) 1 (D) : Persimmons .................................2012: 753 4,091 667 3,222 193 869 2007: 745 3,236 686 2,906 165 329 : Plums and prunes ...........................2012: 1,656 82,910 1,445 73,363 580 9,547 2007: 2,024 102,860 1,884 92,479 651 10,381 2012 acres: : 0.1 to 0.9 acres ...........................: 374 84 261 57 137 27 1.0 to 4.9 acres ...........................: 224 489 179 368 97 122 5.0 to 14.9 acres ..........................: 267 2,367 245 2,094 74 273 15.0 to 24.9 acres .........................: 174 3,377 165 2,929 51 448 25.0 to 49.9 acres .........................: 230 7,977 227 7,228 64 748 50.0 to 99.9 acres .........................: 181 12,822 170 11,406 56 1,416 100.0 acres or more ........................: 206 55,794 198 49,281 101 6,514 100.0 to 249.9 acres .....................: 144 21,451 138 18,396 72 3,056 250.0 to 499.9 acres .....................: 41 14,525 39 12,879 15 1,646 500.0 acres or more ......................: 21 19,818 21 18,006 14 1,812 : 2007 acres: : 0.1 to 0.9 acres ...........................: 374 91 294 69 101 22 1.0 to 4.9 acres ...........................: 246 571 218 482 67 90 5.0 to 14.9 acres ..........................: 360 3,242 343 2,889 98 353 15.0 to 24.9 acres .........................: 266 5,054 260 4,610 72 443 25.0 to 49.9 acres .........................: 279 9,742 274 8,417 110 1,325 50.0 to 99.9 acres .........................: 238 16,640 237 15,078 93 1,562 100.0 acres or more ........................: 261 67,520 258 60,933 110 6,587 100.0 to 249.9 acres .....................: 196 29,793 193 27,389 76 2,405 250.0 to 499.9 acres .....................: 39 13,410 39 11,699 22 1,711 500.0 acres or more ......................: 26 24,317 26 21,846 12 2,471 : Plums ....................................2012: 995 21,616 820 19,177 358 2,439 2007: 1,284 32,838 1,168 29,344 402 3,493 2012 acres: : 0.1 to 0.9 acres .........................: 355 78 242 51 140 27 1.0 to 4.9 acres .........................: 185 408 145 305 85 103 5.0 to 14.9 acres ........................: 176 1,577 170 1,426 40 151 15.0 to 24.9 acres .......................: 94 1,800 87 1,523 32 276 25.0 to 49.9 acres .......................: 97 3,279 94 2,790 30 489 50.0 to 99.9 acres .......................: 45 3,210 41 2,844 17 366 100.0 acres or more ......................: 43 11,264 41 10,238 14 1,025 100.0 to 249.9 acres ...................: 30 4,491 30 4,341 6 150 250.0 to 499.9 acres ...................: 6 1,838 4 1,023 4 815 500.0 acres or more ....................: 7 4,935 7 4,874 4 60 : 2007 acres: : 0.1 to 0.9 acres .........................: 366 89 286 67 102 22 1.0 to 4.9 acres .........................: 212 491 189 412 58 79 5.0 to 14.9 acres ........................: 262 2,284 257 2,066 63 218 15.0 to 24.9 acres .......................: 162 3,069 159 2,751 54 318 25.0 to 49.9 acres .......................: 125 4,380 121 3,751 49 629 50.0 to 99.9 acres .......................: 94 6,476 93 5,800 43 676 100.0 acres or more ......................: 63 16,052 63 14,499 33 1,553 100.0 to 249.9 acres ...................: 45 7,026 45 (D) 22 (D) 250.0 to 499.9 acres ...................: 13 4,375 13 3,637 9 738 500.0 acres or more ....................: 5 4,651 5 (D) 2 (D) : Prunes ...................................2012: 686 61,295 650 54,186 231 7,108 2007: 784 70,022 760 63,134 254 6,888 2012 acres: : 0.1 to 0.9 acres .........................: 32 10 32 9 3 (Z) 1.0 to 4.9 acres .........................: 41 86 36 67 12 18 5.0 to 14.9 acres ........................: 93 815 77 690 36 124 15.0 to 24.9 acres .......................: 83 1,638 81 1,465 21 173 25.0 to 49.9 acres .......................: 136 4,825 136 4,564 33 261 50.0 to 99.9 acres .......................: 136 9,515 129 8,471 39 1,044 100.0 acres or more ......................: 165 44,408 159 38,920 87 5,488 100.0 to 249.9 acres ...................: 117 17,393 111 14,487 66 2,906 250.0 to 499.9 acres ...................: 34 12,199 34 11,368 11 830 500.0 acres or more ....................: 14 14,816 14 13,065 10 1,752 : 2007 acres: : 0.1 to 0.9 acres .........................: 21 5 21 5 - - 1.0 to 4.9 acres .........................: 36 83 31 72 10 11 5.0 to 14.9 acres ........................: 109 1,065 97 930 34 135 15.0 to 24.9 acres .......................: 110 2,113 107 1,976 20 137 ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 39. Specified Fruits and Nuts by Acres: 2012 and 2007 (continued) [Totals may not add due to rounding. For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : Total : Bearing age acres : Nonbearing age acres :-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Crop : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Noncitrus fruit, all (see text) - Con. : Plums and prunes - Con. : Prunes - Con. : 2007 acres: - Con. : : 25.0 to 49.9 acres .......................: 165 5,770 164 5,074 64 696 50.0 to 99.9 acres .......................: 149 10,465 149 9,585 49 880 100.0 acres or more ......................: 194 50,521 191 45,492 77 5,029 100.0 to 249.9 acres ...................: 148 22,240 145 20,382 55 1,858 250.0 to 499.9 acres ...................: 25 8,704 25 7,750 12 954 500.0 acres or more ....................: 21 19,578 21 17,360 10 2,218 : Plumcots, pluots, and other plum-apricot : hybrids (see text) ........................2012: 175 3,240 142 2,930 64 310 2007: 249 4,136 213 3,701 76 436 : Pomegranates ...............................2012: 783 32,226 626 29,570 314 2,656 2007: 517 24,458 379 12,057 256 12,401 : Other noncitrus fruit (see text) ...........2012: 535 4,736 471 4,428 160 308 2007: 701 (D) 661 (D) 81 (D) : Citrus fruit, all ............................2012: 7,283 293,387 6,687 260,129 1,934 33,259 2007: 7,358 303,101 7,027 279,212 1,652 23,890 2012 acres: : 0.1 to 0.9 acres .............................: 1,390 517 1,065 (D) 456 (D) 1.0 to 4.9 acres .............................: 2,476 5,151 2,327 4,591 528 560 5.0 to 14.9 acres ............................: 1,260 10,700 1,201 9,723 250 978 15.0 to 24.9 acres ...........................: 547 10,384 522 9,229 133 1,155 25.0 to 49.9 acres ...........................: 588 20,862 573 18,712 149 2,150 50.0 to 99.9 acres ...........................: 457 32,502 452 29,394 152 3,108 100.0 to 249.9 acres .........................: 360 53,025 352 47,059 156 5,966 250.0 to 499.9 acres .........................: 119 41,587 112 34,763 57 6,824 500.0 to 749.9 acres .........................: 40 24,297 38 21,460 23 2,837 750.0 to 999.9 acres .........................: 15 12,665 15 (D) 9 (D) 1,000.0 acres or more ........................: 31 81,698 30 (D) 21 (D) 1,000.0 to 1,999.9 acres ...................: 24 (D) 23 (D) 17 2,829 2,000.0 to 2,999.9 acres ...................: 4 (D) 4 (D) 3 (D) 3,000.0 acres or more ......................: 3 (D) 3 (D) 1 (D) : 2007 acres: : 0.1 to 0.9 acres .............................: 1,016 412 913 364 163 48 1.0 to 4.9 acres .............................: 2,524 5,315 2,412 4,807 475 508 5.0 to 14.9 acres ............................: 1,464 12,584 1,392 11,529 285 1,055 15.0 to 24.9 acres ...........................: 661 12,550 639 11,460 141 1,090 25.0 to 49.9 acres ...........................: 667 23,457 654 21,638 186 1,818 50.0 to 99.9 acres ...........................: 467 32,639 460 29,762 151 2,878 100.0 to 249.9 acres .........................: 364 54,685 362 49,027 156 5,658 250.0 to 499.9 acres .........................: 118 40,475 118 37,569 53 2,906 500.0 to 749.9 acres .........................: 28 16,435 28 15,665 13 771 750.0 to 999.9 acres .........................: 8 6,958 8 6,480 4 479 1,000.0 acres or more ........................: 41 97,592 41 90,912 25 6,680 1,000.0 to 1,999.9 acres ...................: 31 (D) 31 (D) 20 (D) 2,000.0 to 2,999.9 acres ...................: 5 (D) 5 (D) 3 (D) 3,000.0 acres or more ......................: 5 (D) 5 (D) 2 (D) : Grapefruit .................................2012: 714 10,447 647 9,675 145 772 2007: 879 10,725 815 9,520 177 1,205 2012 acres: : 0.1 to 0.9 acres ...........................: 144 47 116 36 49 10 1.0 to 4.9 acres ...........................: 301 634 276 559 49 76 5.0 to 14.9 acres ..........................: 143 1,184 137 1,097 21 87 15.0 to 24.9 acres .........................: 54 988 49 830 13 158 25.0 to 49.9 acres .........................: 34 (D) 31 (D) 6 149 50.0 to 99.9 acres .........................: 22 1,566 22 1,558 4 8 100.0 acres or more ........................: 16 (D) 16 (D) 3 285 100.0 to 249.9 acres .....................: 11 (D) 11 (D) 2 (D) 250.0 to 499.9 acres .....................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - 500.0 to 749.9 acres .....................: 2 (D) 2 (D) 1 (D) 750.0 to 999.9 acres .....................: - - - - - - 1,000.0 acres or more ....................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - : 2007 acres: : 0.1 to 0.9 acres ...........................: 180 54 160 49 29 5 1.0 to 4.9 acres ...........................: 368 817 352 742 60 75 5.0 to 14.9 acres ..........................: 203 1,641 186 1,398 51 243 15.0 to 24.9 acres .........................: 44 801 39 684 15 117 25.0 to 49.9 acres .........................: 40 (D) 37 (D) 9 127 50.0 to 99.9 acres .........................: 30 2,032 29 1,910 6 122 100.0 acres or more ........................: 14 (D) 12 (D) 7 516 100.0 to 249.9 acres .....................: 9 (D) 7 (D) 5 (D) 250.0 to 499.9 acres .....................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - 500.0 to 749.9 acres .....................: 2 (D) 2 (D) 2 (D) 750.0 to 999.9 acres .....................: - - - - - - 1,000.0 acres or more ....................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - : Kumquats ...................................2012: 58 97 50 91 13 6 2007: 94 133 82 126 17 8 : Lemons .....................................2012: 2,320 49,631 1,992 44,123 621 5,509 2007: 1,880 53,232 1,735 49,563 410 3,670 2012 acres: : 0.1 to 0.9 acres ...........................: 915 190 660 142 294 48 1.0 to 4.9 acres ...........................: 549 1,086 517 984 100 101 5.0 to 14.9 acres ..........................: 345 3,053 319 2,660 84 393 15.0 to 24.9 acres .........................: 163 3,074 160 2,862 36 212 25.0 to 49.9 acres .........................: 139 4,711 136 (D) 32 (D) 50.0 to 99.9 acres .........................: 89 6,302 87 (D) 29 (D) 100.0 acres or more ........................: 120 31,216 113 27,392 46 3,824 100.0 to 249.9 acres .....................: 83 (D) 80 10,364 29 (D) 250.0 to 499.9 acres .....................: 23 (D) 21 (D) 10 (D) 500.0 acres or more ......................: 14 12,019 12 (D) 7 (D) ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 39. Specified Fruits and Nuts by Acres: 2012 and 2007 (continued) [Totals may not add due to rounding. For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : Total : Bearing age acres : Nonbearing age acres :-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Crop : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Citrus fruit, all - Con. : Lemons - Con. : : 2007 acres: : 0.1 to 0.9 acres ...........................: 489 129 406 111 101 19 1.0 to 4.9 acres ...........................: 482 1,003 456 884 85 119 5.0 to 14.9 acres ..........................: 357 3,006 337 2,702 77 304 15.0 to 24.9 acres .........................: 175 3,336 165 2,904 47 431 25.0 to 49.9 acres .........................: 152 5,324 146 4,908 36 416 50.0 to 99.9 acres .........................: 111 7,977 111 7,445 32 532 100.0 acres or more ........................: 114 32,458 114 30,609 32 1,849 100.0 to 249.9 acres .....................: 82 12,056 82 (D) 22 (D) 250.0 to 499.9 acres .....................: 20 6,655 20 (D) 6 (D) 500.0 acres or more ......................: 12 13,746 12 (D) 4 (D) : Limes ......................................2012: 296 460 261 435 61 25 2007: 363 525 352 494 64 31 : Oranges, all ...............................2012: 5,204 193,087 4,776 176,222 1,287 16,865 2007: 5,254 212,313 5,042 200,424 1,036 11,889 2012 acres: : 0.1 to 0.9 acres ...........................: 1,129 359 864 270 351 89 1.0 to 4.9 acres ...........................: 1,524 3,222 1,438 2,888 292 333 5.0 to 14.9 acres ..........................: 933 7,970 895 7,294 166 676 15.0 to 24.9 acres .........................: 393 7,425 375 6,629 88 796 25.0 to 49.9 acres .........................: 472 16,781 462 15,215 117 1,567 50.0 to 99.9 acres .........................: 364 25,711 359 23,108 114 2,603 100.0 acres or more ........................: 389 131,619 383 120,818 159 10,801 100.0 to 249.9 acres .....................: 256 37,567 254 (D) 98 (D) 250.0 to 499.9 acres .....................: 82 (D) 79 (D) 36 (D) 500.0 acres or more ......................: 51 (D) 50 (D) 25 (D) 500.0 to 749.9 acres ...................: 26 16,067 26 15,479 10 588 750.0 to 999.9 acres ...................: 8 (D) 7 (D) 4 (D) 1,000.0 to 1,499.9 acres ...............: 11 (D) 11 (D) 7 696 1,500.0 acres or more ..................: 6 30,387 6 (D) 4 (D) : 2007 acres: : 0.1 to 0.9 acres ...........................: 787 287 715 252 109 35 1.0 to 4.9 acres ...........................: 1,586 3,354 1,526 3,094 245 260 5.0 to 14.9 acres ..........................: 1,118 9,662 1,070 8,966 189 696 15.0 to 24.9 acres .........................: 480 9,188 466 8,549 85 638 25.0 to 49.9 acres .........................: 520 18,246 509 16,752 138 1,495 50.0 to 99.9 acres .........................: 376 25,727 371 23,686 108 2,042 100.0 acres or more ........................: 387 145,849 385 139,125 162 6,724 100.0 to 249.9 acres .....................: 245 36,443 243 (D) 100 (D) 250.0 to 499.9 acres .....................: 88 (D) 88 (D) 32 1,703 500.0 acres or more ......................: 54 (D) 54 (D) 30 (D) 500.0 to 749.9 acres ...................: 17 10,311 17 9,836 11 475 750.0 to 999.9 acres ...................: 8 (D) 8 (D) 4 (D) 1,000.0 to 1,499.9 acres ...............: 17 19,435 17 18,760 10 675 1,500.0 acres or more ..................: 12 (D) 12 (D) 5 304 : Valencia oranges .........................2012: 2,431 43,910 2,252 41,763 428 2,147 2007: 2,620 54,051 2,522 52,001 372 2,049 2012 acres: : 0.1 to 0.9 acres .........................: 636 (D) 506 (D) 168 (D) 1.0 to 4.9 acres .........................: 693 1,482 666 1,373 93 109 5.0 to 14.9 acres ........................: 546 4,708 538 4,505 63 203 15.0 to 24.9 acres .......................: 215 4,066 209 3,833 32 232 25.0 to 49.9 acres .......................: 186 6,396 184 (D) 37 (D) 50.0 to 99.9 acres .......................: 75 5,099 70 4,560 17 539 100.0 acres or more ......................: 80 (D) 79 (D) 18 (D) 100.0 to 249.9 acres ...................: 61 (D) 60 (D) 15 (D) 250.0 to 499.9 acres ...................: 14 (D) 14 (D) 1 (D) 500.0 acres or more ....................: 5 8,213 5 (D) 2 (D) 500.0 to 749.9 acres .................: 2 (D) 2 (D) 1 (D) 750.0 to 999.9 acres .................: - - - - - - 1,000.0 to 1,499.9 acres .............: - - - - - - 1,500.0 acres or more ................: 3 (D) 3 (D) 1 (D) : 2007 acres: : 0.1 to 0.9 acres .........................: 528 216 467 196 71 20 1.0 to 4.9 acres .........................: 782 1,684 764 1,581 114 103 5.0 to 14.9 acres ........................: 650 5,694 638 5,429 69 266 15.0 to 24.9 acres .......................: 257 4,876 253 (D) 39 (D) 25.0 to 49.9 acres .......................: 200 6,950 198 6,701 31 248 50.0 to 99.9 acres .......................: 117 7,608 116 (D) 29 (D) 100.0 acres or more ......................: 86 27,023 86 (D) 19 (D) 100.0 to 249.9 acres ...................: 61 9,489 61 8,909 13 580 250.0 to 499.9 acres ...................: 17 5,829 17 (D) 4 (D) 500.0 acres or more ....................: 8 11,705 8 (D) 2 (D) 500.0 to 749.9 acres .................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - 750.0 to 999.9 acres .................: 2 (D) 2 (D) 1 (D) 1,000.0 to 1,499.9 acres .............: 1 (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) 1,500.0 acres or more ................: 3 7,395 3 7,395 - - : Other oranges (see text) .................2012: 4,114 149,177 3,745 134,460 1,053 14,718 2007: 4,052 158,263 3,867 148,423 833 9,840 2012 acres: : 0.1 to 0.9 acres .........................: 1,033 301 798 235 308 67 1.0 to 4.9 acres .........................: 1,027 2,201 960 1,961 209 240 5.0 to 14.9 acres ........................: 773 6,560 733 5,926 142 634 15.0 to 24.9 acres .......................: 280 5,322 265 4,555 80 767 25.0 to 49.9 acres .......................: 407 14,585 401 13,434 82 1,150 50.0 to 99.9 acres .......................: 303 20,930 303 (D) 103 (D) 100.0 acres or more ......................: 291 99,279 285 (D) 129 (D) 100.0 to 249.9 acres ...................: 184 27,922 182 (D) 77 (D) 250.0 to 499.9 acres ...................: 69 (D) 66 (D) 33 (D) 500.0 acres or more ....................: 38 (D) 37 (D) 19 (D) 500.0 to 749.9 acres .................: 19 (D) 18 (D) 9 (D) 750.0 to 999.9 acres .................: 8 (D) 8 (D) 2 (D) ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 39. Specified Fruits and Nuts by Acres: 2012 and 2007 (continued) [Totals may not add due to rounding. For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : Total : Bearing age acres : Nonbearing age acres :-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Crop : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Citrus fruit, all - Con. : Oranges, all - Con. : Other oranges (see text) - Con. : 2012 acres: - Con. : : 1,000.0 to 1,499.9 acres .............: 7 7,928 7 7,337 6 591 1,500.0 acres or more ................: 4 20,439 4 (D) 2 (D) : 2007 acres: : 0.1 to 0.9 acres .........................: 759 232 705 (D) 93 (D) 1.0 to 4.9 acres .........................: 1,028 2,314 977 2,128 158 187 5.0 to 14.9 acres ........................: 867 7,445 820 6,845 161 600 15.0 to 24.9 acres .......................: 391 7,468 372 6,730 87 738 25.0 to 49.9 acres .......................: 430 15,136 421 13,965 123 1,171 50.0 to 99.9 acres .......................: 293 20,288 289 18,545 83 1,743 100.0 acres or more ......................: 284 105,379 283 (D) 128 (D) 100.0 to 249.9 acres ...................: 176 27,107 175 (D) 79 (D) 250.0 to 499.9 acres ...................: 65 (D) 65 (D) 27 (D) 500.0 acres or more ....................: 43 (D) 43 (D) 22 (D) 500.0 to 749.9 acres .................: 17 (D) 17 (D) 7 (D) 750.0 to 999.9 acres .................: 10 8,826 10 (D) 5 (D) 1,000.0 to 1,499.9 acres .............: 11 (D) 11 (D) 8 418 1,500.0 acres or more ................: 5 24,482 5 (D) 2 (D) : Tangelos ...................................2012: 185 3,632 171 3,179 46 453 2007: 253 4,517 239 3,998 50 519 : Tangerines .................................2012: 755 33,465 643 24,428 264 9,037 2007: 706 21,528 595 15,030 234 6,499 : Other citrus fruit (see text) ..............2012: 238 2,568 196 1,976 80 592 2007: 40 127 35 57 15 70 : Nuts, all (see text) .........................2012: 12,939 1,499,520 11,802 1,275,752 4,877 223,769 2007: 12,639 1,210,203 11,494 990,830 4,892 219,374 : Almonds ....................................2012: 6,841 935,804 6,204 817,920 2,539 117,885 2007: 6,474 790,160 5,821 649,892 2,721 140,269 2012 acres: : 0.1 to 0.9 acres ...........................: 426 92 235 55 201 38 1.0 to 4.9 acres ...........................: 459 1,194 418 1,007 112 187 5.0 to 14.9 acres ..........................: 1,063 9,763 957 8,115 322 1,648 15.0 to 24.9 acres .........................: 1,039 19,245 931 16,035 328 3,210 25.0 to 49.9 acres .........................: 1,165 41,327 1,083 35,335 382 5,992 50.0 to 99.9 acres .........................: 892 62,533 847 53,532 316 9,001 100.0 acres or more ........................: 1,797 801,649 1,733 703,841 878 97,808 100.0 to 249.9 acres .....................: 979 154,908 936 131,897 422 23,011 250.0 to 499.9 acres .....................: 450 157,884 434 135,135 242 22,749 500.0 to 749.9 acres .....................: 155 93,318 150 77,879 88 15,439 750.0 to 999.9 acres .....................: 80 68,493 80 60,884 43 7,609 1,000.0 acres or more ....................: 133 327,045 133 298,045 83 29,000 : 2007 acres: : 0.1 to 0.9 acres ...........................: 266 61 208 47 81 15 1.0 to 4.9 acres ...........................: 467 1,184 423 1,007 146 177 5.0 to 14.9 acres ..........................: 1,063 9,716 907 7,801 356 1,916 15.0 to 24.9 acres .........................: 1,077 19,954 957 16,004 466 3,950 25.0 to 49.9 acres .........................: 1,095 38,702 970 30,066 470 8,636 50.0 to 99.9 acres .........................: 900 63,683 823 51,172 383 12,511 100.0 acres or more ........................: 1,606 656,860 1,533 543,795 819 113,065 100.0 to 249.9 acres .....................: 927 146,610 869 119,021 448 27,590 250.0 to 499.9 acres .....................: 389 137,479 377 113,289 211 24,191 500.0 to 749.9 acres .....................: 139 82,386 136 70,366 76 12,021 750.0 to 999.9 acres .....................: 51 43,630 51 38,534 26 5,096 1,000.0 acres or more ....................: 100 246,754 100 202,586 58 44,168 : Chestnuts (see text) .......................2012: 59 507 53 428 20 79 2007: 76 334 62 (D) 31 (D) : Hazelnuts (Filberts) .......................2012: 33 137 21 26 12 110 2007: 12 10 7 (D) 5 (D) : Macadamia nuts .............................2012: 146 277 126 230 46 48 2007: 139 184 100 102 56 82 : Pecans, all (see text) .....................2012: 222 3,309 190 2,563 74 746 2007: 283 3,128 233 2,487 96 641 2012 acres: : 0.1 to 0.9 acres ...........................: 50 14 38 9 13 4 1.0 to 4.9 acres ...........................: 75 181 70 138 24 42 5.0 to 14.9 acres ..........................: 51 415 43 328 18 87 15.0 to 24.9 acres .........................: 26 479 20 358 12 121 25.0 to 49.9 acres .........................: 9 318 9 (D) 1 (D) 50.0 to 99.9 acres .........................: 4 225 4 (D) 2 (D) 100.0 acres or more ........................: 7 1,678 6 (D) 4 (D) : 2007 acres: : 0.1 to 0.9 acres ...........................: 79 19 58 (D) 31 (D) 1.0 to 4.9 acres ...........................: 92 190 79 164 24 26 5.0 to 14.9 acres ..........................: 64 570 57 461 20 109 15.0 to 24.9 acres .........................: 24 436 21 344 6 92 25.0 to 49.9 acres .........................: 14 437 8 207 9 230 50.0 to 99.9 acres .........................: 6 429 6 (D) 3 (D) 100.0 acres or more ........................: 4 1,048 4 (D) 3 (D) : Pecans, improved (see text) ..............2012: 179 3,081 153 2,377 63 704 2007: 279 3,128 233 2,487 92 641 : Pecans, native and seedlings .............2012: 45 228 39 187 11 42 2007: 4 (Z) - - 4 (Z) ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 39. Specified Fruits and Nuts by Acres: 2012 and 2007 (continued) [Totals may not add due to rounding. For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : Total : Bearing age acres : Nonbearing age acres :-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Crop : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Nuts, all (see text) - Con. : : Pistachios .................................2012: 1,305 228,248 1,076 181,957 519 46,290 2007: 1,141 151,484 936 114,832 435 36,651 2012 acres: : 0.1 to 0.9 acres ...........................: 122 28 67 20 62 9 1.0 to 4.9 acres ...........................: 177 398 142 263 72 134 5.0 to 14.9 acres ..........................: 197 1,795 168 1,479 60 316 15.0 to 24.9 acres .........................: 125 2,422 111 1,978 36 444 25.0 to 49.9 acres .........................: 184 6,438 157 5,168 68 1,270 50.0 to 99.9 acres .........................: 140 10,132 117 7,544 57 2,588 100.0 acres or more ........................: 360 207,036 314 165,505 164 41,531 100.0 to 249.9 acres .....................: 180 26,946 150 20,220 71 6,726 250.0 to 499.9 acres .....................: 94 33,714 89 26,931 43 6,783 500.0 to 749.9 acres .....................: 29 17,461 24 11,441 17 6,021 750.0 to 999.9 acres .....................: 18 15,395 15 9,629 8 5,766 1,000.0 acres or more ....................: 39 113,519 36 97,284 25 16,235 : 2007 acres: : 0.1 to 0.9 acres ...........................: 76 25 50 17 27 7 1.0 to 4.9 acres ...........................: 156 358 121 252 56 106 5.0 to 14.9 acres ..........................: 186 1,631 158 1,322 56 309 15.0 to 24.9 acres .........................: 129 2,501 112 2,170 29 331 25.0 to 49.9 acres .........................: 190 6,880 156 5,167 72 1,713 50.0 to 99.9 acres .........................: 143 10,016 116 7,205 70 2,810 100.0 acres or more ........................: 261 130,073 223 98,699 125 31,374 100.0 to 249.9 acres .....................: 143 21,912 120 15,720 62 6,192 250.0 to 499.9 acres .....................: 62 21,906 53 14,193 34 7,713 500.0 to 749.9 acres .....................: 22 13,263 17 7,625 13 5,638 750.0 to 999.9 acres .....................: 9 7,862 8 6,665 3 1,197 1,000.0 acres or more ....................: 25 65,130 25 54,496 13 10,634 : Walnuts, English ...........................2012: 5,712 329,112 5,176 270,819 2,034 58,293 2007: 5,712 264,517 5,345 222,887 1,878 41,629 2012 acres: : 0.1 to 0.9 acres ...........................: 491 (D) 359 112 171 (D) 1.0 to 4.9 acres ...........................: 1,216 (D) 1,124 2,451 293 (D) 5.0 to 14.9 acres ..........................: 1,235 10,751 1,118 8,767 389 1,983 15.0 to 24.9 acres .........................: 673 12,449 609 10,162 245 2,286 25.0 to 49.9 acres .........................: 729 25,297 669 20,719 276 4,578 50.0 to 99.9 acres .........................: 574 38,910 537 (D) 249 (D) 100.0 acres or more ........................: 794 (D) 760 (D) 411 41,333 100.0 to 249.9 acres .....................: 507 (D) 477 (D) 238 13,993 250.0 to 499.9 acres .....................: 193 64,465 190 53,300 110 11,165 500.0 to 749.9 acres .....................: 51 29,749 50 24,618 35 5,131 750.0 to 999.9 acres .....................: 14 11,826 14 9,884 9 1,942 1,000.0 acres or more ....................: 29 55,228 29 46,126 19 9,102 : 2007 acres: : 0.1 to 0.9 acres ...........................: 345 (D) 272 (D) 104 (D) 1.0 to 4.9 acres ...........................: 1,347 3,168 1,286 (D) 291 (D) 5.0 to 14.9 acres ..........................: 1,370 11,451 1,283 9,823 447 1,627 15.0 to 24.9 acres .........................: 709 13,292 663 11,449 207 1,843 25.0 to 49.9 acres .........................: 752 26,356 701 22,189 266 4,167 50.0 to 99.9 acres .........................: 549 38,278 518 31,857 227 6,421 100.0 acres or more ........................: 640 (D) 622 (D) 336 27,228 100.0 to 249.9 acres .....................: 436 (D) 421 (D) 227 11,446 250.0 to 499.9 acres .....................: 148 49,533 146 43,171 75 6,362 500.0 to 749.9 acres .....................: 36 22,152 35 18,798 22 3,354 750.0 to 999.9 acres .....................: 6 5,115 6 4,060 4 1,055 1,000.0 acres or more ....................: 14 29,200 14 24,189 8 5,011 : Other nuts (see text) ......................2012: 119 2,128 107 1,809 38 319 2007: 21 387 17 358 5 29 ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Table 40. Berries: 2012 and 2007 [Totals may not add due to rounding. For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : Total : Acres harvested : Acres not harvested :----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Crop : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Blackberries and dewberries (including marionberries) ............2012: 626 1,172 531 776 161 396 2007: 383 1,132 335 920 80 212 : Blueberries, tame ................................................2012: 416 4,806 324 4,187 157 619 2007: 223 3,081 186 2,232 72 849 : Blueberries, wild ................................................2012: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - 2007: - - - - - - : Boysenberries ....................................................2012: 210 75 167 61 49 13 2007: 117 114 104 103 22 11 : Currants .........................................................2012: 14 (D) 8 7 9 (D) 2007: 7 (D) 5 2 3 (D) : Loganberries .....................................................2012: 46 14 41 9 9 5 2007: 5 2 5 2 - - : Raspberries, all .................................................2012: 483 5,570 418 5,129 103 441 2007: 274 3,247 254 3,084 51 163 : Strawberries .....................................................2012: 995 40,926 887 38,800 216 2,126 2007: 729 34,442 719 34,101 77 341 2012 acres: : 0.1 to 0.9 acres .................................................: 375 76 288 (D) 99 (D) 1.0 to 4.9 acres .................................................: 245 541 237 472 54 69 5.0 to 14.9 acres ................................................: 114 897 103 705 29 192 15.0 to 24.9 acres ...............................................: 35 660 35 626 6 34 25.0 to 49.9 acres ...............................................: 56 1,940 56 1,912 6 28 50.0 to 99.9 acres ...............................................: 55 3,984 55 3,899 5 85 100.0 acres or more ..............................................: 115 32,828 113 (D) 17 (D) : 2007 acres: : 0.1 to 0.9 acres .................................................: 158 45 150 42 18 3 1.0 to 4.9 acres .................................................: 186 414 185 390 24 24 5.0 to 14.9 acres ................................................: 110 862 109 819 18 43 15.0 to 24.9 acres ...............................................: 53 995 53 976 4 19 25.0 to 49.9 acres ...............................................: 73 2,342 73 2,253 6 89 50.0 to 99.9 acres ...............................................: 56 3,938 56 3,931 3 7 100.0 acres or more ..............................................: 93 25,845 93 25,690 4 155 : Other berries (see text)..........................................2012: 82 52 71 44 19 8 2007: 67 (D) 62 27 6 (D) ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Table 41. Nursery, Greenhouse, Floriculture, Sod, Mushrooms, Vegetable Seeds, and Propagative Materials Grown for Sale: 2012 and 2007 [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ : Under glass or other protection : In the open : Value of sales :----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Crops : Farms : Square feet : Farms : Acres : Farms : Dollars ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Aquatic plants .........................................2012: 16 107,777 31 22 37 (D) 2007: 18 145,812 35 20 44 (D) : Bulbs, corms, rhizomes, and tubers-dry .................2012: 13 129,465 89 1,877 95 31,893,260 2007: 12 95,958 82 823 86 38,208,034 : Cuttings, seedlings, liners, and plugs : (see text) ............................................2012: 111 5,139,559 64 1,903 143 136,817,046 2007: 86 4,426,391 69 177 128 84,376,862 : Floriculture crops - : bedding/garden plants, cut flowers and : cut florist greens, foliage plants, potted : flowering plants, and other floriculture and : bedding crops, total ..................................2012: 1,098 115,337,135 1,581 12,535 2,134 1,029,723,139 2007: 950 103,139,657 1,349 12,017 1,865 1,222,371,503 : Bedding/garden plants ................................2012: 482 24,270,690 488 2,081 773 307,364,419 2007: 374 24,093,631 423 2,601 615 397,805,269 : Cut flowers and cut florist greens ...................2012: 249 50,469,142 834 7,279 952 333,813,948 2007: 184 38,885,970 676 8,126 766 412,597,447 : Foliage plants, indoor ...............................2012: 156 8,104,320 77 317 192 55,125,450 2007: 209 12,213,485 157 778 287 120,065,062 : Potted flowering plants ..............................2012: 292 29,919,592 207 1,661 405 281,283,269 2007: 314 27,854,763 189 431 418 289,618,722 : Other floriculture and bedding crops .................2012: 71 2,573,391 92 1,198 145 52,136,053 2007: 9 91,808 20 81 27 2,285,003 : Flower seeds ...........................................2012: 3 (D) 42 2,049 44 15,951,844 2007: 6 23,984 23 1,065 29 13,557,218 : Greenhouse fruits and berries (see text) ...............2012: 57 4,845,106 (X) (X) 57 19,120,342 2007: 13 (D) (X) (X) 13 (D) : Total greenhouse vegetables and : fresh cut herbs (see text) ............................2012: 427 28,312,315 (X) (X) 427 164,808,642 2007: 182 12,924,882 (X) (X) 181 112,284,392 2012 farms by area: : 1 to 999 square feet ...................................: 184 56,480 (X) (X) 184 917,452 1,000 to 1,999 square feet .............................: 39 50,700 (X) (X) 39 180,662 2,000 to 2,999 square feet .............................: 26 60,953 (X) (X) 26 204,434 3,000 to 3,999 square feet .............................: 32 106,482 (X) (X) 32 3,388,879 4,000 to 5,999 square feet .............................: 28 130,732 (X) (X) 28 2,300,123 6,000 to 9,999 square feet .............................: 14 107,354 (X) (X) 14 359,802 10,000 or more square feet .............................: 104 27,799,614 (X) (X) 104 157,457,290 10,000 to 19,999 square feet .........................: 16 173,246 (X) (X) 16 1,417,092 20,000 to 39,999 square feet .........................: 27 682,060 (X) (X) 27 4,650,512 40,000 or more square feet ...........................: 61 26,944,308 (X) (X) 61 151,389,686 : Greenhouse tomatoes ..................................2012: 223 8,491,057 (X) (X) 221 64,864,808 2007: 81 6,008,943 (X) (X) 81 51,016,867 2012 farms by area: : 1 to 999 square feet .................................: 127 29,084 (X) (X) 125 188,728 1,000 to 1,999 square feet ...........................: 20 28,670 (X) (X) 20 225,229 2,000 to 2,999 square feet ...........................: 16 37,784 (X) (X) 16 202,018 3,000 to 3,999 square feet ...........................: 6 18,000 (X) (X) 6 144,000 4,000 to 5,999 square feet ...........................: 13 58,600 (X) (X) 13 346,200 6,000 to 9,999 square feet ...........................: 8 61,510 (X) (X) 8 258,000 10,000 or more square feet ...........................: 33 8,257,409 (X) (X) 33 63,500,633 10,000 to 19,999 square feet .......................: 5 58,391 (X) (X) 5 (D) 20,000 to 39,999 square feet .......................: 9 241,092 (X) (X) 9 (D) 40,000 or more square feet .........................: 19 7,957,926 (X) (X) 19 62,303,712 : Other greenhouse vegetables and : fresh cut herbs (see text) ..........................2012: 336 19,821,258 (X) (X) 336 99,943,834 2007: 140 6,915,939 (X) (X) 139 61,267,525 : Mushroom spawn (see text) ..............................2012: 2 (X) (X) (X) 2 (D) 2007: 2 (X) (X) (X) 2 (D) : Mushrooms ..............................................2012: 74 6,179,983 (X) (X) 74 241,283,866 2007: 55 5,483,804 (X) (X) 53 223,457,225 2012 farms by area: : 1 to 999 square feet ...................................: 25 6,452 (X) (X) 25 99,648 1,000 to 1,999 square feet .............................: 1 (D) (X) (X) 1 (D) 2,000 to 4,999 square feet .............................: 6 19,743 (X) (X) 6 338,573 5,000 to 9,999 square feet .............................: 7 56,376 (X) (X) 7 1,578,604 10,000 to 19,999 square feet ...........................: 3 47,600 (X) (X) 3 238,686 20,000 to 49,999 square feet ...........................: 14 (D) (X) (X) 14 (D) 50,000 to 99,999 square feet ...........................: 5 401,120 (X) (X) 5 5,554,154 100,000 to 199,999 square feet .........................: 6 (D) (X) (X) 6 (D) 200,000 to 499,999 square feet .........................: 3 715,512 (X) (X) 3 32,406,426 500,000 to 999,999 square feet .........................: 3 (D) (X) (X) 3 (D) 1,000,000 or more square feet ..........................: 1 (D) (X) (X) 1 (D) : Nursery stock crops (see text) .........................2012: 558 38,053,449 1,414 31,876 1,578 779,682,531 2007 1/: 482 25,179,297 1,519 31,889 1,626 1,682,234,080 : Sod harvested ..........................................2012: (X) (X) 48 12,530 48 124,935,633 2007: (X) (X) 55 19,087 55 252,476,652 2012 farms by area: : 0 to 14.9 acres ........................................: (X) (X) 15 (D) 15 (D) 15.0 to 49.9 acres .....................................: (X) (X) 2 (D) 2 (D) 50.0 to 99.9 acres .....................................: (X) (X) 6 377 6 3,289,732 100.0 to 249.9 acres ...................................: (X) (X) 10 1,620 10 18,355,077 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 41. Nursery, Greenhouse, Floriculture, Sod, Mushrooms, Vegetable Seeds, and Propagative Materials Grown for Sale: 2012 and 2007 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ : Under glass or other protection : In the open : Value of sales :----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Crops : Farms : Square feet : Farms : Acres : Farms : Dollars ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Sod harvested - Con. : 2012 farms by area: - Con. : : 250.0 to 399.9 acres ...................................: (X) (X) 5 1,549 5 11,312,514 400.0 to 749.9 acres ...................................: (X) (X) 5 2,519 5 24,680,069 750.0 acres or more ....................................: (X) (X) 5 6,318 5 65,976,000 : Vegetable seeds ........................................2012: 54 4,126,144 200 15,574 243 72,464,696 2007: 14 232,570 113 10,695 119 43,399,223 : Vegetable transplants ..................................2012: 123 11,612,705 81 (D) 160 99,442,667 2007: 57 14,291,522 29 193 68 90,985,384 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 1/2007 data do not include Other nursery stock. Table 42. Woodland Crops: 2012 and 2007 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ : Acres in production : Harvested : Irrigated :----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Crop : Farms : Acres : Farms : Trees cut : Farms : Acres ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Cut Christmas trees ....................................2012: 385 13,805 301 109,045 196 1,181 2007: 400 4,033 279 119,855 237 1,487 2012 farms by acres in production: : 1 to 2 acres ...........................................: 112 148 73 3,888 61 75 3 to 4 acres ...........................................: 74 263 59 12,582 51 177 5 to 9 acres ...........................................: 74 445 57 14,338 26 156 10 to 19 acres .........................................: 60 749 53 30,935 34 375 20 to 49 acres .........................................: 32 952 26 25,930 19 305 50 to 99 acres .........................................: 13 795 13 13,193 3 (D) 100 acres or more ......................................: 20 10,453 20 8,179 2 (D) : 2007 farms by acres in production: : 1 to 2 acres ...........................................: 107 (D) 63 (D) 64 97 3 to 4 acres ...........................................: 91 306 67 10,482 62 192 5 to 9 acres ...........................................: 99 607 76 27,363 56 327 10 to 19 acres .........................................: 53 657 38 43,158 34 318 20 to 49 acres .........................................: 38 1,128 23 22,351 15 305 50 to 99 acres .........................................: 10 620 10 12,739 4 (D) 100 acres or more ......................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) 2 (D) ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ : Acres in production : Harvested : Irrigated :----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Crop : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Short-rotation woody crops .............................2012: 65 542 38 186 30 158 2007: 97 2,086 53 420 52 631 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Table 43. Grain Storage Capacity: 2012 and 2007 [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ : 2012 : 2007 1/ :----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Grain storage capacity : Farms : Bushels : Farms : Bushels ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Grain storage capacity (see text) ..........................: 754 24,564,779 873 29,952,296 : Average capacity per farm ..............................: (X) 32,579 (X) 34,310 : Capacity by bushels: : 1 to 4,999 bushels .....................................: 443 407,695 444 529,773 5,000 to 9,999 bushels .................................: 68 462,781 84 603,293 10,000 to 19,999 bushels ...............................: 69 963,093 73 1,007,278 20,000 to 29,999 bushels ...............................: 22 564,365 53 1,274,746 30,000 to 49,999 bushels ...............................: 42 1,628,731 79 3,053,758 50,000 to 99,999 bushels ...............................: 48 3,518,551 71 5,047,844 100,000 to 249,999 bushels .............................: 41 6,349,765 51 8,204,923 250,000 bushels or more ................................: 21 10,669,798 18 10,230,681 : Capacity by land in farms: : 1 to 9 acres ...........................................: 85 152,722 77 741,328 10 to 49 acres .........................................: 154 2,062,746 166 1,861,521 50 to 69 acres .........................................: 18 (D) 30 651,087 70 to 99 acres .........................................: 49 783,224 27 189,728 100 to 139 acres .......................................: 22 169,310 37 534,452 140 to 179 acres .......................................: 25 772,832 36 892,053 180 to 219 acres .......................................: 18 (D) 38 905,383 220 to 259 acres .......................................: 19 (D) 23 618,143 260 to 499 acres .......................................: 85 3,990,667 88 3,980,782 500 to 999 acres .......................................: 74 2,620,792 100 6,153,451 1,000 to 1,999 acres ...................................: 61 2,887,000 104 6,748,369 2,000 to 4,999 acres ...................................: 73 5,696,734 73 2,924,006 5,000 acres or more ....................................: 71 4,690,880 74 3,751,993 : Capacity by harvested cropland: : 0 to 9 acres ...........................................: 341 2,753,661 363 5,816,516 10 to 49 acres .........................................: 59 1,412,085 62 1,145,616 50 to 69 acres .........................................: 19 506,439 27 818,801 70 to 99 acres .........................................: 26 757,272 28 464,506 100 to 139 acres .......................................: 25 161,991 18 145,836 140 to 179 acres .......................................: 18 507,533 34 1,828,678 180 to 219 acres .......................................: 11 119,726 25 1,243,648 220 to 259 acres .......................................: 12 90,628 12 176,908 260 to 499 acres .......................................: 54 3,399,810 92 2,488,600 500 to 999 acres .......................................: 69 4,000,119 83 5,432,030 1,000 to 1,999 acres ...................................: 63 3,658,301 84 6,191,212 2,000 to 4,999 acres ...................................: 37 4,106,615 31 2,581,716 5,000 acres or more ....................................: 20 3,090,599 14 1,618,229 : Capacity by North American Industry Classification : System (NAICS): : : Crop production (111) ..................................: 415 20,821,117 363 19,544,018 : Animal production and aquaculture (112) ................: 339 3,743,662 510 10,408,278 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 1/ 2007 data may not include storage capacity for pulse crops. Table 44. Farms by Concentration of Market Value of Agricultural Products Sold: 2012 [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: 77,857 44 234 1,019 3,256 percent: 100.0 0.1 0.3 1.3 4.2 Land in farms .........................................acres: 25,569,001 553,085 1,566,029 3,812,214 7,371,693 Average size of farm ..............................acres: 328 12,570 6,692 3,741 2,264 Estimated market value of land and : buildings ............................................farms: 77,857 44 234 1,019 3,256 $1,000: 160,524,953 3,936,804 11,810,099 30,360,729 58,466,443 Average per farm ................................dollars: 2,061,792 89,472,825 50,470,508 29,794,631 17,956,524 Average per acre ................................dollars: 6,278 7,118 7,541 7,964 7,931 Estimated market value of all machinery and : equipment ...........................................$1,000: 9,709,545 394,841 1,193,518 2,604,115 4,452,976 percent: 100.0 4.1 12.3 26.8 45.9 Land in farms according to use: : Total cropland ......................................acres: 9,591,783 479,969 1,232,985 2,829,992 5,046,755 Harvested cropland ................................acres: 8,007,461 445,516 1,140,565 2,626,673 4,593,961 Pastureland, excluding woodland : pastured ...........................................acres: 13,528,718 (D) 218,020 778,088 2,033,898 Market value of agricultural products : sold (see text) .....................................$1,000: 42,627,472 4,294,193 10,678,782 21,319,081 31,971,007 Average per farm ................................dollars: 547,510 97,595,292 45,635,821 20,921,571 9,819,105 Grains, oilseeds, dry beans, and : dry peas ...........................................farms: 4,757 6 45 248 867 $1,000: 1,727,708 22,616 68,334 308,065 775,734 Tobacco .............................................farms: - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - Cotton and cottonseed ...............................farms: 630 6 15 67 231 $1,000: 655,094 (D) 216,534 300,732 485,618 Vegetables, melons, potatoes, and : sweet potatoes .....................................farms: 6,155 17 86 289 764 $1,000: 6,327,838 966,410 2,678,575 4,412,394 5,786,200 Fruits, tree nuts, and berries ......................farms: 36,574 24 127 530 1,715 $1,000: 17,638,972 1,335,207 3,564,024 7,446,401 11,551,739 Fruits and tree nuts ..............................farms: 35,526 21 108 456 1,567 $1,000: 15,655,703 1,184,408 3,014,581 6,125,870 9,767,600 Berries ...........................................farms: 1,701 5 27 95 211 $1,000: 1,983,269 150,799 549,442 1,320,531 1,784,139 Nursery, greenhouse, floriculture, and : sod (see text) .....................................farms: 3,890 4 26 88 242 $1,000: 2,547,307 (D) 751,283 1,406,834 2,001,584 Cut Christmas trees and short-rotation : woody crops ........................................farms: 328 - - - - $1,000: 2,706 - - - - Cut Christmas trees ...............................farms: 301 - - - - $1,000: 2,499 - - - - Short rotation woody crops ........................farms: 38 - - - - $1,000: 206 - - - - Other crops and hay (see text) ......................farms: 5,744 4 32 175 612 $1,000: 1,467,274 (D) (D) 436,024 921,386 Maple syrup (see text) ............................farms: - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - Cattle and calves ...................................farms: 12,594 9 55 328 1,029 $1,000: 3,259,325 878,779 1,408,881 1,985,094 2,492,199 Milk from cows (see text) ...........................farms: 1,554 1 34 276 892 $1,000: 6,945,102 (D) 832,396 3,652,100 6,269,266 Hogs and pigs .......................................farms: 1,163 1 2 4 10 $1,000: 51,526 (D) (D) (D) 40,967 Sheep, goats, wool, mohair, : and milk (see text) ................................farms: 4,376 - 1 8 27 $1,000: 108,136 - (D) (D) 33,603 Horses, ponies, mules, burros, : and donkeys ........................................farms: 3,050 2 3 7 19 $1,000: 62,241 (D) 83 137 2,026 Poultry and eggs ....................................farms: 3,758 4 15 33 86 $1,000: 1,663,919 708,544 1,070,932 1,323,944 1,554,470 Aquaculture .........................................farms: 229 - - - 6 $1,000: 103,016 - - - 27,627 Other animals and other animal : products (see text) ................................farms: 1,766 - - 4 13 $1,000: 67,309 - - 10,920 28,588 Value of organically produced : commodities (see text) ...............................farms: 3,008 6 40 112 271 $1,000: 1,355,207 184,329 388,848 585,595 924,999 Value of landlords' share : of total sales (see text) ...........................farms: 2,147 - 12 52 243 $1,000: 266,275 - 14,424 69,047 141,457 Total farm production expenses ........................farms: 77,857 44 234 1,019 3,256 $1,000: 35,455,667 3,392,810 8,526,516 17,143,061 25,794,765 Selected farm production expenses: : Fertilizer, lime, and soil : conditioners purchased .............................farms: 38,958 33 180 813 2,584 $1,000: 1,806,062 173,606 432,380 857,256 1,298,727 Chemicals purchased .................................farms: 44,536 35 202 889 2,856 $1,000: 2,190,674 174,743 543,753 1,109,232 1,618,043 Livestock and poultry purchased : or leased (see text) ...............................farms: 12,585 13 55 255 737 $1,000: 1,254,286 481,254 740,922 919,071 1,054,852 Feed purchased ......................................farms: 30,014 19 78 385 1,182 $1,000: 6,069,374 827,168 1,542,612 3,449,072 5,216,818 Gasoline, fuels, and oils purchased .................farms: 70,844 44 234 1,014 3,218 $1,000: 1,552,328 125,034 340,682 683,176 1,041,888 Utilities (see text) ................................farms: 60,680 44 234 1,019 3,256 $1,000: 1,684,343 164,900 367,458 710,694 1,090,841 Hired farm labor ....................................farms: 33,955 42 231 989 3,135 $1,000: 5,877,973 370,457 1,276,438 2,621,071 4,063,740 Interest expense ....................................farms: 26,459 29 169 783 2,505 $1,000: 1,217,781 62,014 170,953 415,512 706,987 Government payments .................................. farms: 7,593 2 23 258 1,064 $1,000: 146,919 (D) 1,171 11,267 41,211 Inventory of selected livestock: : Cattle and calves ...................................farms: 16,764 9 54 341 1,053 number: 5,370,531 437,864 1,091,158 2,523,360 3,925,981 Milk cows .........................................farms: 1,931 2 35 277 871 number: 1,815,655 (D) 217,053 934,569 1,620,597 Hogs and pigs .......................................farms: 1,437 1 2 5 14 number: 111,893 (D) (D) (D) (D) ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Table 45. Commodities Raised and Delivered Under Production Contracts: 2012 and 2007 [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : 2012 : 2007 :----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Commodity : Farms : Number : Farms : Number ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Broilers and other meat-type chickens ................................: 41 31,520,639 59 45,163,506 Eggs, chicken (dozens) ...............................................: 5 4,613,725 6 6,943,750 Layers ...............................................................: 4 208,561 (NA) (NA) Pullets for laying flock replacement .................................: 2 (D) 6 816,708 Turkeys ..............................................................: 17 3,676,925 31 6,260,019 Custom fed cattle shipped directly for slaughter (see text) ..........: 25 296,156 7 256,562 Hogs and pigs ........................................................: 2 (D) - - Replacement dairy heifers ............................................: 68 277,529 (NA) (NA) Other cattle, sheep, livestock, or poultry (see text) ................: 65 (X) (NA) (X) Grains and oilseeds ..................................................: 3 (X) 1 (X) Vegetables, melons, and potatoes (see text) ..........................: 20 (X) 40 (X) Other crops (see text) ...............................................: 6 (X) 4 (X) : Value of commodities (see text) ($1,000) .............................: 245 1,082,310 249 787,183 Payments received (see text) ($1,000) ................................: 245 122,354 249 200,663 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Table 46. Value of Land and Buildings: 2012 and 2007 [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ : 2012 : 2007 :----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Value of land and buildings : Farms : Value ($1,000) : Farms : Value ($1,000) ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Estimated market value of land and buildings ..........farms: 77,857 (X) 81,033 (X) $1,000: (X) 160,524,953 (X) 162,533,390 Average per farm ................................dollars: (X) 2,061,792 (X) 2,005,768 Average per acre ................................dollars: (X) 6,278 (X) 6,408 : Farms by value group: : $1 to $49,999 ..........................................: 3,768 74,873 5,029 118,960 $50,000 to $99,999 .....................................: 2,993 208,459 3,759 265,510 $100,000 to $199,999 ...................................: 6,849 948,558 6,414 886,060 $200,000 to $499,999 ...................................: 22,324 7,183,527 17,710 5,776,195 $500,000 to $999,999 ...................................: 17,939 12,068,010 21,030 14,398,674 $1,000,000 to $1,999,999 ...............................: 9,621 12,812,064 11,981 15,622,101 $2,000,000 to $4,999,999 ...............................: 8,056 24,184,961 8,865 26,415,504 $5,000,000 to $9,999,999 ...............................: 3,283 22,493,015 3,291 22,348,564 $10,000,000 or more ....................................: 3,024 80,551,487 2,954 76,701,822 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Table 47. Value of Machinery and Equipment on Operation: 2012 and 2007 [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ : 2012 : 2007 :----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Value of machinery and equipment : Farms : Value ($1,000) : Farms : Value ($1,000) ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Estimated market value of machinery and equipment ..........: 77,851 9,709,545 81,017 8,761,575 Average per farm ................................dollars: (X) 124,720 (X) 108,145 : By value group: : $1 to $4,999 ...........................................: 10,455 23,292 9,262 22,643 $5,000 to $9,999 .......................................: 8,336 54,426 8,601 57,018 $10,000 to $19,999 .....................................: 13,025 172,632 12,858 171,132 $20,000 to $29,999 .....................................: 9,291 213,867 10,053 232,207 $30,000 to $49,999 .....................................: 9,535 353,194 11,186 415,232 $50,000 to $69,999 .....................................: 7,016 388,081 7,705 427,543 $70,000 to $99,999 .....................................: 4,175 338,700 4,813 389,848 $100,000 to $199,999 ...................................: 6,916 891,540 7,413 961,628 $200,000 to $499,999 ...................................: 5,289 1,567,646 5,791 1,707,417 $500,000 to $999,999 ...................................: 1,980 1,296,000 2,027 1,325,859 $1,000,000 or more .....................................: 1,833 4,410,167 1,308 3,051,046 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Table 48. Selected Machinery and Equipment on Operation: 2012 and 2007 [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : 2012 : 2007 :----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : : Manufactured : Manufactured : : Manufactured : Total : 2008 to 2012 : prior to 2008 : Total : 2003 to 2007 :----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Selected machinery and equipment : Farms : Number : Farms : Number : Farms : Number : Farms : Number : Farms : Number ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Trucks, including pickups (see text) ...........................: 55,175 132,455 14,758 27,749 48,885 104,706 64,856 141,131 24,711 39,698 Tractors .......................................................: 53,296 147,163 11,679 26,338 48,545 120,825 58,415 149,901 15,578 29,136 2 or 3 .......................................................: 16,648 38,479 2,822 6,526 15,237 35,140 18,147 41,569 3,200 7,259 4 or more ....................................................: 9,802 81,838 1,564 12,519 7,957 60,334 9,838 77,902 1,333 10,832 : Less than 40 horsepower (PTO) ................................: 31,264 49,313 4,257 6,291 28,112 43,022 35,355 53,949 7,073 9,115 40 to 99 horsepower (PTO) ....................................: 30,456 68,295 6,603 12,743 27,338 55,552 32,186 68,925 8,248 14,043 100 horsepower (PTO) or more .................................: 10,631 29,555 3,308 7,304 9,139 22,251 10,883 27,027 2,835 5,978 : Grain and bean combines, self-propelled ........................: 1,710 2,497 338 429 1,472 2,068 1,453 2,188 262 332 Cotton pickers and strippers, self-propelled ...................: 475 870 43 69 459 801 404 868 68 123 Forage harvesters, self-propelled ..............................: 1,629 2,188 317 406 1,409 1,782 1,348 1,633 217 299 Hay balers .....................................................: 3,674 4,822 431 605 3,330 4,217 3,432 4,209 473 622 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Table 49. Fertilizers and Chemicals Applied: 2012 and 2007 [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : 2012 : 2007 :: Item : 2012 : 2007 --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Any fertilizer, manure, or chemicals used ...farms: 44,143 52,744 :: Chemical expenses ...........................farms: 44,536 44,599 : :: $1,000: 2,190,674 1,369,132 : :: : Manure used .................................farms: 6,794 6,686 :: Acres treated to control- : acres treated: 712,975 645,305 :: Insects ...................................farms: 25,064 30,850 : :: acres: 5,293,093 5,780,492 Any fertilizer or chemical expenses .........farms: 49,254 55,697 :: Weeds, grass, or brush ....................farms: 32,402 30,656 $1,000: 3,996,736 2,683,307 :: acres: 6,116,162 4,819,747 : :: Nematodes .................................farms: 4,485 3,012 Commercial fertilizer, lime, : :: acres: 725,589 412,659 and soil conditioners used .................farms: 32,646 43,321 :: Diseases in crops and orchards ............farms: 14,196 14,877 acres treated: 6,314,533 6,728,011 :: acres: 2,038,769 2,168,502 : :: : Commercial fertilizer, lime, : :: Chemicals used to control growth, thin fruit, : and soil conditioners expenses .............farms: 38,958 48,395 :: ripen, or defoliate ........................farms: 9,810 7,018 $1,000: 1,806,062 1,314,175 :: acres on which used: 1,460,135 1,237,257 --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Table 50. Land Use Practices by Size of Farm: 2012 [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Land use practices : Farms : Acres :: Land use practices : Farms : Acres --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Land drained by tile .......................................: 1,913 476,794 :: Cropland on which no-till practices were used - Con. : Average per farm .......................................: (X) 249 :: No-till practices used: - Con. : : :: : Acres drained: : :: 200 to 499 acres .......................................: 105 30,503 1 to 9 acres ...........................................: 678 2,524 :: 500 to 999 acres .......................................: 41 29,607 10 to 49 acres .........................................: 561 13,120 :: 1,000 to 1,999 acres ...................................: 36 49,072 50 to 99 acres .........................................: 207 13,945 :: 2,000 acres or more ....................................: 11 35,265 100 to 199 acres .......................................: 128 17,051 :: : : :: Cropland on which conservation tillage, excluding no till, : 200 to 499 acres .......................................: 152 47,985 :: practices were used .......................................: 1,945 566,983 500 to 999 acres .......................................: 69 48,887 :: Average per farm .......................................: (X) 292 1,000 to 1,999 acres ...................................: 56 81,048 :: : 2,000 acres or more ....................................: 62 252,234 :: Conservation tillage used: : : :: 1 to 9 acres ...........................................: 818 2,141 Land artificially drained ..................................: 7,166 1,872,676 :: 10 to 49 acres .........................................: 338 7,482 Average per farm .......................................: (X) 261 :: 50 to 99 acres .........................................: 140 9,743 : :: 100 to 199 acres .......................................: 144 20,730 Acres drained by ditches: : :: : 1 to 9 acres ...........................................: 2,281 8,226 :: 200 to 499 acres .......................................: 252 81,963 10 to 49 acres .........................................: 1,908 43,516 :: 500 to 999 acres .......................................: 145 108,276 50 to 99 acres .........................................: 647 44,016 :: 1,000 to 1,999 acres ...................................: 51 66,231 100 to 199 acres .......................................: 614 84,474 :: 2,000 acres or more ....................................: 57 270,417 : :: : 200 to 499 acres .......................................: 831 262,617 :: Cropland on which conventional tillage practices were used .: 11,762 3,083,056 500 to 999 acres .......................................: 469 328,837 :: Average per farm .......................................: (X) 262 1,000 to 1,999 acres ...................................: 248 340,184 :: : 2,000 acres or more ....................................: 168 760,806 :: Conventional tillage used: : : :: 1 to 9 acres ...........................................: 3,671 11,247 Land under conservation easement ...........................: 1,603 929,985 :: 10 to 49 acres .........................................: 2,691 63,021 Average per farm .......................................: (X) 580 :: 50 to 99 acres .........................................: 1,106 78,012 : :: 100 to 199 acres .......................................: 1,202 165,298 Acres under easement: : :: : 1 to 9 acres ...........................................: 411 1,383 :: 200 to 499 acres .......................................: 1,546 486,299 10 to 49 acres .........................................: 351 8,505 :: 500 to 999 acres .......................................: 826 568,604 50 to 99 acres .........................................: 191 13,229 :: 1,000 to 1,999 acres ...................................: 442 610,313 100 to 199 acres .......................................: 216 30,265 :: 2,000 acres or more ....................................: 278 1,100,262 : :: : 200 to 499 acres .......................................: 185 58,036 :: Cropland planted to a cover crop (excluding CRP) ...........: 4,899 340,532 500 to 999 acres .......................................: 119 82,680 :: Average per farm .......................................: (X) 70 1,000 to 1,999 acres ...................................: 61 79,728 :: : 2,000 acres or more ....................................: 69 656,159 :: Cover crop acres (excluding CRP): : : :: 1 to 9 acres ...........................................: 2,437 7,790 Cropland on which no-till practices were used ..............: 4,213 205,383 :: 10 to 49 acres .........................................: 1,439 32,541 Average per farm .......................................: (X) 49 :: 50 to 99 acres .........................................: 397 26,619 : :: 100 to 199 acres .......................................: 280 38,050 No-till practices used: : :: : 1 to 9 acres ...........................................: 2,967 6,897 :: 200 to 499 acres .......................................: 215 63,763 10 to 49 acres .........................................: 657 14,266 :: 500 to 999 acres .......................................: 73 49,802 50 to 99 acres .........................................: 214 14,386 :: 1,000 to 1,999 acres ...................................: 34 44,516 100 to 199 acres .......................................: 182 25,387 :: 2,000 acres or more ....................................: 24 77,451 --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Table 51. Selected Characteristics of Farms by North American Industry Classification System: 2012 [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 ............................................: 77,857 25,569,001 8,007,461 2,061,792 124,720 42,627,472 30,366,898 12,260,574 : Crop production (111) ............................: 51,637 11,944,691 7,228,830 2,257,265 141,639 30,216,135 30,056,994 159,141 : Oilseed and grain farming (1111) ...............: 2,296 1,292,643 906,450 2,902,344 332,202 1,126,317 1,106,590 19,727 Soybean farming (11111) ......................: - - - - - - - - Oilseed (except soybean) farming (11112) .....: 47 15,958 10,831 2,425,440 190,313 4,564 (D) (D) Dry pea and bean farming (11113) .............: 52 13,093 9,503 1,419,962 151,920 8,807 (D) (D) Wheat farming (11114) ........................: 237 103,494 56,048 1,940,653 160,810 35,998 35,180 818 Corn farming (11115) .........................: 529 199,596 135,060 2,386,452 183,489 163,782 161,604 2,178 Rice farming (11116) .........................: 1,189 622,350 537,038 3,165,674 435,026 744,020 740,782 3,238 Other grain farming (11119) ..................: 242 338,152 157,970 4,089,236 386,232 169,147 155,741 13,407 : Vegetable and melon farming (11121) ............: 4,191 1,557,453 1,193,744 3,152,167 304,524 6,406,605 6,389,735 16,870 Potato farming (111211) ......................: 95 82,967 58,831 5,422,772 594,194 215,319 215,297 22 Other vegetable (except potato) and melon : farming (111219) ............................: 4,096 1,474,486 1,134,913 3,099,504 297,806 6,191,286 6,174,437 16,849 : Fruit and tree nut farming (1113) ..............: 35,945 5,417,746 3,300,597 2,108,833 103,370 17,417,879 17,350,270 67,609 Orange groves (11131) ........................: 3,140 217,397 162,143 1,005,270 52,674 563,661 (D) (D) Citrus (except orange) groves (11132) ........: 1,664 203,125 96,855 2,027,724 58,651 428,269 (D) (D) Noncitrus fruit and tree nut farming (11133) .: 31,141 4,997,224 3,041,599 2,224,442 110,872 16,425,949 16,361,113 64,836 Apple orchards (111331) ....................: 731 50,761 10,467 960,061 35,886 45,607 45,466 141 Grape vineyards (111332) ...................: 9,759 2,106,393 1,018,945 3,041,153 121,701 6,398,575 6,379,887 18,687 Strawberry farming (111333) ................: 542 57,936 50,889 2,464,434 253,393 1,717,778 1,717,737 41 Berry (except strawberry) farming (111334) .: 450 22,971 10,168 949,870 62,267 205,994 205,838 156 Tree nut farming (111335) ..................: 10,272 2,046,227 1,570,369 2,521,495 153,822 6,358,692 6,329,779 28,913 Fruit and tree nut combination : farming (111336) ..........................: 303 193,440 97,980 5,214,303 190,639 444,873 432,888 11,986 Other noncitrus fruit farming (111339) .....: 9,084 519,496 282,781 1,061,980 47,960 1,254,430 1,249,518 4,913 : Greenhouse, nursery, and floriculture : production (1114) .............................: 3,390 306,417 90,176 1,133,108 114,973 2,513,501 2,512,972 528 Food crops grown under cover (11141) .........: 211 12,748 6,596 1,316,872 305,247 410,333 410,301 32 Nursery and floriculture production (11142) ..: 3,179 293,669 83,580 1,120,911 102,344 2,103,168 2,102,671 497 Nursery and tree production (111421) .......: 1,722 258,677 66,025 1,325,215 114,468 1,056,346 1,055,999 347 Floriculture production (111422) ...........: 1,457 34,992 17,555 879,449 88,015 1,046,822 1,046,672 150 : Other crop farming (1119) ......................: 5,815 3,370,432 1,737,863 2,930,463 201,117 2,751,834 2,697,427 54,407 Tobacco farming (11191) ......................: - - - - - - - - Cotton farming (11192) .......................: 194 364,447 308,268 8,770,921 1,026,613 552,319 552,218 101 Sugarcane farming (11193) ....................: - - - - - - - - Hay farming (11194) ..........................: 2,672 1,568,523 740,565 2,606,321 154,549 822,855 802,586 20,269 All other crop farming (11199) ...............: 2,949 1,437,462 689,030 2,839,943 188,994 1,376,660 1,342,623 34,037 : Animal production (112) ..........................: 26,220 13,624,310 778,631 1,676,832 91,401 12,411,337 309,904 12,101,433 : Cattle ranching and farming (1121) .............: 13,517 11,664,277 745,552 2,417,567 129,837 10,378,772 284,659 10,094,113 Beef cattle ranching and farming, : including feedlots (11211) ..................: 11,923 10,680,023 210,055 1,954,016 60,986 2,503,339 58,838 2,444,501 Beef cattle ranching and farming (112111) ..: 11,767 10,472,254 205,970 1,941,612 57,625 1,501,824 57,998 1,443,826 Cattle feedlots (112112) ...................: 156 207,769 4,085 2,889,578 314,473 1,001,515 840 1,000,675 Dairy cattle and milk production (11212) .....: 1,594 984,254 535,497 5,884,893 645,162 7,875,433 225,821 7,649,612 : Hog and pig farming (1122) .....................: 446 14,211 658 425,696 39,071 48,716 (D) (D) : Poultry and egg production (1123) ..............: 1,202 70,412 6,293 742,372 140,685 1,667,435 14,578 1,652,857 Chicken egg production (11231) ...............: 804 29,741 2,402 604,895 80,151 349,248 4,800 344,448 Broilers and other meat-type chicken : production (11232) ..........................: 75 14,896 1,644 2,145,761 746,764 867,918 5,461 862,457 Turkey production (11233) ....................: 50 14,744 (D) 1,585,807 440,180 309,889 (D) (D) Poultry hatcheries (11234) ...................: 15 1,130 (D) 2,124,640 874,710 72,996 (D) (D) Other poultry production (11239) .............: 258 9,901 1,106 519,007 52,420 67,385 2,401 64,984 : Sheep and goat farming (1124) ..................: 3,246 540,054 16,637 659,926 35,389 89,704 6,135 83,569 Sheep farming (11241) ........................: 1,785 491,390 14,891 891,587 36,730 73,529 6,013 67,516 Goat farming (11242) .........................: 1,461 48,664 1,746 376,890 33,752 16,175 122 16,053 : Animal aquaculture (1125) ......................: 180 23,866 68 1,771,440 106,231 102,439 (D) (D) : Other animal production (1129) .................: 7,629 1,311,490 9,423 1,015,222 42,084 124,272 3,796 120,476 Apiculture (11291) ...........................: 545 28,619 371 740,664 86,858 19,903 (D) (D) Horse and other equine production (11292) ....: 5,561 354,552 5,792 705,769 36,995 60,388 517 59,871 Fur-bearing animal and rabbit : production (11293) ..........................: 29 703 31 823,346 60,780 424 (D) (D) All other animal production (11299) ..........: 1,494 927,616 3,229 2,270,955 44,326 43,556 2,822 40,734 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Table 52. Energy: 2012 [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Farms :: Item : Farms ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Renewable energy producing systems ...................................: 5,845 :: Renewable energy producing systems - Con. : : :: : Solar panels .......................................................: 5,445 :: Biodiesel ..........................................................: 165 : :: : Wind turbines ......................................................: 324 :: Ethanol ............................................................: 56 : :: : Methane digesters ..................................................: 41 :: Other ..............................................................: 49 : :: : Geoexchange systems ................................................: 104 :: Wind rights leased to others .........................................: 113 : :: : Small hydro systems ................................................: 190 :: : ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Table 53. Institutional, Research, Experimental, and American Indian Reservation Farms: 2012 and 2007 [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Characteristics : 2012 : 2007 :: Characteristics : 2012 : 2007 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Farms .....................................................number: 304 161 :: Market value of agricultural products sold (see text) - Con. : Land in farms ..............................................acres: 189,704 214,304 :: Crops, including nursery and greenhouse crops ...........$1,000: 61,234 38,781 Average size of farm ...................................acres: 624 1,331 :: Livestock, poultry, and their products ..................$1,000: 49,191 38,839 : :: : Estimated value of land and buildings .....................$1,000: 927,228 857,897 :: Total farm production expenses ............................$1,000: 105,981 54,623 Average per farm .....................................dollars: 3,050,092 5,328,552 :: Average per farm .....................................dollars: 348,622 339,271 Average per acre .....................................dollars: 4,888 4,003 :: : : :: Government payments received ...............................farms: 6 9 Estimated market value of all machinery and : :: $1,000: 56 (D) equipment ................................................$1,000: 50,891 26,726 :: Average per farm .....................................dollars: 9,411 (D) : :: : Land in farms according to use: : :: Income from farm-related sources (see text) ................farms: 101 28 : :: $1,000: 4,624 828 Total cropland ...........................................farms: 218 124 :: Average per farm .....................................dollars: 45,783 29,574 acres: 34,749 22,730 :: : Harvested cropland .....................................farms: 184 113 :: Tenure of operator: : acres: 27,474 16,841 :: Full owners ...................................................: 236 128 Other pasture and grazing land that could have : :: Part owners ...................................................: 23 12 been used for crops without additional : :: Tenants .......................................................: 45 21 improvements (see text) ...............................farms: 18 29 :: : acres: 1,222 3,103 :: Farms by North American Industry Classification System: : Other cropland .........................................farms: 68 41 :: : acres: 6,053 2,786 :: Oilseed and grain farming (1111) ..............................: 10 5 : :: Vegetable and melon farming (1112) ............................: 15 16 Total woodland ...........................................farms: 40 16 :: Fruit and tree nut farming (1113) .............................: 81 47 acres: 28,091 7,209 :: Greenhouse, nursery, and floriculture production (1114) .......: 25 15 Woodland pastured ......................................farms: 19 4 :: : acres: 22,332 (D) :: Other crop farming (1119) .....................................: 58 14 Woodland not pastured ..................................farms: 27 15 :: Tobacco farming (11191) .....................................: - - acres: 5,759 (D) :: Cotton farming (11192) ......................................: - 1 Permanent pasture and rangeland, other than cropland : :: Sugarcane farming, hay farming, and all other : and woodland pastured (see text) ........................farms: 107 49 :: crop farming (11193,11194,11199) ...........................: 58 13 acres: (D) (D) :: : Land in farmsteads, buildings, livestock facilities, : :: Beef cattle ranching and farming (112111) .....................: 24 10 ponds, roads, wasteland, etc. ...........................farms: 205 99 :: Cattle feedlots (112112) ......................................: 2 1 acres: (D) (D) :: Dairy cattle and milk production (11212) ......................: 5 6 Irrigated land ...........................................farms: 181 112 :: Hog and pig farming (1122) ....................................: 13 8 acres: 21,766 19,705 :: : : :: Poultry and egg production (1123) .............................: 1 1 Market value of agricultural products : :: Sheep and goat farming (1124) .................................: 6 1 sold (see text) ..........................................$1,000: 110,424 77,620 :: Animal aquaculture and other animal : Average per farm .....................................dollars: 363,238 482,113 :: production (1125,1129) .......................................: 64 37 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Table 54. Organic Agriculture: 2012 [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : 2012 :: Item : 2012 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- VALUE OF SALES OF CERTIFIED OR EXEMPT ORGANICALLY : :: PRINCIPAL OPERATOR CHARACTERISTICS FOR FARMS : PRODUCED COMMODITIES : :: WITH CERTIFIED OR EXEMPT ORGANIC PRODUCTION - Con. : : :: : Total organic product sales (see text) ....................................farms: 3,008 :: Place of residence: : $1,000: 1,355,207 :: On farm operated .............................................................: 2,342 Average per farm ....................................................dollars: 450,534 :: Not on farm operated .........................................................: 1,079 : :: : By value of sales: : :: Days worked off farm: : $1 to $4,999 ..........................................................farms: 817 :: None .........................................................................: 1,452 $1,000: 1,680 :: Any ..........................................................................: 1,969 $5,000 to $9,999 ......................................................farms: 262 :: 1 to 49 days ...............................................................: 368 $1,000: 1,848 :: 50 to 99 days ..............................................................: 205 $10,000 to $24,999 ....................................................farms: 319 :: 100 to 199 days ............................................................: 348 $1,000: 5,306 :: 200 days or more ...........................................................: 1,048 $25,000 to $49,999 ....................................................farms: 289 :: : $1,000: 10,063 :: Years on present farm: : $50,000 or more .......................................................farms: 1,321 :: 2 years or less ..............................................................: 183 $1,000: 1,336,309 :: 3 or 4 years .................................................................: 295 : :: 5 to 9 years .................................................................: 614 TYPE OF PRODUCTION (SEE TEXT) : :: 10 years or more .............................................................: 2,329 : :: : USDA National Organic Program certified organic : :: Average years on present farm ................................................: 18 production ...............................................................farms: 2,831 :: : USDA National Organic Program organic production : :: Age group: : exempt from certification ................................................farms: 590 :: Under 25 years ...............................................................: 24 Acres transitioning into USDA National Organic Program : :: 25 to 34 years ...............................................................: 221 organic production .......................................................farms: 465 :: 35 to 44 years ...............................................................: 383 : :: 45 to 49 years ...............................................................: 268 PRINCIPAL OPERATOR CHARACTERISTICS FOR FARMS : :: 50 to 54 years ...............................................................: 489 WITH CERTIFIED OR EXEMPT ORGANIC PRODUCTION : :: : : :: 55 to 59 years ...............................................................: 535 Sex of operator: : :: 60 to 64 years ...............................................................: 562 Male .........................................................................: 2,780 :: 65 to 69 years ...............................................................: 430 Female .......................................................................: 641 :: 70 years and over ............................................................: 509 : :: : Primary occupation: : :: Average age ..................................................................: 56.6 Farming ......................................................................: 2,148 :: : Other ........................................................................: 1,273 :: : ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Table 55. Selected Operator Characteristics for Principal, Second, and Third Operator: 2012 [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Characteristics : All operators 1/ : Principal operator : Second operator : Third operator ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Operators ........................number: 122,387 77,857 37,660 6,870 : Sex of operator: : Male .................................: 82,315 63,873 14,114 4,328 Spouse of principal operator .......: 4,600 (X) 4,517 83 Female ...............................: 40,072 13,984 23,546 2,542 Spouse of principal operator .......: 20,925 (X) 20,401 524 : Primary occupation: : Farming ..............................: 62,397 42,469 16,183 3,745 Other ................................: 59,990 35,388 21,477 3,125 : Place of residence: : On farm operated .....................: 84,532 54,775 26,592 3,165 Not on farm operated .................: 37,855 23,082 11,068 3,705 : Days worked off farm: : None .................................: 48,013 31,311 14,109 2,593 Any ..................................: 74,374 46,546 23,551 4,277 1 to 49 days .......................: 12,000 7,304 3,926 770 50 to 99 days ......................: 6,856 4,230 2,126 500 100 to 199 days ....................: 11,811 7,065 4,028 718 200 days or more ...................: 43,707 27,947 13,471 2,289 : Years on present farm: : 2 years or less ......................: 5,960 3,151 2,059 750 3 or 4 years .........................: 8,617 4,634 3,159 824 5 to 9 years .........................: 21,773 12,863 7,335 1,575 10 years or more .....................: 86,037 57,209 25,107 3,721 : Years operating any farm (see text): : 2 years or less ......................: 4,379 2,182 1,571 626 3 or 4 years .........................: 7,024 3,648 2,718 658 5 to 9 years .........................: 18,585 10,663 6,526 1,396 10 years or more .....................: 92,399 61,364 26,845 4,190 : Age group: : Under 25 years .......................: 1,292 253 438 601 25 to 34 years .......................: 6,329 2,968 2,329 1,032 35 to 44 years .......................: 12,100 6,255 4,646 1,199 45 to 54 years .......................: 26,896 15,946 9,521 1,429 55 to 64 years .......................: 36,342 23,382 11,512 1,448 65 to 74 years .......................: 25,653 18,154 6,755 744 75 years and over ....................: 13,775 10,899 2,459 417 : Average age ..........................: 57.9 60.1 55.3 48.0 : Number of persons living in household ..: 252,892 201,412 38,078 13,402 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1/ Data were collected for a maximum of three operators per farm. Table 56. Women Principal Operators - Selected Farm Characteristics: 2012 and 2007 [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : Principal operator :: : Principal operator :-----------------------------:: :----------------------------- Characteristics : 2012 : 2007 :: Characteristics : 2012 : 2007 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- FARMS AND LAND IN FARMS : :: FARMS BY NORTH AMERICAN INDUSTRY : : :: CLASSIFICATION SYSTEM (NAICS) - Con. : Farms .....................................................number: 13,984 14,965 :: : Land in farms ..............................................acres: 2,276,877 2,058,833 :: Other crop farming (1119) - Con. : : :: : FARMS BY SIZE : :: Sugarcane farming, hay farming, : : :: and all other crop farming : 1 to 9 acres ....................................................: 5,891 6,448 :: (11193, 11194, 11199) ........................................: 699 648 10 to 49 acres ..................................................: 4,821 5,335 :: : 50 to 179 acres .................................................: 1,872 1,793 :: Beef cattle ranching and farming (112111) .......................: 2,082 1,873 180 to 499 acres ................................................: 748 750 :: Cattle feedlots (112112) ........................................: 23 38 500 acres or more ...............................................: 652 639 :: Dairy cattle and milk production (11212) ........................: 124 128 : :: Hog and pig farming (1122) ......................................: 134 113 OWNED AND RENTED LAND IN FARMS : :: : : :: Poultry and egg production (1123) ...............................: 355 557 Owned land in farms ........................................farms: 12,879 13,835 :: Sheep and goat farming (1124) ...................................: 1,176 1,201 acres: 1,621,654 1,432,035 :: Animal aquaculture and other animal : Rented or leased land in farms .............................farms: 2,064 2,179 :: production (1125, 1129) ........................................: 3,054 4,597 acres: 655,223 626,798 :: : : :: OTHER FARM CHARACTERISTICS : TENURE : :: : : :: Farms by- : Full owners ................................................farms: 11,920 12,786 :: Type of organization (see text): : acres: 1,190,633 1,109,485 :: Organization with 50 percent or more : Part owners ................................................farms: 959 1,049 :: ownership interest held by operator and/or : acres: 874,726 712,722 :: persons related by blood, marriage, or adoption ............: 13,420 (NA) Tenants ....................................................farms: 1,105 1,130 :: : acres: 211,518 236,626 :: Limited Liability Corporation (see text) ....................: 687 (NA) : :: : MARKET VALUE OF AGRICULTURAL PRODUCTS : :: Operation's legal status for tax : SOLD AND GOVERNMENT PAYMENTS : :: purposes (see text): : : :: Family or individual ........................................: 11,517 12,643 Total ......................................................farms: 13,984 14,965 :: Partnerships ................................................: 1,065 1,236 $1,000: 1,587,364 1,259,963 :: Corporations ................................................: 785 728 : :: Other - cooperative, estate or trust, : Market value of agricultural products : :: institutional, etc .........................................: 617 358 sold ....................................................farms: 13,984 14,965 :: : $1,000: 1,577,249 1,246,761 :: Number of operators: : Crops, including nursery : :: 1 operator ..................................................: 7,190 7,876 and greenhouse crops ..................................farms: 6,648 6,077 :: 2 operators .................................................: 5,661 5,917 $1,000: 1,124,669 804,747 :: 3 operators .................................................: 863 925 Livestock, poultry, and : :: 4 operators .................................................: 181 175 their products ........................................farms: 5,080 5,672 :: 5 or more operators .........................................: 89 72 $1,000: 452,580 442,014 :: : Government payments ......................................farms: 800 693 :: Number of women operators: : $1,000: 10,114 13,202 :: 1 operator ..................................................: 12,676 13,502 : :: 2 operators .................................................: 1,162 1,284 FARMS BY ECONOMIC CLASS : :: 3 operators .................................................: 108 156 : :: 4 operators .................................................: 23 13 Less than $1,000 ................................................: 4,073 5,278 :: 5 or more operators .........................................: 15 10 $1,000 to $2,499 ................................................: 1,286 1,497 :: : $2,500 to $4,999 ................................................: 1,376 1,409 :: Farms reporting- : $5,000 to $9,999 ................................................: 1,729 1,601 :: Internet access ...............................................: 11,006 10,389 $10,000 to $24,999 ..............................................: 1,882 1,894 :: Dial-up service .............................................: 943 (NA) $25,000 to $49,999 ..............................................: 1,070 1,079 :: DSL service .................................................: 3,765 (NA) $50,000 or more .................................................: 2,568 2,207 :: Cable modem service .........................................: 1,749 (NA) : :: Fiber-optic service .........................................: 292 (NA) COMMODITY CREDIT CORPORATION (CCC) LOANS : :: Mobile broadband plan for a computer : AND FEDERAL FARM PROGRAM PAYMENTS : :: or a cell phone ............................................: 2,139 (NA) : :: Satellite service ...........................................: 2,718 (NA) CCC loans (see text) .......................................farms: 30 76 :: Broadband over Power Lines (BPL) ............................: 343 (NA) $1,000: 6,329 6,652 :: Other Internet service ......................................: 511 (NA) Conservation Reserve, Wetlands Reserve, Farmable : :: : Wetlands, or Conservation Reserve Enhancement : :: Principal operator is a hired manager ......................farms: 638 532 Programs payments .........................................farms: 93 99 :: acres: 172,373 172,312 $1,000: 576 1,209 :: : Other Federal farm program : :: Farms by number of households sharing : payments ..................................................farms: 738 645 :: in net income of farm: : $1,000: 9,538 11,993 :: 1 household ...................................................: 12,067 12,854 FARMS BY NORTH AMERICAN INDUSTRY : :: 2 households ..................................................: 1,319 1,470 CLASSIFICATION SYSTEM (NAICS) : :: 3 households ..................................................: 361 379 : :: 4 households ..................................................: 143 156 Oilseed and grain farming (1111) ................................: 167 147 :: 5 or more households ..........................................: 94 106 Vegetable and melon farming (1112) ..............................: 821 349 :: : Fruit and tree nut farming (1113) ...............................: 4,704 4,677 :: Farms by share of principal operator's : Greenhouse, nursery, and floriculture : :: total household income from farming: : production (1114) ..............................................: 636 621 :: Less than 25 percent ..........................................: 10,811 11,987 : :: 25 to 49 percent ..............................................: 976 946 Other crop farming (1119) .......................................: 708 664 :: 50 to 74 percent ..............................................: 997 957 Tobacco farming (11191) .......................................: - - :: 75 to 99 percent ..............................................: 679 611 Cotton farming (11192) ........................................: 9 16 :: 100 percent ...................................................: 521 464 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Table 57. Women Operators - Selected Operator Characteristics: 2012 and 2007 [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : All operators 1/ : Principal operator :: : All operators 1/ : Principal operator :-------------------------------------------------:: :------------------------------------------------- Characteristics : 2012 : 2007 : 2012 : 2007 :: Characteristics : 2012 : 2007 : 2012 : 2007 ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Operators ......................number: 40,072 41,879 13,984 14,965 :: Age group - Con. : : :: : Primary occupation: : :: 35 to 44 years .....................: 3,902 5,730 1,092 1,705 Farming ............................: 16,510 16,285 6,939 7,006 :: 45 to 54 years .....................: 9,467 12,261 2,965 4,321 Other ..............................: 23,562 25,594 7,045 7,959 :: 55 to 64 years .....................: 12,431 12,289 4,186 4,281 : :: 65 to 74 years .....................: 8,011 5,981 3,108 2,350 Place of residence: : :: 75 years and over ..................: 3,793 3,147 2,013 1,768 On farm operated ...................: 31,520 33,946 11,191 12,443 :: : Not on farm operated ...............: 8,552 7,933 2,793 2,522 :: Average age of - : : :: All operators ....................: 57.3 55.0 (X) (X) Days worked off farm: : :: Principal operator ...............: (X) (X) 60.1 57.5 None ...............................: 15,985 13,916 6,155 5,306 :: Second operator ..................: 56.5 54.2 (X) (X) Any ................................: 24,087 27,963 7,829 9,659 :: Third operator ...................: 49.7 48.9 (X) (X) 1 to 49 days .....................: 4,133 5,821 1,300 1,794 :: : 50 to 99 days ....................: 2,323 2,826 785 878 :: Spanish, Hispanic, or : 100 to 199 days ..................: 4,395 4,496 1,398 1,588 :: Latino origin (see text) ............: 3,587 3,413 1,113 1,074 200 days or more .................: 13,236 14,820 4,346 5,399 :: : : :: Race: : Years on present farm: : :: American Indian or Alaska Native ...: 597 646 246 259 2 years or less ....................: 2,069 2,665 680 844 :: Asian ..............................: 2,141 1,606 680 486 3 or 4 years .......................: 3,128 4,281 1,035 1,446 :: Black or African American ..........: 173 133 85 74 5 to 9 years .......................: 7,499 10,201 2,557 3,565 :: Native Hawaiian or : 10 years or more ...................: 27,376 24,732 9,712 9,110 :: Other Pacific Islander ............: 141 106 62 31 : :: White ..............................: 36,657 38,955 12,773 13,970 Years operating any farm (see text): : :: More than one race reported ........: 363 433 138 145 2 years or less ....................: 1,624 (NA) 519 (NA) :: : 3 or 4 years .......................: 2,694 (NA) 856 (NA) :: Number of persons living : 5 to 9 years .......................: 6,741 (NA) 2,182 (NA) :: in household of- : 10 years or more ...................: 29,013 (NA) 10,427 (NA) :: Principal operator .................: (X) (X) 32,762 35,983 : :: Second operator ....................: 14,145 12,915 (X) (X) Age group: : :: Third operator .....................: 3,878 3,932 (X) (X) Under 25 years .....................: 469 614 70 95 :: : 25 to 34 years .....................: 1,999 1,857 550 445 :: : ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1/ Data were collected for a maximum of three operators per farm. Table 58. Spanish, Hispanic, or Latino Origin Principal Operators - Selected Farm Characteristics: 2012 and 2007 [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Characteristics : 2012 : 2007 :: Characteristics : 2012 : 2007 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- FARMS AND LAND IN FARMS : :: FARMS BY NORTH AMERICAN INDUSTRY : : :: CLASSIFICATION SYSTEM (NAICS) - Con. : Farms ................................................number: 9,815 9,118 :: : Land in farms .........................................acres: 1,608,488 1,444,764 :: Other crop farming (1119) - Con. : : :: : FARMS BY SIZE : :: Sugarcane farming, hay farming, : : :: and all other crop farming : 1 to 9 acres ...............................................: 3,500 3,078 :: (11193, 11194, 11199) ...................................: 749 570 10 to 49 acres .............................................: 3,788 3,893 :: : 50 to 179 acres ............................................: 1,485 1,206 :: Beef cattle ranching and farming (112111) ..................: 844 806 180 to 499 acres ...........................................: 565 488 :: Cattle feedlots (112112) ...................................: 8 26 500 acres or more ..........................................: 477 453 :: Dairy cattle and milk production (11212) ...................: 107 115 : :: Hog and pig farming (1122) .................................: 56 63 OWNED AND RENTED LAND IN FARMS : :: : : :: Poultry and egg production (1123) ..........................: 113 193 Owned land in farms ...................................farms: 8,354 8,004 :: Sheep and goat farming (1124) ..............................: 368 261 acres: 773,003 689,627 :: Animal aquaculture and other animal : Rented or leased land in farms ........................farms: 2,541 2,041 :: production (1125, 1129) ...................................: 697 770 acres: 835,485 755,137 :: : : :: OTHER FARM CHARACTERISTICS : TENURE : :: : : :: Farms by- : Full owners ...........................................farms: 7,274 7,077 :: Type of organization (see text): : acres: 601,399 525,516 :: Organization with 50 percent or more : Part owners ...........................................farms: 1,080 927 :: ownership interest held by operator and/or : acres: 703,966 679,176 :: persons related by blood, marriage, or adoption .......: 9,143 (NA) Tenants ...............................................farms: 1,461 1,114 :: : acres: 303,123 240,072 :: Limited Liability Corporation (see text) ...............: 617 (NA) : :: : MARKET VALUE OF AGRICULTURAL PRODUCTS : :: Operation's legal status for tax : SOLD AND GOVERNMENT PAYMENTS : :: purposes (see text): : : :: Family or individual ...................................: 7,788 7,518 Total .................................................farms: 9,815 9,118 :: Partnerships ...........................................: 1,045 937 $1,000: 3,564,030 2,712,092 :: Corporations ...........................................: 730 505 : :: Other - cooperative, estate or trust, : Market value of agricultural products : :: institutional, etc ....................................: 252 158 sold ...............................................farms: 9,815 9,118 :: : $1,000: 3,552,323 2,697,727 :: Number of operators: : Crops, including nursery : :: 1 operator .............................................: 5,771 5,302 and greenhouse crops .............................farms: 7,153 6,526 :: 2 operators ............................................: 3,241 3,059 $1,000: 2,955,447 2,223,020 :: 3 operators ............................................: 592 545 Livestock, poultry, and : :: 4 operators ............................................: 129 131 their products ...................................farms: 1,819 1,875 :: 5 or more operators ....................................: 82 81 $1,000: 596,876 474,708 :: : Government payments .................................farms: 859 609 :: Number of women operators: : $1,000: 11,707 14,364 :: 1 operator .............................................: 3,541 3,367 : :: 2 operators ............................................: 236 237 FARMS BY ECONOMIC CLASS : :: 3 operators ............................................: 24 47 : :: 4 operators ............................................: 3 3 Less than $1,000 ...........................................: 1,589 1,447 :: 5 or more operators ....................................: - - $1,000 to $2,499 ...........................................: 482 607 :: : $2,500 to $4,999 ...........................................: 727 680 :: Farms reporting- : $5,000 to $9,999 ...........................................: 934 752 :: Internet access ..........................................: 6,455 4,579 $10,000 to $24,999 .........................................: 1,394 1,382 :: Dial-up service ........................................: 536 (NA) $25,000 to $49,999 .........................................: 1,094 1,225 :: DSL service ............................................: 2,249 (NA) $50,000 or more ............................................: 3,595 3,025 :: Cable modem service ....................................: 1,076 (NA) : :: Fiber-optic service ....................................: 194 (NA) COMMODITY CREDIT CORPORATION (CCC) LOANS : :: Mobile broadband plan for a computer : AND FEDERAL FARM PROGRAM PAYMENTS : :: or a cell phone .......................................: 1,369 (NA) : :: Satellite service ......................................: 1,468 (NA) CCC loans (see text) ..................................farms: 46 78 :: Broadband over Power Lines (BPL) .......................: 239 (NA) $1,000: 6,774 8,354 :: Other Internet service .................................: 241 (NA) Conservation Reserve, Wetlands Reserve, Farmable : :: : Wetlands, or Conservation Reserve Enhancement : :: Principal operator is a hired manager .................farms: 1,213 928 Programs payments ....................................farms: 27 31 :: acres: 490,850 320,511 $1,000: 127 152 :: : Other Federal farm program : :: Farms by number of households sharing : payments .............................................farms: 840 604 :: in net income of farm: : $1,000: 11,580 14,212 :: 1 household ..............................................: 7,315 6,723 FARMS BY NORTH AMERICAN INDUSTRY : :: 2 households .............................................: 1,650 1,591 CLASSIFICATION SYSTEM (NAICS) : :: 3 households .............................................: 420 386 : :: 4 households .............................................: 212 185 Oilseed and grain farming (1111) ...........................: 275 132 :: 5 or more households .....................................: 218 233 Vegetable and melon farming (1112) .........................: 725 457 :: : Fruit and tree nut farming (1113) ..........................: 5,158 4,979 :: Farms by share of principal operator's : Greenhouse, nursery, and floriculture : :: total household income from farming: : production (1114) .........................................: 688 719 :: Less than 25 percent .....................................: 6,358 6,119 : :: 25 to 49 percent .........................................: 849 864 Other crop farming (1119) ..................................: 776 597 :: 50 to 74 percent .........................................: 1,170 1,001 Tobacco farming (11191) ..................................: - - :: 75 to 99 percent .........................................: 661 609 Cotton farming (11192) ...................................: 27 27 :: 100 percent ..............................................: 777 525 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Table 59. Spanish, Hispanic, or Latino Origin Operators - Selected Operator Characteristics: 2012 and 2007 [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : All operators 1/ : Principal operator :: : All operators 1/ : Principal operator :-------------------------------------------------:: :------------------------------------------------- Characteristics : 2012 : 2007 : 2012 : 2007 :: Characteristics : 2012 : 2007 : 2012 : 2007 ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Operators ......................number: 15,123 14,199 9,815 9,118 :: Age group: : : :: Under 25 years .....................: 255 249 62 30 Sex of operator: : :: 25 to 34 years .....................: 1,036 1,012 470 400 Male ...............................: 11,536 10,786 8,702 8,044 :: 35 to 44 years .....................: 2,345 2,640 1,337 1,483 Female .............................: 3,587 3,413 1,113 1,074 :: 45 to 54 years .....................: 4,147 4,306 2,619 2,758 : :: 55 to 64 years .....................: 4,151 3,317 2,830 2,280 Primary occupation: : :: 65 to 74 years .....................: 2,135 1,815 1,653 1,438 Farming ............................: 8,827 7,877 5,865 5,145 :: 75 years and over ..................: 1,054 860 844 729 Other ..............................: 6,296 6,322 3,950 3,973 :: : : :: Average age of - : Place of residence: : :: All operators ....................: 53.9 52.4 (X) (X) On farm operated ...................: 9,068 8,956 6,112 6,062 :: Principal operator ...............: (X) (X) 56.1 55.0 Not on farm operated ...............: 6,055 5,243 3,703 3,056 :: Second operator ..................: 51.0 49.2 (X) (X) : :: Third operator ...................: 45.5 43.1 (X) (X) Days worked off farm: : :: : None ...............................: 5,415 3,905 3,524 2,420 :: Spanish, Hispanic, or : Any ................................: 9,708 10,294 6,291 6,698 :: Latino origin (see text) ............: 15,123 14,199 9,815 9,118 1 to 49 days .....................: 1,556 2,046 932 1,262 :: : 50 to 99 days ....................: 982 1,155 602 759 :: Race: : 100 to 199 days ..................: 1,504 1,496 917 1,011 :: American Indian or Alaska Native ...: 450 455 333 291 200 days or more .................: 5,666 5,597 3,840 3,666 :: Asian ..............................: 474 471 310 294 : :: Black or African American ..........: 47 46 31 32 Years on present farm: : :: Native Hawaiian or : 2 years or less ....................: 909 1,241 509 637 :: Other Pacific Islander ............: 81 44 65 26 3 or 4 years .......................: 1,293 1,855 717 1,135 :: White ..............................: 13,882 13,003 8,943 8,364 5 to 9 years .......................: 3,672 3,789 2,317 2,321 :: More than one race reported ........: 189 180 133 111 10 years or more ...................: 9,249 7,314 6,272 5,025 :: : : :: Number of persons living : Years operating any farm (see text): : :: in household of- : 2 years or less ....................: 666 (NA) 351 (NA) :: Principal operator .................: (X) (X) 29,725 28,863 3 or 4 years .......................: 1,012 (NA) 544 (NA) :: Second operator ....................: 5,600 5,044 (X) (X) 5 to 9 years .......................: 3,053 (NA) 1,849 (NA) :: Third operator .....................: 2,617 2,593 (X) (X) 10 years or more ...................: 10,392 (NA) 7,071 (NA) :: : ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1/ Data were collected for a maximum of three operators per farm. Table 60. Selected Farm Characteristics by Race of Principal Operator: 2012 and 2007 [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : : Operators reporting one race : :--------------------------------------------------------------- : : American Indian : : Black : All principal : or : : or : operators : Alaska Native : Asian : African American :--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Characteristics : 2012 : 2007 : 2012 : 2007 : 2012 : 2007 : 2012 : 2007 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- FARMS AND LAND IN FARMS : : Farms ................................................number: 77,857 81,033 1,192 1,178 4,802 3,684 345 320 Land in farms .........................................acres: 25,569,001 25,364,695 241,808 322,996 593,187 423,116 32,932 26,304 : FARMS BY SIZE : : 1 to 9 acres ...............................................: 24,637 25,278 345 377 1,403 1,053 135 120 10 to 49 acres .............................................: 25,811 28,080 445 408 1,794 1,472 115 115 50 to 179 acres ............................................: 13,056 12,939 216 214 1,017 697 67 58 180 to 499 acres ...........................................: 6,649 7,014 88 93 355 283 12 18 500 acres or more ..........................................: 7,704 7,722 98 86 233 179 16 9 : OWNED AND RENTED LAND IN FARMS : : Owned land in farms ...................................farms: 69,982 73,620 1,082 1,115 3,952 3,064 320 308 acres: 14,281,177 14,395,527 144,902 237,931 429,520 274,349 22,974 24,198 Rented or leased land in farms ........................farms: 17,365 17,256 225 201 1,307 944 42 34 acres: 11,287,824 10,969,168 96,906 85,065 163,667 148,767 9,958 2,106 : TENURE : : Full owners ...........................................farms: 60,492 63,777 967 977 3,495 2,740 303 286 acres: 10,081,540 10,082,984 116,416 208,848 329,164 215,418 21,890 22,705 Part owners ...........................................farms: 9,490 9,843 115 138 457 324 17 22 acres: 11,310,115 11,480,879 70,995 (D) 194,721 (D) 3,916 3,112 Tenants ...............................................farms: 7,875 7,413 110 63 850 620 25 12 acres: 4,177,346 3,800,832 54,397 (D) 69,302 (D) 7,126 487 : MARKET VALUE OF AGRICULTURAL PRODUCTS : SOLD AND GOVERNMENT PAYMENTS : : Total .................................................farms: 77,857 81,033 1,192 1,178 4,802 3,684 345 320 $1,000: 42,774,392 34,125,307 177,645 154,932 2,475,280 1,726,567 31,430 44,784 : Market value of agricultural : products sold ......................................farms: 77,857 81,033 1,192 1,178 4,802 3,684 345 320 $1,000: 42,627,472 33,885,064 176,570 153,465 2,470,052 1,722,056 31,113 44,463 Crops, including nursery and : greenhouse crops .................................farms: 49,253 48,901 644 608 4,192 3,241 167 153 $1,000: 30,366,898 22,903,021 152,876 93,543 2,345,488 1,613,495 30,180 42,459 Livestock, poultry, and : their products ...................................farms: 21,531 23,192 371 428 293 253 90 100 $1,000: 12,260,574 10,982,043 23,695 59,922 124,564 108,561 933 2,004 : Government payments .................................farms: 7,593 7,444 120 69 317 212 38 29 $1,000: 146,919 240,242 1,075 1,467 5,228 4,511 317 320 : FARMS BY ECONOMIC CLASS : : Less than $1,000 ...........................................: 14,629 17,330 276 276 455 311 115 97 $1,000 to $2,499 ...........................................: 4,718 5,999 87 172 174 116 27 39 $2,500 to $4,999 ...........................................: 5,904 6,617 116 140 250 149 35 30 $5,000 to $9,999 ...........................................: 7,846 7,383 142 106 381 252 42 33 $10,000 to $24,999 .........................................: 10,265 10,642 161 163 563 488 42 38 $25,000 to $49,999 .........................................: 7,150 7,651 106 103 482 477 31 28 $50,000 or more ............................................: 27,345 25,411 304 218 2,497 1,891 53 55 : COMMODITY CREDIT CORPORATION (CCC) LOANS : AND FEDERAL FARM PROGRAM PAYMENTS : : CCC loans (see text) ..................................farms: 521 1,098 4 14 12 16 - 1 $1,000: 122,036 181,426 (D) 1,302 1,526 1,559 - (D) Conservation Reserve, Wetlands Reserve, : Farmable Wetlands, or Conservation : Reserve Enhancement Programs payments ................farms: 470 668 2 - 3 20 9 2 $1,000: 3,615 7,528 (D) - 11 96 27 (D) Other Federal farm program payments ...................farms: 7,310 7,084 118 69 317 202 31 29 $1,000: 143,304 232,714 (D) 1,467 5,217 4,415 291 (D) : FARMS BY NORTH AMERICAN INDUSTRY : CLASSIFICATION SYSTEM (NAICS) : : Oilseed and grain farming (1111) ...........................: 2,296 2,063 46 25 91 50 7 3 Vegetable and melon farming (1112) .........................: 4,191 2,638 74 32 701 465 50 14 Fruit and tree nut farming (1113) ..........................: 35,945 37,500 452 469 2,967 2,349 106 112 Greenhouse, nursery, and floriculture : production (1114) .........................................: 3,390 3,549 18 51 466 405 8 13 Other crop farming (1119) ..................................: 5,815 5,527 124 73 254 149 38 24 Tobacco farming (11191) ..................................: - - - - - - - - Cotton farming (11192) ...................................: 194 285 3 6 6 4 1 - Sugarcane farming, hay farming, and all other : crop farming (11193, 11194, 11199) ......................: 5,621 5,242 121 67 248 145 37 24 Beef cattle ranching and farming (112111) ..................: 11,767 11,153 213 227 102 53 69 50 Cattle feedlots (112112) ...................................: 156 404 - 28 1 1 1 2 Dairy cattle and milk production (11212) ...................: 1,594 1,839 5 6 21 11 - - Hog and pig farming (1122) .................................: 446 425 19 16 6 3 9 10 Poultry and egg production (1123) ..........................: 1,202 1,798 23 29 46 59 7 13 Sheep and goat farming (1124) ..............................: 3,246 3,041 53 60 54 26 15 10 Animal aquaculture and other animal : production (1125, 1129) ...................................: 7,809 11,096 165 162 93 113 35 69 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 60. Selected Farm Characteristics by Race of Principal Operator: 2012 and 2007 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ : Operators reporting one race - Con. : :-----------------------------------------------------------: Operators : Native Hawaiian : : reporting : or other : : more than : Pacific Islander : White : one race :----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Characteristics : 2012 : 2007 : 2012 : 2007 : 2012 : 2007 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ FARMS AND LAND IN FARMS : : Farms ................................................number: 321 183 70,537 75,021 660 647 Land in farms .........................................acres: 32,930 38,280 24,500,865 24,309,092 167,279 244,907 : FARMS BY SIZE : : 1 to 9 acres ...............................................: 98 64 22,404 23,460 252 204 10 to 49 acres .............................................: 115 69 23,117 25,785 225 231 50 to 179 acres ............................................: 69 28 11,574 11,829 113 113 180 to 499 acres ...........................................: 26 17 6,133 6,557 35 46 500 acres or more ..........................................: 13 5 7,309 7,390 35 53 : OWNED AND RENTED LAND IN FARMS : : Owned land in farms ...................................farms: 300 172 63,762 68,363 566 598 acres: 26,718 9,608 13,602,347 13,769,265 54,716 80,176 Rented or leased land in farms ........................farms: 53 25 15,577 15,923 161 129 acres: 6,212 28,672 10,898,518 10,539,827 112,563 164,731 : TENURE : : Full owners ...........................................farms: 268 158 54,960 59,098 499 518 acres: 21,891 6,330 9,556,810 9,583,851 35,369 45,832 Part owners ...........................................farms: 32 14 8,802 9,265 67 80 acres: 8,873 30,487 10,915,570 11,102,518 116,040 133,896 Tenants ...............................................farms: 21 11 6,775 6,658 94 49 acres: 2,166 1,463 4,028,485 3,622,723 15,870 65,179 : MARKET VALUE OF AGRICULTURAL PRODUCTS : SOLD AND GOVERNMENT PAYMENTS : : Total .................................................farms: 321 183 70,537 75,021 660 647 $1,000: 83,299 45,603 39,850,083 32,051,453 156,654 101,967 : Market value of agricultural : products sold ......................................farms: 321 183 70,537 75,021 660 647 $1,000: 83,064 45,557 39,710,858 31,818,868 155,816 100,655 Crops, including nursery and : greenhouse crops .................................farms: 210 129 43,686 44,423 354 347 $1,000: 60,130 36,624 27,638,076 21,039,258 140,149 77,643 Livestock, poultry, and : their products ...................................farms: 73 47 20,453 22,126 251 238 $1,000: 22,933 8,933 12,072,782 10,779,610 15,667 23,012 : Government payments .................................farms: 37 6 7,026 7,077 55 51 $1,000: 235 46 139,225 232,585 839 1,313 : FARMS BY ECONOMIC CLASS : : Less than $1,000 ...........................................: 68 24 13,549 16,466 166 156 $1,000 to $2,499 ...........................................: 14 12 4,348 5,601 68 59 $2,500 to $4,999 ...........................................: 24 30 5,401 6,204 78 64 $5,000 to $9,999 ...........................................: 40 21 7,183 6,913 58 58 $10,000 to $24,999 .........................................: 39 26 9,384 9,820 76 107 $25,000 to $49,999 .........................................: 30 18 6,440 6,975 61 50 $50,000 or more ............................................: 106 52 24,232 23,042 153 153 : COMMODITY CREDIT CORPORATION (CCC) LOANS : AND FEDERAL FARM PROGRAM PAYMENTS : : CCC loans (see text) ..................................farms: - - 503 1,062 2 5 $1,000: - - 119,395 178,070 (D) (D) Conservation Reserve, Wetlands Reserve, : Farmable Wetlands, or Conservation : Reserve Enhancement Programs payments ................farms: 5 - 450 642 1 4 $1,000: 7 - 3,558 7,426 (D) (D) Other Federal farm program payments ...................farms: 32 6 6,758 6,729 54 49 $1,000: 229 46 135,667 225,159 (D) (D) : FARMS BY NORTH AMERICAN INDUSTRY : CLASSIFICATION SYSTEM (NAICS) : : Oilseed and grain farming (1111) ...........................: 2 2 2,134 1,961 16 22 Vegetable and melon farming (1112) .........................: 44 16 3,284 2,086 38 25 Fruit and tree nut farming (1113) ..........................: 125 90 32,055 34,236 240 244 Greenhouse, nursery, and floriculture : production (1114) .........................................: 25 19 2,846 3,038 27 23 Other crop farming (1119) ..................................: 32 6 5,300 5,228 67 47 Tobacco farming (11191) ..................................: - - - - - - Cotton farming (11192) ...................................: - - 183 275 1 - Sugarcane farming, hay farming, and all other : crop farming (11193, 11194, 11199) ......................: 32 6 5,117 4,953 66 47 Beef cattle ranching and farming (112111) ..................: 51 22 11,211 10,693 121 108 Cattle feedlots (112112) ...................................: - - 154 365 - 8 Dairy cattle and milk production (11212) ...................: 4 2 1,562 1,817 2 3 Hog and pig farming (1122) .................................: - - 405 395 7 1 Poultry and egg production (1123) ..........................: 21 - 1,089 1,668 16 29 Sheep and goat farming (1124) ..............................: 4 11 3,076 2,912 44 22 Animal aquaculture and other animal : production (1125, 1129) ...................................: 13 15 7,421 10,622 82 115 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ --continued Table 60. Selected Farm Characteristics by Race of Principal Operator: 2012 and 2007 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : : Operators reporting one race : :--------------------------------------------------------------- : : American Indian : : Black : All principal : or : : or : operators : Alaska Native : Asian : African American :--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Characteristics : 2012 : 2007 : 2012 : 2007 : 2012 : 2007 : 2012 : 2007 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- OTHER FARM CHARACTERISTICS : : Farms by- : : Type of organization (see text): : Operation with 50 percent or more ownership : interest held by operator and/or persons : related by blood, marriage, or adoption................: 72,641 (NA) 1,131 (NA) 4,422 (NA) 319 (NA) Limited Liability Corporation...........................: 4,453 (NA) 55 (NA) 337 (NA) 22 (NA) : Operation's legal status for tax purposes (see text): : Family or individual ...................................: 59,732 64,001 1,008 1,020 3,426 2,609 277 280 Partnerships ...........................................: 8,984 9,552 80 106 679 548 29 20 Corporations ...........................................: 6,361 5,750 52 23 592 458 15 17 Other - cooperative, estate or trust, : institutional, etc ....................................: 2,780 1,730 52 29 105 69 24 3 : Number of operators: : 1 operator .............................................: 40,197 41,998 627 550 2,602 2,055 172 167 2 operators ............................................: 30,790 31,976 489 535 1,634 1,187 136 133 3 operators ............................................: 5,058 5,248 53 58 385 325 24 13 4 operators ............................................: 1,137 1,137 16 31 96 74 8 6 5 or more operators ....................................: 675 674 7 4 85 43 5 1 : Number of women operators: : 1 operator .............................................: 35,652 37,150 577 610 1,780 1,350 166 172 2 operators ............................................: 2,226 2,357 23 45 140 84 15 4 3 operators ............................................: 253 324 4 10 20 13 - 1 4 operators ............................................: 44 36 - - 7 4 - - 5 or more operators ....................................: 37 45 - - 5 3 - - : Farms reporting- : Internet access ..........................................: 59,543 53,738 902 717 3,279 1,828 269 195 Dial-up ................................................: 4,703 (NA) 100 (NA) 231 (NA) 37 (NA) DSL service ............................................: 20,030 (NA) 259 (NA) 1,211 (NA) 88 (NA) Cable modem service ....................................: 9,578 (NA) 80 (NA) 771 (NA) 59 (NA) Fiber-optic service ....................................: 1,719 (NA) 21 (NA) 117 (NA) 7 (NA) Mobile broadband plan for a computer or : a cell phone ..........................................: 12,454 (NA) 253 (NA) 725 (NA) 37 (NA) Satellite service ......................................: 15,193 (NA) 235 (NA) 575 (NA) 64 (NA) Broadband over Power Lines (BPL) .......................: 2,135 (NA) 26 (NA) 140 (NA) 7 (NA) Other Internet service .................................: 2,805 (NA) 34 (NA) 130 (NA) 14 (NA) : Principal operator is a hired manager .................farms: 7,130 5,914 76 52 510 355 31 12 acres: 5,266,987 4,406,190 62,873 142,495 147,095 97,934 3,972 2,076 : Farms by number of households sharing in net income : of farm: : : 1 household ..............................................: 61,016 63,112 965 880 3,082 2,245 306 259 2 households .............................................: 11,316 12,282 143 223 1,009 840 33 40 3 households .............................................: 3,013 3,016 36 35 320 263 4 11 4 households .............................................: 1,351 1,440 22 19 214 158 2 6 5 or more households .....................................: 1,161 1,183 26 21 177 178 - 4 : Farms by share of principal operator's total household : income from farming: : : Less than 25 percent .....................................: 53,231 57,986 865 895 2,610 2,189 290 259 25 to 49 percent .........................................: 6,732 6,391 85 92 593 361 28 23 50 to 74 percent .........................................: 8,038 7,380 111 109 730 514 20 24 75 to 99 percent .........................................: 5,290 5,318 79 57 473 377 5 10 100 percent ..............................................: 4,566 3,958 52 25 396 243 2 4 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 60. Selected Farm Characteristics by Race of Principal Operator: 2012 and 2007 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ : Operators reporting one race - Con. : :-----------------------------------------------------------: Operators : Native Hawaiian : : reporting : or other : : more than : Pacific Islander : White : one race :----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Characteristics : 2012 : 2007 : 2012 : 2007 : 2012 : 2007 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ OTHER FARM CHARACTERISTICS : : Farms by- : : Type of organization (see text): : Operation with 50 percent or more ownership : interest held by operator and/or persons : related by blood, marriage, or adoption................: 298 (NA) 65,843 (NA) 628 (NA) Limited Liability Corporation...........................: 14 (NA) 4,008 (NA) 17 (NA) : Operation's legal status for tax purposes (see text): : Family or individual ...................................: 258 156 54,202 59,391 561 545 Partnerships ...........................................: 24 15 8,134 8,796 38 67 Corporations ...........................................: 31 12 5,643 5,215 28 25 Other - cooperative, estate or trust, : institutional, etc ....................................: 8 - 2,558 1,619 33 10 : Number of operators: : 1 operator .............................................: 189 93 36,297 38,764 310 369 2 operators ............................................: 109 83 28,113 29,795 309 243 3 operators ............................................: 20 2 4,542 4,819 34 31 4 operators ............................................: 3 5 1,007 1,020 7 1 5 or more operators ....................................: - - 578 623 - 3 : Number of women operators: : 1 operator .............................................: 146 84 32,642 34,627 341 307 2 operators ............................................: 2 4 2,016 2,202 30 18 3 operators ............................................: - - 229 300 - - 4 operators ............................................: - - 37 32 - - 5 or more operators ....................................: - - 32 42 - - : Farms reporting- : Internet access ..........................................: 209 96 54,406 50,455 478 447 Dial-up ................................................: 35 (NA) 4,250 (NA) 50 (NA) DSL service ............................................: 69 (NA) 18,229 (NA) 174 (NA) Cable modem service ....................................: 35 (NA) 8,565 (NA) 68 (NA) Fiber-optic service ....................................: 8 (NA) 1,548 (NA) 18 (NA) Mobile broadband plan for a computer or : a cell phone ..........................................: 30 (NA) 11,300 (NA) 109 (NA) Satellite service ......................................: 36 (NA) 14,170 (NA) 113 (NA) Broadband over Power Lines (BPL) .......................: 8 (NA) 1,943 (NA) 11 (NA) Other Internet service .................................: 11 (NA) 2,592 (NA) 24 (NA) : Principal operator is a hired manager .................farms: 24 8 6,458 5,454 31 33 acres: 6,019 (D) 4,987,263 4,086,498 59,765 (D) : Farms by number of households sharing in net income : of farm: : : 1 household ..............................................: 260 137 55,842 59,055 561 536 2 households .............................................: 42 30 10,013 11,073 76 76 3 households .............................................: 6 7 2,639 2,674 8 26 4 households .............................................: 9 3 1,097 1,246 7 8 5 or more households .....................................: 4 6 946 973 8 1 : Farms by share of principal operator's total household : income from farming: : : Less than 25 percent .....................................: 247 125 48,737 54,029 482 489 25 to 49 percent .........................................: 21 17 5,960 5,853 45 45 50 to 74 percent .........................................: 21 21 7,102 6,664 54 48 75 to 99 percent .........................................: 13 14 4,678 4,825 42 35 100 percent ..............................................: 19 6 4,060 3,650 37 30 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Table 61. Selected Farm Characteristics by Race: 2012 [Data were collected for a maximum of three operators. For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text] ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ : Any operator reporting race as- : :---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------: : American Indian : : Black or African : Native Hawaiian : : Any operator : or Alaska Native : Asian : American : or Other Pacific : White :reporting ethnicity : alone or in : alone or in : alone or in : Islander alone or : alone or in : as Spanish, : combination with : combination with : combination with :in combination with: combination with : Hispanic, or Characteristics : other races : other races : other races : other races : other races : Latino origin ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ FARMS AND LAND IN FARMS : : Farms ................................................number: 2,203 5,503 594 477 72,353 12,030 Land in farms .........................................acres: 553,333 809,734 65,243 63,401 24,882,182 2,430,874 : FARMS BY SIZE : : 1 to 9 acres ...............................................: 699 1,638 238 155 23,025 4,138 10 to 49 acres .............................................: 809 2,046 201 173 23,741 4,461 50 to 179 acres ............................................: 378 1,149 106 91 11,906 1,868 180 to 499 acres ...........................................: 154 390 24 35 6,245 785 500 acres or more ..........................................: 163 280 25 23 7,436 778 : OWNED AND RENTED LAND IN FARMS : : Owned land in farms ...................................farms: 1,991 4,579 524 447 65,387 10,334 acres: 251,437 564,026 42,143 44,075 13,808,235 1,273,693 Rented or leased land in farms ........................farms: 439 1,438 106 82 15,956 3,049 acres: 301,896 245,708 23,100 19,326 11,073,947 1,157,181 : TENURE : : Full owners ...........................................farms: 1,764 4,065 488 395 56,397 8,981 acres: 187,344 427,044 33,858 29,737 9,726,503 947,763 Part owners ...........................................farms: 227 514 36 52 8,990 1,353 acres: 281,686 254,334 20,368 20,622 11,085,387 1,010,049 Tenants ...............................................farms: 212 924 70 30 6,966 1,696 acres: 84,303 128,356 11,017 13,042 4,070,292 473,062 : MARKET VALUE OF AGRICULTURAL PRODUCTS : SOLD AND GOVERNMENT PAYMENTS : : Total .................................................farms: 2,203 5,503 594 477 72,353 12,030 $1,000: 453,787 2,879,397 98,748 200,278 40,452,904 6,591,673 : Market value of agricultural : products sold ......................................farms: 2,203 5,503 594 477 72,353 12,030 $1,000: 451,607 2,873,633 98,068 199,869 40,311,100 6,575,808 Crops, including nursery and : greenhouse crops .................................farms: 1,140 4,668 313 305 44,791 8,755 $1,000: 393,294 2,724,456 81,746 168,657 28,205,717 5,159,642 Livestock, poultry, and : their products ...................................farms: 786 479 173 121 20,994 2,380 $1,000: 58,313 149,177 16,322 31,212 12,105,383 1,416,166 : Government payments .................................farms: 193 366 54 48 7,194 1,027 $1,000: 2,180 5,764 680 410 141,803 15,864 : FARMS BY ECONOMIC CLASS : : Less than $1,000 ...........................................: 538 571 178 95 13,931 1,914 $1,000 to $2,499 ...........................................: 207 229 55 24 4,484 579 $2,500 to $4,999 ...........................................: 240 304 62 36 5,562 874 $5,000 to $9,999 ...........................................: 219 431 63 63 7,382 1,127 $10,000 to $24,999 .........................................: 289 644 68 64 9,614 1,642 $25,000 to $49,999 .........................................: 179 545 57 44 6,620 1,250 $50,000 or more ............................................: 531 2,779 111 151 24,760 4,644 : COMMODITY CREDIT CORPORATION (CCC) LOANS : AND FEDERAL FARM PROGRAM PAYMENTS : : CCC loans (see text) ..................................farms: 10 12 2 - 508 57 $1,000: 4,760 1,526 (D) - 120,680 10,035 Conservation Reserve, Wetlands Reserve, : Farmable Wetlands, or Conservation : Reserve Enhancement Programs payments ................farms: 6 10 9 6 462 30 $1,000: 19 15 27 9 3,604 133 Other Federal farm program payments ...................farms: 187 361 47 43 6,917 1,007 $1,000: 2,161 5,748 653 401 138,199 15,731 : FARMS BY NORTH AMERICAN INDUSTRY : CLASSIFICATION SYSTEM (NAICS) : : Oilseed and grain farming (1111) ...........................: 76 109 13 2 2,185 315 Vegetable and melon farming (1112) .........................: 123 747 82 54 3,452 875 Fruit and tree nut farming (1113) ..........................: 774 3,329 192 206 32,786 6,305 Greenhouse, nursery, and floriculture : production (1114) .........................................: 58 519 24 32 2,931 839 Other crop farming (1119) ..................................: 223 287 62 34 5,452 887 Tobacco farming (11191) ..................................: - - - - - - Cotton farming (11192) ...................................: 4 6 1 - 188 35 Sugarcane farming, hay farming, and all other : crop farming (11193, 11194, 11199) ......................: 219 281 61 34 5,264 852 Beef cattle ranching and farming (112111) ..................: 436 185 98 69 11,479 1,087 Cattle feedlots (112112) ...................................: - 1 1 - 154 8 Dairy cattle and milk production (11212) ...................: 7 28 2 6 1,565 144 Hog and pig farming (1122) .................................: 31 9 13 - 413 81 Poultry and egg production (1123) ..........................: 46 63 13 22 1,146 163 Sheep and goat farming (1124) ..............................: 132 81 25 13 3,169 461 Animal aquaculture and other animal : production (1125, 1129) ...................................: 297 145 69 39 7,621 865 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ --continued Table 61. Selected Farm Characteristics by Race: 2012 (continued) [Data were collected for a maximum of three operators. For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text] ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ : Any operator reporting race as- : :---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------: : American Indian : : Black or African : Native Hawaiian : : Any operator : or Alaska Native : Asian : American : or Other Pacific : White :reporting ethnicity : alone or in : alone or in : alone or in : Islander alone or : alone or in : as Spanish, : combination with : combination with : combination with :in combination with: combination with : Hispanic, or Characteristics : other races : other races : other races : other races : other races : Latino origin ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ OTHER FARM CHARACTERISTICS : : Farms by- : : Type of organization (see text): : Operation with 50 percent or more ownership : interest held by operator and/or persons : related by blood, marriage, or adoption................: 2,091 5,051 553 437 67,550 11,071 Limited Liability Corporation...........................: 93 377 34 24 4,082 844 : Operation's legal status for tax purposes (see text): : Family or individual ...................................: 1,841 3,909 473 375 55,640 9,153 Partnerships ...........................................: 159 776 51 35 8,294 1,415 Corporations ...........................................: 107 679 35 47 5,787 1,099 Other - cooperative, estate or trust, : institutional, etc ....................................: 96 139 35 20 2,632 363 : Number of operators: : 1 operator .............................................: 846 2,635 251 208 36,591 5,771 2 operators ............................................: 1,156 2,140 280 204 29,307 4,669 3 operators ............................................: 148 522 42 47 4,789 1,168 4 operators ............................................: 41 109 16 11 1,057 244 5 or more operators ....................................: 12 97 5 7 609 178 : Number of women operators: : 1 operator .............................................: 1,283 2,286 318 244 33,878 4,882 2 operators ............................................: 88 177 23 22 2,111 401 3 operators ............................................: 4 22 - - 246 37 4 operators ............................................: - 7 - - 37 6 5 or more operators ....................................: - 5 - - 32 4 : Farms reporting- : Internet access ..........................................: 1,661 3,845 450 327 55,816 8,346 Dial-up ................................................: 188 271 56 48 4,395 661 DSL service ............................................: 530 1,401 144 107 18,670 2,898 Cable modem service ....................................: 171 881 81 54 8,757 1,416 Fiber-optic service ....................................: 42 141 8 11 1,587 265 Mobile broadband plan for a computer or : a cell phone ..........................................: 448 838 79 51 11,645 1,803 Satellite service ......................................: 461 730 111 69 14,558 1,913 Broadband over Power Lines (BPL) .......................: 52 159 16 12 2,007 335 Other Internet service .................................: 70 156 21 21 2,668 357 : Principal operator is a hired manager .................farms: 126 588 48 49 6,592 1,591 acres: 167,134 242,758 6,334 9,700 5,124,843 797,378 : Farms by number of households sharing in net income : of farm: : : 1 household ..............................................: 1,804 3,596 520 385 57,208 8,918 2 households .............................................: 273 1,131 58 62 10,312 2,041 3 households .............................................: 61 358 12 10 2,716 531 4 households .............................................: 26 223 4 12 1,138 251 5 or more households .....................................: 39 195 - 8 979 289 : Farms by share of principal operator's total household : income from farming: : : Less than 25 percent .....................................: 1,643 3,068 468 360 50,019 7,807 25 to 49 percent .........................................: 142 662 37 24 6,102 1,037 50 to 74 percent .........................................: 187 822 42 35 7,293 1,419 75 to 99 percent .........................................: 128 511 24 17 4,798 835 100 percent ..............................................: 103 440 23 41 4,141 932 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Table 62. Selected Principal Operator Characteristics by Race: 2012 and 2007 [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : All principal : American Indian or : : Black or : operators : Alaska Native : Asian : African American :----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Characteristics : 2012 : 2007 : 2012 : 2007 : 2012 : 2007 : 2012 : 2007 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Operators ......................................................number: 77,857 81,033 1,192 1,178 4,802 3,684 345 320 : Sex of operator: : Male ...............................................................: 63,873 66,068 946 919 4,122 3,198 260 246 Female .............................................................: 13,984 14,965 246 259 680 486 85 74 : Primary occupation: : Farming ............................................................: 42,469 40,910 665 614 3,103 2,223 171 139 Other ..............................................................: 35,388 40,123 527 564 1,699 1,461 174 181 : Place of residence: : On farm operated ...................................................: 54,775 59,464 899 898 2,446 2,028 254 250 Not on farm operated ...............................................: 23,082 21,569 293 280 2,356 1,656 91 70 : Days of work off farm: : None ...............................................................: 31,311 26,322 463 366 1,639 1,008 126 83 Any ................................................................: 46,546 54,711 729 812 3,163 2,676 219 237 1 to 49 days .....................................................: 7,304 10,663 121 128 578 566 31 33 50 to 99 days ....................................................: 4,230 5,353 79 84 323 311 16 19 100 to 199 days ..................................................: 7,065 8,185 106 111 553 386 24 30 200 days or more .................................................: 27,947 30,510 423 489 1,709 1,413 148 155 : Years on present farm: : 2 years or less ....................................................: 3,151 3,793 55 60 338 278 11 10 3 or 4 years .......................................................: 4,634 6,780 55 136 438 332 29 43 5 to 9 years .......................................................: 12,863 16,286 294 256 980 729 69 91 10 years or more ...................................................: 57,209 54,174 788 726 3,046 2,345 236 176 : Years operating any farm (see text): : 2 years or less ....................................................: 2,182 (NA) 20 (NA) 244 (NA) 8 (NA) 3 or 4 years .......................................................: 3,648 (NA) 49 (NA) 376 (NA) 24 (NA) 5 to 9 years .......................................................: 10,663 (NA) 230 (NA) 775 (NA) 62 (NA) 10 years or more ...................................................: 61,364 (NA) 893 (NA) 3,407 (NA) 251 (NA) : Age group: : Under 25 years .....................................................: 253 292 - - 31 40 - - 25 to 34 years .....................................................: 2,968 2,466 31 46 275 153 - 8 35 to 44 years .....................................................: 6,255 8,279 138 133 578 496 31 50 45 to 54 years .....................................................: 15,946 20,672 293 357 1,208 1,091 79 88 55 to 64 years .....................................................: 23,382 24,194 348 378 1,530 1,029 87 72 65 to 74 years .....................................................: 18,154 15,488 281 179 712 506 102 74 75 years and over ..................................................: 10,899 9,642 101 85 468 369 46 28 : Average age ........................................................: 60.1 58.4 58.1 56.1 56.3 55.6 61.0 57.4 : Number of persons living in household ................................: 201,412 215,561 3,264 3,338 15,267 11,854 892 904 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : Native Hawaiian or : : : Other Pacific Islander : White : More than one race reported :----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Characteristics : 2012 : 2007 : 2012 : 2007 : 2012 : 2007 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Operators ......................................................number: 321 183 70,537 75,021 660 647 : Sex of operator: : Male ...............................................................: 259 152 57,764 61,051 522 502 Female .............................................................: 62 31 12,773 13,970 138 145 : Primary occupation: : Farming ............................................................: 175 92 38,035 37,500 320 342 Other ..............................................................: 146 91 32,502 37,521 340 305 : Place of residence: : On farm operated ...................................................: 235 115 50,443 55,659 498 514 Not on farm operated ...............................................: 86 68 20,094 19,362 162 133 : Days of work off farm: : None ...............................................................: 128 53 28,719 24,575 236 237 Any ................................................................: 193 130 41,818 50,446 424 410 1 to 49 days .....................................................: 41 23 6,467 9,852 66 61 50 to 99 days ....................................................: 19 10 3,758 4,870 35 59 100 to 199 days ..................................................: 30 23 6,269 7,568 83 67 200 days or more .................................................: 103 74 25,324 28,156 240 223 : Years on present farm: : 2 years or less ....................................................: 15 3 2,712 3,418 20 24 3 or 4 years .......................................................: 18 24 4,054 6,193 40 52 5 to 9 years .......................................................: 54 50 11,343 15,052 123 108 10 years or more ...................................................: 234 106 52,428 50,358 477 463 : Years operating any farm (see text): : 2 years or less ....................................................: 7 (NA) 1,886 (NA) 17 (NA) 3 or 4 years .......................................................: 19 (NA) 3,146 (NA) 34 (NA) 5 to 9 years .......................................................: 43 (NA) 9,448 (NA) 105 (NA) 10 years or more ...................................................: 252 (NA) 56,057 (NA) 504 (NA) : Age group: : Under 25 years .....................................................: - 2 220 246 2 4 25 to 34 years .....................................................: 9 3 2,611 2,241 42 15 35 to 44 years .....................................................: 19 27 5,436 7,515 53 58 45 to 54 years .....................................................: 77 66 14,144 18,862 145 208 55 to 64 years .....................................................: 128 52 21,078 22,472 211 191 65 to 74 years .....................................................: 56 23 16,852 14,584 151 122 75 years and over ..................................................: 32 10 10,196 9,101 56 49 : Average age ........................................................: 58.5 55.0 60.4 58.6 58.0 57.2 : Number of persons living in household ................................: 836 574 179,402 197,231 1,751 1,660 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Table 63. Selected Operator Characteristics by Race: 2012 [Data were collected for a maximum of three operators. For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : : American Indian : : : : Black or : : or Alaska Native : : Asian : : African American : American Indian : alone or in : : alone or in : Black or : alone or in : or Alaska Native : combination with : : combination with : African American : combination with Characteristics : only : other races : Asian only : other races : only : other races -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Operators ..................................number: 1,761 2,482 7,474 7,670 526 722 Sex of operator: : Male ...........................................: 1,164 1,620 5,333 5,462 353 499 Female .........................................: 597 862 2,141 2,208 173 223 Primary occupation: : Farming ........................................: 884 1,237 4,619 4,717 246 330 Other ..........................................: 877 1,245 2,855 2,953 280 392 Place of residence: : On farm operated ...............................: 1,333 1,897 3,747 3,870 379 516 Not on farm operated ...........................: 428 585 3,727 3,800 147 206 Days worked off farm: : None ...........................................: 617 868 2,427 2,479 189 262 Any ............................................: 1,144 1,614 5,047 5,191 337 460 1 to 49 days .................................: 194 280 962 1,007 43 70 50 to 99 days ................................: 113 154 506 514 25 47 100 to 199 days ..............................: 188 280 939 959 39 58 200 days or more .............................: 649 900 2,640 2,711 230 285 Years on present farm: : 2 years or less ................................: 102 155 562 577 24 39 3 or 4 years ...................................: 103 147 772 818 54 77 5 to 9 years ...................................: 390 518 1,542 1,571 129 150 10 years or more ...............................: 1,166 1,662 4,598 4,704 319 456 Years operating any farm (see text): : 2 years or less ................................: 60 108 397 411 19 31 3 or 4 years ...................................: 96 137 674 714 42 66 5 to 9 years ...................................: 309 425 1,298 1,326 123 137 10 years or more ...............................: 1,296 1,783 5,105 5,219 342 488 Age group: : Under 25 years .................................: 20 45 86 90 5 11 25 to 34 years .................................: 81 128 519 560 9 26 35 to 44 years .................................: 213 277 996 1,025 66 79 45 to 54 years .................................: 450 601 1,914 1,960 121 181 55 to 64 years .................................: 527 763 2,274 2,317 137 195 65 to 74 years .................................: 348 503 1,052 1,076 119 146 75 years and over ..............................: 122 165 633 642 69 84 Average age of - : All operators ..................................: 56.0 55.9 55.0 54.9 58.5 57.4 Principal operator .............................: 58.1 58.2 56.3 56.4 61.0 59.8 Second operator ................................: 53.2 52.9 53.9 53.5 52.9 51.7 Third operator .................................: 40.5 41.3 47.2 46.8 56.5 55.7 Number of persons living in household of - : Principal operator .............................: 3,264 4,545 15,267 15,468 892 1,283 Second operator ................................: 385 509 2,851 2,961 141 169 Third operator .................................: 103 191 1,027 1,100 76 92 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : : Native Hawaiian or : : : : Pacific Islander alone or : : White alone or : Native Hawaiian or : in combination with : : in combination with Characteristics : Pacific Islander only : other races : White only : other races -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Operators ..................................number: 455 532 111,141 112,094 Sex of operator: : Male ...........................................: 314 359 74,484 75,100 Female .........................................: 141 173 36,657 36,994 Primary occupation: : Farming ........................................: 219 258 55,930 56,379 Other ..........................................: 236 274 55,211 55,715 Place of residence: : On farm operated ...............................: 324 386 77,992 78,686 Not on farm operated ...........................: 131 146 33,149 33,408 Days worked off farm: : None ...........................................: 166 199 44,262 44,585 Any ............................................: 289 333 66,879 67,509 1 to 49 days .................................: 48 58 10,624 10,738 50 to 99 days ................................: 24 30 6,122 6,183 100 to 199 days ..............................: 51 63 10,471 10,581 200 days or more .............................: 166 182 39,662 40,007 Years on present farm: : 2 years or less ................................: 20 26 5,187 5,244 3 or 4 years ...................................: 30 34 7,549 7,650 5 to 9 years ...................................: 87 95 19,450 19,622 10 years or more ...............................: 318 377 78,955 79,578 Years operating any farm (see text): : 2 years or less ................................: 10 14 3,836 3,888 3 or 4 years ...................................: 31 35 6,079 6,174 5 to 9 years ...................................: 74 82 16,627 16,777 10 years or more ...............................: 340 401 84,599 85,255 Age group: : Under 25 years .................................: 5 7 1,141 1,175 25 to 34 years .................................: 16 23 5,604 5,696 35 to 44 years .................................: 39 53 10,683 10,777 45 to 54 years .................................: 123 139 24,063 24,261 55 to 64 years .................................: 161 187 32,934 33,223 65 to 74 years .................................: 71 78 23,869 24,053 75 years and over ..............................: 40 45 12,847 12,909 Average age of - : All operators ..................................: 56.7 56.1 58.2 58.2 Principal operator .............................: 58.5 58.5 60.4 60.3 Second operator ................................: 54.3 53.0 55.5 55.5 Third operator .................................: 43.0 40.0 48.2 48.2 Number of persons living in household of - : Principal operator .............................: 836 958 179,402 181,024 Second operator ................................: 117 149 34,352 34,562 Third operator .................................: 48 54 12,015 12,120 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Table 64. Summary by Size of Farm: 2012 [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: 77,857 24,637 25,811 3,700 3,601 3,222 percent: 100.0 31.6 33.2 4.8 4.6 4.1 Land in farms .............................acres: 25,569,001 95,670 584,643 212,480 294,439 369,985 Average size of farm ..................acres: 328 4 23 57 82 115 : MARKET VALUE OF AGRICULTURAL : PRODUCTS SOLD AND GOVERNMENT : PAYMENTS : : Total .....................................farms: 77,857 24,637 25,811 3,700 3,601 3,222 $1,000: 42,774,392 665,257 2,589,252 1,046,966 1,254,988 1,684,434 Average per farm ....................dollars: 549,397 27,002 100,316 282,964 348,511 522,791 Farms by economic class: : Less than $1,000 (see text) ................: 14,629 5,817 5,725 552 461 508 $1,000 to $2,499 ...........................: 4,718 2,696 1,405 122 136 99 $2,500 to $4,999 ...........................: 5,904 3,321 1,615 207 173 167 $5,000 to $9,999 ...........................: 7,846 4,523 2,056 255 191 168 $10,000 to $24,999 .........................: 10,265 4,735 3,274 306 373 275 : $25,000 to $49,999 .........................: 7,150 1,902 3,509 315 255 185 $50,000 to $99,999 .........................: 6,698 885 3,846 453 314 205 $100,000 to $249,999 .......................: 6,951 375 3,064 783 706 469 $250,000 to $499,999 .......................: 4,132 186 734 453 549 500 : $500,000 to $999,999 .......................: 3,197 106 233 131 294 395 $1,000,000 or more .........................: 6,367 91 350 123 149 251 $1,000,000 to $2,499,999 .................: 3,015 73 201 64 67 125 $2,500,000 to $4,999,999 .................: 1,480 9 91 27 42 58 $5,000,000 or more .......................: 1,872 9 58 32 40 68 : Total sales .............................farms: 77,857 24,637 25,811 3,700 3,601 3,222 $1,000: 42,627,472 663,142 2,580,746 1,043,900 1,250,202 1,678,975 Grains, oilseeds, dry beans, and : dry peas .............................farms: 4,757 147 549 164 243 286 $1,000: 1,727,708 (D) 7,800 6,909 (D) 22,035 Sales of $50,000 or more ............farms: 3,235 - 26 62 131 164 $1,000: 1,701,529 - 1,551 4,615 (D) 19,434 Corn ................................farms: 1,796 74 248 61 116 121 $1,000: 419,544 155 3,783 2,445 (D) 7,949 Sales of $50,000 or more ..........farms: 1,130 - 9 21 59 65 $1,000: 407,430 - 505 1,516 (D) 6,467 Wheat ...............................farms: 1,499 6 121 42 38 57 $1,000: 341,702 8 847 956 1,190 1,988 Sales of $50,000 or more ..........farms: 914 - - 1 7 16 $1,000: 329,286 - - (D) (D) 1,299 Soybeans ............................farms: 2 - - - - - $1,000: (D) - - - - - Sales of $50,000 or more ..........farms: 1 - - - - - $1,000: (D) - - - - - Sorghum .............................farms: 200 5 18 4 8 11 $1,000: (D) 12 182 282 103 406 Sales of $50,000 or more ..........farms: 76 - - 2 - 5 $1,000: 13,369 - - (D) - 273 Barley ..............................farms: 261 12 20 7 3 6 $1,000: 29,212 (D) 28 (D) (D) 202 Sales of $50,000 or more ..........farms: 105 - - - - 2 $1,000: 27,084 - - - - (D) Rice ................................farms: 1,391 10 55 41 71 81 $1,000: 782,644 (D) 2,149 (D) 7,007 10,591 Sales of $50,000 or more ..........farms: 1,306 - 17 33 63 73 $1,000: 780,488 - 1,005 (D) 6,811 10,381 Other grains, oilseeds, : dry beans, and dry peas ............farms: 953 54 143 24 37 32 $1,000: 138,816 70 811 467 787 900 Sales of $50,000 or more ..........farms: 438 - - 5 1 6 $1,000: 132,134 - - (D) (D) 463 : Tobacco .............................. farms: - - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - - Sales of $50,000 or more ............farms: - - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - - Cotton and cottonseed .................farms: 630 9 19 7 3 8 $1,000: 655,094 (D) 752 411 (D) 932 Sales of $50,000 or more ............farms: 584 - 5 5 2 6 $1,000: 653,962 - 356 (D) (D) (D) Vegetables, melons, potatoes, : and sweet potatoes ...................farms: 6,155 2,521 1,654 191 174 162 $1,000: 6,327,838 26,971 107,456 27,798 44,457 80,822 Sales of $50,000 or more ............farms: 1,961 106 381 89 82 91 $1,000: 6,293,658 11,939 93,730 26,600 43,828 79,990 : Fruits, tree nuts, and berries ........farms: 36,574 11,989 12,958 1,986 1,830 1,485 $1,000: 17,638,972 171,156 1,049,716 418,629 559,809 640,827 Sales of $50,000 or more ............farms: 17,379 568 6,650 1,528 1,548 1,287 $1,000: 17,344,347 46,054 908,997 408,753 554,410 636,970 Fruits and tree nuts ................farms: 35,526 11,559 12,602 1,948 1,778 1,465 $1,000: 15,655,703 154,093 955,781 370,861 480,397 544,561 Sales of $50,000 or more ..........farms: 16,846 469 6,449 1,494 1,511 1,266 $1,000: 15,369,315 33,859 818,234 361,017 475,028 540,847 Berries .............................farms: 1,701 684 544 70 88 46 $1,000: 1,983,269 17,063 93,935 47,768 79,412 96,266 Sales of $50,000 or more ..........farms: 610 97 195 37 40 28 $1,000: 1,972,002 11,960 89,284 47,311 78,952 96,043 Nursery, greenhouse, floriculture, : and sod (see text) ...................farms: 3,890 2,266 1,081 107 81 83 $1,000: 2,547,307 245,352 637,728 103,359 154,210 181,435 Sales of $50,000 or more ............farms: 1,465 584 540 61 47 55 $1,000: 2,520,294 226,964 631,476 102,917 153,734 181,082 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 64. Summary by Size of Farm: 2012 (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: 2,533 1,477 1,189 3,983 3,230 2,040 2,434 percent: 3.3 1.9 1.5 5.1 4.1 2.6 3.1 Land in farms .............................acres: 398,520 292,751 282,281 1,428,792 2,244,264 2,800,180 16,564,996 Average size of farm ..................acres: 157 198 237 359 695 1,373 6,806 : MARKET VALUE OF AGRICULTURAL : PRODUCTS SOLD AND GOVERNMENT : PAYMENTS : : Total .....................................farms: 2,533 1,477 1,189 3,983 3,230 2,040 2,434 $1,000: 1,530,776 1,032,589 1,163,325 4,797,702 6,413,293 6,585,677 14,010,133 Average per farm ....................dollars: 604,333 699,113 978,406 1,204,545 1,985,540 3,228,273 5,756,012 Farms by economic class: : Less than $1,000 (see text) ................: 353 158 131 381 276 93 174 $1,000 to $2,499 ...........................: 105 31 21 47 34 9 13 $2,500 to $4,999 ...........................: 113 49 32 110 66 31 20 $5,000 to $9,999 ...........................: 145 98 57 190 108 31 24 $10,000 to $24,999 .........................: 249 116 101 355 229 159 93 : $25,000 to $49,999 .........................: 143 84 82 224 212 134 105 $50,000 to $99,999 .........................: 151 79 86 181 191 144 163 $100,000 to $249,999 .......................: 314 146 89 260 210 181 354 $250,000 to $499,999 .......................: 362 199 164 466 182 122 215 : $500,000 to $999,999 .......................: 311 267 186 595 395 112 172 $1,000,000 or more .........................: 287 250 240 1,174 1,327 1,024 1,101 $1,000,000 to $2,499,999 .................: 190 178 158 743 640 343 233 $2,500,000 to $4,999,999 .................: 49 42 33 266 352 282 229 $5,000,000 or more .......................: 48 30 49 165 335 399 639 : Total sales .............................farms: 2,533 1,477 1,189 3,983 3,230 2,040 2,434 $1,000: 1,525,079 1,028,136 1,158,463 4,772,037 6,381,186 6,561,240 13,984,366 Grains, oilseeds, dry beans, and : dry peas .............................farms: 272 206 186 799 764 531 610 $1,000: 29,798 28,170 (D) 212,431 334,292 315,838 721,092 Sales of $50,000 or more ............farms: 172 139 140 686 682 477 556 $1,000: 27,306 26,780 (D) 209,683 332,076 314,608 720,039 Corn ................................farms: 102 71 62 246 261 194 240 $1,000: 6,885 6,973 (D) 40,088 70,576 74,854 192,874 Sales of $50,000 or more ..........farms: 51 46 43 205 229 177 225 $1,000: 5,667 6,297 (D) 38,931 69,679 74,327 192,617 Wheat ...............................farms: 60 56 45 169 239 273 393 $1,000: 2,620 3,581 1,986 14,582 33,754 51,687 228,504 Sales of $50,000 or more ..........farms: 12 24 11 95 171 221 356 $1,000: 1,055 2,919 1,011 12,766 31,809 50,291 227,579 Soybeans ............................farms: - 1 - 1 - - - $1,000: - (D) - (D) - - - Sales of $50,000 or more ..........farms: - 1 - - - - - $1,000: - (D) - - - - - Sorghum .............................farms: 14 6 6 29 34 31 34 $1,000: 252 (D) 388 (D) 2,324 4,856 5,404 Sales of $50,000 or more ..........farms: 1 - 3 8 13 20 24 $1,000: (D) - 352 821 1,877 4,604 5,158 Barley ..............................farms: 4 15 11 31 27 36 89 $1,000: 81 294 248 1,320 1,679 4,758 20,534 Sales of $50,000 or more ..........farms: 1 1 2 11 13 19 56 $1,000: (D) (D) (D) 844 1,338 4,480 19,967 Rice ................................farms: 97 68 79 355 299 138 97 $1,000: 18,923 15,996 23,075 143,278 207,174 157,952 193,732 Sales of $50,000 or more ..........farms: 97 67 79 353 295 133 96 $1,000: 18,923 (D) 23,075 (D) 207,079 157,846 (D) Other grains, oilseeds, : dry beans, and dry peas ............farms: 27 28 23 141 133 128 183 $1,000: 1,038 1,089 1,279 11,817 18,784 21,731 80,044 Sales of $50,000 or more ..........farms: 7 5 10 77 90 92 145 $1,000: 636 697 1,068 10,665 17,985 20,939 79,323 : Tobacco .............................. farms: - - - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - - - Sales of $50,000 or more ............farms: - - - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - - - Cotton and cottonseed .................farms: 15 16 18 81 155 171 128 $1,000: 2,111 2,803 2,067 17,709 78,315 135,327 414,370 Sales of $50,000 or more ............farms: 13 15 14 76 153 167 128 $1,000: (D) (D) 2,030 17,570 (D) 135,183 414,370 Vegetables, melons, potatoes, : and sweet potatoes ...................farms: 113 95 58 232 290 277 388 $1,000: 40,392 44,962 42,756 299,966 688,339 1,220,425 3,703,493 Sales of $50,000 or more ............farms: 48 45 36 182 267 259 375 $1,000: 39,856 44,330 42,570 299,363 687,947 1,220,230 3,703,276 : Fruits, tree nuts, and berries ........farms: 1,099 703 516 1,528 1,132 676 672 $1,000: 616,484 527,869 539,934 2,286,164 2,458,313 2,473,046 5,897,026 Sales of $50,000 or more ............farms: 962 626 461 1,413 1,064 637 635 $1,000: 614,091 526,476 539,128 2,284,030 2,456,817 2,472,249 5,896,374 Fruits and tree nuts ................farms: 1,082 681 497 1,488 1,106 660 660 $1,000: 553,267 415,546 361,809 1,675,691 2,122,955 2,327,389 5,693,353 Sales of $50,000 or more ..........farms: 950 610 440 1,370 1,044 621 622 $1,000: 550,897 414,150 360,963 1,673,548 2,121,508 2,326,592 5,692,672 Berries .............................farms: 26 29 33 84 49 22 26 $1,000: 63,217 112,322 178,126 610,473 335,357 145,657 203,673 Sales of $50,000 or more ..........farms: 13 22 27 67 36 22 26 $1,000: 63,153 112,318 178,119 610,288 335,246 145,657 203,673 Nursery, greenhouse, floriculture, : and sod (see text) ...................farms: 46 26 20 60 46 35 39 $1,000: 118,010 85,331 122,914 215,937 341,949 196,204 144,877 Sales of $50,000 or more ............farms: 24 21 13 40 29 27 24 $1,000: 117,901 (D) (D) 215,673 341,656 196,051 144,719 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 64. Summary by Size of Farm: 2012 (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. : : Cut Christmas trees and : short-rotation woody crops ...........farms: 328 83 146 24 12 12 $1,000: 2,706 355 1,216 305 121 156 Sales of $50,000 or more ............farms: 9 1 5 - - - $1,000: 904 (D) 490 - - - Cut Christmas trees .................farms: 301 78 131 23 12 12 $1,000: 2,499 318 1,186 (D) 121 156 Sales of $50,000 or more ..........farms: 8 1 5 - - - $1,000: 846 (D) 490 - - - Short-rotation woody crops ..........farms: 38 13 15 1 - - $1,000: 206 37 30 (D) - - Sales of $50,000 or more ..........farms: 1 - - - - - $1,000: (D) - - - - - Other crops and hay (see text) ........farms: 5,744 255 1,232 260 368 380 $1,000: 1,467,274 1,080 11,255 5,613 9,838 12,925 Sales of $50,000 or more ............farms: 2,246 1 21 41 59 83 $1,000: 1,425,574 (D) 1,553 3,204 (D) 8,270 Maple syrup (see text) ..............farms: - - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - - Sales of $50,000 or more ..........farms: - - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - - : Cattle and calves .....................farms: 12,594 1,876 3,054 583 696 696 $1,000: 3,259,325 51,117 192,548 71,316 126,894 88,276 Sales of $50,000 or more ............farms: 3,515 111 238 84 110 155 $1,000: 3,170,394 43,276 174,185 66,889 120,969 82,735 Milk from cows (see text) .............farms: 1,554 41 163 76 85 141 $1,000: 6,945,102 42,500 350,425 191,420 221,736 544,294 Sales of $50,000 or more ............farms: 1,520 31 149 73 84 141 $1,000: 6,944,530 42,458 350,080 191,397 (D) 544,294 Hogs and pigs .........................farms: 1,163 479 418 45 54 47 $1,000: 51,526 1,934 5,798 163 (D) 1,384 Sales of $50,000 or more ............farms: 43 8 14 1 3 5 $1,000: 48,608 1,045 4,776 (D) (D) 1,229 Sheep, goats, wool, mohair, and : milk (see text) ......................farms: 4,376 1,550 1,595 183 162 170 $1,000: 108,136 8,784 14,122 1,566 4,339 2,057 Sales of $50,000 or more ............farms: 196 20 26 12 7 7 $1,000: 91,373 5,602 8,318 898 3,056 1,170 Horses, ponies, mules, burros, and : donkeys ..............................farms: 3,050 1,098 1,081 161 95 96 $1,000: 62,241 13,842 21,456 3,767 3,680 1,620 Sales of $50,000 or more ............farms: 212 50 82 14 5 10 $1,000: 35,731 4,788 11,743 2,556 2,627 900 Poultry and eggs ......................farms: 3,758 1,708 1,292 152 139 116 $1,000: 1,663,919 58,146 140,826 205,693 82,228 96,601 Sales of $50,000 or more ............farms: 248 67 67 24 21 16 $1,000: 1,658,976 55,890 139,293 205,407 82,025 96,503 Aquaculture ...........................farms: 229 81 70 11 15 10 $1,000: 103,016 16,122 26,954 4,577 8,396 4,968 Sales of $50,000 or more ............farms: 119 29 40 6 11 6 $1,000: 101,782 15,776 26,603 4,536 8,347 4,842 Other animals and other animal : products (see text) ..................farms: 1,766 875 547 72 61 37 $1,000: 67,309 25,398 12,693 2,372 (D) 644 Sales of $50,000 or more ............farms: 150 54 54 10 2 4 $1,000: 58,094 20,294 9,975 1,991 (D) 553 : Value of- : Government payments .....................farms: 7,593 397 1,200 352 475 487 $1,000: 146,919 2,115 8,505 3,067 4,786 5,459 : Landlord's share of total : sales (see text) .......................farms: 2,147 80 275 111 179 166 $1,000: 266,275 242 4,774 12,415 6,279 6,428 : Agricultural products sold directly to : individuals for human : consumption (see text) .................farms: 8,588 4,151 2,816 331 280 234 $1,000: 169,915 21,707 46,148 11,968 16,348 9,952 : FARM PRODUCTION EXPENSES : : Total farm production expenses 1/ .........farms: 77,857 24,637 25,811 3,700 3,601 3,222 $1,000: 35,455,667 798,197 2,300,654 802,137 1,046,297 1,393,531 Average per farm ....................dollars: 455,395 32,398 89,135 216,794 290,557 432,505 : Fertilizer, lime, and soil : conditioners purchased .................farms: 38,958 11,181 12,638 1,972 2,017 1,722 $1,000: 1,806,062 15,431 68,951 19,129 37,766 37,964 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 .............................: 24,634 10,778 9,826 1,034 832 616 $5,000 to $24,999 ........................: 7,312 348 2,488 776 877 704 $25,000 to $49,999 .......................: 2,319 29 200 116 219 256 $50,000 or more ..........................: 4,693 26 124 46 89 146 : Chemicals purchased .....................farms: 44,536 11,375 15,279 2,440 2,393 2,117 $1,000: 2,190,674 9,974 80,109 30,025 36,285 52,154 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 .............................: 28,059 11,081 11,565 1,190 985 784 $5,000 to $24,999 ........................: 8,444 265 3,348 994 975 772 $25,000 to $49,999 .......................: 2,676 21 253 180 314 328 $50,000 or more ..........................: 5,357 8 113 76 119 233 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 64. Summary by Size of Farm: 2012 (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. : : Cut Christmas trees and : short-rotation woody crops ...........farms: 8 2 9 12 11 5 4 $1,000: 191 (D) (D) 232 12 (D) 12 Sales of $50,000 or more ............farms: 1 - 1 1 - - - $1,000: (D) - (D) (D) - - - Cut Christmas trees .................farms: 8 2 8 12 8 3 4 $1,000: (D) (D) (D) 232 10 7 12 Sales of $50,000 or more ..........farms: 1 - - 1 - - - $1,000: (D) - - (D) - - - Short-rotation woody crops ..........farms: 1 2 1 - 3 2 - $1,000: (D) (D) (D) - 2 (D) - Sales of $50,000 or more ..........farms: - - 1 - - - - $1,000: - - (D) - - - - Other crops and hay (see text) ........farms: 283 189 158 648 637 539 795 $1,000: 17,688 11,171 13,908 89,558 168,230 260,389 865,618 Sales of $50,000 or more ............farms: 117 81 79 378 420 399 567 $1,000: 15,037 9,551 12,496 85,561 164,736 258,012 861,612 Maple syrup (see text) ..............farms: - - - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - - - Sales of $50,000 or more ..........farms: - - - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - - - : Cattle and calves .....................farms: 601 349 289 1,176 1,086 888 1,300 $1,000: 240,361 86,047 183,689 443,758 592,394 284,275 898,649 Sales of $50,000 or more ............farms: 128 93 95 434 507 523 1,037 $1,000: 235,576 82,738 180,921 432,502 581,617 276,066 892,921 Milk from cows (see text) .............farms: 93 78 56 277 279 174 91 $1,000: 406,492 187,664 200,411 988,459 1,502,011 1,286,869 1,022,822 Sales of $50,000 or more ............farms: 93 78 56 277 275 173 90 $1,000: 406,492 187,664 200,411 988,459 1,501,872 (D) (D) Hogs and pigs .........................farms: 21 19 7 27 20 11 15 $1,000: 163 (D) 7 (D) 107 124 3,232 Sales of $50,000 or more ............farms: - 1 - 7 - 1 3 $1,000: - (D) - (D) - (D) (D) Sheep, goats, wool, mohair, and : milk (see text) ......................farms: 131 57 70 138 85 87 148 $1,000: 1,159 1,558 (D) (D) 7,711 17,965 41,247 Sales of $50,000 or more ............farms: 3 7 4 14 6 25 65 $1,000: 503 1,295 (D) 4,220 (D) 17,208 40,112 Horses, ponies, mules, burros, and : donkeys ..............................farms: 69 27 30 112 91 65 125 $1,000: 2,042 (D) 1,113 5,768 1,868 (D) 3,339 Sales of $50,000 or more ............farms: 6 1 6 10 9 8 11 $1,000: 1,436 (D) (D) 4,331 1,178 2,993 2,184 Poultry and eggs ......................farms: 77 44 31 85 63 19 32 $1,000: 35,979 45,907 (D) 170,760 196,980 364,209 (D) Sales of $50,000 or more ............farms: 7 8 1 12 14 7 4 $1,000: 35,884 45,869 (D) 170,617 196,887 364,198 (D) Aquaculture ...........................farms: 10 7 5 5 9 2 4 $1,000: 12,796 5,541 (D) 6,054 (D) (D) 2,884 Sales of $50,000 or more ............farms: 6 7 3 4 2 2 3 $1,000: 12,678 5,541 (D) (D) (D) (D) (D) Other animals and other animal : products (see text) ..................farms: 35 18 16 36 32 11 26 $1,000: 1,415 (D) 885 1,207 (D) 84 (D) Sales of $50,000 or more ............farms: 4 2 4 5 5 - 6 $1,000: 1,224 (D) 846 1,078 (D) - (D) : Value of- : Government payments .....................farms: 528 302 264 1,126 1,095 676 691 $1,000: 5,697 4,453 4,862 25,665 32,106 24,437 25,767 : Landlord's share of total : sales (see text) .......................farms: 139 115 97 363 293 190 139 $1,000: 7,695 7,145 10,101 46,624 43,005 45,146 76,418 : Agricultural products sold directly to : individuals for human : consumption (see text) .................farms: 164 95 56 174 140 76 71 $1,000: 9,958 6,171 3,739 20,003 18,348 3,197 2,377 : FARM PRODUCTION EXPENSES : : Total farm production expenses 1/ .........farms: 2,533 1,477 1,189 3,983 3,230 2,040 2,434 $1,000: 1,296,045 816,831 970,559 3,870,184 5,420,931 5,482,754 11,257,547 Average per farm ....................dollars: 511,664 553,034 816,282 971,676 1,678,307 2,687,624 4,625,122 : Fertilizer, lime, and soil : conditioners purchased .................farms: 1,329 859 699 2,361 1,890 1,154 1,136 $1,000: 32,637 30,644 37,711 168,895 227,973 292,366 836,596 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 .............................: 399 196 153 343 215 120 122 $5,000 to $24,999 ........................: 534 300 211 555 287 119 113 $25,000 to $49,999 .......................: 230 226 152 503 254 68 66 $50,000 or more ..........................: 166 137 183 960 1,134 847 835 : Chemicals purchased .....................farms: 1,588 1,018 793 2,710 2,172 1,310 1,341 $1,000: 48,818 42,235 46,264 202,892 298,519 357,644 985,754 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 .............................: 527 268 199 578 368 240 274 $5,000 to $24,999 ........................: 475 301 198 543 296 121 156 $25,000 to $49,999 .......................: 318 191 148 492 277 94 60 $50,000 or more ..........................: 268 258 248 1,097 1,231 855 851 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 64. Summary by Size of Farm: 2012 (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. : : Seeds, plants, vines, and : trees purchased ........................farms: 27,527 6,735 7,896 1,256 1,295 1,371 $1,000: 1,317,934 40,754 87,040 18,981 28,503 44,516 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $999 ...............................: 11,381 4,785 4,311 478 424 346 $1,000 to $4,999 .........................: 6,676 1,285 2,301 465 460 478 $5,000 to $24,999 ........................: 5,157 459 931 229 311 423 $25,000 to $49,999 .......................: 1,473 74 145 35 50 53 $50,000 or more ..........................: 2,840 132 208 49 50 71 : Livestock and poultry purchased or : leased .................................farms: 12,585 3,599 3,733 537 460 517 $1,000: 1,254,286 49,968 74,219 24,194 58,625 24,986 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 .............................: 7,903 2,880 2,865 336 258 286 $5,000 to $24,999 ........................: 2,950 591 687 156 143 155 $25,000 to $99,999 .......................: 995 74 104 23 33 44 $100,000 to $249,999 .....................: 335 31 50 9 9 16 $250,000 or more .........................: 402 23 27 13 17 16 : Breeding livestock purchased or : leased ...............................farms: 6,850 1,463 1,852 283 258 317 $1,000: 255,730 6,407 44,222 5,822 3,841 8,056 Other livestock and poultry : purchased or leased (see text) .......farms: 7,673 2,660 2,473 336 293 266 $1,000: 998,556 43,561 29,997 18,372 54,785 16,930 : Feed purchased ..........................farms: 30,014 9,384 9,679 1,289 1,225 1,225 $1,000: 6,069,374 116,589 415,264 232,524 264,325 410,658 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 .............................: 16,191 5,980 5,759 698 657 668 $5,000 to $24,999 ........................: 9,417 2,932 3,042 393 368 340 $25,000 to $99,999 .......................: 2,042 335 586 90 66 53 $100,000 to $249,999 .....................: 596 78 92 27 40 29 $250,000 or more .........................: 1,768 59 200 81 94 135 : Gasoline, fuels, and oils purchased .....farms: 70,844 20,674 23,944 3,503 3,379 3,099 $1,000: 1,552,328 34,884 91,789 26,363 32,862 45,994 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 .............................: 51,974 19,409 20,818 2,429 2,092 1,671 $5,000 to $24,999 ........................: 11,182 1,110 2,614 904 1,023 1,054 $25,000 to $49,999 .......................: 2,745 88 270 98 161 204 $50,000 or more ..........................: 4,943 67 242 72 103 170 : Utilities ...............................farms: 60,680 17,342 20,141 3,015 2,985 2,695 $1,000: 1,684,343 46,957 121,516 32,020 42,629 54,098 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $999 ...............................: 16,704 7,644 5,857 617 501 512 $1,000 to $4,999 .........................: 23,136 7,970 9,571 1,031 901 667 $5,000 to $24,999 ........................: 12,275 1,538 3,851 1,115 1,191 998 $25,000 to $49,999 .......................: 3,178 120 511 134 241 304 $50,000 or more ..........................: 5,387 70 351 118 151 214 : Supplies, repairs, and maintenance costs farms: 63,106 17,756 20,711 3,174 3,109 2,912 $1,000: 2,042,434 43,016 127,202 40,698 53,437 68,502 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 .............................: 41,934 16,252 16,207 1,893 1,585 1,371 $5,000 to $24,999 ........................: 12,194 1,321 3,683 993 1,123 991 $25,000 to $49,999 .......................: 3,091 98 445 156 221 276 $50,000 or more ..........................: 5,887 85 376 132 180 274 : Hired farm labor ........................farms: 33,955 7,568 10,008 1,790 1,829 1,791 $1,000: 5,877,973 176,886 534,451 147,818 201,802 249,626 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 .............................: 9,680 4,249 3,464 347 309 292 $5,000 to $24,999 ........................: 8,646 2,062 3,545 552 585 388 $25,000 to $99,999 .......................: 8,011 918 2,071 599 640 652 $100,000 to $249,999 .....................: 3,496 223 554 179 161 276 $250,000 or more .........................: 4,122 116 374 113 134 183 : Contract labor ..........................farms: 25,067 5,490 8,443 1,488 1,463 1,285 $1,000: 3,378,012 42,173 187,606 65,478 91,866 110,662 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $999 ...............................: 2,190 1,223 609 64 66 49 $1,000 to $4,999 .........................: 5,812 2,349 2,261 248 184 155 $5,000 to $24,999 ........................: 7,825 1,580 3,523 523 441 377 $25,000 to $49,999 .......................: 2,941 264 1,065 299 296 187 $50,000 or more ..........................: 6,299 74 985 354 476 517 : Customwork and custom hauling ...........farms: 19,644 2,744 5,975 1,119 1,236 1,098 $1,000: 1,258,384 10,609 55,420 23,162 31,936 36,743 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $999 ...............................: 3,589 1,321 1,419 144 142 94 $1,000 to $4,999 .........................: 4,990 1,037 2,161 312 288 232 $5,000 to $24,999 ........................: 5,384 335 1,969 452 494 384 $25,000 to $49,999 .......................: 1,859 32 260 132 159 199 $50,000 or more ..........................: 3,822 19 166 79 153 189 : Cash rent for land, buildings, : and grazing fees .......................farms: 15,007 2,021 2,619 614 797 853 $1,000: 1,511,985 12,209 28,865 13,718 23,098 27,703 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 .............................: 5,241 1,466 1,427 268 289 304 $5,000 to $9,999 .........................: 1,649 222 411 93 121 95 $10,000 to $24,999 .......................: 2,878 277 534 144 201 198 $25,000 or more ..........................: 5,239 56 247 109 186 256 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 64. Summary by Size of Farm: 2012 (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. : : Seeds, plants, vines, and : trees purchased ........................farms: 1,159 765 628 2,191 1,875 1,186 1,170 $1,000: 22,830 25,635 36,881 94,310 192,666 193,155 532,664 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $999 ...............................: 308 133 96 256 120 67 57 $1,000 to $4,999 .........................: 326 205 162 464 273 136 121 $5,000 to $24,999 ........................: 406 317 257 876 536 228 184 $25,000 to $49,999 .......................: 69 51 45 305 405 142 99 $50,000 or more ..........................: 50 59 68 290 541 613 709 : Livestock and poultry purchased or : leased .................................farms: 388 226 192 707 656 578 992 $1,000: 113,624 27,765 66,341 192,205 208,310 124,937 289,112 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 .............................: 208 80 88 287 270 174 171 $5,000 to $24,999 ........................: 117 81 43 234 188 198 357 $25,000 to $99,999 .......................: 43 44 40 121 105 109 255 $100,000 to $249,999 .....................: 4 10 10 44 52 36 64 $250,000 or more .........................: 16 11 11 21 41 61 145 : Breeding livestock purchased or : leased ...............................farms: 261 136 126 482 479 423 770 $1,000: 5,029 5,509 18,360 14,117 18,385 27,694 98,288 Other livestock and poultry : purchased or leased (see text) .......farms: 177 113 97 312 266 236 444 $1,000: 108,595 22,255 47,982 178,088 189,926 97,243 190,823 : Feed purchased ..........................farms: 900 520 427 1,545 1,334 985 1,501 $1,000: 365,629 170,641 187,535 867,822 1,203,370 982,552 852,466 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 .............................: 460 218 196 613 450 236 256 $5,000 to $24,999 ........................: 290 164 115 454 438 361 520 $25,000 to $99,999 .......................: 41 32 46 128 127 158 380 $100,000 to $249,999 .....................: 6 27 9 58 38 48 144 $250,000 or more .........................: 103 79 61 292 281 182 201 : Gasoline, fuels, and oils purchased .....farms: 2,397 1,428 1,135 3,789 3,109 1,993 2,394 $1,000: 41,996 30,898 29,180 146,680 213,561 255,839 602,281 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 .............................: 1,279 572 461 1,316 942 482 503 $5,000 to $24,999 ........................: 729 527 372 1,054 674 453 668 $25,000 to $49,999 .......................: 221 181 151 651 394 136 190 $50,000 or more ..........................: 168 148 151 768 1,099 922 1,033 : Utilities ...............................farms: 2,060 1,287 975 3,402 2,793 1,801 2,184 $1,000: 45,764 34,953 38,479 164,794 247,919 240,121 615,091 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $999 ...............................: 388 162 104 365 282 154 118 $1,000 to $4,999 .........................: 495 305 203 672 507 319 495 $5,000 to $24,999 ........................: 704 435 301 849 474 314 505 $25,000 to $49,999 .......................: 257 203 157 573 356 144 178 $50,000 or more ..........................: 216 182 210 943 1,174 870 888 : Supplies, repairs, and maintenance costs farms: 2,219 1,349 1,072 3,610 2,933 1,924 2,337 $1,000: 60,756 50,762 51,076 208,521 291,438 311,346 735,679 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 .............................: 1,007 481 373 1,118 753 429 465 $5,000 to $24,999 ........................: 742 416 308 1,021 637 364 595 $25,000 to $49,999 .......................: 234 195 165 533 379 179 210 $50,000 or more ..........................: 236 257 226 938 1,164 952 1,067 : Hired farm labor ........................farms: 1,352 928 734 2,531 2,149 1,465 1,810 $1,000: 203,760 153,342 208,407 701,611 830,151 792,514 1,677,606 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 .............................: 192 98 89 227 188 93 132 $5,000 to $24,999 ........................: 292 154 141 370 196 133 228 $25,000 to $99,999 .......................: 514 360 217 788 583 277 392 $100,000 to $249,999 .....................: 203 186 143 570 455 306 240 $250,000 or more .........................: 151 130 144 576 727 656 818 : Contract labor ..........................farms: 940 600 440 1,552 1,342 911 1,113 $1,000: 89,105 76,859 77,363 321,699 463,802 594,423 1,256,977 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $999 ...............................: 23 21 13 34 36 25 27 $1,000 to $4,999 .........................: 97 63 40 119 115 80 101 $5,000 to $24,999 ........................: 248 134 120 329 246 115 189 $25,000 to $49,999 .......................: 152 87 60 217 152 78 84 $50,000 or more ..........................: 420 295 207 853 793 613 712 : Customwork and custom hauling ...........farms: 916 563 482 1,754 1,541 980 1,236 $1,000: 36,347 25,763 25,596 130,792 216,612 230,968 434,436 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $999 ...............................: 85 31 18 126 80 59 70 $1,000 to $4,999 .........................: 152 85 70 171 163 96 223 $5,000 to $24,999 ........................: 300 192 176 453 247 147 235 $25,000 to $49,999 .......................: 179 102 91 287 210 97 111 $50,000 or more ..........................: 200 153 127 717 841 581 597 : Cash rent for land, buildings, : and grazing fees .......................farms: 724 532 440 1,731 1,688 1,294 1,694 $1,000: 28,868 26,082 29,040 144,034 212,743 243,963 721,662 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 .............................: 212 143 133 380 330 142 147 $5,000 to $9,999 .........................: 95 49 36 173 157 112 85 $10,000 to $24,999 .......................: 196 108 77 292 299 255 297 $25,000 or more ..........................: 221 232 194 886 902 785 1,165 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 64. Summary by Size of Farm: 2012 (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. : : Rent and lease expenses for machinery, : equipment, and farm share of vehicles ..farms: 7,895 1,221 1,752 413 390 412 $1,000: 400,054 4,082 13,844 4,795 4,747 14,578 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $999 ...............................: 1,914 693 637 121 85 61 $1,000 to $4,999 .........................: 2,150 389 681 157 141 135 $5,000 to $24,999 ........................: 1,990 109 360 106 131 144 $25,000 to $49,999 .......................: 567 15 43 13 17 37 $50,000 or more ..........................: 1,274 15 31 16 16 35 : Interest expense ........................farms: 26,459 5,399 8,180 1,353 1,387 1,362 $1,000: 1,217,781 57,898 117,502 29,562 34,690 40,650 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 .............................: 8,135 2,328 2,967 404 415 328 $5,000 to $24,999 ........................: 11,048 2,562 3,986 613 581 586 $25,000 to $99,999 .......................: 5,129 489 1,137 303 340 376 $100,000 or more .........................: 2,147 20 90 33 51 72 : Secured by real estate ................farms: 20,307 4,267 6,655 1,122 1,075 1,057 $1,000: 941,302 49,738 100,879 25,400 28,319 30,871 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $999 .............................: 1,166 408 393 56 33 41 $1,000 to $4,999 .......................: 4,137 1,145 1,660 238 241 168 $5,000 to $24,999 ......................: 9,276 2,282 3,549 532 467 490 $25,000 to $49,999 .....................: 2,690 369 739 199 209 188 $50,000 or more ........................: 3,038 63 314 97 125 170 : Not secured by real estate ............farms: 13,273 2,248 3,504 597 673 747 $1,000: 276,479 8,160 16,623 4,162 6,371 9,779 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $999 .............................: 2,988 848 1,107 172 118 163 $1,000 to $4,999 .......................: 4,701 983 1,570 255 300 265 $5,000 to $24,999 ......................: 3,514 386 741 133 189 226 $25,000 to $49,999 .....................: 835 20 49 18 40 49 $50,000 or more ........................: 1,235 11 37 19 26 44 : Property taxes paid .....................farms: 71,398 22,393 24,102 3,420 3,345 2,947 $1,000: 827,587 73,142 116,107 26,308 28,069 32,663 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 .............................: 45,137 18,101 17,265 1,815 1,630 1,266 $5,000 to $9,999 .........................: 12,923 3,319 4,617 901 920 708 $10,000 to $24,999 .......................: 7,776 873 1,807 574 623 701 $25,000 or more ..........................: 5,562 100 413 130 172 272 : All other production : expenses (see text) ....................farms: 43,111 9,169 12,835 2,308 2,417 2,354 $1,000: 3,066,456 63,624 180,770 67,362 75,657 142,033 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 .............................: 22,864 7,349 8,785 1,172 1,043 940 $5,000 to $24,999 ........................: 10,967 1,501 3,018 791 897 889 $25,000 to $49,999 .......................: 2,928 134 437 143 214 187 $50,000 to $99,999 .......................: 2,313 103 301 107 129 148 $100,000 or more .........................: 4,039 82 294 95 134 190 : Production expenses paid by : landlords 1/ .............................farms: 1,305 107 185 82 65 93 $1,000: 54,690 265 940 2,454 665 1,969 : Depreciation expenses claimed .............farms: 39,342 7,899 11,802 2,235 2,274 2,166 $1,000: 2,256,892 83,108 164,676 60,750 66,966 93,379 : NET CASH FARM INCOME (SEE TEXT) : : Net cash farm income of operations ........farms: 77,857 24,637 25,811 3,700 3,601 3,222 $1,000: 8,523,285 -47,745 450,263 302,739 257,711 355,309 Average per farm ....................dollars: 109,474 -1,938 17,445 81,821 71,566 110,276 : Farms with net gains 2/ ................number: 36,283 8,902 11,617 1,923 1,966 1,694 Average net gain ..................dollars: 314,056 26,197 77,426 210,360 185,326 288,386 : Gain of- : Less than $1,000 .........................: 1,602 915 410 46 43 38 $1,000 to $4,999 .........................: 4,785 2,611 1,330 120 138 81 $5,000 to $9,999 .........................: 3,597 1,725 1,210 112 108 84 $10,000 to $24,999 .......................: 5,723 1,896 2,433 235 251 178 $25,000 to $49,999 .......................: 4,813 950 2,405 297 244 199 $50,000 or more ..........................: 15,763 805 3,829 1,113 1,182 1,114 : Farms with net losses ..................number: 41,574 15,735 14,194 1,777 1,635 1,528 Average net loss ..................dollars: 69,072 17,855 31,647 57,279 65,224 87,185 : Loss of- : Less than $1,000 .........................: 1,982 1,093 584 55 84 47 $1,000 to $4,999 .........................: 8,924 4,555 2,918 318 228 211 $5,000 to $9,999 .........................: 7,815 3,551 2,797 263 258 230 $10,000 to $24,999 .......................: 10,269 3,742 3,960 466 407 355 $25,000 to $49,999 .......................: 5,478 1,757 2,043 277 278 233 $50,000 or more ..........................: 7,106 1,037 1,892 398 380 452 : Net cash farm income of operators .........farms: 77,857 24,637 25,811 3,700 3,601 3,222 $1,000: 8,177,199 -49,012 438,534 275,995 243,943 346,941 Average per farm ....................dollars: 105,028 -1,989 16,990 74,593 67,743 107,679 : Operators reporting net gains 2/ ........farms: 36,052 8,901 11,588 1,910 1,953 1,683 Average net gain ..................dollars: 308,890 26,051 76,683 197,953 182,625 286,349 : Gain of- : Less than $1,000 .........................: 1,605 918 407 47 44 39 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 64. Summary by Size of Farm: 2012 (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. : : Rent and lease expenses for machinery, : equipment, and farm share of vehicles ..farms: 361 266 210 780 803 564 723 $1,000: 10,276 5,800 12,797 34,204 44,289 52,387 198,255 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $999 ...............................: 66 32 33 57 75 17 37 $1,000 to $4,999 .........................: 103 71 42 146 124 78 83 $5,000 to $24,999 ........................: 126 92 77 293 269 151 132 $25,000 to $49,999 .......................: 31 49 25 112 104 68 53 $50,000 or more ..........................: 35 22 33 172 231 250 418 : Interest expense ........................farms: 1,109 691 559 2,011 1,784 1,206 1,418 $1,000: 45,629 25,285 26,541 119,801 180,840 187,482 351,901 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 .............................: 274 168 143 384 281 188 255 $5,000 to $24,999 ........................: 428 261 206 691 461 321 352 $25,000 to $99,999 .......................: 313 198 149 625 569 306 324 $100,000 or more .........................: 94 64 61 311 473 391 487 : Secured by real estate ................farms: 860 495 417 1,393 1,240 835 891 $1,000: 35,848 18,883 20,910 93,508 132,646 142,746 261,554 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $999 .............................: 46 26 31 39 26 35 32 $1,000 to $4,999 .......................: 135 60 55 141 97 96 101 $5,000 to $24,999 ......................: 342 206 164 508 351 186 199 $25,000 to $49,999 .....................: 164 86 69 260 213 92 102 $50,000 or more ........................: 173 117 98 445 553 426 457 : Not secured by real estate ............farms: 567 412 317 1,233 1,127 797 1,051 $1,000: 9,781 6,402 5,631 26,293 48,194 44,736 90,347 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $999 .............................: 80 57 46 164 98 56 79 $1,000 to $4,999 .......................: 226 134 117 313 221 109 208 $5,000 to $24,999 ......................: 186 152 97 466 358 263 317 $25,000 to $49,999 .....................: 40 40 31 148 202 93 105 $50,000 or more ........................: 35 29 26 142 248 276 342 : Property taxes paid .....................farms: 2,332 1,359 1,064 3,579 2,877 1,819 2,161 $1,000: 30,402 20,936 17,564 73,382 92,480 102,429 214,104 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 .............................: 1,034 523 411 1,262 877 440 513 $5,000 to $9,999 .........................: 469 249 189 569 444 294 244 $10,000 to $24,999 .......................: 579 373 266 761 499 301 419 $25,000 or more ..........................: 250 214 198 987 1,057 784 985 : All other production : expenses (see text) ....................farms: 1,818 1,205 951 3,297 2,703 1,843 2,211 $1,000: 119,604 69,232 79,784 298,543 496,256 520,626 952,964 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 .............................: 678 359 270 857 612 415 384 $5,000 to $24,999 ........................: 604 440 301 926 611 406 583 $25,000 to $49,999 .......................: 190 155 145 496 370 213 244 $50,000 to $99,999 .......................: 147 126 101 416 333 153 249 $100,000 or more .........................: 199 125 134 602 777 656 751 : Production expenses paid by : landlords 1/ .............................farms: 56 44 52 142 184 145 150 $1,000: 683 1,118 1,425 3,945 12,990 7,076 21,159 : Depreciation expenses claimed .............farms: 1,667 1,116 856 3,032 2,560 1,673 2,062 $1,000: 82,749 55,811 52,310 234,174 325,325 314,453 723,190 : NET CASH FARM INCOME (SEE TEXT) : : Net cash farm income of operations ........farms: 2,533 1,477 1,189 3,983 3,230 2,040 2,434 $1,000: 310,739 245,994 225,658 1,050,786 1,138,370 1,248,375 2,985,087 Average per farm ....................dollars: 122,676 166,550 189,788 263,818 352,436 611,948 1,226,412 : Farms with net gains 2/ ................number: 1,416 829 675 2,377 2,012 1,322 1,550 Average net gain ..................dollars: 296,153 383,524 474,210 564,090 750,648 1,164,591 2,294,656 : Gain of- : Less than $1,000 .........................: 47 9 7 42 30 12 3 $1,000 to $4,999 .........................: 118 46 40 144 88 42 27 $5,000 to $9,999 .........................: 81 36 22 80 82 37 20 $10,000 to $24,999 .......................: 127 60 49 173 151 91 79 $25,000 to $49,999 .......................: 122 54 54 162 132 71 123 $50,000 or more ..........................: 921 624 503 1,776 1,529 1,069 1,298 : Farms with net losses ..................number: 1,117 648 514 1,606 1,218 718 884 Average net loss ..................dollars: 97,237 111,030 183,723 180,608 305,365 405,591 646,640 : Loss of- : Less than $1,000 .........................: 26 20 13 31 17 8 4 $1,000 to $4,999 .........................: 178 67 60 195 103 58 33 $5,000 to $9,999 .........................: 178 85 48 191 108 60 46 $10,000 to $24,999 .......................: 245 165 139 343 252 99 96 $25,000 to $49,999 .......................: 140 78 74 204 169 106 119 $50,000 or more ..........................: 350 233 180 642 569 387 586 : Net cash farm income of operators .........farms: 2,533 1,477 1,189 3,983 3,230 2,040 2,434 $1,000: 298,375 232,632 218,126 969,464 1,080,083 1,197,126 2,924,993 Average per farm ....................dollars: 117,795 157,503 183,453 243,400 334,391 586,826 1,201,723 : Operators reporting net gains 2/ ........farms: 1,396 825 671 2,327 1,975 1,307 1,516 Average net gain ..................dollars: 295,042 371,500 466,928 557,458 748,963 1,153,864 2,297,333 : Gain of- : Less than $1,000 .........................: 47 9 12 40 27 11 4 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 64. Summary by Size of Farm: 2012 (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 (SEE TEXT) - Con. : : Net cash farm income of operators - Con. : Operators reporting net gains 2/ - Con. : Gain of- - Con. : : $1,000 to $4,999 .........................: 4,774 2,607 1,322 120 138 82 $5,000 to $9,999 .........................: 3,610 1,723 1,220 113 109 80 $10,000 to $24,999 .......................: 5,758 1,907 2,446 235 254 178 $25,000 to $49,999 .......................: 4,811 950 2,404 289 244 200 $50,000 or more ..........................: 15,494 796 3,789 1,106 1,164 1,104 : Operators reporting net losses ..........farms: 41,805 15,736 14,223 1,790 1,648 1,539 Average net loss ..................dollars: 70,779 17,850 31,643 57,036 68,401 87,710 : Loss of- : Less than $1,000 .........................: 2,006 1,101 598 53 84 44 $1,000 to $4,999 .........................: 8,944 4,556 2,919 316 228 217 $5,000 to $9,999 .........................: 7,798 3,548 2,801 260 253 226 $10,000 to $24,999 .......................: 10,315 3,738 3,962 479 412 358 $25,000 to $49,999 .......................: 5,518 1,756 2,048 285 283 240 $50,000 or more ..........................: 7,224 1,037 1,895 397 388 454 : COMMODITY CREDIT CORPORATION : LOANS (SEE TEXT) : : Total .....................................farms: 521 3 11 - 9 26 $1,000: 122,036 (D) (D) - 312 1,172 : INCOME FROM FARM-RELATED SOURCES : : Total income from farm-related sources, gross : before taxes and expenses (see text) .....farms: 23,685 5,208 6,905 1,328 1,292 1,276 $1,000: 1,204,560 85,195 161,666 57,910 49,020 64,406 Customwork and other agricultural : services ...............................farms: 5,255 1,075 1,303 282 244 238 $1,000: 383,434 13,079 42,242 12,231 15,493 20,152 : Gross cash rent or share payments .......farms: 6,000 870 1,495 385 395 362 $1,000: 256,997 9,025 25,164 9,306 11,470 11,837 Sales of forest products, excluding : Christmas trees, short rotation woody : crops, and maple products ..............farms: 862 194 267 46 49 51 $1,000: 27,613 366 783 313 74 1,591 Agri-tourism and recreational services : (see text) .............................farms: 1,699 543 443 66 100 65 $1,000: 64,520 7,907 11,767 6,193 2,183 9,328 Patronage dividends and refunds : from cooperatives ......................farms: 7,469 918 1,978 445 494 514 $1,000: 171,066 1,585 13,714 7,096 10,881 11,952 Crop and livestock insurance : payments received ......................farms: 1,568 227 478 78 97 98 $1,000: 62,457 1,573 9,021 2,148 3,453 1,682 Amount from state and local government : agricultural program payments ..........farms: 343 54 102 20 15 14 $1,000: 4,218 56 487 27 157 77 Other farm-related income : sources (see text) .....................farms: 5,192 1,821 1,644 283 146 193 $1,000: 234,255 51,606 58,488 20,596 5,309 7,786 : LAND USE : : Total cropland ............................farms: 57,731 17,374 19,300 2,925 2,864 2,502 acres: 9,591,783 51,900 336,597 125,450 181,647 211,715 Harvested cropland ......................farms: 53,372 16,772 17,517 2,659 2,576 2,247 acres: 8,007,461 47,435 279,832 106,190 153,014 179,277 Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 49 acres ............................: 38,391 16,772 17,517 1,353 748 605 50 to 99 acres ...........................: 4,412 - - 1,306 1,828 501 100 to 199 acres .........................: 3,567 - - - - 1,141 200 to 499 acres .........................: 3,538 - - - - - 500 to 999 acres .........................: 1,780 - - - - - 1,000 to 1,999 acres .....................: 950 - - - - - 2,000 acres or more ......................: 734 - - - - - : Cropland- : Other pasture and grazing land that could : have been used for crops without additional: improvements (see text) ..............farms: 2,879 537 999 169 134 151 acres: 492,270 1,559 9,938 3,449 5,984 8,227 On which all crops failed or : were abandoned .......................farms: 2,425 369 1,068 161 126 90 acres: 207,072 719 12,048 2,795 4,047 3,456 Idle or used for cover crops or soil : improvement, but not harvested and not : pastured or grazed (see text) ........farms: 6,204 732 2,466 461 391 366 acres: 674,022 1,865 31,282 12,050 15,407 16,818 In cultivated summer fallow ...........farms: 1,477 117 398 64 105 81 acres: 210,958 322 3,497 966 3,195 3,937 : Total woodland ............................farms: 7,345 762 2,609 508 451 480 acres: 1,575,520 2,018 32,292 13,398 21,470 30,951 Woodland pastured .......................farms: 3,519 303 1,107 185 209 269 acres: 855,116 903 11,654 5,310 8,230 15,322 Woodland not pastured ...................farms: 4,610 491 1,730 350 293 275 acres: 720,404 1,115 20,638 8,088 13,240 15,629 Permanent pasture and rangeland, : other than cropland and woodland : pastured (see text) ......................farms: 21,886 4,283 7,331 1,133 1,076 1,081 acres: 13,036,448 15,207 111,845 42,115 54,520 82,639 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 64. Summary by Size of Farm: 2012 (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 (SEE TEXT) - Con. : : Net cash farm income of operators - Con. : Operators reporting net gains 2/ - Con. : Gain of- - Con. : : $1,000 to $4,999 .........................: 116 52 40 141 88 43 25 $5,000 to $9,999 .........................: 78 39 23 77 85 42 21 $10,000 to $24,999 .......................: 125 59 50 176 148 96 84 $25,000 to $49,999 .......................: 127 55 53 170 126 72 121 $50,000 or more ..........................: 903 611 493 1,723 1,501 1,043 1,261 : Operators reporting net losses ..........farms: 1,137 652 518 1,656 1,255 733 918 Average net loss ..................dollars: 99,828 113,275 183,751 197,911 318,024 424,248 607,586 : Loss of- : Less than $1,000 .........................: 24 20 18 33 18 9 4 $1,000 to $4,999 .........................: 187 65 55 203 106 59 33 $5,000 to $9,999 .........................: 179 85 45 190 105 60 46 $10,000 to $24,999 .......................: 250 168 141 353 257 100 97 $25,000 to $49,999 .......................: 140 76 74 202 187 102 125 $50,000 or more ..........................: 357 238 185 675 582 403 613 : COMMODITY CREDIT CORPORATION : LOANS (SEE TEXT) : : Total .....................................farms: 33 25 26 122 116 94 56 $1,000: 1,695 1,470 2,499 15,087 24,000 33,800 41,809 : INCOME FROM FARM-RELATED SOURCES : : Total income from farm-related sources, gross : before taxes and expenses (see text) .....farms: 962 647 525 1,788 1,528 1,001 1,225 $1,000: 76,007 30,236 32,892 123,267 146,008 145,452 232,501 Customwork and other agricultural : services ...............................farms: 196 162 139 504 481 308 323 $1,000: 25,311 10,403 11,169 46,623 62,019 60,532 64,181 : Gross cash rent or share payments .......farms: 273 172 158 549 474 336 531 $1,000: 9,618 7,980 4,495 23,495 31,976 39,949 72,683 Sales of forest products, excluding : Christmas trees, short rotation woody : crops, and maple products ..............farms: 55 17 18 49 49 27 40 $1,000: 204 113 263 842 1,073 1,924 20,067 Agri-tourism and recreational services : (see text) .............................farms: 33 40 34 65 63 66 181 $1,000: 337 2,237 1,923 4,918 5,295 3,539 8,893 Patronage dividends and refunds : from cooperatives ......................farms: 390 271 218 747 681 417 396 $1,000: 10,543 5,865 4,250 22,038 25,463 24,029 33,651 Crop and livestock insurance : payments received ......................farms: 67 45 48 105 121 84 120 $1,000: 3,581 1,305 2,717 11,797 6,853 5,747 12,580 Amount from state and local government : agricultural program payments ..........farms: 14 14 10 35 22 22 21 $1,000: 515 234 299 885 384 736 362 Other farm-related income : sources (see text) .....................farms: 141 76 68 271 213 124 212 $1,000: 25,899 2,100 7,778 12,670 12,945 8,996 20,084 : LAND USE : : Total cropland ............................farms: 1,977 1,193 957 3,071 2,500 1,485 1,583 acres: 227,654 177,028 165,648 856,506 1,332,078 1,476,314 4,449,246 Harvested cropland ......................farms: 1,714 1,085 867 2,829 2,255 1,389 1,462 acres: 188,404 153,270 145,206 748,857 1,152,032 1,285,858 3,568,086 Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 49 acres ............................: 372 204 143 302 159 104 112 50 to 99 acres ...........................: 184 83 72 184 107 75 72 100 to 199 acres .........................: 1,158 515 165 271 152 64 101 200 to 499 acres .........................: - 283 487 2,072 417 132 147 500 to 999 acres .........................: - - - - 1,420 254 106 1,000 to 1,999 acres .....................: - - - - - 760 190 2,000 acres or more ......................: - - - - - - 734 : Cropland- : Other pasture and grazing land that could : have been used for crops without additional: improvements (see text) ..............farms: 110 61 59 200 152 129 178 acres: 8,817 4,886 6,266 27,947 39,872 79,993 295,332 On which all crops failed or : were abandoned .......................farms: 68 43 20 117 168 90 105 acres: 3,691 2,472 1,829 13,288 30,442 33,218 99,067 Idle or used for cover crops or soil : improvement, but not harvested and not : pastured or grazed (see text) ........farms: 297 173 120 382 367 169 280 acres: 21,958 14,043 10,697 53,580 87,082 50,550 358,690 In cultivated summer fallow ...........farms: 96 34 23 141 154 111 153 acres: 4,784 2,357 1,650 12,834 22,650 26,695 128,071 : Total woodland ............................farms: 416 208 207 587 446 310 361 acres: 37,123 23,273 28,789 122,568 177,860 209,570 876,208 Woodland pastured .......................farms: 200 115 107 315 249 200 260 acres: 15,917 10,033 12,061 56,861 85,549 116,577 516,699 Woodland not pastured ...................farms: 265 132 127 359 264 156 168 acres: 21,206 13,240 16,728 65,707 92,311 92,993 359,509 Permanent pasture and rangeland, : other than cropland and woodland : pastured (see text) ......................farms: 902 472 413 1,392 1,230 987 1,586 acres: 88,311 60,594 59,926 333,726 568,449 960,995 10,658,121 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 64. Summary by Size of Farm: 2012 (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. : : Land in farmsteads, homes, buildings, : livestock facilities, ponds, roads, : wasteland, etc. ..........................farms: 41,259 11,968 15,161 2,096 1,892 1,758 acres: 1,365,250 26,545 103,909 31,517 36,802 44,680 : Irrigated land ............................farms: 53,546 16,781 17,952 2,579 2,555 2,193 acres: 7,861,964 48,555 277,751 100,629 149,309 171,412 Harvested cropland ......................farms: 47,972 15,065 15,665 2,376 2,342 2,024 acres: 7,371,411 42,019 246,931 94,220 140,173 162,973 Pastureland and other land ..............farms: 7,884 2,041 3,119 335 357 258 acres: 490,553 6,536 30,820 6,409 9,136 8,439 : CONSERVATION AND CROP INSURANCE : : Land enrolled in Conservation Reserve, : Wetlands Reserve, Farmable Wetlands, : or Conservation Reserve Enhancement : Programs .................................farms: 470 1 62 32 40 25 acres: 105,504 (D) 1,381 (D) 2,255 1,507 : Land enrolled in crop insurance : programs (see text) ......................farms: 13,813 881 4,063 962 1,031 906 acres: 4,929,132 3,857 84,416 43,729 66,152 78,073 : ORGANIC AGRICULTURE : : Total organic commodity sales (see text) ..farms: 3,008 860 892 133 150 118 $1,000: 1,355,207 28,344 83,564 112,294 32,044 41,053 : VALUE OF LAND AND BUILDINGS : : Estimated market value of land and : buildings ................................farms: 77,857 24,637 25,811 3,700 3,601 3,222 $1,000: 160,524,953 8,809,727 16,540,972 4,200,628 4,712,732 5,337,040 Average per farm ....................dollars: 2,061,792 357,581 640,850 1,135,305 1,308,729 1,656,437 Average per acre ....................dollars: 6,278 92,085 28,292 19,770 16,006 14,425 : Farms by value group: : $1 to $49,999 ..............................: 3,768 2,534 999 65 66 47 $50,000 to $99,999 .........................: 2,993 1,791 841 101 97 55 $100,000 to $199,999 .......................: 6,849 3,692 2,360 158 210 141 $200,000 to $499,999 .......................: 22,324 9,965 9,511 736 608 413 $500,000 to $999,999 .......................: 17,939 5,670 7,678 1,196 948 609 : $1,000,000 to $1,999,999 ...................: 9,621 863 3,107 918 1,071 1,017 $2,000,000 to $4,999,999 ...................: 8,056 103 1,213 429 475 807 $5,000,000 to $9,999,999 ...................: 3,283 17 86 83 102 94 $10,000,000 or more ........................: 3,024 2 16 14 24 39 : VALUE OF MACHINERY AND EQUIPMENT : : Estimated market value of all machinery : and equipment ............................farms: 77,851 24,637 25,811 3,697 3,599 3,222 $1,000: 9,709,545 574,374 1,109,231 274,570 352,945 387,844 : Farms by value group: : $1 to $4,999 ...............................: 10,455 6,271 2,824 247 215 210 $5,000 to $9,999 ...........................: 8,336 4,095 3,026 249 178 185 $10,000 to $19,999 .........................: 13,025 5,431 5,210 534 430 352 $20,000 to $49,999 .........................: 18,826 6,011 7,877 954 902 628 $50,000 to $99,999 .........................: 11,191 2,016 4,207 930 838 674 $100,000 to $199,999 .......................: 6,916 541 1,949 521 666 637 $200,000 to $499,999 .......................: 5,289 250 627 214 299 423 $500,000 or more ...........................: 3,813 22 91 48 71 113 : SELECTED MACHINERY AND EQUIPMENT : : Trucks, including pickups (see text) ......farms: 55,175 14,503 18,248 2,800 2,786 2,537 number: 132,455 19,376 28,610 5,324 5,821 5,900 : Tractors, all .............................farms: 53,296 12,488 18,776 2,899 2,859 2,535 number: 147,163 16,409 31,723 6,707 7,227 7,201 Less than 40 horsepower (PTO) ...........farms: 31,264 9,238 11,237 1,579 1,475 1,346 number: 49,313 11,012 15,112 2,509 2,408 2,313 40 to 99 horsepower (PTO) ...............farms: 30,456 3,864 10,362 1,983 2,038 1,831 number: 68,295 4,561 14,481 3,694 3,882 3,853 100 horsepower (PTO) or more ............farms: 10,631 749 1,638 356 602 624 number: 29,555 836 2,130 504 937 1,035 : Grain and bean combines, self-propelled ...farms: 1,710 9 81 37 44 70 number: 2,497 9 87 40 53 88 : Cotton pickers and strippers, : self-propelled ...........................farms: 475 6 11 4 3 5 number: 870 11 16 6 3 7 Forage harvesters, self-propelled .........farms: 1,629 70 264 55 101 132 number: 2,188 74 296 69 108 156 Hay balers ................................farms: 3,674 131 690 148 224 246 number: 4,822 145 783 174 275 288 : FERTILIZERS AND CHEMICALS : : Commercial fertilizer, lime, and soil : conditioners used ........................farms: 32,646 7,749 10,474 1,767 1,856 1,597 acres treated: 6,314,533 22,223 175,004 70,656 110,010 132,023 Manure used ...............................farms: 6,794 1,611 2,204 325 423 325 acres treated: 712,975 3,468 27,902 10,066 16,374 20,564 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 64. Summary by Size of Farm: 2012 (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. : : Land in farmsteads, homes, buildings, : livestock facilities, ponds, roads, : wasteland, etc. ..........................farms: 1,351 791 600 1,981 1,597 980 1,084 acres: 45,432 31,856 27,918 115,992 165,877 153,301 581,421 : Irrigated land ............................farms: 1,650 1,045 834 2,810 2,267 1,400 1,480 acres: 179,907 146,234 137,641 720,848 1,125,266 1,250,285 3,554,127 Harvested cropland ......................farms: 1,525 989 764 2,594 2,106 1,257 1,265 acres: 171,208 140,634 131,135 691,266 1,081,795 1,198,601 3,270,456 Pastureland and other land ..............farms: 241 107 128 373 301 236 388 acres: 8,699 5,600 6,506 29,582 43,471 51,684 283,671 : CONSERVATION AND CROP INSURANCE : : Land enrolled in Conservation Reserve, : Wetlands Reserve, Farmable Wetlands, : or Conservation Reserve Enhancement : Programs .................................farms: 68 31 13 70 65 21 42 acres: 6,738 3,759 1,672 13,898 23,319 14,856 34,837 : Land enrolled in crop insurance : programs (see text) ......................farms: 726 504 408 1,418 1,248 799 867 acres: 88,066 72,494 70,081 381,367 641,702 721,610 2,677,585 : ORGANIC AGRICULTURE : : Total organic commodity sales (see text) ..farms: 112 80 55 202 148 123 135 $1,000: 39,308 38,645 29,147 150,646 167,820 235,051 397,289 : VALUE OF LAND AND BUILDINGS : : Estimated market value of land and : buildings ................................farms: 2,533 1,477 1,189 3,983 3,230 2,040 2,434 $1,000: 4,719,041 3,686,631 3,508,975 14,826,376 18,845,418 20,710,607 54,626,804 Average per farm ....................dollars: 1,863,024 2,496,026 2,951,199 3,722,414 5,834,495 10,152,259 22,443,223 Average per acre ....................dollars: 11,841 12,593 12,431 10,377 8,397 7,396 3,298 : Farms by value group: : $1 to $49,999 ..............................: 34 3 8 11 - - 1 $50,000 to $99,999 .........................: 48 16 10 29 5 - - $100,000 to $199,999 .......................: 94 44 38 66 40 6 - $200,000 to $499,999 .......................: 370 138 99 283 135 52 14 $500,000 to $999,999 .......................: 480 245 204 520 265 82 42 : $1,000,000 to $1,999,999 ...................: 571 327 216 725 432 267 107 $2,000,000 to $4,999,999 ...................: 787 549 425 1,363 910 494 501 $5,000,000 to $9,999,999 ...................: 122 112 147 751 886 422 461 $10,000,000 or more ........................: 27 43 42 235 557 717 1,308 : VALUE OF MACHINERY AND EQUIPMENT : : Estimated market value of all machinery : and equipment ............................farms: 2,533 1,477 1,189 3,983 3,230 2,040 2,433 $1,000: 330,254 239,700 250,638 1,021,159 1,341,869 1,366,803 2,460,158 : Farms by value group: : $1 to $4,999 ...............................: 179 59 67 176 125 39 43 $5,000 to $9,999 ...........................: 132 69 66 144 91 43 58 $10,000 to $19,999 .........................: 247 97 86 260 178 99 101 $20,000 to $49,999 .........................: 504 268 196 578 424 220 264 $50,000 to $99,999 .........................: 513 258 162 564 402 256 371 $100,000 to $199,999 .......................: 455 295 187 668 390 264 343 $200,000 to $499,999 .......................: 376 331 286 983 747 360 393 $500,000 or more ...........................: 127 100 139 610 873 759 860 : SELECTED MACHINERY AND EQUIPMENT : : Trucks, including pickups (see text) ......farms: 1,954 1,257 975 3,326 2,741 1,818 2,230 number: 4,710 3,666 3,032 11,979 13,287 11,897 18,853 : Tractors, all .............................farms: 1,964 1,247 969 3,218 2,613 1,718 2,010 number: 5,802 4,354 3,914 14,003 15,096 12,843 21,884 Less than 40 horsepower (PTO) ...........farms: 971 637 474 1,468 1,194 784 861 number: 1,713 1,302 1,270 3,313 3,142 2,336 2,883 40 to 99 horsepower (PTO) ...............farms: 1,410 911 725 2,439 1,996 1,348 1,549 number: 3,069 2,300 1,922 7,376 7,272 6,057 9,828 100 horsepower (PTO) or more ............farms: 572 399 378 1,507 1,517 1,036 1,253 number: 1,020 752 722 3,314 4,682 4,450 9,173 : Grain and bean combines, self-propelled ...farms: 67 56 34 275 384 288 365 number: 84 72 42 338 546 467 671 : Cotton pickers and strippers, : self-propelled ...........................farms: 12 14 12 54 124 138 92 number: 19 15 12 73 176 241 291 Forage harvesters, self-propelled .........farms: 78 59 64 217 222 158 209 number: 106 72 84 266 330 231 396 Hay balers ................................farms: 169 108 115 472 440 371 560 number: 215 150 163 675 594 498 862 : FERTILIZERS AND CHEMICALS : : Commercial fertilizer, lime, and soil : conditioners used ........................farms: 1,265 830 654 2,305 1,889 1,136 1,124 acres treated: 140,212 116,958 110,494 615,209 934,548 1,038,382 2,848,814 Manure used ...............................farms: 262 169 149 478 400 223 225 acres treated: 18,497 17,024 15,661 83,256 122,299 121,344 256,520 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 64. Summary by Size of Farm: 2012 (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 - Con. : : Acres treated to control- : Insects .................................farms: 25,064 4,838 8,323 1,487 1,518 1,307 acres: 5,293,093 14,993 144,393 61,817 93,933 111,859 Weeds, grass, or brush ..................farms: 32,402 7,223 10,922 1,786 1,824 1,605 acres: 6,116,162 21,544 175,140 69,934 107,268 130,215 Nematodes ...............................farms: 4,485 735 1,395 279 273 232 acres: 725,589 2,572 21,535 9,396 12,985 16,727 Diseases in crops and orchards ..........farms: 14,196 2,996 4,810 870 856 718 acres: 2,038,769 8,630 78,416 32,550 49,239 58,670 Chemicals used to control growth, : thin fruit, ripen, or defoliate ..........farms: 9,810 1,294 3,418 743 707 623 acres on which used: 1,460,135 3,921 69,133 31,915 42,909 49,075 : LAND USE PRACTICES : : Land drained by tile ......................farms: 1,913 301 522 123 92 92 acres: 476,794 934 7,211 3,336 3,261 4,462 Land artificially drained by ditches ......farms: 7,166 1,425 2,110 331 316 340 acres: 1,872,676 4,590 33,431 12,681 18,948 25,705 Land under conservation easement ..........farms: 1,603 206 370 90 92 97 acres: 929,985 574 6,009 3,683 4,800 7,372 Cropland on which no-till practices were : used .....................................farms: 4,213 1,611 1,221 151 157 134 acres: 205,383 2,819 6,439 1,834 3,362 3,074 Cropland on which conservation tillage, : including no till, practices were : used .....................................farms: 1,945 333 418 73 86 74 acres: 566,983 588 2,802 1,048 1,964 2,941 Cropland on which conventional tillage : practices were used ......................farms: 11,762 1,722 2,893 541 539 630 acres: 3,083,056 4,275 35,006 16,171 24,532 40,668 Cropland planted to a cover crop : (excluding CRP) ..........................farms: 4,899 1,130 1,706 315 300 250 acres: 340,532 2,552 18,325 7,487 10,186 9,883 : ENERGY : : Renewable energy producing systems ........farms: 5,845 1,818 1,871 293 220 271 Solar panels ............................farms: 5,445 1,719 1,744 268 205 251 Wind turbines ...........................farms: 324 48 99 21 18 24 Methane digesters .......................farms: 41 14 11 2 - - Geoexchange systems .....................farms: 104 42 36 - 3 4 : Small hydro systems .....................farms: 190 43 40 24 11 12 Biodiesel ...............................farms: 165 55 56 8 4 8 Ethanol .................................farms: 56 24 9 2 - 6 Other ...................................farms: 49 20 12 1 2 3 : Wind rights leased to others ..............farms: 113 16 24 6 7 4 : TENURE : : Full owners ...............................farms: 60,492 21,972 22,207 2,811 2,641 2,250 Part owners ...............................farms: 9,490 460 1,668 526 601 597 Tenants ...................................farms: 7,875 2,205 1,936 363 359 375 : OWNED AND RENTED LAND : : Land owned ................................farms: 70,216 22,472 23,931 3,356 3,253 2,859 acres: 16,064,215 144,264 663,141 221,769 310,256 363,649 Owned land in farms .....................farms: 69,982 22,432 23,875 3,337 3,242 2,847 acres: 14,281,177 86,845 518,748 176,135 240,049 290,371 : Land rented or leased from others .........farms: 17,477 2,681 3,629 899 970 985 acres: 11,608,764 17,632 69,147 39,987 59,219 82,280 Rented or leased land in farms ..........farms: 17,365 2,665 3,604 889 960 972 acres: 11,287,824 8,825 65,895 36,345 54,390 79,614 : Land rented or leased to others ...........farms: 6,066 1,090 1,579 390 387 331 acres: 2,103,978 66,226 147,645 49,276 75,036 75,944 : NUMBER OF OPERATORS : : Total operators ..........................number: 126,099 37,717 40,481 6,000 5,770 5,173 Farms by number of operators: : 1 operator .................................: 40,197 13,229 13,549 1,955 1,947 1,739 2 operators ................................: 30,790 10,200 10,502 1,374 1,273 1,166 3 operators ................................: 5,058 983 1,362 285 294 233 4 operators ................................: 1,137 131 294 50 67 48 5 or more operators ........................: 675 94 104 36 20 36 : Total women operators ..................number: 41,256 14,721 13,971 1,850 1,616 1,458 Farms by number of women operators: : 1 operator ...............................: 35,652 13,131 12,426 1,543 1,345 1,260 2 operators ..............................: 2,226 652 679 126 87 76 3 operators ..............................: 253 54 50 9 24 10 4 operators ..............................: 44 8 8 7 5 4 5 or more operators ......................: 37 16 1 - 1 - : PRINCIPAL OPERATOR CHARACTERISTICS : : Sex of operator: : Male .........................................: 63,873 18,746 20,990 3,098 3,114 2,781 Female .......................................: 13,984 5,891 4,821 602 487 441 : Primary occupation: : Farming ......................................: 42,469 10,658 13,323 2,212 2,219 1,996 Other ........................................: 35,388 13,979 12,488 1,488 1,382 1,226 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 64. Summary by Size of Farm: 2012 (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 - Con. : : Acres treated to control- : Insects .................................farms: 1,025 687 530 1,922 1,585 952 890 acres: 117,055 99,657 94,465 521,747 803,068 852,557 2,377,549 Weeds, grass, or brush ..................farms: 1,193 818 626 2,288 1,883 1,111 1,123 acres: 132,652 114,001 104,878 596,389 934,748 990,098 2,739,295 Nematodes ...............................farms: 191 138 117 354 292 225 254 acres: 14,210 12,520 12,747 65,306 93,196 108,030 356,365 Diseases in crops and orchards ..........farms: 574 366 297 978 792 494 445 acres: 58,125 48,239 45,548 233,576 333,846 337,771 754,159 Chemicals used to control growth, : thin fruit, ripen, or defoliate ..........farms: 462 280 227 687 591 399 379 acres on which used: 50,851 35,402 32,670 137,678 198,383 215,213 592,985 : LAND USE PRACTICES : : Land drained by tile ......................farms: 65 47 39 189 145 135 163 acres: 3,979 3,092 2,979 27,693 41,178 77,528 301,141 Land artificially drained by ditches ......farms: 295 185 176 704 593 367 324 acres: 30,957 26,089 28,123 184,970 298,743 337,543 870,896 Land under conservation easement ..........farms: 104 41 53 154 150 104 142 acres: 12,092 5,727 8,342 35,583 69,824 74,164 701,815 Cropland on which no-till practices were : used .....................................farms: 113 78 64 171 210 123 180 acres: 5,898 2,808 2,520 12,499 22,648 30,431 111,051 Cropland on which conservation tillage, : including no till, practices were : used .....................................farms: 62 41 18 183 247 181 229 acres: 3,372 2,012 1,833 27,673 67,174 81,648 373,928 Cropland on which conventional tillage : practices were used ......................farms: 513 367 318 1,265 1,272 827 875 acres: 43,359 42,338 45,625 265,679 478,442 555,685 1,531,276 Cropland planted to a cover crop : (excluding CRP) ..........................farms: 174 139 82 314 211 140 138 acres: 10,481 10,315 6,323 42,507 39,791 56,062 126,620 : ENERGY : : Renewable energy producing systems ........farms: 246 117 89 255 251 169 245 Solar panels ............................farms: 223 108 80 237 233 157 220 Wind turbines ...........................farms: 21 5 2 33 13 15 25 Methane digesters .......................farms: 1 - - 4 4 1 4 Geoexchange systems .....................farms: - - - 8 3 2 6 : Small hydro systems .....................farms: 6 6 15 8 11 - 14 Biodiesel ...............................farms: 7 1 7 10 7 1 1 Ethanol .................................farms: - - 3 1 5 - 6 Other ...................................farms: 3 1 - 3 2 2 - : Wind rights leased to others ..............farms: 6 4 3 13 6 5 19 : TENURE : : Full owners ...............................farms: 1,779 882 714 2,151 1,526 761 798 Part owners ...............................farms: 490 412 310 1,174 1,169 901 1,182 Tenants ...................................farms: 264 183 165 658 535 378 454 : OWNED AND RENTED LAND : : Land owned ................................farms: 2,279 1,297 1,026 3,356 2,718 1,673 1,996 acres: 382,922 256,293 233,809 1,137,907 1,689,394 1,743,306 8,917,505 Owned land in farms .....................farms: 2,269 1,294 1,024 3,325 2,695 1,662 1,980 acres: 316,574 211,980 203,397 953,311 1,429,677 1,575,046 8,279,044 : Land rented or leased from others .........farms: 762 598 478 1,843 1,707 1,283 1,642 acres: 84,754 81,344 85,983 487,063 845,874 1,255,800 8,499,681 Rented or leased land in farms ..........farms: 754 595 475 1,832 1,704 1,279 1,636 acres: 81,946 80,771 78,884 475,481 814,587 1,225,134 8,285,952 : Land rented or leased to others ...........farms: 253 161 134 518 449 292 482 acres: 69,156 44,886 37,511 196,178 291,004 198,926 852,190 : NUMBER OF OPERATORS : : Total operators ..........................number: 4,317 2,495 1,990 6,870 6,084 4,048 5,154 Farms by number of operators: : 1 operator .................................: 1,221 773 604 1,956 1,412 840 972 2 operators ................................: 988 527 441 1,480 1,217 782 840 3 operators ................................: 243 121 104 410 409 252 362 4 operators ................................: 57 40 26 86 99 97 142 5 or more operators ........................: 24 16 14 51 93 69 118 : Total women operators ..................number: 1,236 622 517 1,725 1,431 943 1,166 Farms by number of women operators: : 1 operator ...............................: 1,000 526 428 1,420 1,071 712 790 2 operators ..............................: 89 40 40 99 117 76 145 3 operators ..............................: 13 4 3 19 28 16 23 4 operators ..............................: 2 1 - 1 3 2 3 5 or more operators ......................: 2 - - 6 6 4 1 : PRINCIPAL OPERATOR CHARACTERISTICS : : Sex of operator: : Male .........................................: 2,191 1,318 1,055 3,528 2,948 1,885 2,219 Female .......................................: 342 159 134 455 282 155 215 : Primary occupation: : Farming ......................................: 1,585 1,064 790 2,832 2,334 1,581 1,875 Other ........................................: 948 413 399 1,151 896 459 559 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 64. Summary by Size of Farm: 2012 (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 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ PRINCIPAL OPERATOR : CHARACTERISTICS - Con. : : Place of residence: : On farm operated .............................: 54,775 19,298 18,824 2,474 2,275 2,045 Not on farm operated .........................: 23,082 5,339 6,987 1,226 1,326 1,177 : Days worked off farm: : None .........................................: 31,311 8,491 9,932 1,457 1,479 1,406 Any ..........................................: 46,546 16,146 15,879 2,243 2,122 1,816 1 to 49 days ...............................: 7,304 2,727 2,383 312 284 313 50 to 99 days ..............................: 4,230 1,320 1,573 207 186 163 100 to 199 days ............................: 7,065 2,323 2,509 376 393 236 200 days or more ...........................: 27,947 9,776 9,414 1,348 1,259 1,104 : Years on present farm: : 2 years or less ..............................: 3,151 1,304 1,062 125 142 126 3 or 4 years .................................: 4,634 1,793 1,673 138 168 191 5 to 9 years .................................: 12,863 4,873 4,330 627 551 529 10 years or more .............................: 57,209 16,667 18,746 2,810 2,740 2,376 : Average years on present farm ................: 20.2 17.4 19.5 21.2 21.3 22.0 : Years operating any farm (see text): : 2 years or less ..............................: 2,182 1,012 702 94 89 67 3 or 4 years .................................: 3,648 1,494 1,319 112 120 132 5 to 9 years .................................: 10,663 4,366 3,561 492 402 406 10 years or more .............................: 61,364 17,765 20,229 3,002 2,990 2,617 : Average years operating any farm .............: 22.7 19.1 22.2 24.0 24.7 25.2 : Age group: : Under 25 years ...............................: 253 81 81 13 10 24 25 to 34 years ...............................: 2,968 893 922 123 154 157 35 to 44 years ...............................: 6,255 1,916 2,165 336 272 239 45 to 49 years ...............................: 6,107 2,048 1,945 247 240 254 50 to 54 years ...............................: 9,839 3,274 3,143 489 490 380 55 to 59 years ...............................: 11,513 3,506 3,803 581 546 535 60 to 64 years ...............................: 11,869 3,674 3,855 565 539 477 65 to 69 years ...............................: 10,683 3,616 3,532 473 512 397 70 years and over ............................: 18,370 5,629 6,365 873 838 759 : Average age ..................................: 60.1 60.0 60.3 60.0 60.2 59.6 : Spanish, Hispanic, or Latino origin (see text) .: 9,815 3,500 3,788 466 432 336 : Race: : American Indian or Alaska Native .............: 1,192 345 445 78 63 46 Asian ........................................: 4,802 1,403 1,794 287 317 252 Black or African American ....................: 345 135 115 37 6 6 Native Hawaiian or Other Pacific Islander ....: 321 98 115 21 17 19 White ........................................: 70,537 22,404 23,117 3,244 3,170 2,885 More than one race reported ..................: 660 252 225 33 28 14 : Farms by number of persons living in : operator's household: : 1 person .....................................: 10,856 3,499 3,646 560 487 482 2 people .....................................: 39,377 12,123 13,169 1,840 1,844 1,600 3 people .....................................: 10,481 3,687 3,320 471 421 398 4 people .....................................: 9,895 3,146 3,200 461 470 425 5 or more people .............................: 7,248 2,182 2,476 368 379 317 : Percent of operator's total : household income from farming: : Less than 25 percent .........................: 53,231 21,148 18,537 2,166 2,018 1,851 25 to 49 percent .............................: 6,732 1,222 2,507 409 424 302 50 to 74 percent .............................: 8,038 1,175 2,486 518 542 441 75 to 99 percent .............................: 5,290 483 1,261 361 369 363 100 percent ..................................: 4,566 609 1,020 246 248 265 : Operator is a hired manager ...............farms: 7,130 1,519 1,799 311 354 411 acres: 5,266,987 5,634 43,008 18,056 28,886 47,043 : Farms with- : Internet access ..............................: 59,543 18,613 19,294 2,836 2,695 2,512 Dial-up service ............................: 4,703 1,444 1,666 243 187 182 DSL service ................................: 20,030 6,732 6,158 924 856 780 Cable modem service ........................: 9,578 4,024 2,575 383 390 370 Fiber-optic service ........................: 1,719 604 465 82 76 65 Mobile broadband plan for a computer : or cell phone .............................: 12,454 3,231 4,235 629 594 572 Satellite service ..........................: 15,193 3,530 5,068 858 785 766 Broadband over Power Lines (BPL) ...........: 2,135 530 683 113 116 107 Other Internet service .....................: 2,805 732 1,029 147 135 109 : Farms by number of households sharing : in net income of operation: : 1 household ..................................: 61,016 21,267 20,988 2,747 2,678 2,328 2 households .................................: 11,316 2,629 3,495 627 559 582 3 households .................................: 3,013 421 705 176 207 147 4 households .................................: 1,351 154 342 90 77 85 5 or more households .........................: 1,161 166 281 60 80 80 : FARMS BY TYPE OF : ORGANIZATION (SEE TEXT) : : Operation with 50 percent or more ownership : interest held by operator and/or persons : related by blood, marriage, : or adoption ..............................farms: 72,641 23,900 24,621 3,409 3,297 2,917 acres: 20,951,605 92,707 555,090 195,662 269,532 334,637 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 64. Summary by Size of Farm: 2012 (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 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ PRINCIPAL OPERATOR : CHARACTERISTICS - Con. : : Place of residence: : On farm operated .............................: 1,531 865 742 2,342 1,828 1,160 1,391 Not on farm operated .........................: 1,002 612 447 1,641 1,402 880 1,043 : Days worked off farm: : None .........................................: 1,145 700 551 2,056 1,670 1,102 1,322 Any ..........................................: 1,388 777 638 1,927 1,560 938 1,112 1 to 49 days ...............................: 202 108 103 328 242 110 192 50 to 99 days ..............................: 149 78 64 146 120 124 100 100 to 199 days ............................: 181 164 82 271 214 148 168 200 days or more ...........................: 856 427 389 1,182 984 556 652 : Years on present farm: : 2 years or less ..............................: 81 37 34 97 65 45 33 3 or 4 years .................................: 143 67 62 169 116 50 64 5 to 9 years .................................: 392 175 168 489 355 185 189 10 years or more .............................: 1,917 1,198 925 3,228 2,694 1,760 2,148 : Average years on present farm ................: 21.8 23.8 22.3 24.3 24.8 26.4 28.2 : Years operating any farm (see text): : 2 years or less ..............................: 45 32 17 39 38 25 22 3 or 4 years .................................: 98 51 46 115 78 45 38 5 to 9 years .................................: 318 117 117 357 238 141 148 10 years or more .............................: 2,072 1,277 1,009 3,472 2,876 1,829 2,226 : Average years operating any farm .............: 24.6 26.8 25.5 27.5 28.3 29.6 31.2 : Age group: : Under 25 years ...............................: 18 8 3 5 4 4 2 25 to 34 years ...............................: 107 59 61 220 128 78 66 35 to 44 years ...............................: 199 106 92 331 270 151 178 45 to 49 years ...............................: 199 150 94 290 286 154 200 50 to 54 years ...............................: 319 169 136 464 419 266 290 55 to 59 years ...............................: 342 197 185 608 544 309 357 60 to 64 years ...............................: 414 242 203 633 532 351 384 65 to 69 years ...............................: 353 199 147 514 369 262 309 70 years and over ............................: 582 347 268 918 678 465 648 : Average age ..................................: 60.0 60.0 59.7 59.4 59.1 60.2 61.2 : Spanish, Hispanic, or Latino origin (see text) .: 251 156 88 321 246 126 105 : Race: : American Indian or Alaska Native .............: 29 21 17 50 46 36 16 Asian ........................................: 161 96 74 185 130 50 53 Black or African American ....................: 18 1 1 10 11 3 2 Native Hawaiian or Other Pacific Islander ....: 12 13 2 11 2 10 1 White ........................................: 2,275 1,334 1,088 3,711 3,024 1,935 2,350 More than one race reported ..................: 38 12 7 16 17 6 12 : Farms by number of persons living in : operator's household: : 1 person .....................................: 326 216 187 554 375 246 278 2 people .....................................: 1,333 756 603 1,963 1,653 1,157 1,336 3 people .....................................: 340 171 152 521 451 226 323 4 people .....................................: 283 207 147 559 435 261 301 5 or more people .............................: 251 127 100 386 316 150 196 : Percent of operator's total : household income from farming: : Less than 25 percent .........................: 1,414 740 581 1,797 1,339 741 899 25 to 49 percent .............................: 250 148 131 447 372 249 271 50 to 74 percent .............................: 398 231 173 644 554 407 469 75 to 99 percent .............................: 260 201 169 535 513 318 457 100 percent ..................................: 211 157 135 560 452 325 338 : Operator is a hired manager ...............farms: 256 226 167 647 559 400 481 acres: 40,328 44,680 39,583 233,925 404,080 550,285 3,811,479 : Farms with- : Internet access ..............................: 1,894 1,167 918 3,231 2,670 1,701 2,012 Dial-up service ............................: 160 76 64 234 188 127 132 DSL service ................................: 611 411 314 1,066 906 580 692 Cable modem service ........................: 260 158 121 474 353 218 252 Fiber-optic service ........................: 58 51 29 107 60 52 70 Mobile broadband plan for a computer : or cell phone .............................: 415 249 205 822 612 418 472 Satellite service ..........................: 607 333 277 953 825 541 650 Broadband over Power Lines (BPL) ...........: 56 40 45 132 116 69 128 Other Internet service .....................: 80 68 37 154 135 90 89 : Farms by number of households sharing : in net income of operation: : 1 household ..................................: 1,796 1,017 827 2,654 2,063 1,237 1,414 2 households .................................: 496 241 213 819 669 446 540 3 households .................................: 135 116 75 289 281 215 246 4 households .................................: 50 66 36 127 126 76 122 5 or more households .........................: 56 37 38 94 91 66 112 : FARMS BY TYPE OF : ORGANIZATION (SEE TEXT) : : Operation with 50 percent or more ownership : interest held by operator and/or persons : related by blood, marriage, : or adoption ..............................farms: 2,261 1,306 1,036 3,452 2,725 1,710 2,007 acres: 355,529 258,740 245,783 1,238,022 1,882,816 2,344,066 13,179,021 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 64. Summary by Size of Farm: 2012 (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 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ FARMS BY TYPE OF : ORGANIZATION (SEE TEXT) - Con. : : Limited Liability Corporation .............farms: 4,453 808 1,306 250 277 259 acres: 2,772,951 3,350 31,746 14,350 22,623 29,952 : LEGAL STATUS FOR TAX PURPOSES (SEE TEXT) : : Family or individual .....................farms: 59,732 21,829 21,105 2,671 2,558 2,249 acres: 12,000,544 83,966 467,569 153,194 208,682 258,198 Partnership ...............................farms: 8,984 1,176 2,300 541 543 483 acres: 6,934,159 4,943 58,824 30,943 44,877 55,684 Registered under state law ..............farms: 7,283 868 1,748 439 436 408 acres: 5,929,592 3,672 45,366 25,200 35,880 47,074 : Corporation ...............................farms: 6,361 958 1,490 358 359 325 acres: 5,359,671 3,869 36,467 20,778 29,410 37,314 Family held .............................farms: 5,345 773 1,273 303 299 281 acres: 4,209,678 3,227 31,365 17,489 24,452 32,251 More than 10 stockholders .............farms: 264 22 24 9 15 15 10 or less stockholders ...............farms: 5,081 751 1,249 294 284 266 : Other than family held ..................farms: 1,016 185 217 55 60 44 acres: 1,149,993 642 5,102 3,289 4,958 5,063 More than 10 stockholders .............farms: 171 3 13 9 12 11 10 or less stockholders ...............farms: 845 182 204 46 48 33 : Other-cooperative, estate : or trust, institutional, etc .............farms: 2,780 674 916 130 141 165 acres: 1,274,627 2,892 21,783 7,565 11,470 18,789 : HIRED FARM LABOR : : Hired farm labor ..........................farms: 33,955 7,568 10,008 1,790 1,829 1,791 workers: 465,422 26,454 60,207 15,638 18,280 22,521 Workers by days worked: : 150 days or more ......................farms: 20,018 2,814 4,871 1,017 1,152 1,219 workers: 205,851 7,748 21,067 5,207 7,534 9,049 Less than 150 days ....................farms: 22,621 5,608 6,910 1,224 1,209 1,129 workers: 259,571 18,706 39,140 10,431 10,746 13,472 Migrant farm labor on farms with hired : labor (see text) .........................farms: 2,921 320 766 186 214 180 Migrant farm labor on farms reporting : only contract labor (see text) ...........farms: 755 146 376 62 49 42 : Unpaid workers (see text) .................farms: 31,965 11,425 11,382 1,457 1,345 1,154 workers: 72,020 24,875 25,409 3,300 2,972 2,769 : FARMS BY SIZE : : 1 to 9 acres ...................................: 24,637 24,637 - - - - 10 to 49 acres .................................: 25,811 - 25,811 - - - 50 to 69 acres .................................: 3,700 - - 3,700 - - 70 to 99 acres .................................: 3,601 - - - 3,601 - 100 to 139 acres ...............................: 3,222 - - - - 3,222 140 to 179 acres ...............................: 2,533 - - - - - 180 to 219 acres ...............................: 1,477 - - - - - 220 to 259 acres ...............................: 1,189 - - - - - 260 to 499 acres ...............................: 3,983 - - - - - 500 to 999 acres ...............................: 3,230 - - - - - 1,000 to 1,999 acres ...........................: 2,040 - - - - - 2,000 acres or more ............................: 2,434 - - - - - : FARMS BY NORTH AMERICAN : INDUSTRY CLASSIFICATION : SYSTEM (NAICS) : : Oilseed and grain farming (1111) ...............: 2,296 53 335 111 165 159 Vegetable and melon farming (1112) .............: 4,191 1,870 1,117 128 96 116 Fruit and tree nut farming (1113) ..............: 35,945 12,108 13,244 1,964 1,810 1,424 Greenhouse, nursery, and floriculture : production (1114) .............................: 3,390 2,015 937 94 67 77 Other crop farming (1119) ......................: 5,815 353 1,947 318 450 376 Tobacco farming (11191) ......................: - - - - - - Cotton farming (11192) .......................: 194 9 19 7 2 5 Sugarcane farming, hay farming, and all : other crop farming (11193,11194,11199) ......: 5,621 344 1,928 311 448 371 Beef cattle ranching and farming (112111) ......: 11,767 2,394 3,499 557 606 596 Cattle feedlots (112112) .......................: 156 14 23 5 10 2 Dairy cattle and milk production (11212) .......: 1,594 88 190 74 84 141 Hog and pig farming (1122) .....................: 446 239 149 4 14 8 Poultry and egg production (1123) ..............: 1,202 580 400 55 44 34 Sheep and goat farming (1124) ..................: 3,246 1,351 1,235 132 106 100 Animal aquaculture and other animal : production (1125, 1129) .......................: 7,809 3,572 2,735 258 149 189 : LIVESTOCK : : Cattle and calves inventory ...............farms: 16,764 3,048 4,918 818 886 938 number: 5,370,531 62,409 224,048 125,355 148,661 258,436 Farms with- : 1 to 9 .....................................: 7,396 2,501 3,220 365 345 321 10 to 49 ...................................: 4,687 424 1,443 340 379 411 50 to 99 ...................................: 1,128 49 65 37 52 48 100 to 199 .................................: 914 30 38 8 38 37 200 to 499 .................................: 896 22 45 24 13 19 500 or more ................................: 1,743 22 107 44 59 102 : Cows and heifers that calved ............farms: 12,566 2,010 3,411 554 633 724 number: 2,399,249 21,885 115,726 58,267 64,648 128,567 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 64. Summary by Size of Farm: 2012 (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 BY TYPE OF : ORGANIZATION (SEE TEXT) - Con. : : Limited Liability Corporation .............farms: 215 129 98 359 313 177 262 acres: 33,739 25,580 23,189 132,558 218,844 243,579 1,993,441 : LEGAL STATUS FOR TAX PURPOSES (SEE TEXT) : : Family or individual .....................farms: 1,662 913 698 2,311 1,661 952 1,123 acres: 261,288 180,991 165,600 823,615 1,138,945 1,289,325 6,969,171 Partnership ...............................farms: 467 277 234 853 849 574 687 acres: 73,609 54,807 55,657 311,027 594,771 790,142 4,858,875 Registered under state law ..............farms: 368 238 191 750 709 513 615 acres: 58,107 47,062 45,554 273,196 499,970 706,670 4,141,841 : Corporation ...............................farms: 294 226 207 652 572 417 503 acres: 46,379 44,846 49,268 234,582 407,421 586,186 3,863,151 Family held .............................farms: 249 188 172 562 470 358 417 acres: 39,255 37,421 40,892 203,214 332,204 505,610 2,942,298 More than 10 stockholders .............farms: 10 10 1 47 40 26 45 10 or less stockholders ...............farms: 239 178 171 515 430 332 372 : Other than family held ..................farms: 45 38 35 90 102 59 86 acres: 7,124 7,425 8,376 31,368 75,217 80,576 920,853 More than 10 stockholders .............farms: 8 9 3 20 34 15 34 10 or less stockholders ...............farms: 37 29 32 70 68 44 52 : Other-cooperative, estate : or trust, institutional, etc .............farms: 110 61 50 167 148 97 121 acres: 17,244 12,107 11,756 59,568 103,127 134,527 873,799 : HIRED FARM LABOR : : Hired farm labor ..........................farms: 1,352 928 734 2,531 2,149 1,465 1,810 workers: 16,572 12,276 19,014 55,702 59,537 52,055 107,166 Workers by days worked: : 150 days or more ......................farms: 988 714 575 2,008 1,825 1,274 1,561 workers: 6,472 5,720 8,142 26,926 28,943 26,384 52,659 Less than 150 days ....................farms: 827 565 452 1,541 1,216 837 1,103 workers: 10,100 6,556 10,872 28,776 30,594 25,671 54,507 Migrant farm labor on farms with hired : labor (see text) .........................farms: 167 108 82 248 229 198 223 Migrant farm labor on farms reporting : only contract labor (see text) ...........farms: 23 8 5 18 8 11 7 : Unpaid workers (see text) .................farms: 891 473 377 1,211 936 537 777 workers: 2,121 1,073 831 2,693 2,316 1,381 2,280 : 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 ...............................: 2,533 - - - - - - 180 to 219 acres ...............................: - 1,477 - - - - - 220 to 259 acres ...............................: - - 1,189 - - - - 260 to 499 acres ...............................: - - - 3,983 - - - 500 to 999 acres ...............................: - - - - 3,230 - - 1,000 to 1,999 acres ...........................: - - - - - 2,040 - 2,000 acres or more ............................: - - - - - - 2,434 : FARMS BY NORTH AMERICAN : INDUSTRY CLASSIFICATION : SYSTEM (NAICS) : : Oilseed and grain farming (1111) ...............: 181 112 109 454 341 160 116 Vegetable and melon farming (1112) .............: 72 74 35 161 179 144 199 Fruit and tree nut farming (1113) ..............: 1,071 648 481 1,385 924 469 417 Greenhouse, nursery, and floriculture : production (1114) .............................: 30 21 20 51 36 23 19 Other crop farming (1119) ......................: 360 174 142 487 530 332 346 Tobacco farming (11191) ......................: - - - - - - - Cotton farming (11192) .......................: 11 8 4 21 41 44 23 Sugarcane farming, hay farming, and all : other crop farming (11193,11194,11199) ......: 349 166 138 466 489 288 323 Beef cattle ranching and farming (112111) ......: 436 247 212 861 708 631 1,020 Cattle feedlots (112112) .......................: 6 2 15 21 22 7 29 Dairy cattle and milk production (11212) .......: 88 78 55 273 272 170 81 Hog and pig farming (1122) .....................: 9 13 3 6 - 1 - Poultry and egg production (1123) ..............: 22 15 2 22 19 5 4 Sheep and goat farming (1124) ..................: 85 19 52 61 31 24 50 Animal aquaculture and other animal : production (1125, 1129) .......................: 173 74 63 201 168 74 153 : LIVESTOCK : : Cattle and calves inventory ...............farms: 719 420 328 1,326 1,128 899 1,336 number: 328,464 123,291 195,346 715,523 889,034 775,480 1,524,484 Farms with- : 1 to 9 .....................................: 189 75 37 199 76 34 34 10 to 49 ...................................: 338 191 144 499 295 145 78 50 to 99 ...................................: 69 58 61 192 229 158 110 100 to 199 .................................: 32 24 22 97 192 195 201 200 to 499 .................................: 11 24 10 91 79 176 382 500 or more ................................: 80 48 54 248 257 191 531 : Cows and heifers that calved ............farms: 574 351 246 1,125 987 785 1,166 number: 117,435 53,923 61,093 303,939 428,144 396,740 648,882 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 64. Summary by Size of Farm: 2012 (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 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ LIVESTOCK - Con. : : Cattle and calves inventory - Con. : Cows and heifers that calved - Con. : : Beef cows .............................farms: 10,925 1,863 3,160 481 542 596 number: 583,594 10,170 23,736 6,354 7,110 8,712 Farms with- : 1 to 9 .................................: 6,173 1,709 2,584 333 347 356 10 to 49 ...............................: 2,704 127 549 136 170 217 50 to 99 ...............................: 801 16 16 10 19 18 100 to 199 .............................: 542 8 3 - 4 3 200 to 499 .............................: 479 3 7 1 2 1 500 or more ............................: 226 - 1 1 - 1 Milk cows .............................farms: 1,931 198 320 81 104 142 number: 1,815,655 11,715 91,990 51,913 57,538 119,855 Farms with- : 1 to 9 .................................: 457 160 172 12 24 18 10 to 49 ...............................: 62 10 15 13 1 4 50 to 99 ...............................: 52 9 8 1 12 8 100 to 199 .............................: 110 1 14 9 9 11 200 to 499 .............................: 258 13 33 13 18 24 500 or more ............................: 992 5 78 33 40 77 : Other cattle (see text) .................farms: 13,380 2,059 3,683 669 719 774 number: 2,971,282 40,524 108,322 67,088 84,013 129,869 : Cattle and calves sold ....................farms: 12,594 1,876 3,054 583 696 696 number: 3,671,078 152,688 210,127 104,818 117,424 136,316 $1,000: 3,259,325 51,117 192,548 71,316 126,894 88,276 Calves weighing less than 500 pounds ....farms: 5,347 656 1,114 233 284 291 number: 1,252,820 116,172 55,854 70,251 26,356 73,842 : Cattle, including calves weighing : 500 pounds or more .....................farms: 11,228 1,563 2,638 502 615 647 number: 2,418,258 36,516 154,273 34,567 91,068 62,474 Cattle on feed (see text) .............farms: 262 15 26 5 16 14 number: 712,651 2,204 4,395 (D) (D) 1,618 : Hogs and pigs inventory ...................farms: 1,437 588 459 67 74 60 number: 111,893 5,690 (D) 2,571 1,620 2,837 Farms with- : 1 to 24 ....................................: 1,228 536 399 58 55 48 25 to 49 ...................................: 95 28 30 5 13 6 50 to 99 ...................................: 52 17 12 1 3 2 100 to 199 .................................: 39 6 14 2 2 - 200 to 499 .................................: 11 1 1 - - 3 500 or more ................................: 12 - 3 1 1 1 : Used or to be used for breeding .........farms: 732 282 226 32 42 26 number: 8,322 1,495 2,680 214 405 530 Other hogs and pigs .....................farms: 1,179 488 378 49 62 54 number: 103,571 4,195 (D) 2,357 1,215 2,307 : Hogs and pigs sold ........................farms: 1,163 479 418 45 54 47 number: 290,488 (D) 36,540 1,838 46,705 5,730 $1,000: 51,526 1,934 5,798 163 (D) 1,384 : Sheep and lambs inventory (see text) ......farms: 4,224 1,460 1,555 188 151 143 number: 668,517 38,422 70,619 6,753 8,627 20,068 Ewes 1 year old or older ................farms: 3,222 1,014 1,215 152 124 118 number: 306,987 24,846 29,662 4,063 4,319 10,452 Sheep and lambs sold ......................farms: 2,593 781 939 116 93 112 number: 440,092 25,366 36,171 4,112 18,473 9,518 : Total horses and ponies inventory .........farms: 14,932 4,651 5,349 653 571 549 number: 142,555 35,910 50,572 7,913 5,854 5,268 Owned horses and ponies : inventory ..............................farms: 14,353 4,533 5,111 631 533 518 number: 107,774 29,780 37,029 5,428 3,827 3,213 Owned horses and ponies sold ..............farms: 2,959 1,062 1,040 157 92 96 number: 10,452 2,677 3,922 489 356 298 : Goats, all inventory ......................farms: 4,474 1,924 1,636 158 156 134 number: 140,042 31,467 38,073 4,239 6,144 6,860 Goats, all sold ...........................farms: 2,133 865 799 79 80 74 number: 62,844 10,945 15,439 2,715 2,706 1,801 : POULTRY : : Layers inventory (see text) ...............farms: 6,744 2,856 2,505 265 240 215 number: 19,000,779 258,013 2,978,208 1,005,801 2,787,361 2,681,705 Farms with- : 1 to 399 ...................................: 6,653 2,835 2,475 258 232 209 400 to 3,199 ...............................: 39 14 13 - 3 2 3,200 to 9,999 .............................: 4 1 2 - 1 - 10,000 to 19,999 ...........................: 4 3 - 1 - - 20,000 to 49,999 ...........................: 5 1 3 1 - - 50,000 to 99,999 ...........................: 8 2 3 1 - - 100,000 or more ............................: 31 - 9 4 4 4 : Pullets for laying flock replacement : inventory ................................farms: 873 414 267 37 29 30 number: 4,633,558 208,852 593,078 200,756 (D) (D) : Layers sold (see text) ....................farms: 831 428 287 31 17 22 number: 8,195,242 108,349 1,540,474 687,741 1,352,735 1,771,864 : Pullets for laying flock replacement : sold .....................................farms: 86 44 26 1 5 4 number: 3,508,788 194,726 3,257 (D) (D) (D) ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 64. Summary by Size of Farm: 2012 (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 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ LIVESTOCK - Con. : : Cattle and calves inventory - Con. : Cows and heifers that calved - Con. : : Beef cows .............................farms: 482 288 192 856 740 626 1,099 number: 11,644 5,991 5,536 30,508 44,488 60,620 368,725 Farms with- : 1 to 9 .................................: 246 125 38 234 106 58 37 10 to 49 ...............................: 197 132 123 447 330 182 94 50 to 99 ...............................: 29 24 25 127 191 179 147 100 to 199 .............................: 5 6 6 35 82 132 258 200 to 499 .............................: 3 1 - 8 25 69 359 500 or more ............................: 2 - - 5 6 6 204 Milk cows .............................farms: 101 73 59 296 274 184 99 number: 105,791 47,932 55,557 273,431 383,656 336,120 280,157 Farms with- : 1 to 9 .................................: 12 13 3 18 7 10 8 10 to 49 ...............................: 3 - - 1 9 1 5 50 to 99 ...............................: 4 3 - - 3 2 2 100 to 199 .............................: 7 10 6 23 7 9 4 200 to 499 .............................: 16 9 6 60 36 23 7 500 or more ............................: 59 38 44 194 212 139 73 : Other cattle (see text) .................farms: 603 347 282 1,139 1,002 840 1,263 number: 211,029 69,368 134,253 411,584 460,890 378,740 875,602 : Cattle and calves sold ....................farms: 601 349 289 1,176 1,086 888 1,300 number: 249,209 83,271 236,630 421,604 637,295 374,508 947,188 $1,000: 240,361 86,047 183,689 443,758 592,394 284,275 898,649 Calves weighing less than 500 pounds ....farms: 290 167 140 607 588 417 560 number: 93,218 21,489 133,135 96,045 201,075 162,786 202,597 : Cattle, including calves weighing : 500 pounds or more .....................farms: 526 302 255 1,087 1,011 843 1,239 number: 155,991 61,782 103,495 325,559 436,220 211,722 744,591 Cattle on feed (see text) .............farms: 11 10 17 34 38 20 56 number: 87,950 (D) (D) (D) (D) 1,543 28,546 : Hogs and pigs inventory ...................farms: 48 24 8 44 24 17 24 number: 1,255 929 111 (D) 1,450 992 4,890 Farms with- : 1 to 24 ....................................: 35 17 8 32 19 11 10 25 to 49 ...................................: 1 2 - 2 1 2 5 50 to 99 ...................................: 4 3 - 6 2 - 2 100 to 199 .................................: 8 - - 2 - 3 2 200 to 499 .................................: - 2 - - - 1 3 500 or more ................................: - - - 2 2 - 2 : Used or to be used for breeding .........farms: 29 22 6 20 21 7 19 number: 494 397 41 358 164 458 1,086 Other hogs and pigs .....................farms: 41 17 5 39 11 14 21 number: 761 532 70 (D) 1,286 534 3,804 : Hogs and pigs sold ........................farms: 21 19 7 27 20 11 15 number: 2,163 2,607 153 (D) 928 993 19,351 $1,000: 163 (D) 7 (D) 107 124 3,232 : Sheep and lambs inventory (see text) ......farms: 137 57 58 145 88 76 166 number: 11,739 4,845 22,983 23,346 36,454 83,337 341,324 Ewes 1 year old or older ................farms: 112 50 50 116 63 64 144 number: 6,843 2,615 10,585 13,164 8,099 18,690 173,649 Sheep and lambs sold ......................farms: 94 43 51 103 59 70 132 number: 4,431 4,644 12,371 14,165 35,401 72,667 202,773 : Total horses and ponies inventory .........farms: 368 220 197 669 504 433 768 number: 3,223 1,580 2,169 8,426 5,345 4,106 12,189 Owned horses and ponies : inventory ..............................farms: 340 214 189 645 482 414 743 number: 2,462 1,239 1,191 5,012 4,152 3,445 10,996 Owned horses and ponies sold ..............farms: 67 27 30 112 90 64 122 number: 167 69 128 586 489 417 854 : Goats, all inventory ......................farms: 104 34 52 105 73 44 54 number: 3,587 2,817 4,256 19,289 2,464 6,121 14,725 Goats, all sold ...........................farms: 51 20 24 53 28 30 30 number: 1,496 603 1,088 10,301 806 8,030 6,914 : POULTRY : : Layers inventory (see text) ...............farms: 146 67 69 170 117 38 56 number: (D) (D) (D) (D) 4,162,115 721 2,790 Farms with- : 1 to 399 ...................................: 143 64 67 166 111 38 55 400 to 3,199 ...............................: 2 - 1 2 1 - 1 3,200 to 9,999 .............................: - - - - - - - 10,000 to 19,999 ...........................: - - - - - - - 20,000 to 49,999 ...........................: - - - - - - - 50,000 to 99,999 ...........................: - 1 - 1 - - - 100,000 or more ............................: 1 2 1 1 5 - - : Pullets for laying flock replacement : inventory ................................farms: 24 13 8 16 16 6 13 number: (D) (D) (D) (D) 1,380,469 65 661 : Layers sold (see text) ....................farms: 14 4 5 10 9 2 2 number: 506 (D) (D) 1,666 1,946,140 (D) (D) : Pullets for laying flock replacement : sold .....................................farms: 1 - - 2 3 - - number: (D) - - (D) (D) - - ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 64. Summary by Size of Farm: 2012 (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. : : Broilers and other meat-type chickens : sold .....................................farms: 421 192 118 23 24 15 number: 273,277,272 3,392,328 7,458,949 24,842,551 3,329,143 (D) Farms with- : 1 to 1,999 .................................: 336 170 93 14 17 11 2,000 to 59,999 ............................: 26 10 8 4 - 1 60,000 to 99,999 ...........................: - - - - - - 100,000 or more ............................: 59 12 17 5 7 3 : Turkeys inventory (see text) ..............farms: 682 306 231 25 34 19 number: 4,532,307 35,245 508,889 (D) (D) 193,405 Turkeys sold (see text) ...................farms: 302 149 79 13 13 8 number: 15,384,675 62,567 758,317 (D) 914,696 832,069 : CROPS HARVESTED : : Barley for grain ..........................farms: 264 12 21 7 3 6 acres: 81,954 (D) 213 173 (D) 390 bushels: 5,312,595 (D) 6,173 9,419 (D) 28,664 Irrigated ...............................farms: 144 12 2 3 2 4 acres: 44,819 16 (D) 77 (D) (D) Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..............................: 60 12 20 3 2 1 25 to 99 acres .............................: 59 - 1 4 1 3 100 to 249 acres ...........................: 68 - - - - 2 250 to 499 acres ...........................: 30 - - - - - 500 acres or more ..........................: 47 - - - - - : Corn for grain ............................farms: 733 53 72 14 39 16 acres: 180,672 107 761 574 1,761 879 bushels: 31,922,610 6,744 72,584 59,677 286,891 130,139 Irrigated ...............................farms: 733 53 72 14 39 16 acres: 175,863 107 761 574 1,761 879 Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..............................: 163 53 58 3 11 5 25 to 99 acres .............................: 211 - 14 11 28 7 100 to 249 acres ...........................: 152 - - - - 4 250 to 499 acres ...........................: 103 - - - - - 500 acres or more ..........................: 104 - - - - - : Corn for silage or greenchop ..............farms: 1,895 25 191 63 110 159 acres: 487,570 96 3,627 2,521 5,801 12,119 tons: 12,575,973 2,874 88,528 65,308 142,533 311,096 Irrigated ...............................farms: 1,802 24 180 58 105 154 acres: 461,898 (D) 3,420 (D) 5,637 11,802 Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..............................: 249 25 137 14 24 14 25 to 99 acres .............................: 538 - 54 49 86 91 100 to 249 acres ...........................: 512 - - - - 54 250 to 499 acres ...........................: 329 - - - - - 500 acres or more ..........................: 267 - - - - - : Cotton, all ...............................farms: 630 9 19 7 3 8 acres: 367,766 (D) 475 331 (D) 675 bales: 1,201,860 (D) 1,501 1,049 (D) 2,149 Irrigated ...............................farms: 630 9 19 7 3 8 acres: 367,766 (D) 475 331 (D) 675 Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..............................: 31 9 11 - 1 - 25 to 99 acres .............................: 102 - 8 7 2 4 100 to 249 acres ...........................: 180 - - - - 4 250 to 499 acres ...........................: 153 - - - - - 500 acres or more ..........................: 164 - - - - - : Dry edible beans, excluding limas .........farms: 308 32 45 4 9 12 acres: 39,511 47 291 84 392 420 cwt: 955,995 1,013 5,948 1,420 4,790 8,982 Irrigated ...............................farms: 269 27 29 4 6 10 acres: 36,866 42 185 84 361 (D) Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..............................: 95 32 41 2 4 3 25 to 99 acres .............................: 93 - 4 2 5 9 100 to 249 acres ...........................: 69 - - - - - 250 to 499 acres ...........................: 38 - - - - - 500 acres or more ..........................: 13 - - - - - : Oats for grain ............................farms: 240 8 61 9 15 8 acres: 25,065 24 848 382 688 784 bushels: 2,246,420 2,504 77,008 40,122 71,761 88,786 Irrigated ...............................farms: 145 3 32 7 14 7 acres: 15,901 14 461 (D) (D) (D) Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..............................: 86 8 50 - 4 - 25 to 99 acres .............................: 75 - 11 9 11 3 100 to 249 acres ...........................: 54 - - - - 5 250 to 499 acres ...........................: 16 - - - - - 500 acres or more ..........................: 9 - - - - - : Peanuts for nuts ..........................farms: 15 13 - 2 - - acres: 27 (D) - (D) - - pounds: 84,093 (D) - (D) - - Irrigated ...............................farms: 15 13 - 2 - - acres: 27 (D) - (D) - - Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..............................: 15 13 - 2 - - 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 64. Summary by Size of Farm: 2012 (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. : : Broilers and other meat-type chickens : sold .....................................farms: 9 12 1 5 11 2 9 number: (D) 2,902,330 (D) (D) 5,710,363 (D) (D) Farms with- : 1 to 1,999 .................................: 8 9 1 1 7 - 5 2,000 to 59,999 ............................: - - - - - - 3 60,000 to 99,999 ...........................: - - - - - - - 100,000 or more ............................: 1 3 - 4 4 2 1 : Turkeys inventory (see text) ..............farms: 13 6 5 26 10 4 3 number: 118,174 (D) 21 (D) 1,443,228 (D) (D) Turkeys sold (see text) ...................farms: 11 3 1 10 8 3 4 number: 340,039 1,425,029 (D) (D) 4,910,815 (D) (D) : CROPS HARVESTED : : Barley for grain ..........................farms: 4 15 11 31 29 36 89 acres: 270 772 567 3,066 6,650 14,595 55,178 bushels: 19,690 58,492 46,320 221,469 348,979 863,753 3,706,762 Irrigated ...............................farms: 2 6 9 18 15 22 49 acres: (D) 282 (D) 1,632 2,622 9,343 29,943 Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..............................: - 6 5 5 2 2 2 25 to 99 acres .............................: 3 5 4 8 5 8 17 100 to 249 acres ...........................: 1 4 2 18 11 9 21 250 to 499 acres ...........................: - - - - 5 7 18 500 acres or more ..........................: - - - - 6 10 31 : Corn for grain ............................farms: 31 25 14 86 119 115 149 acres: 1,795 2,355 1,542 10,721 26,555 37,073 96,549 bushels: 319,249 354,460 290,611 1,941,192 4,888,478 6,518,532 17,054,053 Irrigated ...............................farms: 31 25 14 86 119 115 149 acres: 1,745 2,355 1,542 10,702 26,046 35,945 93,446 Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..............................: 17 - 2 3 4 3 4 25 to 99 acres .............................: 4 13 5 48 36 25 20 100 to 249 acres ...........................: 10 12 6 22 39 33 26 250 to 499 acres ...........................: - - 1 13 25 31 33 500 acres or more ..........................: - - - - 15 23 66 : Corn for silage or greenchop ..............farms: 119 83 92 335 347 197 174 acres: 10,876 9,484 11,602 66,783 115,563 100,851 148,247 tons: 265,550 234,591 288,652 1,725,523 3,001,723 2,534,300 3,915,295 Irrigated ...............................farms: 108 78 88 319 331 189 168 acres: 9,632 8,813 11,115 61,482 106,708 96,946 143,867 Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..............................: 9 3 8 12 1 1 1 25 to 99 acres .............................: 53 30 26 60 50 23 16 100 to 249 acres ...........................: 57 50 57 146 83 32 33 250 to 499 acres ...........................: - - 1 117 135 47 29 500 acres or more ..........................: - - - - 78 94 95 : Cotton, all ...............................farms: 15 16 18 81 155 171 128 acres: 1,352 1,539 1,591 11,233 42,725 75,386 232,251 bales: 3,994 5,362 4,484 36,835 146,380 250,730 748,777 Irrigated ...............................farms: 15 16 18 81 155 171 128 acres: 1,352 1,539 1,591 11,233 42,725 75,386 232,251 Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..............................: - - 4 4 - 2 - 25 to 99 acres .............................: 9 9 7 24 12 17 3 100 to 249 acres ...........................: 6 7 5 46 60 35 17 250 to 499 acres ...........................: - - 2 7 69 59 16 500 acres or more ..........................: - - - - 14 58 92 : Dry edible beans, excluding limas .........farms: 4 10 4 41 49 43 55 acres: 197 689 286 2,927 7,352 7,968 18,858 cwt: 6,800 14,186 5,562 72,370 161,158 191,038 482,728 Irrigated ...............................farms: 4 10 2 40 46 40 51 acres: 197 689 (D) (D) 6,858 7,003 18,207 Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..............................: 1 3 - 8 - - 1 25 to 99 acres .............................: 2 5 3 22 16 13 12 100 to 249 acres ...........................: 1 2 1 11 25 18 11 250 to 499 acres ...........................: - - - - 8 12 18 500 acres or more ..........................: - - - - - - 13 : Oats for grain ............................farms: 10 14 7 22 23 20 43 acres: 798 1,229 712 2,969 4,403 3,272 8,956 bushels: 100,245 96,179 81,911 265,186 393,371 224,970 804,377 Irrigated ...............................farms: 6 4 3 12 18 11 28 acres: 570 324 566 1,613 2,676 2,270 5,874 Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..............................: 2 6 1 3 4 1 7 25 to 99 acres .............................: 3 2 3 7 8 5 13 100 to 249 acres ...........................: 5 6 3 7 4 11 13 250 to 499 acres ...........................: - - - 5 3 2 6 500 acres or more ..........................: - - - - 4 1 4 : Peanuts for nuts ..........................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 ..........................: - - - - - - - ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 64. Summary by Size of Farm: 2012 (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 HARVESTED - Con. : : Rice ......................................farms: 1,392 10 56 41 71 81 acres: 561,968 (D) (D) (D) 5,016 7,712 cwt: 46,692,580 2,931 136,138 149,096 414,378 627,932 Irrigated ...............................farms: 1,392 10 56 41 71 81 acres: 561,968 (D) (D) (D) 5,016 7,712 Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..............................: 49 10 19 4 6 1 25 to 99 acres .............................: 232 - 37 37 65 28 100 to 249 acres ...........................: 385 - - - - 52 250 to 499 acres ...........................: 366 - - - - - 500 acres or more ..........................: 360 - - - - - : Sorghum for grain .........................farms: 74 3 4 - 3 4 acres: 13,908 9 4 - 12 (D) bushels: 1,263,924 1,287 144 - 1,200 23,024 Irrigated ...............................farms: 62 3 4 - 3 2 acres: 10,997 9 4 - 12 (D) Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..............................: 17 3 4 - 3 1 25 to 99 acres .............................: 18 - - - - 1 100 to 249 acres ...........................: 19 - - - - 2 250 to 499 acres ...........................: 13 - - - - - 500 acres or more ..........................: 7 - - - - - : Soybeans for beans ........................farms: 2 - - - - - acres: (D) - - - - - bushels: (D) - - - - - Irrigated ...............................farms: 1 - - - - - acres: (D) - - - - - Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..............................: 1 - - - - - 25 to 99 acres .............................: - - - - - - 100 to 249 acres ...........................: 1 - - - - - 250 to 499 acres ...........................: - - - - - - 500 acres or more ..........................: - - - - - - : Sugarbeets for sugar ......................farms: 58 - - - - - acres: 27,193 - - - - - tons: 1,179,753 - - - - - Irrigated ...............................farms: 58 - - - - - acres: 26,567 - - - - - : Sunflower seed, all .......................farms: 197 8 19 5 7 6 acres: 49,749 (D) 208 86 222 (D) pounds: 68,792,639 (D) 234,908 68,549 332,256 309,400 Irrigated ...............................farms: 152 2 11 5 5 6 acres: 34,815 (D) 186 86 (D) (D) Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..............................: 42 8 14 4 3 - 25 to 99 acres .............................: 52 - 5 1 4 6 100 to 249 acres ...........................: 43 - - - - - 250 to 499 acres ...........................: 31 - - - - - 500 acres or more ..........................: 29 - - - - - : Wheat for grain, all ......................farms: 1,503 6 122 42 38 57 acres: 491,846 24 1,864 1,877 2,165 3,537 bushels: 42,955,324 1,468 129,405 137,251 172,132 243,256 Irrigated ...............................farms: 1,123 6 64 29 27 35 acres: 382,958 24 1,247 1,330 1,490 2,386 Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..............................: 164 6 95 9 3 15 25 to 99 acres .............................: 427 - 27 33 33 26 100 to 249 acres ...........................: 430 - - - 2 16 250 to 499 acres ...........................: 220 - - - - - 500 acres or more ..........................: 262 - - - - - : Forage-land used for all hay and all : haylage, grass silage, and : greenchop (see text) .....................farms: 7,903 401 1,862 391 494 521 acres: 1,670,027 1,684 29,653 13,337 22,671 31,448 tons, dry: 9,363,421 5,072 92,751 47,765 81,423 139,400 Irrigated ...............................farms: 5,498 252 1,076 239 328 326 acres: 1,346,666 1,077 16,525 8,076 15,067 20,165 Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..............................: 2,621 401 1,502 132 144 119 25 to 99 acres .............................: 2,274 - 360 259 350 269 100 to 249 acres ...........................: 1,435 - - - - 133 250 to 499 acres ...........................: 728 - - - - - 500 acres or more ..........................: 845 - - - - - : Alfalfa hay .............................farms: 3,243 86 416 98 147 180 acres: 874,137 346 7,470 3,819 7,356 9,160 tons, dry: 5,607,210 1,771 34,851 19,044 33,433 53,300 Irrigated .............................farms: 3,035 80 380 93 127 164 acres: 831,858 301 6,584 3,685 6,135 8,267 : Other tame hay ..........................farms: 1,699 137 412 75 99 106 acres: 212,238 537 5,000 1,904 3,320 3,911 tons, dry: 821,999 1,317 11,087 4,191 8,651 10,209 Irrigated .............................farms: 1,217 100 303 55 77 59 acres: 155,054 410 3,544 1,272 2,439 2,242 : Field and grass seed crops, all ...........farms: 209 9 18 1 9 8 acres: 71,921 31 260 (D) 504 322 Irrigated ...............................farms: 202 9 17 1 9 8 acres: 71,053 31 (D) (D) 504 322 : Land in vegetables (see text) .............farms: 6,055 2,499 1,642 181 167 149 acres: 985,735 3,633 10,813 3,631 3,222 6,291 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 64. Summary by Size of Farm: 2012 (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 HARVESTED - Con. : : Rice ......................................farms: 97 68 79 355 299 138 97 acres: 13,378 10,894 15,734 102,036 155,757 114,066 133,846 cwt: 1,107,068 923,446 1,286,576 8,580,830 12,608,237 9,588,183 11,267,765 Irrigated ...............................farms: 97 68 79 355 299 138 97 acres: 13,378 10,894 15,734 102,036 155,757 114,066 133,846 Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..............................: - 1 - 2 2 4 - 25 to 99 acres .............................: 15 10 8 13 11 4 4 100 to 249 acres ...........................: 82 57 67 81 33 7 6 250 to 499 acres ...........................: - - 4 259 65 23 15 500 acres or more ..........................: - - - - 188 100 72 : Sorghum for grain .........................farms: 4 3 1 9 12 15 16 acres: 127 320 (D) 1,242 1,438 5,259 5,146 bushels: (D) 17,356 (D) 118,890 113,523 539,121 428,114 Irrigated ...............................farms: 4 3 - 8 11 14 10 acres: 127 320 - (D) (D) (D) 3,931 Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..............................: - - - 2 2 - 2 25 to 99 acres .............................: 4 - - 4 5 4 - 100 to 249 acres ...........................: - 3 1 1 3 3 6 250 to 499 acres ...........................: - - - 2 2 4 5 500 acres or more ..........................: - - - - - 4 3 : Soybeans for beans ........................farms: - 1 - 1 - - - acres: - (D) - (D) - - - bushels: - (D) - (D) - - - Irrigated ...............................farms: - - - 1 - - - acres: - - - (D) - - - Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..............................: - - - 1 - - - 25 to 99 acres .............................: - - - - - - - 100 to 249 acres ...........................: - 1 - - - - - 250 to 499 acres ...........................: - - - - - - - 500 acres or more ..........................: - - - - - - - : Sugarbeets for sugar ......................farms: - - 2 4 8 7 37 acres: - - (D) (D) 3,028 1,841 (D) tons: - - (D) 8,360 (D) 78,172 (D) Irrigated ...............................farms: - - 2 4 8 7 37 acres: - - (D) (D) 3,028 1,841 (D) : Sunflower seed, all .......................farms: 10 1 - 30 35 27 49 acres: 1,084 (D) - 3,011 6,774 4,160 33,907 pounds: 1,099,372 (D) - 4,072,672 7,971,514 5,507,550 49,141,424 Irrigated ...............................farms: 8 1 - 30 30 23 31 acres: (D) (D) - 3,011 6,120 3,436 20,736 Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..............................: - 1 - 5 - 7 - 25 to 99 acres .............................: 2 - - 12 10 8 4 100 to 249 acres ...........................: 8 - - 13 14 5 3 250 to 499 acres ...........................: - - - - 11 7 13 500 acres or more ..........................: - - - - - - 29 : Wheat for grain, all ......................farms: 60 56 45 170 241 273 393 acres: 5,164 5,212 3,613 23,321 46,258 71,171 327,640 bushels: 337,197 393,904 259,755 1,817,102 4,293,341 6,619,568 28,550,945 Irrigated ...............................farms: 36 38 33 124 195 218 318 acres: 2,870 4,207 2,700 15,286 37,079 57,700 256,639 Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..............................: 2 3 2 10 8 5 6 25 to 99 acres .............................: 33 31 29 60 76 48 31 100 to 249 acres ...........................: 25 22 14 72 93 109 77 250 to 499 acres ...........................: - - - 28 48 83 61 500 acres or more ..........................: - - - - 16 28 218 : Forage-land used for all hay and all : haylage, grass silage, and : greenchop (see text) .....................farms: 375 273 235 920 854 680 897 acres: 30,506 23,268 26,837 141,092 233,762 300,434 815,335 tons, dry: 132,517 101,445 122,467 771,428 1,396,334 1,853,371 4,619,448 Irrigated ...............................farms: 257 183 161 712 708 544 712 acres: 21,078 15,838 17,820 106,937 194,403 248,454 681,226 Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..............................: 69 54 23 75 50 15 37 25 to 99 acres .............................: 141 100 87 303 154 125 126 100 to 249 acres ...........................: 165 119 118 332 251 157 160 250 to 499 acres ...........................: - - 7 210 245 147 119 500 acres or more ..........................: - - - - 154 236 455 : Alfalfa hay .............................farms: 151 98 83 458 496 468 562 acres: 11,869 7,025 7,396 59,059 114,229 177,808 468,600 tons, dry: 62,044 41,678 45,495 362,297 748,220 1,171,203 3,033,874 Irrigated .............................farms: 144 88 76 420 480 450 533 acres: 11,262 6,177 6,881 54,287 109,149 168,402 450,728 : Other tame hay ..........................farms: 55 59 58 149 149 127 273 acres: 2,733 2,758 4,150 13,824 20,626 28,287 125,188 tons, dry: 9,393 7,781 12,151 49,051 72,913 137,404 497,851 Irrigated .............................farms: 43 34 37 109 116 97 187 acres: 1,731 1,793 2,004 9,256 15,599 21,243 93,521 : Field and grass seed crops, all ...........farms: 3 8 3 28 22 38 62 acres: (D) 297 (D) 3,531 4,273 13,285 48,814 Irrigated ...............................farms: 3 8 3 26 22 37 59 acres: (D) 297 (D) (D) 4,273 (D) 48,094 : Land in vegetables (see text) .............farms: 111 85 57 222 286 273 383 acres: 4,577 4,724 4,649 37,158 102,342 160,863 643,833 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 64. Summary by Size of Farm: 2012 (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 HARVESTED - Con. : : Land in vegetables (see text) - Con. : : Irrigated ...............................farms: 6,055 2,499 1,642 181 167 149 acres: 985,731 3,629 10,813 3,631 3,222 6,291 Farms by acres harvested: : 0.1 to 4.9 acres ...........................: 3,667 2,321 955 73 84 56 5.0 to 24.9 acres ..........................: 948 178 591 39 33 26 25.0 to 99.9 acres .........................: 394 - 96 69 50 29 100.0 to 249.9 acres .......................: 312 - - - - 38 250.0 acres or more ........................: 734 - - - - - : Beans, snap .............................farms: 652 291 212 16 16 14 acres: 9,419 139 445 161 117 104 Harvested for processing ..............farms: 56 18 9 2 - 5 acres: 3,645 4 57 (D) - 81 : Peas, green .............................farms: 138 47 40 4 9 3 acres: 821 37 82 (D) 71 5 Harvested for processing ..............farms: - - - - - - acres: - - - - - - Potatoes ................................farms: 441 140 147 23 18 14 acres: 42,660 47 117 142 168 192 Harvested for processing ..............farms: 36 6 4 2 - 1 acres: 14,436 1 (Z) (D) - (D) Farms by acres harvested: : 0.1 to 4.9 acres .........................: 345 140 142 20 11 9 5.0 to 24.9 acres ........................: 17 - 5 1 5 2 25.0 to 99.9 acres .......................: 20 - - 2 2 3 100.0 to 249.9 acres .....................: 16 - - - - - 250.0 acres or more ......................: 43 - - - - - : Sweet corn ..............................farms: 441 127 140 15 15 19 acres: 32,667 62 200 97 64 24 Harvested for processing ..............farms: 12 4 - - 2 - acres: 561 5 - - (D) - Sweet potatoes ..........................farms: 188 60 41 7 10 18 acres: 18,189 (D) 334 194 355 1,509 Harvested for processing ..............farms: 27 - 3 2 3 7 acres: 2,571 - 15 (D) 47 545 : Tomatoes in the open ....................farms: 3,176 1,442 871 85 65 66 acres: 295,247 697 1,473 633 282 819 Harvested for processing ..............farms: 631 141 70 12 9 8 acres: 256,051 (D) 132 213 5 407 : Land in orchards ..........................farms: 38,098 12,663 13,625 2,021 1,853 1,525 acres: 3,138,943 33,934 217,741 79,197 110,291 117,390 Irrigated ...............................farms: 34,580 11,020 12,423 1,861 1,743 1,437 acres: 3,072,245 30,103 200,421 73,379 106,202 113,472 Farms by bearing and nonbearing acres: : 0.1 to 4.9 acres ...........................: 13,263 10,359 2,263 172 127 95 5.0 to 24.9 acres ..........................: 12,094 2,304 8,480 382 219 213 25.0 to 99.9 acres .........................: 7,356 - 2,882 1,467 1,507 479 100.0 to 249.9 acres .......................: 2,969 - - - - 738 250.0 acres or more ........................: 2,416 - - - - - : Apples ..................................farms: 2,527 1,088 884 125 84 84 bearing and nonbearing acres: 18,205 1,010 3,013 1,155 571 1,287 : Grapes ..................................farms: 11,462 2,977 4,076 748 686 562 bearing and nonbearing acres: 940,177 6,546 58,250 24,457 32,716 33,905 : Peaches, all ............................farms: 2,201 755 717 121 103 81 bearing and nonbearing acres: 51,948 472 3,418 1,002 2,159 2,300 : Citrus fruit, all .......................farms: 7,283 3,286 2,276 315 293 265 bearing and nonbearing acres: 293,387 6,524 28,091 9,317 15,829 17,597 : Almonds .................................farms: 6,841 852 2,495 407 434 349 bearing and nonbearing acres: 935,804 2,895 47,279 16,964 25,726 26,936 : Pecans .................................farms: 222 97 79 14 1 5 bearing and nonbearing acres: 3,309 250 656 219 (D) 156 : Walnuts, English ........................farms: 5,712 1,482 1,877 332 308 266 bearing and nonbearing acres: 329,112 4,163 26,845 10,599 13,899 13,996 : Land in berries (see text) ................farms: 1,985 841 625 82 94 49 acres: 52,626 781 3,348 1,251 2,159 2,188 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 64. Summary by Size of Farm: 2012 (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 HARVESTED - Con. : : Land in vegetables (see text) - Con. : : Irrigated ...............................farms: 111 85 57 222 286 273 383 acres: 4,577 4,724 4,649 37,158 102,342 160,863 643,833 Farms by acres harvested: : 0.1 to 4.9 acres ...........................: 55 34 19 33 16 13 8 5.0 to 24.9 acres ..........................: 20 14 7 23 8 4 5 25.0 to 99.9 acres .........................: 10 16 12 38 27 27 20 100.0 to 249.9 acres .......................: 26 21 16 57 68 52 34 250.0 acres or more ........................: - - 3 71 167 177 316 : Beans, snap .............................farms: 14 12 13 25 14 11 14 acres: 17 (D) (D) 809 710 1,823 4,765 Harvested for processing ..............farms: - 1 1 4 4 4 8 acres: - (D) (D) (D) 354 16 3,090 : Peas, green .............................farms: 10 6 1 9 1 7 1 acres: (D) (D) (D) 40 (D) 449 (D) Harvested for processing ..............farms: - - - - - - - acres: - - - - - - - Potatoes ................................farms: 7 10 3 17 9 15 38 acres: 339 431 112 609 3,355 4,648 32,500 Harvested for processing ..............farms: 1 2 - 1 3 8 8 acres: (D) (D) - (D) (D) 2,191 10,843 Farms by acres harvested: : 0.1 to 4.9 acres .........................: 4 5 - 10 2 1 1 5.0 to 24.9 acres ........................: 1 - 1 2 - - - 25.0 to 99.9 acres .......................: - 3 2 2 1 3 2 100.0 to 249.9 acres .....................: 2 2 - 3 1 2 6 250.0 acres or more ......................: - - - - 5 9 29 : Sweet corn ..............................farms: 9 9 6 25 22 26 28 acres: 4 234 193 353 3,678 6,460 21,297 Harvested for processing ..............farms: - - - - 2 1 3 acres: - - - - (D) (D) 243 Sweet potatoes ..........................farms: 2 11 4 16 10 5 4 acres: (D) 1,397 1,000 2,683 4,395 2,165 3,920 Harvested for processing ..............farms: 2 3 - 1 2 2 2 acres: (D) 600 - (D) (D) (D) (D) : Tomatoes in the open ....................farms: 33 45 19 97 132 129 192 acres: 425 447 132 8,744 32,009 45,127 204,461 Harvested for processing ..............farms: 2 5 4 31 90 100 159 acres: (D) 257 70 5,664 26,530 40,230 182,275 : Land in orchards ..........................farms: 1,134 711 511 1,536 1,167 682 670 acres: 120,805 94,464 78,595 355,830 440,846 411,175 1,078,675 Irrigated ...............................farms: 1,063 669 471 1,465 1,125 664 639 acres: 117,339 91,418 75,193 346,613 435,013 409,669 1,073,425 Farms by bearing and nonbearing acres: : 0.1 to 4.9 acres ...........................: 65 39 28 56 25 21 13 5.0 to 24.9 acres ..........................: 113 78 60 89 71 38 47 25.0 to 99.9 acres .........................: 237 103 68 254 182 91 86 100.0 to 249.9 acres .......................: 719 491 324 291 212 113 81 250.0 acres or more ........................: - - 31 846 677 419 443 : Apples ..................................farms: 42 33 25 63 41 24 34 bearing and nonbearing acres: 898 396 735 2,345 1,244 1,763 3,787 : Grapes ..................................farms: 442 277 170 563 405 275 281 bearing and nonbearing acres: 39,015 27,625 20,695 102,862 111,038 143,740 339,328 : Peaches, all ............................farms: 66 60 32 95 75 55 41 bearing and nonbearing acres: 2,867 3,026 2,026 7,775 6,876 8,296 11,731 : Citrus fruit, all .......................farms: 145 104 86 203 126 80 104 bearing and nonbearing acres: 13,075 10,425 10,628 35,521 30,031 27,717 88,632 : Almonds .................................farms: 289 231 147 521 524 284 308 bearing and nonbearing acres: 29,354 (D) 21,773 97,037 161,222 115,353 (D) : Pecans .................................farms: 2 1 1 7 7 3 5 bearing and nonbearing acres: (D) (D) (D) 476 969 (D) 47 : Walnuts, English ........................farms: 203 143 125 380 283 177 136 bearing and nonbearing acres: 15,148 (D) 10,558 53,347 (D) 47,997 69,443 : Land in berries (see text) ................farms: 32 33 34 89 56 23 27 acres: 1,549 2,666 3,670 14,259 9,664 4,816 6,276 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 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. Table 65. Summary by Market Value of Agricultural Products Sold: 2012 [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: 77,857 6,333 3,186 4,117 6,922 6,679 percent: 100.0 8.1 4.1 5.3 8.9 8.6 Land in farms ...................................................acres: 25,569,001 10,951,478 2,362,704 2,418,361 2,993,005 1,576,035 Average size of farm ........................................acres: 328 1,729 742 587 432 236 : MARKET VALUE OF AGRICULTURAL : PRODUCTS SOLD AND GOVERNMENT : PAYMENTS : : Total ...........................................................farms: 77,857 6,333 3,186 4,117 6,922 6,679 $1,000: 42,774,392 36,949,363 2,267,167 1,461,081 1,114,029 474,588 Average per farm ..........................................dollars: 549,397 5,834,417 711,603 354,890 160,940 71,057 Farms by economic class: : Less than $1,000 (see text) ......................................: 14,629 - - - - - $1,000 to $2,499 .................................................: 4,718 - - - - - $2,500 to $4,999 .................................................: 5,904 - - - - - $5,000 to $9,999 .................................................: 7,846 - - - - - $10,000 to $24,999 ...............................................: 10,265 - - - - - : $25,000 to $49,999 ...............................................: 7,150 - - - - - $50,000 to $99,999 ...............................................: 6,698 - - - - 6,595 $100,000 to $249,999 .............................................: 6,951 - - - 6,862 84 $250,000 to $499,999 .............................................: 4,132 - - 4,072 60 - : $500,000 to $999,999 .............................................: 3,197 - 3,152 45 - - $1,000,000 or more ...............................................: 6,367 6,333 34 - - - $1,000,000 to $2,499,999 .......................................: 3,015 2,981 34 - - - $2,500,000 to $4,999,999 .......................................: 1,480 1,480 - - - - $5,000,000 or more .............................................: 1,872 1,872 - - - - : Total sales ...................................................farms: 77,857 6,333 3,186 4,117 6,922 6,679 $1,000: 42,627,472 36,871,564 2,245,124 1,444,378 1,103,202 469,861 Grains, oilseeds, dry beans, and : dry peas ...................................................farms: 4,757 1,615 632 691 597 361 $1,000: 1,727,708 1,191,071 261,520 175,762 70,139 18,860 Sales of $50,000 or more ..................................farms: 3,235 1,396 564 595 468 212 $1,000: 1,701,529 1,185,542 260,105 173,508 67,343 15,031 Corn ......................................................farms: 1,796 714 213 182 195 134 $1,000: 419,544 322,503 46,463 25,134 15,711 5,572 Sales of $50,000 or more ................................farms: 1,130 616 186 140 133 55 $1,000: 407,430 319,885 45,868 24,158 14,043 3,475 Wheat .....................................................farms: 1,499 818 162 117 113 78 $1,000: 341,702 300,843 17,502 9,504 8,002 3,428 Sales of $50,000 or more ................................farms: 914 679 95 53 56 31 $1,000: 329,286 296,812 15,845 7,790 6,571 2,268 Soybeans ..................................................farms: 2 - - 1 1 - $1,000: (D) - - (D) (D) - Sales of $50,000 or more ................................farms: 1 - - - 1 - $1,000: (D) - - - (D) - Sorghum ...................................................farms: 200 96 21 16 21 12 $1,000: (D) 12,287 1,534 (D) (D) 261 Sales of $50,000 or more ................................farms: 76 56 12 2 6 - $1,000: 13,369 11,367 1,410 (D) (D) - Barley ....................................................farms: 261 104 25 19 30 19 $1,000: 29,212 20,973 3,685 1,544 1,920 685 Sales of $50,000 or more ................................farms: 105 59 15 9 17 5 $1,000: 27,084 20,082 3,543 1,447 1,609 404 Rice ......................................................farms: 1,391 311 290 379 247 102 $1,000: 782,644 425,892 180,555 127,867 39,742 7,038 Sales of $50,000 or more ................................farms: 1,306 305 290 378 239 94 $1,000: 780,488 425,730 180,555 (D) (D) 6,808 Other grains, oilseeds, : dry beans, and dry peas ..................................farms: 953 383 93 113 74 58 $1,000: 138,816 108,573 11,780 11,251 3,832 1,876 Sales of $50,000 or more ................................farms: 438 269 60 67 26 16 $1,000: 132,134 106,472 11,219 10,469 3,018 956 : Tobacco .................................................... farms: - - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - - Sales of $50,000 or more ..................................farms: - - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - - Cotton and cottonseed .......................................farms: 630 429 80 49 33 16 $1,000: 655,094 614,340 26,617 8,709 4,029 925 Sales of $50,000 or more ..................................farms: 584 417 80 47 28 12 $1,000: 653,962 613,980 26,617 (D) 3,909 (D) Vegetables, melons, potatoes, : and sweet potatoes .........................................farms: 6,155 1,086 215 239 359 454 $1,000: 6,327,838 6,101,037 93,634 48,834 34,869 21,926 Sales of $50,000 or more ..................................farms: 1,961 1,058 194 192 243 274 $1,000: 6,293,658 6,100,656 93,371 48,038 32,819 18,774 : Fruits, tree nuts, and berries ..............................farms: 36,574 3,541 2,115 2,690 4,851 4,726 $1,000: 17,638,972 14,052,558 1,372,360 877,895 733,564 320,536 Sales of $50,000 or more ..................................farms: 17,379 3,486 2,084 2,627 4,701 4,481 $1,000: 17,344,347 14,051,369 1,371,649 876,679 730,504 314,145 Fruits and tree nuts ......................................farms: 35,526 3,332 2,055 2,640 4,752 4,631 $1,000: 15,655,703 12,157,273 1,331,645 860,784 718,196 314,151 Sales of $50,000 or more ................................farms: 16,846 3,273 2,023 2,572 4,594 4,384 $1,000: 15,369,315 12,156,051 1,330,880 859,594 715,044 307,745 Berries ...................................................farms: 1,701 298 79 82 155 154 $1,000: 1,983,269 1,895,285 40,716 17,111 15,368 6,385 Sales of $50,000 or more ................................farms: 610 291 67 59 113 80 $1,000: 1,972,002 1,895,150 40,542 16,788 14,518 5,004 Nursery, greenhouse, floriculture, : and sod (see text) .........................................farms: 3,890 438 197 227 425 366 $1,000: 2,547,307 2,258,787 118,641 71,049 53,985 21,006 Sales of $50,000 or more ..................................farms: 1,465 413 186 215 374 277 $1,000: 2,520,294 2,258,369 118,433 70,945 53,262 19,285 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 65. Summary by Market Value of Agricultural Products Sold: 2012 (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: 7,043 10,137 7,718 5,736 4,590 15,396 percent: 9.0 13.0 9.9 7.4 5.9 19.8 Land in farms ...................................................acres: 1,066,274 1,203,072 420,769 304,012 231,492 2,041,799 Average size of farm ........................................acres: 151 119 55 53 50 133 : MARKET VALUE OF AGRICULTURAL : PRODUCTS SOLD AND GOVERNMENT : PAYMENTS : : Total ...........................................................farms: 7,043 10,137 7,718 5,736 4,590 15,396 $1,000: 251,139 164,324 54,637 20,699 7,855 9,509 Average per farm ..........................................dollars: 35,658 16,210 7,079 3,609 1,711 618 Farms by economic class: : Less than $1,000 (see text) ......................................: - - - - - 14,629 $1,000 to $2,499 .................................................: - - - - 4,532 186 $2,500 to $4,999 .................................................: - - - 5,669 29 206 $5,000 to $9,999 .................................................: - - 7,621 50 23 152 $10,000 to $24,999 ...............................................: - 10,002 89 17 6 151 : $25,000 to $49,999 ...............................................: 6,960 133 6 - - 51 $50,000 to $99,999 ...............................................: 80 2 2 - - 19 $100,000 to $249,999 .............................................: 3 - - - - 2 $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: 7,043 10,137 7,718 5,736 4,590 15,396 $1,000: 248,136 161,882 53,701 20,356 7,596 1,673 Grains, oilseeds, dry beans, and : dry peas ...................................................farms: 297 214 145 89 71 45 $1,000: 7,278 2,236 556 193 72 21 Sales of $50,000 or more ..................................farms: - - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - - Corn ......................................................farms: 128 83 46 47 32 22 $1,000: 2,992 888 184 56 24 14 Sales of $50,000 or more ................................farms: - - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - - Wheat .....................................................farms: 93 49 29 27 10 3 $1,000: 1,712 495 129 71 15 1 Sales of $50,000 or more ................................farms: - - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - - Soybeans ..................................................farms: - - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - - Sales of $50,000 or more ................................farms: - - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - - Sorghum ...................................................farms: 18 8 5 3 - - $1,000: 239 52 14 9 - - Sales of $50,000 or more ................................farms: - - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - - Barley ....................................................farms: 20 6 12 3 15 8 $1,000: 294 5 82 9 13 2 Sales of $50,000 or more ................................farms: - - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - - Rice ......................................................farms: 35 22 5 - - - $1,000: 1,241 271 38 - - - Sales of $50,000 or more ................................farms: - - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - - Other grains, oilseeds, : dry beans, and dry peas ..................................farms: 55 68 53 28 16 12 $1,000: 800 524 108 48 21 3 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: 9 8 6 - - - $1,000: 311 130 33 - - - Sales of $50,000 or more ..................................farms: - - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - - Vegetables, melons, potatoes, : and sweet potatoes .........................................farms: 485 879 1,037 651 511 239 $1,000: 10,698 9,315 4,989 1,728 702 107 Sales of $50,000 or more ..................................farms: - - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - - : Fruits, tree nuts, and berries ..............................farms: 4,629 5,853 4,102 2,406 1,214 447 $1,000: 156,528 88,979 26,321 8,055 1,934 241 Sales of $50,000 or more ..................................farms: - - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - - Fruits and tree nuts ......................................farms: 4,485 5,709 3,956 2,359 1,188 419 $1,000: 151,997 86,306 25,315 7,907 1,896 233 Sales of $50,000 or more ................................farms: - - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - - Berries ...................................................farms: 219 282 260 87 45 40 $1,000: 4,531 2,672 1,007 148 38 8 Sales of $50,000 or more ................................farms: - - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - - Nursery, greenhouse, floriculture, : and sod (see text) .........................................farms: 428 714 517 273 222 83 $1,000: 11,389 8,755 2,600 765 292 36 Sales of $50,000 or more ..................................farms: - - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - - ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 65. Summary by Market Value of Agricultural Products Sold: 2012 (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. : : Cut Christmas trees and : short-rotation woody crops .................................farms: 328 1 - 2 8 9 $1,000: 2,706 (D) - (D) 503 363 Sales of $50,000 or more ..................................farms: 9 1 - - 3 5 $1,000: 904 (D) - - 455 (D) Cut Christmas trees .......................................farms: 301 1 - 1 6 7 $1,000: 2,499 (D) - (D) (D) (D) Sales of $50,000 or more ................................farms: 8 1 - - 3 4 $1,000: 846 (D) - - 455 (D) Short-rotation woody crops ................................farms: 38 - - 1 2 2 $1,000: 206 - - (D) (D) (D) Sales of $50,000 or more ................................farms: 1 - - - - 1 $1,000: (D) - - - - (D) Other crops and hay (see text) ..............................farms: 5,744 1,173 401 472 670 535 $1,000: 1,467,274 1,185,080 114,946 72,537 52,032 19,775 Sales of $50,000 or more ..................................farms: 2,246 1,020 320 322 386 198 $1,000: 1,425,574 1,181,634 113,397 69,836 47,029 13,678 Maple syrup (see text) ....................................farms: - - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - - Sales of $50,000 or more ................................farms: - - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - - : Cattle and calves ...........................................farms: 12,594 1,623 377 567 959 883 $1,000: 3,259,325 2,776,923 135,507 119,966 106,242 47,104 Sales of $50,000 or more ..................................farms: 3,515 1,486 288 413 702 626 $1,000: 3,170,394 2,773,669 133,918 117,515 102,392 42,901 Milk from cows (see text) ...................................farms: 1,554 1,280 114 65 57 14 $1,000: 6,945,102 (D) 72,642 20,844 8,708 771 Sales of $50,000 or more ..................................farms: 1,520 1,279 114 65 52 10 $1,000: 6,944,530 (D) 72,642 20,844 8,533 (D) Hogs and pigs ...............................................farms: 1,163 22 13 14 48 51 $1,000: 51,526 43,219 2,135 (D) 2,629 728 Sales of $50,000 or more ..................................farms: 43 9 5 5 19 5 $1,000: 48,608 43,016 2,053 768 2,401 370 Sheep, goats, wool, mohair, and : milk (see text) ............................................farms: 4,376 82 52 78 172 202 $1,000: 108,136 58,504 15,086 9,287 8,429 3,664 Sales of $50,000 or more ..................................farms: 196 50 25 33 57 31 $1,000: 91,373 58,192 14,673 9,006 7,419 2,083 Horses, ponies, mules, burros, and : donkeys ....................................................farms: 3,050 45 28 58 133 216 $1,000: 62,241 (D) 3,306 8,998 10,047 7,615 Sales of $50,000 or more ..................................farms: 212 12 7 31 70 92 $1,000: 35,731 8,702 3,135 8,699 9,395 5,801 Poultry and eggs ............................................farms: 3,758 145 38 67 150 142 $1,000: 1,663,919 1,626,383 12,786 12,113 6,875 2,010 Sales of $50,000 or more ..................................farms: 248 127 16 35 44 26 $1,000: 1,658,976 1,626,289 12,652 11,963 6,490 1,583 Aquaculture .................................................farms: 229 42 13 30 21 19 $1,000: 103,016 78,367 8,798 10,338 3,292 1,113 Sales of $50,000 or more ..................................farms: 119 42 13 29 20 15 $1,000: 101,782 78,367 8,798 (D) (D) (D) Other animals and other animal : products (see text) ........................................farms: 1,766 28 23 38 131 124 $1,000: 67,309 34,108 7,146 7,057 7,858 3,464 Sales of $50,000 or more ..................................farms: 150 12 14 26 57 41 $1,000: 58,094 33,986 7,076 6,996 7,285 2,751 : Value of- : Government payments ...........................................farms: 7,593 2,053 780 879 952 663 $1,000: 146,919 77,799 22,042 16,703 10,827 4,727 : Landlord's share of total : sales (see text) .............................................farms: 2,147 579 362 376 339 176 $1,000: 266,275 198,192 36,198 19,482 9,263 2,050 : Agricultural products sold directly to : individuals for human : consumption (see text) .......................................farms: 8,588 214 124 225 484 574 $1,000: 169,915 66,885 16,802 21,685 23,548 14,061 : FARM PRODUCTION EXPENSES : : Total farm production expenses 1/ ...............................farms: 77,857 6,333 3,186 4,117 6,922 6,679 $1,000: 35,455,667 29,618,320 1,765,606 1,244,892 1,019,901 462,934 Average per farm ..........................................dollars: 455,395 4,676,823 554,176 302,378 147,342 69,312 : Fertilizer, lime, and soil : conditioners purchased .......................................farms: 38,958 4,930 2,457 3,008 4,687 4,392 $1,000: 1,806,062 1,521,628 108,171 74,319 49,483 21,205 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 ...................................................: 24,634 252 276 667 2,110 3,080 $5,000 to $24,999 ..............................................: 7,312 710 822 1,331 2,096 1,225 $25,000 to $49,999 .............................................: 2,319 629 575 607 374 63 $50,000 or more ................................................: 4,693 3,339 784 403 107 24 : Chemicals purchased ...........................................farms: 44,536 5,540 2,872 3,550 5,740 5,057 $1,000: 2,190,674 1,862,064 131,258 85,057 59,217 22,546 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 ...................................................: 28,059 383 357 789 2,438 3,591 $5,000 to $24,999 ..............................................: 8,444 758 849 1,519 2,744 1,390 $25,000 to $49,999 .............................................: 2,676 661 694 782 432 60 $50,000 or more ................................................: 5,357 3,738 972 460 126 16 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 65. Summary by Market Value of Agricultural Products Sold: 2012 (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. : : Cut Christmas trees and : short-rotation woody crops .................................farms: 25 65 69 25 57 67 $1,000: 365 684 430 89 (D) (D) Sales of $50,000 or more ..................................farms: - - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - - Cut Christmas trees .......................................farms: 21 62 68 23 47 65 $1,000: 299 675 422 83 63 (D) Sales of $50,000 or more ................................farms: - - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - - Short-rotation woody crops ................................farms: 7 5 3 3 13 2 $1,000: 66 9 8 6 (D) (D) Sales of $50,000 or more ................................farms: - - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - - Other crops and hay (see text) ..............................farms: 537 675 486 359 254 182 $1,000: 11,307 7,513 2,582 1,046 369 88 Sales of $50,000 or more ..................................farms: - - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - - Maple syrup (see text) ....................................farms: - - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - - Sales of $50,000 or more ................................farms: - - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - - : Cattle and calves ...........................................farms: 1,171 2,099 1,644 1,555 1,258 458 $1,000: 30,723 25,979 9,762 4,920 1,901 297 Sales of $50,000 or more ..................................farms: - - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - - Milk from cows (see text) ...................................farms: 7 1 10 3 3 - $1,000: 172 (D) (D) 9 (D) - Sales of $50,000 or more ..................................farms: - - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - - Hogs and pigs ...............................................farms: 73 123 204 170 237 208 $1,000: 392 466 461 255 194 (D) Sales of $50,000 or more ..................................farms: - - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - - Sheep, goats, wool, mohair, and : milk (see text) ............................................farms: 275 611 570 605 820 909 $1,000: 3,493 4,924 1,986 1,356 1,011 397 Sales of $50,000 or more ..................................farms: - - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - - Horses, ponies, mules, burros, and : donkeys ....................................................farms: 432 775 501 428 319 115 $1,000: 10,105 8,827 2,443 1,227 448 (D) Sales of $50,000 or more ..................................farms: - - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - - Poultry and eggs ............................................farms: 233 487 585 500 560 851 $1,000: 1,166 880 639 420 385 261 Sales of $50,000 or more ..................................farms: - - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - - Aquaculture .................................................farms: 17 43 11 10 16 7 $1,000: 554 (D) (D) 23 (D) 2 Sales of $50,000 or more ..................................farms: - - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - - Other animals and other animal : products (see text) ........................................farms: 216 351 275 164 219 197 $1,000: 3,654 2,701 809 269 189 53 Sales of $50,000 or more ..................................farms: - - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - - : Value of- : Government payments ...........................................farms: 496 435 209 111 86 929 $1,000: 3,004 2,442 935 343 259 7,836 : Landlord's share of total : sales (see text) .............................................farms: 110 67 55 30 39 14 $1,000: 692 231 88 56 18 3 : Agricultural products sold directly to : individuals for human : consumption (see text) .......................................farms: 766 1,557 1,662 1,191 1,073 718 $1,000: 9,428 9,612 4,465 2,105 1,083 242 : FARM PRODUCTION EXPENSES : : Total farm production expenses 1/ ...............................farms: 7,043 10,137 7,718 5,736 4,590 15,396 $1,000: 319,982 304,126 132,279 87,664 63,752 436,211 Average per farm ..........................................dollars: 45,433 30,002 17,139 15,283 13,889 28,333 : Fertilizer, lime, and soil : conditioners purchased .......................................farms: 4,109 4,973 3,663 2,416 1,557 2,766 $1,000: 11,068 7,746 3,096 1,516 1,067 6,764 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 ...................................................: 3,537 4,666 3,596 2,386 1,541 2,523 $5,000 to $24,999 ..............................................: 546 292 62 29 11 188 $25,000 to $49,999 .............................................: 18 15 5 1 3 29 $50,000 or more ................................................: 8 - - - 2 26 : Chemicals purchased ...........................................farms: 4,719 5,676 3,751 2,448 1,600 3,583 $1,000: 11,998 7,219 2,029 1,170 948 7,167 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 ...................................................: 4,103 5,413 3,704 2,422 1,583 3,276 $5,000 to $24,999 ..............................................: 586 246 45 24 15 268 $25,000 to $49,999 .............................................: 18 12 2 2 - 13 $50,000 or more ................................................: 12 5 - - 2 26 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 65. Summary by Market Value of Agricultural Products Sold: 2012 (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. : : Seeds, plants, vines, and : trees purchased ..............................................farms: 27,527 4,664 2,072 2,216 2,862 2,403 $1,000: 1,317,934 1,163,513 56,427 39,244 21,557 10,169 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $999 .....................................................: 11,381 145 209 346 789 1,028 $1,000 to $4,999 ...............................................: 6,676 524 520 576 937 836 $5,000 to $24,999 ..............................................: 5,157 1,089 686 935 972 470 $25,000 to $49,999 .............................................: 1,473 608 381 205 104 48 $50,000 or more ................................................: 2,840 2,298 276 154 60 21 : Livestock and poultry purchased or : leased .......................................................farms: 12,585 1,250 348 455 823 726 $1,000: 1,254,286 1,130,871 32,819 25,693 23,625 8,665 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 ...................................................: 7,903 117 58 87 250 292 $5,000 to $24,999 ..............................................: 2,950 237 90 178 352 334 $25,000 to $99,999 .............................................: 995 393 111 114 161 98 $100,000 to $249,999 ...........................................: 335 182 43 53 53 2 $250,000 or more ...............................................: 402 321 46 23 7 - : Breeding livestock purchased or : leased .....................................................farms: 6,850 820 210 283 515 490 $1,000: 255,730 205,188 11,461 8,960 10,489 4,487 Other livestock and poultry : purchased or leased (see text) .............................farms: 7,673 612 194 238 442 358 $1,000: 998,556 925,683 21,358 16,733 13,136 4,179 : Feed purchased ................................................farms: 30,014 1,969 516 781 1,454 1,390 $1,000: 6,069,374 5,695,041 95,007 54,594 49,001 22,895 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 ...................................................: 16,191 82 53 135 372 459 $5,000 to $24,999 ..............................................: 9,417 109 100 189 504 612 $25,000 to $99,999 .............................................: 2,042 72 101 250 480 307 $100,000 to $249,999 ...........................................: 596 123 121 184 87 12 $250,000 or more ...............................................: 1,768 1,583 141 23 11 - : Gasoline, fuels, and oils purchased ...........................farms: 70,844 6,237 3,085 3,924 6,554 6,256 $1,000: 1,552,328 1,231,982 97,512 65,533 58,342 26,788 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 ...................................................: 51,974 227 432 1,136 3,503 4,723 $5,000 to $24,999 ..............................................: 11,182 1,055 1,373 2,090 2,617 1,396 $25,000 to $49,999 .............................................: 2,745 1,059 726 461 288 102 $50,000 or more ................................................: 4,943 3,896 554 237 146 35 : Utilities .....................................................farms: 60,680 6,330 3,186 4,107 6,249 5,708 $1,000: 1,684,343 1,314,042 107,547 76,984 65,698 36,637 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $999 .....................................................: 16,704 34 40 144 459 980 $1,000 to $4,999 ...............................................: 23,136 212 357 842 2,329 2,726 $5,000 to $24,999 ..............................................: 12,275 837 1,430 2,263 2,862 1,728 $25,000 to $49,999 .............................................: 3,178 1,046 731 585 427 210 $50,000 or more ................................................: 5,387 4,201 628 273 172 64 : Supplies, repairs, and maintenance costs ......................farms: 63,106 6,329 3,185 4,115 6,249 5,714 $1,000: 2,042,434 1,642,279 118,800 82,486 74,828 36,545 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 ...................................................: 41,934 181 353 1,022 2,737 3,659 $5,000 to $24,999 ..............................................: 12,194 883 1,359 2,110 2,785 1,819 $25,000 to $49,999 .............................................: 3,091 891 753 606 479 170 $50,000 or more ................................................: 5,887 4,374 720 377 248 66 : Hired farm labor ..............................................farms: 33,955 5,975 2,688 3,049 4,407 3,333 $1,000: 5,877,973 4,792,475 338,929 240,363 197,360 78,351 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 ...................................................: 9,680 24 60 191 670 936 $5,000 to $24,999 ..............................................: 8,646 171 329 702 1,486 1,472 $25,000 to $99,999 .............................................: 8,011 928 1,206 1,432 1,820 813 $100,000 to $249,999 ...........................................: 3,496 1,450 725 574 326 91 $250,000 or more ...............................................: 4,122 3,402 368 150 105 21 : Contract labor ................................................farms: 25,067 3,833 1,841 2,185 3,612 3,111 $1,000: 3,378,012 2,758,220 199,080 140,684 135,821 57,046 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $999 .....................................................: 2,190 21 25 32 47 131 $1,000 to $4,999 ...............................................: 5,812 96 118 168 448 705 $5,000 to $24,999 ..............................................: 7,825 372 409 617 1,315 1,545 $25,000 to $49,999 .............................................: 2,941 362 272 433 875 509 $50,000 or more ................................................: 6,299 2,982 1,017 935 927 221 : Customwork and custom hauling .................................farms: 19,644 3,843 1,666 1,908 2,783 2,229 $1,000: 1,258,384 1,015,894 87,674 61,625 44,070 19,790 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $999 .....................................................: 3,589 25 29 71 217 351 $1,000 to $4,999 ...............................................: 4,990 117 136 269 720 857 $5,000 to $24,999 ..............................................: 5,384 540 567 816 1,332 893 $25,000 to $49,999 .............................................: 1,859 543 381 367 340 82 $50,000 or more ................................................: 3,822 2,618 553 385 174 46 : Cash rent for land, buildings, : and grazing fees .............................................farms: 15,007 3,588 1,287 1,349 1,733 1,256 $1,000: 1,511,985 1,233,024 92,011 55,645 52,285 21,372 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 ...................................................: 5,241 110 103 160 381 417 $5,000 to $9,999 ...............................................: 1,649 123 90 141 268 253 $10,000 to $24,999 .............................................: 2,878 526 310 362 557 434 $25,000 or more ................................................: 5,239 2,829 784 686 527 152 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 65. Summary by Market Value of Agricultural Products Sold: 2012 (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. : : Seeds, plants, vines, and : trees purchased ..............................................farms: 2,333 2,923 2,366 1,665 1,260 2,763 $1,000: 5,292 5,522 2,406 1,359 943 11,502 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $999 .....................................................: 1,201 1,796 1,748 1,346 1,052 1,721 $1,000 to $4,999 ...............................................: 847 890 542 275 174 555 $5,000 to $24,999 ..............................................: 272 223 72 41 34 363 $25,000 to $49,999 .............................................: 7 7 4 3 - 106 $50,000 or more ................................................: 6 7 - - - 18 : Livestock and poultry purchased or : leased .......................................................farms: 965 1,529 1,242 1,192 1,212 2,843 $1,000: 7,510 7,773 3,671 2,818 1,943 8,897 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 ...................................................: 561 1,066 996 1,035 1,126 2,315 $5,000 to $24,999 ..............................................: 339 441 238 151 85 505 $25,000 to $99,999 .............................................: 63 17 8 6 1 23 $100,000 to $249,999 ...........................................: 2 - - - - - $250,000 or more ...............................................: - 5 - - - - : Breeding livestock purchased or : leased .....................................................farms: 548 839 601 558 598 1,388 $1,000: 3,654 3,135 1,459 1,154 930 4,813 Other livestock and poultry : purchased or leased (see text) .............................farms: 558 905 837 801 820 1,908 $1,000: 3,856 4,639 2,211 1,663 1,013 4,084 : Feed purchased ................................................farms: 2,043 3,664 2,918 2,703 2,699 9,877 $1,000: 25,228 29,315 15,309 12,542 9,720 60,722 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 ...................................................: 842 1,909 1,923 1,966 2,125 6,325 $5,000 to $24,999 ..............................................: 935 1,575 929 688 554 3,222 $25,000 to $99,999 .............................................: 245 156 62 47 17 305 $100,000 to $249,999 ...........................................: 20 24 4 1 3 17 $250,000 or more ...............................................: 1 - - 1 - 8 : Gasoline, fuels, and oils purchased ...........................farms: 6,526 8,997 6,666 4,975 3,929 13,695 $1,000: 18,914 18,670 7,044 4,907 3,367 19,269 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 ...................................................: 5,541 8,161 6,414 4,814 3,849 13,174 $5,000 to $24,999 ..............................................: 917 765 245 159 79 486 $25,000 to $49,999 .............................................: 48 43 - 2 1 15 $50,000 or more ................................................: 20 28 7 - - 20 : Utilities .....................................................farms: 5,763 7,555 5,510 3,837 2,904 9,531 $1,000: 25,257 23,641 8,756 5,342 3,736 16,702 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $999 .....................................................: 1,425 2,585 2,646 2,019 1,639 4,733 $1,000 to $4,999 ...............................................: 2,973 3,699 2,641 1,704 1,200 4,453 $5,000 to $24,999 ..............................................: 1,250 1,196 218 110 62 319 $25,000 to $49,999 .............................................: 97 65 2 4 1 10 $50,000 or more ................................................: 18 10 3 - 2 16 : Supplies, repairs, and maintenance costs ......................farms: 5,840 7,861 5,790 4,146 3,193 10,684 $1,000: 24,457 23,698 8,292 4,842 3,641 22,566 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 ...................................................: 4,387 6,736 5,589 4,013 3,125 10,132 $5,000 to $24,999 ..............................................: 1,330 1,026 194 132 65 491 $25,000 to $49,999 .............................................: 93 74 2 1 2 20 $50,000 or more ................................................: 30 25 5 - 1 41 : Hired farm labor ..............................................farms: 2,852 3,413 2,142 1,451 915 3,730 $1,000: 53,407 46,277 22,263 12,537 8,424 87,588 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 ...................................................: 1,176 1,857 1,476 1,001 643 1,646 $5,000 to $24,999 ..............................................: 1,129 1,146 473 296 177 1,265 $25,000 to $99,999 .............................................: 443 320 153 141 81 674 $100,000 to $249,999 ...........................................: 91 76 34 13 11 105 $250,000 or more ...............................................: 13 14 6 - 3 40 : Contract labor ................................................farms: 2,679 2,856 1,594 924 497 1,935 $1,000: 34,488 19,871 7,093 3,455 2,347 19,907 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $999 .....................................................: 208 514 447 300 182 283 $1,000 to $4,999 ...............................................: 832 1,270 794 438 204 739 $5,000 to $24,999 ..............................................: 1,332 932 311 168 93 731 $25,000 to $49,999 .............................................: 214 104 30 17 13 112 $50,000 or more ................................................: 93 36 12 1 5 70 : Customwork and custom hauling .................................farms: 1,840 1,739 989 608 415 1,624 $1,000: 9,453 5,662 2,135 1,163 796 10,122 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $999 .....................................................: 424 692 534 373 252 621 $1,000 to $4,999 ...............................................: 860 768 351 188 133 591 $5,000 to $24,999 ..............................................: 508 256 95 40 23 314 $25,000 to $49,999 .............................................: 39 16 9 7 7 68 $50,000 or more ................................................: 9 7 - - - 30 : Cash rent for land, buildings, : and grazing fees .............................................farms: 1,208 1,615 790 490 388 1,303 $1,000: 16,411 17,754 2,792 1,185 1,232 18,273 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 ...................................................: 609 1,027 674 443 338 979 $5,000 to $9,999 ...............................................: 262 274 62 20 30 126 $10,000 to $24,999 .............................................: 248 236 45 27 17 116 $25,000 or more ................................................: 89 78 9 - 3 82 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 65. Summary by Market Value of Agricultural Products Sold: 2012 (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. : : Rent and lease expenses for machinery, : equipment, and farm share of vehicles ........................farms: 7,895 2,408 813 729 920 592 $1,000: 400,054 354,784 17,028 11,192 7,497 3,440 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $999 .....................................................: 1,914 116 77 87 199 177 $1,000 to $4,999 ...............................................: 2,150 242 186 218 345 232 $5,000 to $24,999 ..............................................: 1,990 639 364 291 319 157 $25,000 to $49,999 .............................................: 567 306 100 89 37 19 $50,000 or more ................................................: 1,274 1,105 86 44 20 7 : Interest expense ..............................................farms: 26,459 4,553 1,892 2,107 3,030 2,238 $1,000: 1,217,781 849,956 73,306 59,531 55,933 30,767 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 ...................................................: 8,135 289 299 502 1,034 852 $5,000 to $24,999 ..............................................: 11,048 918 752 929 1,349 1,047 $25,000 to $99,999 .............................................: 5,129 1,601 683 574 595 318 $100,000 or more ...............................................: 2,147 1,745 158 102 52 21 : Secured by real estate ......................................farms: 20,307 3,110 1,339 1,501 2,340 1,759 $1,000: 941,302 622,560 60,576 49,128 49,096 26,660 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $999 ...................................................: 1,166 40 39 55 121 108 $1,000 to $4,999 .............................................: 4,137 140 105 216 534 458 $5,000 to $24,999 ............................................: 9,276 600 511 674 1,111 882 $25,000 to $49,999 ...........................................: 2,690 484 314 294 365 229 $50,000 or more ..............................................: 3,038 1,846 370 262 209 82 : Not secured by real estate ..................................farms: 13,273 3,172 1,146 1,224 1,477 1,006 $1,000: 276,479 227,397 12,730 10,402 6,837 4,107 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $999 ...................................................: 2,988 105 128 155 334 333 $1,000 to $4,999 .............................................: 4,701 298 350 483 702 435 $5,000 to $24,999 ............................................: 3,514 991 531 500 410 230 $25,000 to $49,999 ...........................................: 835 607 101 69 30 5 $50,000 or more ..............................................: 1,235 1,171 36 17 1 3 : Property taxes paid ...........................................farms: 71,398 5,715 2,863 3,675 6,272 6,055 $1,000: 827,587 449,099 54,915 48,497 55,410 38,590 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 ...................................................: 45,137 569 498 1,024 2,734 3,677 $5,000 to $9,999 ...............................................: 12,923 472 596 1,057 1,949 1,495 $10,000 to $24,999 .............................................: 7,776 1,198 1,089 1,169 1,268 697 $25,000 or more ................................................: 5,562 3,476 680 425 321 186 : All other production : expenses (see text) ..........................................farms: 43,111 6,299 3,170 4,083 4,414 3,332 $1,000: 3,066,456 2,603,448 155,123 123,445 69,773 28,128 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 ...................................................: 22,864 211 310 870 1,602 1,933 $5,000 to $24,999 ..............................................: 10,967 973 1,245 1,952 2,175 1,179 $25,000 to $49,999 .............................................: 2,928 842 704 597 364 134 $50,000 to $99,999 .............................................: 2,313 1,007 526 419 194 73 $100,000 or more ...............................................: 4,039 3,266 385 245 79 13 : Production expenses paid by : landlords 1/ ...................................................farms: 1,305 435 191 140 159 72 $1,000: 54,690 43,857 4,817 2,870 1,721 588 : Depreciation expenses claimed ...................................farms: 39,342 6,323 3,174 4,102 4,542 3,633 $1,000: 2,256,892 1,717,282 152,593 119,786 85,769 42,941 : NET CASH FARM INCOME (SEE TEXT) : : Net cash farm income of operations ..............................farms: 77,857 6,333 3,186 4,117 6,922 6,679 $1,000: 8,523,285 7,909,985 625,878 317,126 189,176 72,532 Average per farm ..........................................dollars: 109,474 1,249,011 196,446 77,028 27,330 10,860 : Farms with net gains 2/ ......................................number: 36,283 5,273 2,632 3,254 5,156 4,858 Average net gain ........................................dollars: 314,056 1,754,795 305,936 155,991 78,020 40,663 : Gain of- : Less than $1,000 ...............................................: 1,602 8 4 9 20 32 $1,000 to $4,999 ...............................................: 4,785 8 9 29 106 189 $5,000 to $9,999 ...............................................: 3,597 20 21 47 140 261 $10,000 to $24,999 .............................................: 5,723 33 42 136 453 1,040 $25,000 to $49,999 .............................................: 4,813 60 69 250 955 1,883 $50,000 or more ................................................: 15,763 5,144 2,487 2,783 3,482 1,453 : Farms with net losses ........................................number: 41,574 1,060 554 863 1,766 1,821 Average net loss ........................................dollars: 69,072 1,267,028 323,729 220,705 120,664 68,649 : Loss of- : Less than $1,000 ...............................................: 1,982 - 2 6 31 45 $1,000 to $4,999 ...............................................: 8,924 6 8 36 85 150 $5,000 to $9,999 ...............................................: 7,815 6 9 35 123 170 $10,000 to $24,999 .............................................: 10,269 29 45 70 294 396 $25,000 to $49,999 .............................................: 5,478 49 43 108 310 369 $50,000 or more ................................................: 7,106 970 447 608 923 691 : Net cash farm income of operators ...............................farms: 77,857 6,333 3,186 4,117 6,922 6,679 $1,000: 8,177,199 7,632,609 586,402 298,719 180,121 71,041 Average per farm ..........................................dollars: 105,028 1,205,212 184,056 72,557 26,021 10,636 : Operators reporting net gains 2/ ..............................farms: 36,052 5,218 2,580 3,213 5,112 4,845 Average net gain ........................................dollars: 308,890 1,734,243 299,289 153,721 77,349 40,550 : Gain of- : Less than $1,000 ...............................................: 1,605 9 5 9 22 31 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 65. Summary by Market Value of Agricultural Products Sold: 2012 (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. : : Rent and lease expenses for machinery, : equipment, and farm share of vehicles ........................farms: 538 544 307 205 151 688 $1,000: 1,371 1,604 431 366 180 2,162 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $999 .....................................................: 239 255 195 110 105 354 $1,000 to $4,999 ...............................................: 243 217 86 73 39 269 $5,000 to $24,999 ..............................................: 47 63 26 22 7 55 $25,000 to $49,999 .............................................: 6 8 - - - 2 $50,000 or more ................................................: 3 1 - - - 8 : Interest expense ..............................................farms: 2,164 2,544 1,580 1,106 866 4,379 $1,000: 24,711 28,833 14,272 11,829 8,293 60,350 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 ...................................................: 856 1,058 710 473 411 1,651 $5,000 to $24,999 ..............................................: 1,073 1,220 740 520 381 2,119 $25,000 to $99,999 .............................................: 226 247 129 108 73 575 $100,000 or more ...............................................: 9 19 1 5 1 34 : Secured by real estate ......................................farms: 1,698 2,044 1,261 926 734 3,595 $1,000: 21,805 25,849 12,392 10,759 7,586 54,890 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $999 ...................................................: 129 156 111 70 89 248 $1,000 to $4,999 .............................................: 408 542 387 291 221 835 $5,000 to $24,999 ............................................: 947 1,119 660 464 353 1,955 $25,000 to $49,999 ...........................................: 166 156 91 83 66 442 $50,000 or more ..............................................: 48 71 12 18 5 115 : Not secured by real estate ..................................farms: 996 1,057 686 423 310 1,776 $1,000: 2,905 2,985 1,879 1,070 706 5,460 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $999 ...................................................: 353 386 305 186 135 568 $1,000 to $4,999 .............................................: 447 477 255 176 135 943 $5,000 to $24,999 ............................................: 193 188 119 61 40 251 $25,000 to $49,999 ...........................................: 2 6 7 - - 8 $50,000 or more ..............................................: 1 - - - - 6 : Property taxes paid ...........................................farms: 6,481 9,263 7,068 5,282 4,207 14,517 $1,000: 30,850 40,362 24,968 17,139 13,108 54,649 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 ...................................................: 4,535 6,932 5,638 4,360 3,538 11,632 $5,000 to $9,999 ...............................................: 1,343 1,658 1,100 680 536 2,037 $10,000 to $24,999 .............................................: 505 556 292 211 115 676 $25,000 or more ................................................: 98 117 38 31 18 172 : All other production : expenses (see text) ..........................................farms: 3,406 4,333 2,955 2,207 1,790 7,122 $1,000: 19,568 20,177 7,722 5,495 4,006 29,570 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 ...................................................: 2,435 3,505 2,601 1,976 1,610 5,811 $5,000 to $24,999 ..............................................: 875 723 316 202 165 1,162 $25,000 to $49,999 .............................................: 60 63 28 23 10 103 $50,000 to $99,999 .............................................: 24 24 10 4 3 29 $100,000 or more ...............................................: 12 18 - 2 2 17 : Production expenses paid by : landlords 1/ ...................................................farms: 70 71 59 41 21 46 $1,000: 315 229 93 87 44 68 : Depreciation expenses claimed ...................................farms: 3,391 4,049 2,454 1,718 1,313 4,643 $1,000: 30,917 27,875 15,188 9,788 9,073 45,681 : NET CASH FARM INCOME (SEE TEXT) : : Net cash farm income of operations ..............................farms: 7,043 10,137 7,718 5,736 4,590 15,396 $1,000: -28,295 -100,187 -50,200 -53,262 -35,658 -323,810 Average per farm ..........................................dollars: -4,017 -9,883 -6,504 -9,286 -7,769 -21,032 : Farms with net gains 2/ ......................................number: 4,396 5,140 2,763 1,158 459 1,194 Average net gain ........................................dollars: 21,021 10,884 9,306 6,667 32,587 27,209 : Gain of- : Less than $1,000 ...............................................: 79 300 439 376 220 115 $1,000 to $4,999 ...............................................: 453 1,324 1,584 645 146 292 $5,000 to $9,999 ...............................................: 596 1,680 584 46 27 175 $10,000 to $24,999 .............................................: 1,932 1,613 93 49 19 313 $25,000 to $49,999 .............................................: 1,207 144 28 22 25 170 $50,000 or more ................................................: 129 79 35 20 22 129 : Farms with net losses ........................................number: 2,647 4,997 4,955 4,578 4,131 14,202 Average net loss ........................................dollars: 45,601 31,245 15,321 13,321 12,253 25,088 : Loss of- : Less than $1,000 ...............................................: 85 261 464 428 301 359 $1,000 to $4,999 ...............................................: 334 992 1,440 1,427 1,423 3,023 $5,000 to $9,999 ...............................................: 384 858 1,099 1,018 963 3,150 $10,000 to $24,999 .............................................: 721 1,460 1,187 1,047 972 4,048 $25,000 to $49,999 .............................................: 513 729 514 449 328 2,066 $50,000 or more ................................................: 610 697 251 209 144 1,556 : Net cash farm income of operators ...............................farms: 7,043 10,137 7,718 5,736 4,590 15,396 $1,000: -28,687 -100,203 -50,196 -53,232 -35,631 -323,745 Average per farm ..........................................dollars: -4,073 -9,885 -6,504 -9,280 -7,763 -21,028 : Operators reporting net gains 2/ ..............................farms: 4,380 5,135 2,760 1,158 457 1,194 Average net gain ........................................dollars: 21,017 10,899 9,309 6,658 32,725 27,212 : Gain of- : Less than $1,000 ...............................................: 77 297 439 383 218 115 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 65. Summary by Market Value of Agricultural Products Sold: 2012 (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 (SEE TEXT) - Con. : : Net cash farm income of operators - Con. : Operators reporting net gains 2/ - Con. : Gain of- - Con. : : $1,000 to $4,999 ...............................................: 4,774 8 10 34 105 187 $5,000 to $9,999 ...............................................: 3,610 23 22 52 143 262 $10,000 to $24,999 .............................................: 5,758 37 54 132 463 1,059 $25,000 to $49,999 .............................................: 4,811 66 74 252 965 1,861 $50,000 or more ................................................: 15,494 5,075 2,415 2,734 3,414 1,445 : Operators reporting net losses ................................farms: 41,805 1,115 606 904 1,810 1,834 Average net loss ........................................dollars: 70,779 1,270,558 306,539 215,915 118,942 68,389 : Loss of- : Less than $1,000 ...............................................: 2,006 - 5 6 33 39 $1,000 to $4,999 ...............................................: 8,944 6 10 42 90 152 $5,000 to $9,999 ...............................................: 7,798 6 9 30 117 173 $10,000 to $24,999 .............................................: 10,315 36 49 73 314 403 $25,000 to $49,999 .............................................: 5,518 47 58 120 318 377 $50,000 or more ................................................: 7,224 1,020 475 633 938 690 : COMMODITY CREDIT CORPORATION : LOANS (SEE TEXT) : : Total ...........................................................farms: 521 185 110 119 94 4 $1,000: 122,036 82,701 21,481 13,185 4,533 110 : INCOME FROM FARM-RELATED SOURCES : : Total income from farm-related sources, gross : before taxes and expenses (see text) ...........................farms: 23,685 3,439 1,547 1,789 2,685 2,223 $1,000: 1,204,560 578,942 124,317 100,936 95,047 60,878 Customwork and other agricultural : services .....................................................farms: 5,255 1,109 523 484 647 505 $1,000: 383,434 228,860 47,977 26,772 27,693 12,490 : Gross cash rent or share payments .............................farms: 6,000 863 331 415 631 591 $1,000: 256,997 127,678 23,158 19,896 19,406 14,459 Sales of forest products, excluding : Christmas trees, short rotation woody : crops, and maple products ....................................farms: 862 33 19 52 41 80 $1,000: 27,613 948 (D) 580 822 4,959 Agri-tourism and recreational services : (see text) ...................................................farms: 1,699 103 78 122 163 132 $1,000: 64,520 12,271 5,970 15,729 3,708 6,358 Patronage dividends and refunds : from cooperatives ............................................farms: 7,469 1,892 745 764 1,149 763 $1,000: 171,066 117,434 18,142 13,833 11,522 4,645 Crop and livestock insurance : payments received ............................................farms: 1,568 293 169 150 234 154 $1,000: 62,457 28,847 8,326 8,416 6,348 3,883 Amount from state and local government : agricultural program payments ................................farms: 343 64 29 23 43 41 $1,000: 4,218 1,590 (D) 496 608 263 Other farm-related income : sources (see text) ...........................................farms: 5,192 546 199 171 340 334 $1,000: 234,255 61,315 19,272 15,215 24,940 13,821 : LAND USE : : Total cropland ..................................................farms: 57,731 5,830 3,010 3,785 6,317 6,027 acres: 9,591,783 6,521,564 848,853 603,728 540,073 254,631 Harvested cropland ............................................farms: 53,372 5,760 2,978 3,755 6,234 5,963 acres: 8,007,461 5,880,909 726,471 508,138 392,478 181,984 Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 49 acres ..................................................: 38,391 351 347 1,109 3,941 5,083 50 to 99 acres .................................................: 4,412 241 555 1,062 1,281 557 100 to 199 acres ...............................................: 3,567 703 858 789 664 249 200 to 499 acres ...............................................: 3,538 1,627 824 668 291 59 500 to 999 acres ...............................................: 1,780 1,236 347 104 50 15 1,000 to 1,999 acres ...........................................: 950 878 40 20 7 - 2,000 acres or more ............................................: 734 724 7 3 - - : Cropland- : Other pasture and grazing land that could : have been used for crops without additional : improvements (see text) ....................................farms: 2,879 205 66 79 186 150 acres: 492,270 157,405 43,027 51,411 55,078 41,780 On which all crops failed or : were abandoned .............................................farms: 2,425 155 69 88 180 196 acres: 207,072 74,754 19,079 9,230 22,013 6,084 Idle or used for cover crops or soil : improvement, but not harvested and not : pastured or grazed (see text) ..............................farms: 6,204 613 260 304 473 455 acres: 674,022 305,377 39,526 23,685 35,691 19,455 In cultivated summer fallow .................................farms: 1,477 258 86 118 145 103 acres: 210,958 103,119 20,750 11,264 34,813 5,328 : Total woodland ..................................................farms: 7,345 215 142 235 453 541 acres: 1,575,520 126,445 57,494 142,898 260,951 168,507 Woodland pastured .............................................farms: 3,519 92 54 95 172 199 acres: 855,116 67,686 37,571 89,950 181,439 97,452 Woodland not pastured .........................................farms: 4,610 138 96 162 319 390 acres: 720,404 58,759 19,923 52,948 79,512 71,055 Permanent pasture and rangeland, : other than cropland and woodland : pastured (see text) ............................................farms: 21,886 994 444 684 1,225 1,095 acres: 13,036,448 3,771,128 1,356,303 1,581,040 2,054,340 1,072,808 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 65. Summary by Market Value of Agricultural Products Sold: 2012 (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 (SEE TEXT) - Con. : : Net cash farm income of operators - Con. : Operators reporting net gains 2/ - Con. : Gain of- - Con. : : $1,000 to $4,999 ...............................................: 453 1,323 1,579 637 146 292 $5,000 to $9,999 ...............................................: 593 1,680 586 47 27 175 $10,000 to $24,999 .............................................: 1,927 1,612 93 49 19 313 $25,000 to $49,999 .............................................: 1,204 144 28 22 25 170 $50,000 or more ................................................: 126 79 35 20 22 129 : Operators reporting net losses ................................farms: 2,663 5,002 4,958 4,578 4,133 14,202 Average net loss ........................................dollars: 45,341 31,222 15,306 13,312 12,240 25,083 : Loss of- : Less than $1,000 ...............................................: 92 267 468 433 304 359 $1,000 to $4,999 ...............................................: 341 991 1,443 1,422 1,422 3,025 $5,000 to $9,999 ...............................................: 386 855 1,094 1,017 963 3,148 $10,000 to $24,999 .............................................: 721 1,461 1,189 1,048 973 4,048 $25,000 to $49,999 .............................................: 513 731 512 449 327 2,066 $50,000 or more ................................................: 610 697 252 209 144 1,556 : COMMODITY CREDIT CORPORATION : LOANS (SEE TEXT) : : Total ...........................................................farms: 2 4 - - 1 2 $1,000: (D) 25 - - (D) (D) : INCOME FROM FARM-RELATED SOURCES : : Total income from farm-related sources, gross : before taxes and expenses (see text) ...........................farms: 2,183 2,783 1,619 1,090 811 3,516 $1,000: 40,548 39,615 27,442 13,703 20,239 102,892 Customwork and other agricultural : services .....................................................farms: 514 819 212 181 85 176 $1,000: 7,406 11,444 10,274 1,252 480 8,787 : Gross cash rent or share payments .............................farms: 604 645 396 272 198 1,054 $1,000: 8,788 8,261 4,099 3,358 1,433 26,462 Sales of forest products, excluding : Christmas trees, short rotation woody : crops, and maple products ....................................farms: 88 106 149 74 57 163 $1,000: 598 761 (D) 2,846 11,925 2,671 Agri-tourism and recreational services : (see text) ...................................................farms: 115 217 134 114 74 447 $1,000: 1,854 3,540 1,571 2,708 679 10,132 Patronage dividends and refunds : from cooperatives ............................................farms: 552 534 317 204 189 360 $1,000: 1,978 1,209 553 208 78 1,463 Crop and livestock insurance : payments received ............................................farms: 205 107 52 33 32 139 $1,000: 2,043 561 (D) (D) 2,214 1,476 Amount from state and local government : agricultural program payments ................................farms: 39 54 12 14 4 20 $1,000: 97 226 (D) (D) 68 371 Other farm-related income : sources (see text) ...........................................farms: 402 589 511 327 243 1,530 $1,000: 17,783 13,613 10,277 3,125 3,363 51,530 : LAND USE : : Total cropland ..................................................farms: 5,976 7,910 5,947 3,874 2,510 6,545 acres: 177,954 137,136 69,936 31,467 24,167 382,274 Harvested cropland ............................................farms: 5,846 7,708 5,723 3,604 2,278 3,523 acres: 109,993 79,682 32,339 16,226 14,325 64,916 Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 49 acres ..................................................: 5,364 7,404 5,642 3,571 2,247 3,332 50 to 99 acres .................................................: 310 226 57 27 19 77 100 to 199 acres ...............................................: 142 68 21 6 8 59 200 to 499 acres ...............................................: 28 8 2 - 2 29 500 to 999 acres ...............................................: 2 2 - - - 24 1,000 to 1,999 acres ...........................................: - - 1 - 2 2 2,000 acres or more ............................................: - - - - - - : Cropland- : Other pasture and grazing land that could : have been used for crops without additional : improvements (see text) ....................................farms: 208 361 310 261 217 836 acres: 38,261 26,972 23,706 7,720 4,173 42,737 On which all crops failed or : were abandoned .............................................farms: 205 286 214 121 80 831 acres: 6,005 6,247 4,116 1,893 646 57,005 Idle or used for cover crops or soil : improvement, but not harvested and not : pastured or grazed (see text) ..............................farms: 531 558 478 303 258 1,971 acres: 17,625 19,786 7,262 4,919 4,575 196,121 In cultivated summer fallow .................................farms: 109 147 96 78 54 283 acres: 6,070 4,449 2,513 709 448 21,495 : Total woodland ..................................................farms: 694 990 850 633 565 2,027 acres: 156,029 142,503 79,769 82,968 63,560 294,396 Woodland pastured .............................................farms: 320 455 404 341 319 1,068 acres: 109,736 81,592 41,904 28,291 11,649 107,846 Woodland not pastured .........................................farms: 472 614 526 375 316 1,202 acres: 46,293 60,911 37,865 54,677 51,911 186,550 Permanent pasture and rangeland, : other than cropland and woodland : pastured (see text) ............................................farms: 1,662 2,790 2,217 2,063 1,844 6,868 acres: 661,240 844,458 226,436 154,656 120,368 1,193,671 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 65. Summary by Market Value of Agricultural Products Sold: 2012 (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. : : Land in farmsteads, homes, buildings, : livestock facilities, ponds, roads, : wasteland, etc. ................................................farms: 41,259 3,232 1,392 1,914 3,334 3,213 acres: 1,365,250 532,341 100,054 90,695 137,641 80,089 : Irrigated land ..................................................farms: 53,546 5,718 2,955 3,684 5,966 5,667 acres: 7,861,964 5,729,402 724,788 511,103 368,581 176,900 Harvested cropland ............................................farms: 47,972 5,656 2,880 3,585 5,807 5,469 acres: 7,371,411 5,579,975 659,110 446,525 321,189 146,251 Pastureland and other land ....................................farms: 7,884 297 177 278 408 407 acres: 490,553 149,427 65,678 64,578 47,392 30,649 : CONSERVATION AND CROP INSURANCE : : Land enrolled in Conservation Reserve, : Wetlands Reserve, Farmable Wetlands, : or Conservation Reserve Enhancement : Programs .......................................................farms: 470 22 16 20 22 18 acres: 105,504 15,187 9,229 2,386 6,420 3,501 : Land enrolled in crop insurance : programs (see text) ............................................farms: 13,813 3,057 1,721 2,003 2,668 1,705 acres: 4,929,132 3,320,476 507,789 426,579 349,552 151,847 : ORGANIC AGRICULTURE : : Total organic commodity sales (see text) ........................farms: 3,008 520 165 240 369 295 $1,000: 1,355,207 1,157,739 74,010 53,426 41,836 13,510 : VALUE OF LAND AND BUILDINGS : : Estimated market value of land and : buildings ......................................................farms: 77,857 6,333 3,186 4,117 6,922 6,679 $1,000: 160,524,953 77,984,742 13,559,016 11,062,670 13,181,235 7,990,266 Average per farm ..........................................dollars: 2,061,792 12,314,028 4,255,812 2,687,071 1,904,252 1,196,327 Average per acre ..........................................dollars: 6,278 7,121 5,739 4,574 4,404 5,070 : Farms by value group: : $1 to $49,999 ....................................................: 3,768 65 29 72 144 260 $50,000 to $99,999 ...............................................: 2,993 34 19 60 125 209 $100,000 to $199,999 .............................................: 6,849 54 48 88 227 400 $200,000 to $499,999 .............................................: 22,324 180 141 341 1,237 1,903 $500,000 to $999,999 .............................................: 17,939 274 290 657 1,953 1,904 : $1,000,000 to $1,999,999 .........................................: 9,621 532 609 1,215 1,664 1,092 $2,000,000 to $4,999,999 .........................................: 8,056 1,558 1,307 1,240 1,117 661 $5,000,000 to $9,999,999 .........................................: 3,283 1,538 500 285 271 159 $10,000,000 or more ..............................................: 3,024 2,098 243 159 184 91 : VALUE OF MACHINERY AND EQUIPMENT : : Estimated market value of all machinery : and equipment ..................................................farms: 77,851 6,332 3,186 4,117 6,922 6,679 $1,000: 9,709,545 5,774,850 787,764 651,181 590,932 344,086 : Farms by value group: : $1 to $4,999 .....................................................: 10,455 16 26 74 165 519 $5,000 to $9,999 .................................................: 8,336 9 23 61 268 539 $10,000 to $19,999 ...............................................: 13,025 58 89 212 723 1,208 $20,000 to $49,999 ...............................................: 18,826 189 306 687 1,803 2,104 $50,000 to $99,999 ...............................................: 11,191 415 542 990 1,867 1,384 $100,000 to $199,999 .............................................: 6,916 851 803 978 1,407 696 $200,000 to $499,999 .............................................: 5,289 1,898 954 868 610 178 $500,000 or more .................................................: 3,813 2,896 443 247 79 51 : SELECTED MACHINERY AND EQUIPMENT : : Trucks, including pickups (see text) ............................farms: 55,175 5,782 2,728 3,418 5,530 4,788 number: 132,455 47,976 9,231 8,638 11,365 8,033 : Tractors, all ...................................................farms: 53,296 5,708 2,673 3,353 5,560 5,014 number: 147,163 55,508 11,008 10,258 13,459 9,737 Less than 40 horsepower (PTO) .................................farms: 31,264 2,636 1,168 1,506 2,629 2,609 number: 49,313 10,402 2,410 2,677 4,167 3,767 40 to 99 horsepower (PTO) .....................................farms: 30,456 4,835 2,197 2,656 4,105 3,279 number: 68,295 26,586 6,070 5,648 7,379 4,960 100 horsepower (PTO) or more ..................................farms: 10,631 3,615 1,112 1,074 1,205 725 number: 29,555 18,520 2,528 1,933 1,913 1,010 : Grain and bean combines, self-propelled .........................farms: 1,710 717 287 257 182 93 number: 2,497 1,209 423 357 212 110 : Cotton pickers and strippers, : self-propelled .................................................farms: 475 332 56 37 23 9 number: 870 679 74 45 33 13 Forage harvesters, self-propelled ...............................farms: 1,629 402 123 137 214 165 number: 2,188 709 172 180 260 196 Hay balers ......................................................farms: 3,674 691 230 281 394 281 number: 4,822 1,079 329 421 538 365 : FERTILIZERS AND CHEMICALS : : Commercial fertilizer, lime, and soil : conditioners used ..............................................farms: 32,646 4,976 2,420 2,888 4,336 3,878 acres treated: 6,314,533 4,748,023 586,251 387,215 274,587 121,770 Manure used .....................................................farms: 6,794 1,071 383 484 701 588 acres treated: 712,975 510,922 59,110 42,308 36,091 20,240 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 65. Summary by Market Value of Agricultural Products Sold: 2012 (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. : : Land in farmsteads, homes, buildings, : livestock facilities, ponds, roads, : wasteland, etc. ................................................farms: 3,618 5,244 3,928 3,076 2,717 9,591 acres: 71,051 78,975 44,628 34,921 23,397 171,458 : Irrigated land ..................................................farms: 5,676 7,485 5,570 3,675 2,475 4,675 acres: 105,625 91,944 31,874 20,378 11,066 90,303 Harvested cropland ............................................farms: 5,275 6,730 4,963 3,034 1,864 2,709 acres: 80,996 54,336 19,969 8,902 5,868 48,290 Pastureland and other land ....................................farms: 668 1,039 898 800 751 2,161 acres: 24,629 37,608 11,905 11,476 5,198 42,013 : CONSERVATION AND CROP INSURANCE : : Land enrolled in Conservation Reserve, : Wetlands Reserve, Farmable Wetlands, : or Conservation Reserve Enhancement : Programs .......................................................farms: 31 18 7 7 6 303 acres: 8,567 2,734 709 96 134 56,541 : Land enrolled in crop insurance : programs (see text) ............................................farms: 1,216 767 233 94 35 314 acres: 59,026 32,688 14,161 3,600 1,059 62,355 : ORGANIC AGRICULTURE : : Total organic commodity sales (see text) ........................farms: 344 375 300 211 119 70 $1,000: 8,396 4,128 1,345 603 183 33 : VALUE OF LAND AND BUILDINGS : : Estimated market value of land and : buildings ......................................................farms: 7,043 10,137 7,718 5,736 4,590 15,396 $1,000: 6,501,489 7,618,744 4,141,895 3,087,186 2,315,443 13,082,267 Average per farm ..........................................dollars: 923,114 751,578 536,654 538,212 504,454 849,719 Average per acre ..........................................dollars: 6,097 6,333 9,844 10,155 10,002 6,407 : Farms by value group: : $1 to $49,999 ....................................................: 287 594 593 436 374 914 $50,000 to $99,999 ...............................................: 239 482 476 333 297 719 $100,000 to $199,999 .............................................: 690 1,244 866 691 606 1,935 $200,000 to $499,999 .............................................: 2,276 3,423 2,862 2,354 1,904 5,703 $500,000 to $999,999 .............................................: 1,879 2,632 2,114 1,371 1,084 3,781 : $1,000,000 to $1,999,999 .........................................: 979 1,096 565 377 228 1,264 $2,000,000 to $4,999,999 .........................................: 540 477 199 131 74 752 $5,000,000 to $9,999,999 .........................................: 105 142 28 29 14 212 $10,000,000 or more ..............................................: 48 47 15 14 9 116 : VALUE OF MACHINERY AND EQUIPMENT : : Estimated market value of all machinery : and equipment ..................................................farms: 7,043 10,137 7,718 5,736 4,590 15,391 $1,000: 280,903 318,579 196,109 142,607 101,830 520,705 : Farms by value group: : $1 to $4,999 .....................................................: 697 1,654 1,823 1,417 1,319 2,745 $5,000 to $9,999 .................................................: 854 1,456 1,238 863 725 2,300 $10,000 to $19,999 ...............................................: 1,478 2,259 1,528 1,261 985 3,224 $20,000 to $49,999 ...............................................: 2,188 2,991 2,119 1,404 1,057 3,978 $50,000 to $99,999 ...............................................: 1,142 1,175 684 529 377 2,086 $100,000 to $199,999 .............................................: 537 425 229 185 88 717 $200,000 to $499,999 .............................................: 136 150 89 77 34 295 $500,000 or more .................................................: 11 27 8 - 5 46 : SELECTED MACHINERY AND EQUIPMENT : : Trucks, including pickups (see text) ............................farms: 4,969 6,725 4,808 3,729 2,894 9,804 number: 7,551 9,786 6,490 4,962 3,869 14,554 : Tractors, all ...................................................farms: 5,144 6,479 4,529 3,387 2,331 9,118 number: 8,739 9,994 6,419 4,906 3,307 13,828 Less than 40 horsepower (PTO) .................................farms: 2,997 4,217 3,198 2,453 1,726 6,125 number: 3,932 5,377 3,900 3,072 2,089 7,520 40 to 99 horsepower (PTO) .....................................farms: 2,896 2,893 1,678 1,234 773 3,910 number: 4,126 3,792 2,106 1,558 992 5,078 100 horsepower (PTO) or more ..................................farms: 519 656 358 227 179 961 number: 681 825 413 276 226 1,230 : Grain and bean combines, self-propelled .........................farms: 50 34 34 9 2 45 number: 52 36 35 (D) (D) 52 : Cotton pickers and strippers, : self-propelled .................................................farms: 7 8 3 - - - number: 8 12 6 - - - Forage harvesters, self-propelled ...............................farms: 128 130 83 61 31 155 number: 159 147 91 67 31 176 Hay balers ......................................................farms: 325 396 286 188 123 479 number: 404 486 323 210 128 539 : FERTILIZERS AND CHEMICALS : : Commercial fertilizer, lime, and soil : conditioners used ..............................................farms: 3,415 3,784 2,524 1,617 970 1,838 acres treated: 62,687 44,005 16,589 7,926 4,676 60,804 Manure used .....................................................farms: 600 747 704 448 398 670 acres treated: 11,642 6,544 4,155 2,403 1,690 17,870 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 65. Summary by Market Value of Agricultural Products Sold: 2012 (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 - Con. : : Acres treated to control- : Insects .......................................................farms: 25,064 4,424 2,214 2,639 3,847 3,251 acres: 5,293,093 4,100,169 474,813 319,487 203,702 81,816 Weeds, grass, or brush ........................................farms: 32,402 4,755 2,354 2,833 4,396 3,939 acres: 6,116,162 4,541,275 577,750 403,296 267,580 121,816 Nematodes .....................................................farms: 4,485 1,166 451 486 591 507 acres: 725,589 608,869 45,263 30,431 20,087 9,106 Diseases in crops and orchards ................................farms: 14,196 2,426 1,266 1,440 2,148 1,835 acres: 2,038,769 1,526,153 203,615 135,461 91,716 38,810 Chemicals used to control growth, : thin fruit, ripen, or defoliate ................................farms: 9,810 1,936 925 1,129 1,764 1,169 acres on which used: 1,460,135 1,103,592 118,737 81,634 75,788 31,498 : LAND USE PRACTICES : : Land drained by tile ............................................farms: 1,913 534 147 185 223 191 acres: 476,794 410,823 18,526 19,440 7,105 5,204 Land artificially drained by ditches ............................farms: 7,166 1,182 549 665 779 621 acres: 1,872,676 1,338,777 188,475 147,779 75,937 28,748 Land under conservation easement ................................farms: 1,603 155 110 138 178 161 acres: 929,985 360,270 77,588 94,901 122,474 81,607 Cropland on which no-till practices were : used ...........................................................farms: 4,213 487 183 215 341 380 acres: 205,383 141,823 14,908 13,800 13,647 5,392 Cropland on which conservation tillage, : including no till, practices were : used ...........................................................farms: 1,945 621 138 109 171 152 acres: 566,983 472,003 28,900 17,223 29,105 3,214 Cropland on which conventional tillage : practices were used ............................................farms: 11,762 2,836 879 1,044 1,227 1,051 acres: 3,083,056 2,302,924 287,855 194,772 129,688 53,396 Cropland planted to a cover crop : (excluding CRP) ................................................farms: 4,899 659 324 400 677 543 acres: 340,532 245,656 31,720 18,019 19,026 7,728 : ENERGY : : Renewable energy producing systems ..............................farms: 5,845 305 178 203 414 408 Solar panels ..................................................farms: 5,445 276 158 193 364 384 Wind turbines .................................................farms: 324 20 15 13 29 28 Methane digesters .............................................farms: 41 11 - 3 3 1 Geoexchange systems ...........................................farms: 104 3 2 3 15 3 : Small hydro systems ...........................................farms: 190 5 3 4 11 8 Biodiesel .....................................................farms: 165 13 3 8 10 14 Ethanol .......................................................farms: 56 1 4 2 1 4 Other .........................................................farms: 49 1 - 1 4 1 : Wind rights leased to others ....................................farms: 113 10 3 8 11 18 : TENURE : : Full owners .....................................................farms: 60,492 2,659 1,703 2,537 4,912 5,224 Part owners .....................................................farms: 9,490 2,394 972 907 1,131 746 Tenants .........................................................farms: 7,875 1,280 511 673 879 709 : OWNED AND RENTED LAND : : Land owned ......................................................farms: 70,216 5,085 2,698 3,466 6,072 5,991 acres: 16,064,215 6,296,903 1,341,620 1,534,175 1,728,013 1,044,231 Owned land in farms ...........................................farms: 69,982 5,053 2,675 3,444 6,043 5,970 acres: 14,281,177 5,777,796 1,220,594 1,406,814 1,547,385 870,417 : Land rented or leased from others ...............................farms: 17,477 3,689 1,491 1,594 2,032 1,458 acres: 11,608,764 5,332,187 1,155,595 1,094,472 1,458,002 731,425 Rented or leased land in farms ................................farms: 17,365 3,674 1,483 1,580 2,010 1,455 acres: 11,287,824 5,173,682 1,142,110 1,011,547 1,445,620 705,618 : Land rented or leased to others .................................farms: 6,066 869 338 411 639 609 acres: 2,103,978 677,612 134,511 210,286 193,010 199,621 : NUMBER OF OPERATORS : : Total operators ................................................number: 126,099 13,222 5,621 6,803 11,000 10,290 Farms by number of operators: : 1 operator .......................................................: 40,197 2,561 1,577 2,202 3,839 3,745 2 operators ......................................................: 30,790 2,142 1,079 1,382 2,347 2,438 3 operators ......................................................: 5,058 1,061 379 395 570 398 4 operators ......................................................: 1,137 276 105 93 128 70 5 or more operators ..............................................: 675 293 46 45 38 28 : Total women operators ........................................number: 41,256 2,238 1,164 1,461 2,921 3,077 Farms by number of women operators: : 1 operator .....................................................: 35,652 1,607 923 1,256 2,475 2,639 2 operators ....................................................: 2,226 210 89 73 170 178 3 operators ....................................................: 253 42 21 10 30 14 4 operators ....................................................: 44 6 - 6 4 5 5 or more operators ............................................: 37 10 - 1 - 4 : PRINCIPAL OPERATOR CHARACTERISTICS : : Sex of operator: : Male ...............................................................: 63,873 6,064 2,981 3,795 6,136 5,709 Female .............................................................: 13,984 269 205 322 786 970 : Primary occupation: : Farming ............................................................: 42,469 5,482 2,541 3,114 4,758 3,877 Other ..............................................................: 35,388 851 645 1,003 2,164 2,802 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 65. Summary by Market Value of Agricultural Products Sold: 2012 (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 - Con. : : Acres treated to control- : Insects .......................................................farms: 2,571 2,567 1,394 782 507 868 acres: 37,564 21,137 5,470 2,870 2,322 43,743 Weeds, grass, or brush ........................................farms: 3,498 3,816 2,365 1,489 867 2,090 acres: 63,841 40,256 15,117 9,923 5,128 70,180 Nematodes .....................................................farms: 378 402 177 113 59 155 acres: 4,201 2,695 1,199 361 155 3,222 Diseases in crops and orchards ................................farms: 1,409 1,645 827 521 259 420 acres: 16,994 10,313 2,769 985 1,004 10,949 Chemicals used to control growth, : thin fruit, ripen, or defoliate ................................farms: 854 831 422 272 135 373 acres on which used: 16,293 10,579 3,648 1,398 894 16,074 : LAND USE PRACTICES : : Land drained by tile ............................................farms: 165 173 92 44 51 108 acres: 6,724 2,443 708 775 718 4,328 Land artificially drained by ditches ............................farms: 565 753 533 346 322 851 acres: 16,090 17,869 6,974 4,618 3,014 44,395 Land under conservation easement ................................farms: 187 190 76 86 62 260 acres: 69,788 28,896 7,845 6,286 1,752 78,578 Cropland on which no-till practices were : used ...........................................................farms: 447 634 581 353 283 309 acres: 4,489 3,279 2,145 1,162 1,041 3,697 Cropland on which conservation tillage, : including no till, practices were : used ...........................................................farms: 133 200 117 93 87 124 acres: 3,229 3,239 708 318 334 8,710 Cropland on which conventional tillage : practices were used ............................................farms: 962 1,098 894 596 428 747 acres: 34,465 23,233 13,664 6,097 3,293 33,669 Cropland planted to a cover crop : (excluding CRP) ................................................farms: 553 601 386 297 147 312 acres: 4,770 3,933 1,217 920 703 6,840 : ENERGY : : Renewable energy producing systems ..............................farms: 577 864 753 502 422 1,219 Solar panels ..................................................farms: 536 830 705 463 413 1,123 Wind turbines .................................................farms: 31 34 34 29 15 76 Methane digesters .............................................farms: 2 5 1 6 - 9 Geoexchange systems ...........................................farms: 4 15 12 9 8 30 : Small hydro systems ...........................................farms: 17 33 34 17 8 50 Biodiesel .....................................................farms: 14 17 15 23 3 45 Ethanol .......................................................farms: 8 5 10 6 3 12 Other .........................................................farms: 12 4 2 6 4 14 : Wind rights leased to others ....................................farms: 7 4 11 8 3 30 : TENURE : : Full owners .....................................................farms: 5,673 8,320 6,689 4,975 4,008 13,792 Part owners .....................................................farms: 719 896 403 336 238 748 Tenants .........................................................farms: 651 921 626 425 344 856 : OWNED AND RENTED LAND : : Land owned ......................................................farms: 6,410 9,247 7,106 5,316 4,257 14,568 acres: 666,023 792,761 358,981 292,867 230,753 1,777,888 Owned land in farms ...........................................farms: 6,392 9,216 7,092 5,311 4,246 14,540 acres: 554,771 694,815 310,165 246,217 186,262 1,465,941 : Land rented or leased from others ...............................farms: 1,389 1,823 1,035 764 587 1,615 acres: 520,436 512,169 111,617 66,265 45,440 581,156 Rented or leased land in farms ................................farms: 1,370 1,817 1,029 761 582 1,604 acres: 511,503 508,257 110,604 57,795 45,230 575,858 : Land rented or leased to others .................................farms: 554 640 418 302 231 1,055 acres: 120,185 101,858 49,829 55,120 44,701 317,245 : NUMBER OF OPERATORS : : Total operators ................................................number: 10,874 15,628 11,965 8,984 7,157 24,555 Farms by number of operators: : 1 operator .......................................................: 3,902 5,479 4,068 2,970 2,320 7,534 2 operators ......................................................: 2,639 4,014 3,260 2,451 2,045 6,993 3 operators ......................................................: 365 530 315 232 174 639 4 operators ......................................................: 104 82 41 49 37 152 5 or more operators ..............................................: 33 32 34 34 14 78 : Total women operators ........................................number: 3,441 5,468 4,603 3,597 3,022 10,264 Farms by number of women operators: : 1 operator .....................................................: 2,959 4,867 4,022 3,144 2,637 9,123 2 operators ....................................................: 204 253 225 173 149 502 3 operators ....................................................: 14 22 12 20 25 43 4 operators ....................................................: 8 6 1 3 3 2 5 or more operators ............................................: - 1 14 7 - - : PRINCIPAL OPERATOR CHARACTERISTICS : : Sex of operator: : Male ...............................................................: 5,982 8,301 6,009 4,390 3,334 11,172 Female .............................................................: 1,061 1,836 1,709 1,346 1,256 4,224 : Primary occupation: : Farming ............................................................: 3,839 4,889 3,496 2,428 1,842 6,203 Other ..............................................................: 3,204 5,248 4,222 3,308 2,748 9,193 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 65. Summary by Market Value of Agricultural Products Sold: 2012 (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 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- PRINCIPAL OPERATOR CHARACTERISTICS - Con. : : Place of residence: : On farm operated ...................................................: 54,775 2,942 1,607 2,120 4,106 4,339 Not on farm operated ...............................................: 23,082 3,391 1,579 1,997 2,816 2,340 : Days worked off farm: : None ...............................................................: 31,311 3,958 1,733 1,984 3,015 2,550 Any ................................................................: 46,546 2,375 1,453 2,133 3,907 4,129 1 to 49 days .....................................................: 7,304 384 204 292 612 577 50 to 99 days ....................................................: 4,230 142 127 216 394 434 100 to 199 days ..................................................: 7,065 219 182 324 700 722 200 days or more .................................................: 27,947 1,630 940 1,301 2,201 2,396 : Years on present farm: : 2 years or less ....................................................: 3,151 133 68 105 235 268 3 or 4 years .......................................................: 4,634 204 118 144 370 366 5 to 9 years .......................................................: 12,863 602 383 634 1,012 1,230 10 years or more ...................................................: 57,209 5,394 2,617 3,234 5,305 4,815 : Average years on present farm ......................................: 20.2 25.6 24.3 23.5 21.9 20.3 : Years operating any farm (see text): : 2 years or less ....................................................: 2,182 48 37 50 149 178 3 or 4 years .......................................................: 3,648 127 84 103 264 291 5 to 9 years .......................................................: 10,663 406 233 419 754 1,012 10 years or more ...................................................: 61,364 5,752 2,832 3,545 5,755 5,198 : Average years operating any farm ...................................: 22.7 28.9 28.0 26.9 25.3 23.0 : Age group: : Under 25 years .....................................................: 253 6 10 5 31 20 25 to 34 years .....................................................: 2,968 231 178 212 289 287 35 to 44 years .....................................................: 6,255 646 257 318 543 535 45 to 49 years .....................................................: 6,107 634 263 323 531 497 50 to 54 years .....................................................: 9,839 899 391 539 875 819 55 to 59 years .....................................................: 11,513 1,055 572 679 1,096 1,016 60 to 64 years .....................................................: 11,869 1,026 496 659 1,056 1,022 65 to 69 years .....................................................: 10,683 641 380 497 856 867 70 years and over ..................................................: 18,370 1,195 639 885 1,645 1,616 : Average age ........................................................: 60.1 58.2 58.7 59.3 59.9 60.1 : Spanish, Hispanic, or Latino origin (see text) .......................: 9,815 604 398 517 984 1,065 : Race: : American Indian or Alaska Native ...................................: 1,192 29 31 56 102 84 Asian ..............................................................: 4,802 429 336 419 706 603 Black or African American ..........................................: 345 6 3 5 20 18 Native Hawaiian or Other Pacific Islander ..........................: 321 20 15 3 31 37 White ..............................................................: 70,537 5,822 2,781 3,614 6,022 5,893 More than one race reported ........................................: 660 27 20 20 41 44 : Farms by number of persons living in : operator's household: : 1 person ...........................................................: 10,856 562 379 535 944 952 2 people ...........................................................: 39,377 3,113 1,556 2,045 3,484 3,364 3 people ...........................................................: 10,481 872 383 517 842 864 4 people ...........................................................: 9,895 937 509 602 898 881 5 or more people ...................................................: 7,248 849 359 418 754 618 : Percent of operator's total : household income from farming: : Less than 25 percent ...............................................: 53,231 1,428 848 1,384 2,828 3,544 25 to 49 percent ...................................................: 6,732 641 393 607 1,072 1,123 50 to 74 percent ...................................................: 8,038 1,338 719 888 1,476 1,097 75 to 99 percent ...................................................: 5,290 1,409 691 681 973 505 100 percent ........................................................: 4,566 1,517 535 557 573 410 : Operator is a hired manager .....................................farms: 7,130 1,887 685 626 922 639 acres: 5,266,987 3,527,403 357,633 454,743 468,542 186,870 : Farms with- : Internet access ....................................................: 59,543 5,620 2,613 3,251 5,140 4,818 Dial-up service ..................................................: 4,703 284 140 193 323 412 DSL service ......................................................: 20,030 1,996 938 1,185 1,694 1,603 Cable modem service ..............................................: 9,578 863 462 539 797 705 Fiber-optic service ..............................................: 1,719 234 90 116 209 122 Mobile broadband plan for a computer : or cell phone ...................................................: 12,454 1,500 658 811 1,238 1,009 Satellite service ................................................: 15,193 1,550 726 877 1,377 1,119 Broadband over Power Lines (BPL) .................................: 2,135 359 149 172 234 214 Other Internet service ...........................................: 2,805 379 84 94 259 262 : Farms by number of households sharing : in net income of operation: : 1 household ........................................................: 61,016 3,262 1,863 2,624 4,902 5,113 2 households .......................................................: 11,316 1,571 760 920 1,354 1,081 3 households .......................................................: 3,013 791 321 309 364 249 4 households .......................................................: 1,351 357 126 158 181 151 5 or more households ...............................................: 1,161 352 116 106 121 85 : FARMS BY TYPE OF : ORGANIZATION (SEE TEXT) : : Operation with 50 percent or more ownership : interest held by operator and/or persons : related by blood, marriage, : or adoption ....................................................farms: 72,641 4,937 2,701 3,604 6,278 6,244 acres: 20,951,605 7,887,336 2,085,452 2,071,368 2,664,096 1,446,483 Limited Liability Corporation ...................................farms: 4,453 702 385 420 621 511 acres: 2,772,951 1,080,690 396,479 342,518 524,372 110,452 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 65. Summary by Market Value of Agricultural Products Sold: 2012 (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 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- PRINCIPAL OPERATOR CHARACTERISTICS - Con. : : Place of residence: : On farm operated ...................................................: 4,883 7,695 6,090 4,629 3,904 12,460 Not on farm operated ...............................................: 2,160 2,442 1,628 1,107 686 2,936 : Days worked off farm: : None ...............................................................: 2,577 3,515 2,701 1,926 1,514 5,838 Any ................................................................: 4,466 6,622 5,017 3,810 3,076 9,558 1 to 49 days .....................................................: 715 1,013 922 616 459 1,510 50 to 99 days ....................................................: 519 656 417 323 265 737 100 to 199 days ..................................................: 726 1,045 740 626 434 1,347 200 days or more .................................................: 2,506 3,908 2,938 2,245 1,918 5,964 : Years on present farm: : 2 years or less ....................................................: 255 380 323 274 302 808 3 or 4 years .......................................................: 360 617 551 387 426 1,091 5 to 9 years .......................................................: 1,219 1,938 1,504 1,147 829 2,365 10 years or more ...................................................: 5,209 7,202 5,340 3,928 3,033 11,132 : Average years on present farm ......................................: 20.2 18.7 18.2 18.4 17.2 19.2 : Years operating any farm (see text): : 2 years or less ....................................................: 183 276 259 208 237 557 3 or 4 years .......................................................: 258 483 444 335 366 893 5 to 9 years .......................................................: 1,009 1,678 1,344 978 764 2,066 10 years or more ...................................................: 5,593 7,700 5,671 4,215 3,223 11,880 : Average years operating any farm ...................................: 22.9 21.0 20.0 20.4 19.1 21.2 : Age group: : Under 25 years .....................................................: 18 57 26 21 24 35 25 to 34 years .....................................................: 253 334 244 214 227 499 35 to 44 years .....................................................: 558 805 576 413 403 1,201 45 to 49 years .....................................................: 503 859 590 414 404 1,089 50 to 54 years .....................................................: 850 1,250 959 723 577 1,957 55 to 59 years .....................................................: 954 1,349 1,138 794 685 2,175 60 to 64 years .....................................................: 1,030 1,482 1,170 833 661 2,434 65 to 69 years .....................................................: 1,041 1,482 1,090 877 596 2,356 70 years and over ..................................................: 1,836 2,519 1,925 1,447 1,013 3,650 : Average age ........................................................: 60.9 60.3 60.6 60.8 59.0 60.6 : Spanish, Hispanic, or Latino origin (see text) .......................: 1,098 1,373 919 700 487 1,670 : Race: : American Indian or Alaska Native ...................................: 107 148 140 110 88 297 Asian ..............................................................: 464 570 359 247 180 489 Black or African American ..........................................: 32 39 38 33 23 128 Native Hawaiian or Other Pacific Islander ..........................: 30 33 46 20 9 77 White ..............................................................: 6,350 9,276 7,076 5,255 4,226 14,222 More than one race reported ........................................: 60 71 59 71 64 183 : Farms by number of persons living in : operator's household: : 1 person ...........................................................: 1,044 1,468 1,130 806 562 2,474 2 people ...........................................................: 3,583 5,065 3,954 2,920 2,239 8,054 3 people ...........................................................: 893 1,443 1,083 834 664 2,086 4 people ...........................................................: 923 1,213 976 741 635 1,580 5 or more people ...................................................: 600 948 575 435 490 1,202 : Percent of operator's total : household income from farming: : Less than 25 percent ...............................................: 4,565 8,229 6,857 5,273 4,215 14,060 25 to 49 percent ...................................................: 1,052 802 342 189 115 396 50 to 74 percent ...................................................: 854 623 282 144 158 459 75 to 99 percent ...................................................: 337 224 109 40 46 275 100 percent ........................................................: 235 259 128 90 56 206 : Operator is a hired manager .....................................farms: 467 620 398 288 146 452 acres: 54,521 38,225 18,881 10,442 46,416 103,311 : Farms with- : Internet access ....................................................: 5,211 7,633 5,928 4,275 3,655 11,399 Dial-up service ..................................................: 479 677 513 382 305 995 DSL service ......................................................: 1,643 2,434 1,974 1,348 1,260 3,955 Cable modem service ..............................................: 831 1,301 1,098 767 616 1,599 Fiber-optic service ..............................................: 113 213 141 105 91 285 Mobile broadband plan for a computer : or cell phone ...................................................: 1,044 1,530 1,036 830 652 2,146 Satellite service ................................................: 1,287 1,863 1,306 1,054 857 3,177 Broadband over Power Lines (BPL) .................................: 119 232 141 99 103 313 Other Internet service ...........................................: 260 359 295 176 169 468 : Farms by number of households sharing : in net income of operation: : 1 household ........................................................: 5,511 8,418 6,656 5,081 3,977 13,609 2 households .......................................................: 1,153 1,346 873 527 469 1,262 3 households .......................................................: 191 234 131 74 72 277 4 households .......................................................: 94 74 21 29 37 123 5 or more households ...............................................: 94 65 37 25 35 125 : FARMS BY TYPE OF : ORGANIZATION (SEE TEXT) : : Operation with 50 percent or more ownership : interest held by operator and/or persons : related by blood, marriage, : or adoption ....................................................farms: 6,686 9,784 7,516 5,614 4,508 14,769 acres: 998,522 1,152,239 397,029 297,600 225,834 1,725,646 Limited Liability Corporation ...................................farms: 462 422 222 149 86 473 acres: 74,598 43,730 49,517 53,090 6,740 90,765 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 65. Summary by Market Value of Agricultural Products Sold: 2012 (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 (SEE TEXT) : : Family or individual ...........................................farms: 59,732 2,073 1,535 2,351 4,696 5,113 acres: 12,000,544 2,964,370 1,177,648 1,409,267 1,620,991 1,052,341 Partnership .....................................................farms: 8,984 2,093 856 939 1,164 807 acres: 6,934,159 3,819,135 764,566 640,770 804,148 215,729 Registered under state law ....................................farms: 7,283 1,864 774 793 942 631 acres: 5,929,592 3,148,941 709,989 598,450 701,978 169,560 : Corporation .....................................................farms: 6,361 1,965 661 656 724 534 acres: 5,359,671 3,637,758 304,517 297,002 395,615 229,179 Family held ...................................................farms: 5,345 1,631 567 578 619 445 acres: 4,209,678 2,792,322 286,570 217,159 377,444 97,693 More than 10 stockholders ...................................farms: 264 126 15 27 18 15 10 or less stockholders .....................................farms: 5,081 1,505 552 551 601 430 : Other than family held ........................................farms: 1,016 334 94 78 105 89 acres: 1,149,993 845,436 17,947 79,843 18,171 131,486 More than 10 stockholders ...................................farms: 171 93 10 6 13 11 10 or less stockholders .....................................farms: 845 241 84 72 92 78 : Other-cooperative, estate : or trust, institutional, etc ...................................farms: 2,780 202 134 171 338 225 acres: 1,274,627 530,215 115,973 71,322 172,251 78,786 : HIRED FARM LABOR : : Hired farm labor ................................................farms: 33,955 5,975 2,688 3,049 4,407 3,333 workers: 465,422 314,058 30,618 25,351 31,631 16,133 Workers by days worked: : 150 days or more ............................................farms: 20,018 5,625 2,288 2,258 2,730 1,656 workers: 205,851 160,690 12,400 8,653 8,712 4,058 Less than 150 days ..........................................farms: 22,621 3,327 1,549 1,879 2,887 2,267 workers: 259,571 153,368 18,218 16,698 22,919 12,075 Migrant farm labor on farms with hired : labor (see text) ...............................................farms: 2,921 891 351 312 450 267 Migrant farm labor on farms reporting : only contract labor (see text) .................................farms: 755 24 31 86 134 126 : Unpaid workers (see text) .......................................farms: 31,965 797 730 1,178 2,377 2,689 workers: 72,020 1,710 1,441 2,558 5,061 6,057 : FARMS BY SIZE : : 1 to 9 acres .........................................................: 24,637 91 106 186 373 878 10 to 49 acres .......................................................: 25,811 348 235 732 3,040 3,842 50 to 69 acres .......................................................: 3,700 122 132 452 774 454 70 to 99 acres .......................................................: 3,601 149 294 546 706 311 100 to 139 acres .....................................................: 3,222 251 395 492 464 215 140 to 179 acres .....................................................: 2,533 286 312 350 323 146 180 to 219 acres .....................................................: 1,477 250 266 196 148 78 220 to 259 acres .....................................................: 1,189 240 186 156 96 87 260 to 499 acres .....................................................: 3,983 1,170 563 488 269 178 500 to 999 acres .....................................................: 3,230 1,306 411 185 211 181 1,000 to 1,999 acres .................................................: 2,040 1,022 112 123 179 139 2,000 acres or more ..................................................: 2,434 1,098 174 211 339 170 : FARMS BY NORTH AMERICAN : INDUSTRY CLASSIFICATION : SYSTEM (NAICS) : : Oilseed and grain farming (1111) .....................................: 2,296 275 339 460 407 264 Vegetable and melon farming (1112) ...................................: 4,191 663 124 139 221 309 Fruit and tree nut farming (1113) ....................................: 35,945 2,815 1,968 2,536 4,632 4,581 Greenhouse, nursery, and floriculture : production (1114) ...................................................: 3,390 364 175 203 352 298 Other crop farming (1119) ............................................: 5,815 540 216 239 367 279 Tobacco farming (11191) ............................................: - - - - - - Cotton farming (11192) .............................................: 194 87 29 18 23 14 Sugarcane farming, hay farming, and all : other crop farming (11193,11194,11199) ............................: 5,621 453 187 221 344 265 Beef cattle ranching and farming (112111) ............................: 11,767 209 172 332 631 652 Cattle feedlots (112112) .............................................: 156 25 15 16 27 18 Dairy cattle and milk production (11212) .............................: 1,594 1,249 113 59 51 10 Hog and pig farming (1122) ...........................................: 446 4 2 2 13 8 Poultry and egg production (1123) ....................................: 1,202 116 15 32 41 31 Sheep and goat farming (1124) ........................................: 3,246 19 21 23 46 43 Animal aquaculture and other animal : production (1125, 1129) .............................................: 7,809 54 26 76 134 186 : LIVESTOCK : : Cattle and calves inventory .....................................farms: 16,764 1,644 391 545 1,009 880 number: 5,370,531 4,409,827 207,546 182,218 213,836 98,861 Farms with- : 1 to 9 ...........................................................: 7,396 60 22 48 154 150 10 to 49 .........................................................: 4,687 45 47 78 148 193 50 to 99 .........................................................: 1,128 26 17 44 101 158 100 to 199 .......................................................: 914 38 44 80 228 256 200 to 499 .......................................................: 896 119 125 161 307 110 500 or more ......................................................: 1,743 1,356 136 134 71 13 : Cows and heifers that calved ..................................farms: 12,566 1,471 299 445 764 685 number: 2,399,249 1,946,513 96,392 93,447 96,990 51,213 : Beef cows ...................................................farms: 10,925 331 198 381 713 663 number: 583,594 168,649 70,356 86,166 93,986 50,745 Farms with- : 1 to 9 .......................................................: 6,173 46 25 45 129 120 10 to 49 .....................................................: 2,704 44 29 58 101 133 50 to 99 .....................................................: 801 41 13 37 83 224 100 to 199 ...................................................: 542 34 17 54 209 159 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 65. Summary by Market Value of Agricultural Products Sold: 2012 (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 (SEE TEXT) : : Family or individual ...........................................farms: 5,735 8,783 6,902 5,252 4,208 13,084 acres: 842,528 940,541 356,015 256,197 163,194 1,217,452 Partnership .....................................................farms: 667 682 383 209 180 1,004 acres: 128,312 78,678 27,102 26,993 46,957 381,769 Registered under state law ....................................farms: 506 518 261 134 119 741 acres: 104,309 63,675 20,547 21,436 45,302 345,405 : Corporation .....................................................farms: 360 344 230 135 79 673 acres: 34,244 128,450 28,222 14,380 3,260 287,044 Family held ...................................................farms: 311 302 192 112 74 514 acres: 27,191 112,821 20,628 13,436 1,314 263,100 More than 10 stockholders ...................................farms: 10 7 6 5 - 35 10 or less stockholders .....................................farms: 301 295 186 107 74 479 : Other than family held ........................................farms: 49 42 38 23 5 159 acres: 7,053 15,629 7,594 944 1,946 23,944 More than 10 stockholders ...................................farms: 2 4 2 3 2 25 10 or less stockholders .....................................farms: 47 38 36 20 3 134 : Other-cooperative, estate : or trust, institutional, etc ...................................farms: 281 328 203 140 123 635 acres: 61,190 55,403 9,430 6,442 18,081 155,534 : HIRED FARM LABOR : : Hired farm labor ................................................farms: 2,852 3,413 2,142 1,451 915 3,730 workers: 11,102 13,157 5,844 3,608 2,322 11,598 Workers by days worked: : 150 days or more ............................................farms: 1,175 1,139 698 424 273 1,752 workers: 2,393 2,246 1,270 768 520 4,141 Less than 150 days ..........................................farms: 2,106 2,669 1,655 1,115 696 2,471 workers: 8,709 10,911 4,574 2,840 1,802 7,457 Migrant farm labor on farms with hired : labor (see text) ...............................................farms: 190 178 79 40 25 138 Migrant farm labor on farms reporting : only contract labor (see text) .................................farms: 139 93 45 24 10 43 : Unpaid workers (see text) .......................................farms: 3,180 4,860 3,730 2,703 2,293 7,428 workers: 7,221 11,314 8,308 6,017 5,380 16,953 : FARMS BY SIZE : : 1 to 9 acres .........................................................: 1,881 4,717 4,507 3,325 2,697 5,876 10 to 49 acres .......................................................: 3,467 3,264 2,036 1,579 1,368 5,900 50 to 69 acres .......................................................: 320 307 244 193 98 604 70 to 99 acres .......................................................: 250 367 178 158 115 527 100 to 139 acres .....................................................: 172 275 160 146 92 560 140 to 179 acres .....................................................: 145 220 129 100 82 440 180 to 219 acres .....................................................: 80 104 95 37 24 199 220 to 259 acres .....................................................: 72 100 51 24 21 156 260 to 499 acres .....................................................: 220 331 173 77 44 470 500 to 999 acres .....................................................: 197 207 87 50 30 365 1,000 to 1,999 acres .................................................: 133 148 34 31 6 113 2,000 acres or more ..................................................: 106 97 24 16 13 186 : FARMS BY NORTH AMERICAN : INDUSTRY CLASSIFICATION : SYSTEM (NAICS) : : Oilseed and grain farming (1111) .....................................: 211 136 70 58 38 38 Vegetable and melon farming (1112) ...................................: 282 593 727 478 427 228 Fruit and tree nut farming (1113) ....................................: 4,436 5,515 3,808 2,289 1,130 2,235 Greenhouse, nursery, and floriculture : production (1114) ...................................................: 325 622 410 231 211 199 Other crop farming (1119) ............................................: 324 468 393 301 249 2,439 Tobacco farming (11191) ............................................: - - - - - - Cotton farming (11192) .............................................: 9 8 6 - - - Sugarcane farming, hay farming, and all : other crop farming (11193,11194,11199) ............................: 315 460 387 301 249 2,439 Beef cattle ranching and farming (112111) ............................: 863 1,614 1,400 1,408 1,175 3,311 Cattle feedlots (112112) .............................................: 30 17 8 - - - Dairy cattle and milk production (11212) .............................: 4 - 10 3 - 95 Hog and pig farming (1122) ...........................................: 10 25 51 54 109 168 Poultry and egg production (1123) ....................................: 29 40 52 79 195 572 Sheep and goat farming (1124) ........................................: 101 307 270 374 621 1,421 Animal aquaculture and other animal : production (1125, 1129) .............................................: 428 800 519 461 435 4,690 : LIVESTOCK : : Cattle and calves inventory .....................................farms: 1,258 2,164 1,675 1,598 1,397 4,203 number: 67,643 68,210 27,016 21,794 9,678 63,902 Farms with- : 1 to 9 ...........................................................: 359 664 737 935 1,118 3,149 10 to 49 .........................................................: 357 1,111 871 641 274 922 50 to 99 .........................................................: 348 303 53 20 3 55 100 to 199 .......................................................: 158 66 12 - - 32 200 to 499 .......................................................: 34 13 1 - 2 24 500 or more ......................................................: 2 7 1 2 - 21 : Cows and heifers that calved ..................................farms: 919 1,672 1,222 1,233 1,013 2,843 number: 35,516 33,259 13,130 8,175 5,024 19,590 : Beef cows ...................................................farms: 904 1,640 1,191 1,218 967 2,719 number: 35,412 33,127 12,987 8,099 4,910 19,157 Farms with- : 1 to 9 .......................................................: 245 668 692 977 871 2,355 10 to 49 .....................................................: 360 828 483 238 92 338 50 to 99 .....................................................: 247 123 14 3 2 14 100 to 199 ...................................................: 44 18 1 - - 6 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 65. Summary by Market Value of Agricultural Products Sold: 2012 (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. : : Cattle and calves inventory - Con. : Cows and heifers that calved - Con. : Beef cows - Con. : Farms with- - Con. : : 200 to 499 ...................................................: 479 62 51 144 181 25 500 or more ..................................................: 226 104 63 43 10 2 Milk cows ...................................................farms: 1,931 1,217 111 73 73 33 number: 1,815,655 1,777,864 26,036 7,281 3,004 468 Farms with- : 1 to 9 .......................................................: 457 1 3 8 18 19 10 to 49 .....................................................: 62 1 3 5 26 11 50 to 99 .....................................................: 52 2 1 24 22 3 100 to 199 ...................................................: 110 22 50 31 7 - 200 to 499 ...................................................: 258 203 50 5 - - 500 or more ..................................................: 992 988 4 - - - : Other cattle (see text) .......................................farms: 13,380 1,516 362 479 901 758 number: 2,971,282 2,463,314 111,154 88,771 116,846 47,648 : Cattle and calves sold ..........................................farms: 12,594 1,623 377 567 959 883 number: 3,671,078 3,008,216 150,405 189,960 162,634 58,849 $1,000: 3,259,325 2,776,923 135,507 119,966 106,242 47,104 Calves weighing less than 500 pounds ..........................farms: 5,347 1,113 169 235 369 357 number: 1,252,820 1,029,897 28,907 84,374 65,263 15,302 : Cattle, including calves weighing : 500 pounds or more ...........................................farms: 11,228 1,511 358 553 907 829 number: 2,418,258 1,978,319 121,498 105,586 97,371 43,547 Cattle on feed (see text) ...................................farms: 262 91 22 23 35 33 number: 712,651 695,725 7,854 3,020 3,423 1,318 : Hogs and pigs inventory .........................................farms: 1,437 29 16 15 57 50 number: 111,893 83,405 6,396 3,196 4,251 1,282 Farms with- : 1 to 24 ..........................................................: 1,228 10 5 4 41 34 25 to 49 .........................................................: 95 4 2 2 4 5 50 to 99 .........................................................: 52 2 4 1 6 7 100 to 199 .......................................................: 39 6 - 2 2 4 200 to 499 .......................................................: 11 2 1 4 3 - 500 or more ......................................................: 12 5 4 2 1 - : Used or to be used for breeding ...............................farms: 732 20 11 10 29 31 number: 8,322 (D) 782 522 448 350 Other hogs and pigs ...........................................farms: 1,179 21 16 14 52 43 number: 103,571 (D) 5,614 2,674 3,803 932 : Hogs and pigs sold ..............................................farms: 1,163 22 13 14 48 51 number: 290,488 226,570 19,882 9,075 13,288 3,386 $1,000: 51,526 43,219 2,135 (D) 2,629 728 : Sheep and lambs inventory (see text) ............................farms: 4,224 77 57 63 170 167 number: 668,517 329,920 137,869 47,508 41,735 18,181 Ewes 1 year old or older ......................................farms: 3,222 57 54 47 132 135 number: 306,987 129,018 77,854 16,056 23,213 9,275 Sheep and lambs sold ............................................farms: 2,593 65 45 56 122 141 number: 440,092 264,035 75,680 24,402 20,191 11,643 : Total horses and ponies inventory ...............................farms: 14,932 298 180 283 637 686 number: 142,555 7,135 3,556 4,472 7,654 10,139 Owned horses and ponies : inventory ....................................................farms: 14,353 281 178 265 600 645 number: 107,774 4,413 2,831 3,566 5,297 8,269 Owned horses and ponies sold ....................................farms: 2,959 45 27 58 132 216 number: 10,452 654 213 684 670 1,199 : Goats, all inventory ............................................farms: 4,474 50 26 53 122 126 number: 140,042 13,546 5,938 17,301 19,198 9,432 Goats, all sold .................................................farms: 2,133 27 15 33 64 73 number: 62,844 5,432 1,801 10,929 9,443 6,819 : POULTRY : : Layers inventory (see text) .....................................farms: 6,744 70 51 72 203 232 number: 19,000,779 18,533,857 218,479 32,388 39,679 9,909 Farms with- : 1 to 399 .........................................................: 6,653 25 42 68 193 229 400 to 3,199 .....................................................: 39 5 3 2 8 3 3,200 to 9,999 ...................................................: 4 1 - 1 1 - 10,000 to 19,999 .................................................: 4 1 - 1 1 - 20,000 to 49,999 .................................................: 5 1 4 - - - 50,000 to 99,999 .................................................: 8 6 2 - - - 100,000 or more ..................................................: 31 31 - - - - : Pullets for laying flock replacement : inventory ......................................................farms: 873 31 9 7 25 21 number: 4,633,558 4,379,015 (D) (D) 182,461 2,179 : Layers sold (see text) ..........................................farms: 831 39 11 9 23 27 number: 8,195,242 8,005,011 131,361 1,685 18,251 1,395 : Pullets for laying flock replacement : sold ...........................................................farms: 86 9 - 2 7 3 number: 3,508,788 3,310,646 - (D) 185,708 (D) : Broilers and other meat-type chickens : sold ...........................................................farms: 421 41 11 18 18 17 number: 273,277,272 268,559,077 2,401,040 1,630,440 488,595 96,107 Farms with- : 1 to 1,999 .......................................................: 336 1 1 4 11 12 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 65. Summary by Market Value of Agricultural Products Sold: 2012 (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. : : Cattle and calves inventory - Con. : Cows and heifers that calved - Con. : Beef cows - Con. : Farms with- - Con. : : 200 to 499 ...................................................: 7 2 1 - 2 4 500 or more ..................................................: 1 1 - - - 2 Milk cows ...................................................farms: 27 51 60 37 69 180 number: 104 132 143 76 114 433 Farms with- : 1 to 9 .......................................................: 23 51 60 36 69 169 10 to 49 .....................................................: 4 - - 1 - 11 50 to 99 .....................................................: - - - - - - 100 to 199 ...................................................: - - - - - - 200 to 499 ...................................................: - - - - - - 500 or more ..................................................: - - - - - - : Other cattle (see text) .......................................farms: 1,087 1,767 1,367 1,239 997 2,907 number: 32,127 34,951 13,886 13,619 4,654 44,312 : Cattle and calves sold ..........................................farms: 1,171 2,099 1,644 1,555 1,258 458 number: 39,989 37,428 12,981 6,829 3,119 668 $1,000: 30,723 25,979 9,762 4,920 1,901 297 Calves weighing less than 500 pounds ..........................farms: 461 864 603 506 432 238 number: 10,534 11,071 3,800 2,090 1,191 391 : Cattle, including calves weighing : 500 pounds or more ...........................................farms: 1,095 1,898 1,474 1,369 993 241 number: 29,455 26,357 9,181 4,739 1,928 277 Cattle on feed (see text) ...................................farms: 33 17 8 - - - number: 879 323 109 - - - : Hogs and pigs inventory .........................................farms: 75 135 241 188 256 375 number: 1,681 2,081 4,173 1,711 2,171 1,546 Farms with- : 1 to 24 ..........................................................: 56 102 194 167 243 372 25 to 49 .........................................................: 9 22 20 19 5 3 50 to 99 .........................................................: 4 9 15 2 2 - 100 to 199 .......................................................: 5 2 12 - 6 - 200 to 499 .......................................................: 1 - - - - - 500 or more ......................................................: - - - - - - : Used or to be used for breeding ...............................farms: 39 61 129 104 151 147 number: 483 539 (D) 519 876 531 Other hogs and pigs ...........................................farms: 59 121 208 147 202 296 number: 1,198 1,542 (D) 1,192 1,295 1,015 : Hogs and pigs sold ..............................................farms: 73 123 204 170 237 208 number: 4,471 4,104 5,312 1,961 1,721 718 $1,000: 392 466 461 255 194 (D) : Sheep and lambs inventory (see text) ............................farms: 220 474 456 480 590 1,470 number: 17,225 24,482 14,122 12,923 9,181 15,371 Ewes 1 year old or older ......................................farms: 184 359 365 388 444 1,057 number: 11,171 13,334 6,850 7,519 4,793 7,904 Sheep and lambs sold ............................................farms: 169 381 348 381 445 440 number: 12,024 14,086 7,294 5,497 3,567 1,673 : Total horses and ponies inventory ...............................farms: 1,006 1,804 1,385 1,241 1,113 6,299 number: 11,459 18,572 9,443 8,622 6,184 55,319 Owned horses and ponies : inventory ....................................................farms: 960 1,710 1,319 1,194 1,067 6,134 number: 8,222 13,931 7,166 6,596 5,116 42,367 Owned horses and ponies sold ....................................farms: 429 757 491 415 301 88 number: 1,955 2,799 1,002 728 446 102 : Goats, all inventory ............................................farms: 228 487 458 456 692 1,776 number: 13,509 13,711 10,298 7,846 10,180 19,083 Goats, all sold .................................................farms: 153 290 267 302 443 466 number: 5,363 7,752 5,155 4,194 4,092 1,864 : POULTRY : : Layers inventory (see text) .....................................farms: 402 816 927 816 902 2,253 number: 27,169 27,662 39,478 19,928 20,485 31,745 Farms with- : 1 to 399 .........................................................: 393 810 924 816 902 2,251 400 to 3,199 .....................................................: 8 6 2 - - 2 3,200 to 9,999 ...................................................: 1 - - - - - 10,000 to 19,999 .................................................: - - 1 - - - 20,000 to 49,999 .................................................: - - - - - - 50,000 to 99,999 .................................................: - - - - - - 100,000 or more ..................................................: - - - - - - : Pullets for laying flock replacement : inventory ......................................................farms: 36 96 123 137 167 221 number: 17,893 2,889 4,407 2,601 2,766 2,892 : Layers sold (see text) ..........................................farms: 51 106 121 118 153 173 number: 10,303 6,867 7,372 3,225 6,704 3,068 : Pullets for laying flock replacement : sold ...........................................................farms: 12 12 8 12 9 12 number: 949 1,246 1,184 676 394 130 : Broilers and other meat-type chickens : sold ...........................................................farms: 36 50 75 54 48 53 number: 63,385 19,778 10,820 4,863 2,007 1,160 Farms with- : 1 to 1,999 .......................................................: 29 48 75 54 48 53 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 65. Summary by Market Value of Agricultural Products Sold: 2012 (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. : : Broilers and other meat-type chickens : sold - Con. : Farms with- - Con. : : 2,000 to 59,999 ..................................................: 26 2 1 3 6 5 60,000 to 99,999 .................................................: - - - - - - 100,000 or more ..................................................: 59 38 9 11 1 - : Turkeys inventory (see text) ....................................farms: 682 32 1 3 18 14 number: 4,532,307 (D) (D) (D) 24,170 443 Turkeys sold (see text) .........................................farms: 302 40 1 2 16 10 number: 15,384,675 (D) (D) (D) 25,355 315 : CROPS HARVESTED : : Barley for grain ................................................farms: 264 104 25 19 30 20 acres: 81,954 51,276 12,992 6,751 5,683 3,124 bushels: 5,312,595 3,765,764 675,692 278,992 382,050 132,559 Irrigated .....................................................farms: 144 72 18 9 17 5 acres: 44,819 33,618 6,359 1,569 2,439 683 Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ....................................................: 60 6 5 4 1 1 25 to 99 acres ...................................................: 59 20 5 2 7 9 100 to 249 acres .................................................: 68 32 2 5 15 7 250 to 499 acres .................................................: 30 20 5 1 3 1 500 acres or more ................................................: 47 26 8 7 4 2 : Corn for grain ..................................................farms: 733 360 79 58 53 29 acres: 180,672 146,499 17,366 9,169 4,097 1,494 bushels: 31,922,610 26,412,943 2,931,046 1,519,994 649,276 200,224 Irrigated .....................................................farms: 733 360 79 58 53 29 acres: 175,863 142,419 17,366 8,490 4,047 1,494 Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ....................................................: 163 12 3 7 10 8 25 to 99 acres ...................................................: 211 78 33 21 30 19 100 to 249 acres .................................................: 152 100 20 18 11 2 250 to 499 acres .................................................: 103 81 12 9 1 - 500 acres or more ................................................: 104 89 11 3 1 - : Corn for silage or greenchop ....................................farms: 1,895 1,106 181 140 154 106 acres: 487,570 421,378 29,442 15,576 11,731 5,353 tons: 12,575,973 10,923,520 756,018 412,732 280,360 115,583 Irrigated .....................................................farms: 1,802 1,063 168 133 146 102 acres: 461,898 400,711 27,635 14,300 10,838 4,737 Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ....................................................: 249 19 9 26 24 15 25 to 99 acres ...................................................: 538 202 65 52 86 84 100 to 249 acres .................................................: 512 341 66 51 44 7 250 to 499 acres .................................................: 329 282 36 11 - - 500 acres or more ................................................: 267 262 5 - - - : Cotton, all .....................................................farms: 630 429 80 49 33 16 acres: 367,766 341,601 16,543 5,497 3,012 743 bales: 1,201,860 1,120,703 52,272 17,251 8,464 1,960 Irrigated .....................................................farms: 630 429 80 49 33 16 acres: 367,766 341,601 16,543 5,497 3,012 743 Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ....................................................: 31 7 - 1 3 - 25 to 99 acres ...................................................: 102 34 9 24 16 16 100 to 249 acres .................................................: 180 101 44 23 12 - 250 to 499 acres .................................................: 153 123 27 1 2 - 500 acres or more ................................................: 164 164 - - - - : Dry edible beans, excluding limas ...............................farms: 308 129 42 34 21 16 acres: 39,511 29,806 4,389 3,744 622 535 cwt: 955,995 761,701 90,012 76,972 13,219 7,295 Irrigated .....................................................farms: 269 123 39 32 18 15 acres: 36,866 28,215 3,895 (D) 490 (D) Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ....................................................: 95 4 7 8 11 7 25 to 99 acres ...................................................: 93 38 18 11 9 9 100 to 249 acres .................................................: 69 45 14 9 1 - 250 to 499 acres .................................................: 38 29 3 6 - - 500 acres or more ................................................: 13 13 - - - - : Oats for grain ..................................................farms: 240 88 13 20 17 13 acres: 25,065 18,016 1,609 1,535 1,369 971 bushels: 2,246,420 1,619,946 136,927 136,583 147,399 62,787 Irrigated .....................................................farms: 145 68 9 10 12 4 acres: 15,901 12,754 959 607 679 281 Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ....................................................: 86 10 1 4 3 3 25 to 99 acres ...................................................: 75 23 7 8 8 6 100 to 249 acres .................................................: 54 32 3 8 6 4 250 to 499 acres .................................................: 16 14 2 - - - 500 acres or more ................................................: 9 9 - - - - : Peanuts for nuts ................................................farms: 15 - - - 5 - acres: 27 - - - 7 - pounds: 84,093 - - - 21,803 - Irrigated .....................................................farms: 15 - - - 5 - acres: 27 - - - 7 - Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ....................................................: 15 - - - 5 - 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 65. Summary by Market Value of Agricultural Products Sold: 2012 (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. : : Broilers and other meat-type chickens : sold - Con. : Farms with- - Con. : : 2,000 to 59,999 ..................................................: 7 2 - - - - 60,000 to 99,999 .................................................: - - - - - - 100,000 or more ..................................................: - - - - - - : Turkeys inventory (see text) ....................................farms: 25 81 121 74 107 206 number: 233 (D) 999 450 718 1,434 Turkeys sold (see text) .........................................farms: 19 31 47 44 46 46 number: 2,605 908 606 480 1,574 539 : CROPS HARVESTED : : Barley for grain ................................................farms: 20 7 12 4 15 8 acres: 1,388 67 440 51 131 51 bushels: 53,833 3,569 13,966 1,906 3,573 691 Irrigated .....................................................farms: 7 4 - 2 7 3 acres: 112 9 - (D) 23 (D) Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ....................................................: 6 6 6 3 14 8 25 to 99 acres ...................................................: 7 1 6 1 1 - 100 to 249 acres .................................................: 7 - - - - - 250 to 499 acres .................................................: - - - - - - 500 acres or more ................................................: - - - - - - : Corn for grain ..................................................farms: 34 27 22 34 20 17 acres: 964 512 108 285 36 142 bushels: 164,334 29,988 4,731 6,470 1,820 1,784 Irrigated .....................................................farms: 34 27 22 34 20 17 acres: 964 512 108 285 36 142 Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ....................................................: 18 19 20 29 20 17 25 to 99 acres ...................................................: 16 8 2 4 - - 100 to 249 acres .................................................: - - - 1 - - 250 to 499 acres .................................................: - - - - - - 500 acres or more ................................................: - - - - - - : Corn for silage or greenchop ....................................farms: 94 56 24 13 16 5 acres: 2,912 882 193 40 58 5 tons: 62,803 18,602 4,244 819 1,200 92 Irrigated .....................................................farms: 86 49 23 12 16 4 acres: 2,725 679 (D) (D) 58 (D) Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ....................................................: 45 54 24 13 15 5 25 to 99 acres ...................................................: 46 2 - - 1 - 100 to 249 acres .................................................: 3 - - - - - 250 to 499 acres .................................................: - - - - - - 500 acres or more ................................................: - - - - - - : Cotton, all .....................................................farms: 9 8 6 - - - acres: 236 107 27 - - - bales: 761 353 96 - - - Irrigated .....................................................farms: 9 8 6 - - - acres: 236 107 27 - - - Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ....................................................: 6 8 6 - - - 25 to 99 acres ...................................................: 3 - - - - - 100 to 249 acres .................................................: - - - - - - 250 to 499 acres .................................................: - - - - - - 500 acres or more ................................................: - - - - - - : Dry edible beans, excluding limas ...............................farms: 17 19 15 12 3 - acres: 214 167 19 12 3 - cwt: 3,719 2,445 299 270 63 - Irrigated .....................................................farms: 9 9 11 12 1 - acres: 77 151 15 12 (D) - Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ....................................................: 13 15 15 12 3 - 25 to 99 acres ...................................................: 4 4 - - - - 100 to 249 acres .................................................: - - - - - - 250 to 499 acres .................................................: - - - - - - 500 acres or more ................................................: - - - - - - : Oats for grain ..................................................farms: 22 23 18 16 9 1 acres: 445 538 255 133 (D) (D) bushels: 43,327 54,420 19,073 11,432 (D) (D) Irrigated .....................................................farms: 11 15 7 7 2 - acres: 227 215 (D) 93 (D) - Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ....................................................: 14 13 13 16 9 - 25 to 99 acres ...................................................: 8 9 5 - - 1 100 to 249 acres .................................................: - 1 - - - - 250 to 499 acres .................................................: - - - - - - 500 acres or more ................................................: - - - - - - : Peanuts for nuts ................................................farms: - 10 - - - - acres: - 20 - - - - pounds: - 62,290 - - - - Irrigated .....................................................farms: - 10 - - - - acres: - 20 - - - - Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ....................................................: - 10 - - - - 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 65. Summary by Market Value of Agricultural Products Sold: 2012 (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 HARVESTED - Con. : : Rice ............................................................farms: 1,392 311 290 379 247 102 acres: 561,968 293,939 135,651 94,953 30,408 5,684 cwt: 46,692,580 24,798,729 11,094,988 7,860,771 2,397,403 444,444 Irrigated .....................................................farms: 1,392 311 290 379 247 102 acres: 561,968 293,939 135,651 94,953 30,408 5,684 Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ....................................................: 49 5 - - 7 4 25 to 99 acres ...................................................: 232 10 9 18 71 94 100 to 249 acres .................................................: 385 23 18 177 163 4 250 to 499 acres .................................................: 366 45 136 179 6 - 500 acres or more ................................................: 360 228 127 5 - - : Sorghum for grain ...............................................farms: 74 44 8 3 3 3 acres: 13,908 11,868 1,307 170 217 90 bushels: 1,263,924 1,104,021 106,680 16,150 17,979 8,250 Irrigated .....................................................farms: 62 34 6 3 3 3 acres: 10,997 (D) (D) 170 217 90 Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ....................................................: 17 4 1 1 - - 25 to 99 acres ...................................................: 18 9 1 2 3 3 100 to 249 acres .................................................: 19 12 5 - - - 250 to 499 acres .................................................: 13 13 - - - - 500 acres or more ................................................: 7 6 1 - - - : Soybeans for beans ..............................................farms: 2 - - 1 1 - acres: (D) - - (D) (D) - bushels: (D) - - (D) (D) - Irrigated .....................................................farms: 1 - - 1 - - acres: (D) - - (D) - - Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ....................................................: 1 - - 1 - - 25 to 99 acres ...................................................: - - - - - - 100 to 249 acres .................................................: 1 - - - 1 - 250 to 499 acres .................................................: - - - - - - 500 acres or more ................................................: - - - - - - : Sugarbeets for sugar ............................................farms: 58 49 5 4 - - acres: 27,193 (D) (D) 204 - - tons: 1,179,753 1,159,119 14,504 6,130 - - Irrigated .....................................................farms: 58 49 5 4 - - acres: 26,567 (D) (D) 204 - - : Sunflower seed, all .............................................farms: 197 83 15 29 13 13 acres: 49,749 38,769 1,834 4,645 1,967 1,350 pounds: 68,792,639 55,601,656 2,156,774 5,775,166 2,349,900 1,546,796 Irrigated .....................................................farms: 152 59 14 28 13 13 acres: 34,815 24,719 (D) (D) 1,967 1,350 Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ....................................................: 42 6 2 - 3 2 25 to 99 acres ...................................................: 52 17 4 12 4 4 100 to 249 acres .................................................: 43 10 8 11 3 7 250 to 499 acres .................................................: 31 21 1 6 3 - 500 acres or more ................................................: 29 29 - - - - : Wheat for grain, all ............................................farms: 1,503 820 162 117 113 80 acres: 491,846 413,722 31,819 17,114 15,403 7,188 bushels: 42,955,324 37,562,775 2,282,681 1,156,409 1,074,544 461,667 Irrigated .....................................................farms: 1,123 697 112 79 73 53 acres: 382,958 340,780 17,818 9,386 7,917 4,099 Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ....................................................: 164 12 9 6 11 13 25 to 99 acres ...................................................: 427 143 57 54 51 37 100 to 249 acres .................................................: 430 255 62 42 30 28 250 to 499 acres .................................................: 220 165 25 9 21 - 500 acres or more ................................................: 262 245 9 6 - 2 : Forage-land used for all hay and all : haylage, grass silage, and : greenchop (see text) ...........................................farms: 7,903 1,873 466 545 789 637 acres: 1,670,027 1,125,809 144,347 121,227 119,656 54,110 tons, dry: 9,363,421 7,347,826 721,610 486,870 398,554 175,514 Irrigated .....................................................farms: 5,498 1,701 399 454 605 441 acres: 1,346,666 997,980 112,420 85,726 73,891 31,934 Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ....................................................: 2,621 39 31 46 108 97 25 to 99 acres ...................................................: 2,274 278 111 160 284 357 100 to 249 acres .................................................: 1,435 519 136 177 251 154 250 to 499 acres .................................................: 728 392 100 101 105 19 500 acres or more ................................................: 845 645 88 61 41 10 : Alfalfa hay ...................................................farms: 3,243 1,238 300 304 402 268 acres: 874,137 658,079 74,870 58,513 44,719 18,717 tons, dry: 5,607,210 4,500,486 446,998 311,215 199,529 84,221 Irrigated ...................................................farms: 3,035 1,188 289 290 378 249 acres: 831,858 634,021 70,776 54,583 41,223 16,410 : Other tame hay ................................................farms: 1,699 279 78 138 170 126 acres: 212,238 127,434 15,685 19,801 21,463 7,586 tons, dry: 821,999 608,421 52,952 53,822 50,263 16,787 Irrigated ...................................................farms: 1,217 205 62 103 114 88 acres: 155,054 98,145 13,303 14,727 11,841 4,464 : Field and grass seed crops, all .................................farms: 209 116 17 15 13 11 acres: 71,921 64,232 4,074 1,304 1,072 566 Irrigated .....................................................farms: 202 113 17 14 12 10 acres: 71,053 63,512 4,074 (D) (D) (D) : Land in vegetables (see text) ...................................farms: 6,055 1,060 194 223 344 445 acres: 985,735 937,885 18,835 10,339 6,302 4,510 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 65. Summary by Market Value of Agricultural Products Sold: 2012 (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 HARVESTED - Con. : : Rice ............................................................farms: 35 22 5 1 - - acres: 1,036 251 (D) (D) - - cwt: 76,193 17,841 (D) (D) - - Irrigated .....................................................farms: 35 22 5 1 - - acres: 1,036 251 (D) (D) - - Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ....................................................: 9 18 5 1 - - 25 to 99 acres ...................................................: 26 4 - - - - 100 to 249 acres .................................................: - - - - - - 250 to 499 acres .................................................: - - - - - - 500 acres or more ................................................: - - - - - - : Sorghum for grain ...............................................farms: 7 - 3 3 - - acres: 235 - 12 9 - - bushels: 8,357 - 1,200 1,287 - - Irrigated .....................................................farms: 7 - 3 3 - - acres: 235 - 12 9 - - Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ....................................................: 5 - 3 3 - - 25 to 99 acres ...................................................: - - - - - - 100 to 249 acres .................................................: 2 - - - - - 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: - - - - - - acres: - - - - - - tons: - - - - - - Irrigated .....................................................farms: - - - - - - acres: - - - - - - : Sunflower seed, all .............................................farms: 7 17 6 2 - 12 acres: 517 626 15 (D) - (D) pounds: 801,396 524,049 18,540 (D) - (D) Irrigated .....................................................farms: 2 12 3 2 - 6 acres: (D) 566 12 (D) - 6 Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ....................................................: 2 7 6 2 - 12 25 to 99 acres ...................................................: 3 8 - - - - 100 to 249 acres .................................................: 2 2 - - - - 250 to 499 acres .................................................: - - - - - - 500 acres or more ................................................: - - - - - - : Wheat for grain, all ............................................farms: 93 49 29 27 10 3 acres: 4,343 1,046 613 452 95 51 bushels: 306,244 76,583 18,437 12,486 3,099 399 Irrigated .....................................................farms: 56 21 16 8 5 3 acres: 2,060 519 230 90 23 36 Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ....................................................: 25 29 23 23 10 3 25 to 99 acres ...................................................: 58 20 3 4 - - 100 to 249 acres .................................................: 10 - 3 - - - 250 to 499 acres .................................................: - - - - - - 500 acres or more ................................................: - - - - - - : Forage-land used for all hay and all : haylage, grass silage, and : greenchop (see text) ...........................................farms: 689 813 605 466 372 648 acres: 36,810 32,390 13,598 8,057 5,187 8,836 tons, dry: 100,070 71,678 27,539 12,324 6,420 15,016 Irrigated .....................................................farms: 457 433 320 216 182 290 acres: 18,339 13,525 5,224 2,289 1,743 3,595 Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ....................................................: 235 359 433 372 322 579 25 to 99 acres ...................................................: 336 393 160 89 46 60 100 to 249 acres .................................................: 112 56 12 5 4 9 250 to 499 acres .................................................: 6 5 - - - - 500 acres or more ................................................: - - - - - - : Alfalfa hay ...................................................farms: 191 220 113 93 46 68 acres: 7,028 7,150 2,127 1,202 670 1,062 tons, dry: 31,359 22,892 6,357 2,193 748 1,212 Irrigated ...................................................farms: 181 188 98 71 40 63 acres: 6,624 4,673 1,505 572 616 855 : Other tame hay ................................................farms: 167 175 153 97 116 200 acres: 7,174 5,655 2,514 1,509 1,016 2,401 tons, dry: 16,725 10,097 4,784 2,585 1,619 3,944 Irrigated ...................................................farms: 124 129 117 61 94 120 acres: 4,433 3,721 1,789 736 737 1,158 : Field and grass seed crops, all .................................farms: 11 7 10 4 5 - acres: 376 170 85 (D) (D) - Irrigated .....................................................farms: 11 7 10 3 5 - acres: 376 170 85 (D) (D) - : Land in vegetables (see text) ...................................farms: 468 868 1,023 654 503 273 acres: 2,149 2,680 1,648 731 382 273 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 65. Summary by Market Value of Agricultural Products Sold: 2012 (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 HARVESTED - Con. : : Land in vegetables (see text) - Con. : : Irrigated .....................................................farms: 6,055 1,060 194 223 344 445 acres: 985,731 937,885 18,835 10,339 6,302 4,510 Farms by acres harvested: : 0.1 to 4.9 acres .................................................: 3,667 15 18 27 106 145 5.0 to 24.9 acres ................................................: 948 22 37 70 138 257 25.0 to 99.9 acres ...............................................: 394 88 72 90 96 43 100.0 to 249.9 acres .............................................: 312 223 46 35 4 - 250.0 acres or more ..............................................: 734 712 21 1 - - : Beans, snap ...................................................farms: 652 50 23 35 52 57 acres: 9,419 8,003 577 225 182 223 Harvested for processing ....................................farms: 56 21 - 4 4 4 acres: 3,645 3,499 - 85 1 44 : Peas, green ...................................................farms: 138 15 8 7 16 22 acres: 821 479 12 132 91 43 Harvested for processing ....................................farms: - - - - - - acres: - - - - - - Potatoes ......................................................farms: 441 70 11 22 51 26 acres: 42,660 40,826 376 947 390 20 Harvested for processing ....................................farms: 36 20 - 2 6 - acres: 14,436 14,095 - (D) (D) - Farms by acres harvested: : 0.1 to 4.9 acres ...............................................: 345 4 7 11 40 26 5.0 to 24.9 acres ..............................................: 17 4 1 2 6 - 25.0 to 99.9 acres .............................................: 20 9 1 5 5 - 100.0 to 249.9 acres ...........................................: 16 10 2 4 - - 250.0 acres or more ............................................: 43 43 - - - - : Sweet corn ....................................................farms: 441 76 19 23 31 36 acres: 32,667 31,015 640 596 90 27 Harvested for processing ....................................farms: 12 4 - 2 - - acres: 561 255 - (D) - - Sweet potatoes ................................................farms: 188 44 10 22 13 20 acres: 18,189 15,964 468 1,359 126 240 Harvested for processing ....................................farms: 27 16 2 6 - 3 acres: 2,571 2,298 (D) 200 - (D) : Tomatoes in the open ..........................................farms: 3,176 481 91 86 154 206 acres: 295,247 285,157 6,081 1,508 680 661 Harvested for processing ....................................farms: 631 344 34 18 15 24 acres: 256,051 249,435 5,017 1,185 204 75 : Land in orchards ................................................farms: 38,098 3,366 2,077 2,654 4,775 4,659 acres: 3,138,943 2,167,510 311,651 211,668 189,608 96,515 Irrigated .....................................................farms: 34,580 3,311 2,008 2,535 4,459 4,321 acres: 3,072,245 2,154,209 302,662 203,976 177,822 90,171 Farms by bearing and nonbearing acres: : 0.1 to 4.9 acres .................................................: 13,263 29 14 38 95 128 5.0 to 24.9 acres ................................................: 12,094 84 61 167 1,755 3,341 25.0 to 99.9 acres ...............................................: 7,356 319 644 1,766 2,680 1,151 100.0 to 249.9 acres .............................................: 2,969 901 1,091 626 233 37 250.0 acres or more ..............................................: 2,416 2,033 267 57 12 2 : Apples ........................................................farms: 2,527 83 37 66 127 128 bearing and nonbearing acres: 18,205 7,832 2,045 1,393 1,694 848 : Grapes ........................................................farms: 11,462 1,339 802 1,039 1,837 1,624 bearing and nonbearing acres: 940,177 681,942 88,409 63,775 53,945 25,061 : Peaches, all ..................................................farms: 2,201 232 123 136 203 146 bearing and nonbearing acres: 51,948 32,939 7,305 4,162 3,361 1,191 : Citrus fruit, all .............................................farms: 7,283 431 301 455 671 665 bearing and nonbearing acres: 293,387 168,930 34,226 28,982 24,158 11,725 : Almonds .......................................................farms: 6,841 1,453 711 616 1,101 992 bearing and nonbearing acres: 935,804 (D) 92,164 49,308 (D) (D) : Pecans .......................................................farms: 222 14 4 5 12 10 bearing and nonbearing acres: 3,309 1,404 135 416 224 274 : Walnuts, English ..............................................farms: 5,712 744 399 466 727 664 bearing and nonbearing acres: 329,112 200,605 39,985 26,844 25,943 12,231 : Land in berries (see text) ......................................farms: 1,985 304 80 87 163 160 acres: 52,626 47,267 1,504 582 824 432 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 65. Summary by Market Value of Agricultural Products Sold: 2012 (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 HARVESTED - Con. : : Land in vegetables (see text) - Con. : : Irrigated .....................................................farms: 468 868 1,023 654 503 273 acres: 2,145 2,680 1,648 731 382 273 Farms by acres harvested: : 0.1 to 4.9 acres .................................................: 330 674 966 634 488 264 5.0 to 24.9 acres ................................................: 132 194 54 20 15 9 25.0 to 99.9 acres ...............................................: 5 - - - - - 100.0 to 249.9 acres .............................................: 1 - 3 - - - 250.0 acres or more ..............................................: - - - - - - : Beans, snap ...................................................farms: 78 108 127 78 32 12 acres: 49 85 40 26 5 4 Harvested for processing ....................................farms: 8 - 9 6 - - acres: 13 - 3 1 - - : Peas, green ...................................................farms: 19 16 15 5 5 10 acres: 39 15 4 1 5 1 Harvested for processing ....................................farms: - - - - - - acres: - - - - - - Potatoes ......................................................farms: 49 71 81 41 7 12 acres: 46 27 19 6 1 1 Harvested for processing ....................................farms: - - 4 4 - - acres: - - (Z) (Z) - - Farms by acres harvested: : 0.1 to 4.9 acres ...............................................: 45 71 81 41 7 12 5.0 to 24.9 acres ..............................................: 4 - - - - - 25.0 to 99.9 acres .............................................: - - - - - - 100.0 to 249.9 acres ...........................................: - - - - - - 250.0 acres or more ............................................: - - - - - - : Sweet corn ....................................................farms: 31 69 73 49 23 11 acres: 153 101 29 10 7 1 Harvested for processing ....................................farms: 1 2 3 - - - acres: (D) (D) 2 - - - Sweet potatoes ................................................farms: 7 17 33 16 6 - acres: 5 13 13 2 1 - Harvested for processing ....................................farms: - - - - - - acres: - - - - - - : Tomatoes in the open ..........................................farms: 293 544 615 328 269 109 acres: 403 377 212 67 81 20 Harvested for processing ....................................farms: 39 37 70 17 27 6 acres: 72 20 35 2 6 1 : Land in orchards ................................................farms: 4,524 5,794 4,079 2,460 1,276 2,434 acres: 56,439 36,600 12,672 5,153 2,921 48,206 Irrigated .....................................................farms: 4,120 5,153 3,513 2,083 1,048 2,029 acres: 51,128 32,283 10,550 4,400 2,600 42,445 Farms by bearing and nonbearing acres: : 0.1 to 4.9 acres .................................................: 909 3,553 3,608 2,296 1,170 1,423 5.0 to 24.9 acres ................................................: 3,206 2,091 443 142 97 707 25.0 to 99.9 acres ...............................................: 389 145 24 22 5 211 100.0 to 249.9 acres .............................................: 20 1 3 - 4 53 250.0 acres or more ..............................................: - 4 1 - - 40 : Apples ........................................................farms: 215 488 524 363 173 323 bearing and nonbearing acres: 1,313 1,595 800 295 110 281 : Grapes ........................................................farms: 1,380 1,574 706 411 245 505 bearing and nonbearing acres: 12,127 5,691 949 640 340 7,297 : Peaches, all ..................................................farms: 174 312 323 220 98 234 bearing and nonbearing acres: 961 604 211 128 44 1,042 : Citrus fruit, all .............................................farms: 730 1,195 1,110 852 389 484 bearing and nonbearing acres: 8,012 5,743 3,065 1,108 400 7,039 : Almonds .......................................................farms: 649 506 263 101 72 377 bearing and nonbearing acres: 10,020 4,162 949 309 295 12,479 : Pecans .......................................................farms: 22 35 37 27 24 32 bearing and nonbearing acres: 262 252 96 62 43 140 : Walnuts, English ..............................................farms: 664 846 544 209 93 356 bearing and nonbearing acres: 8,340 5,500 1,879 437 195 7,152 : Land in berries (see text) ......................................farms: 246 320 304 132 78 111 acres: 377 415 138 73 29 987 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 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. Table 66. Summary by Combined Government Payments and Market Value of Agricultural Products Sold: 2012 [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: 77,857 6,367 3,197 4,132 6,951 6,698 percent: 100.0 8.2 4.1 5.3 8.9 8.6 Land in farms .........................................acres: 25,569,001 11,008,019 2,329,769 2,455,915 3,080,089 1,534,088 Average size of farm ..............................acres: 328 1,729 729 594 443 229 : MARKET VALUE OF AGRICULTURAL : PRODUCTS SOLD AND GOVERNMENT : PAYMENTS : : Total .................................................farms: 77,857 6,367 3,197 4,132 6,951 6,698 $1,000: 42,774,392 36,984,412 2,255,552 1,453,434 1,108,388 471,323 Average per farm ................................dollars: 549,397 5,808,766 705,521 351,751 159,457 70,368 Farms by economic class: : Less than $1,000 (see text) ............................: 14,629 - - - - - $1,000 to $2,499 .......................................: 4,718 - - - - - $2,500 to $4,999 .......................................: 5,904 - - - - - $5,000 to $9,999 .......................................: 7,846 - - - - - $10,000 to $24,999 .....................................: 10,265 - - - - - : $25,000 to $49,999 .....................................: 7,150 - - - - - $50,000 to $99,999 .....................................: 6,698 - - - - 6,698 $100,000 to $249,999 ...................................: 6,951 - - - 6,951 - $250,000 to $499,999 ...................................: 4,132 - - 4,132 - - : $500,000 to $999,999 ...................................: 3,197 - 3,197 - - - $1,000,000 or more .....................................: 6,367 6,367 - - - - $1,000,000 to $2,499,999 .............................: 3,015 3,015 - - - - $2,500,000 to $4,999,999 .............................: 1,480 1,480 - - - - $5,000,000 or more ...................................: 1,872 1,872 - - - - : Total sales .........................................farms: 77,857 6,367 3,197 4,132 6,951 6,698 $1,000: 42,627,472 36,904,710 2,233,215 1,437,184 1,096,809 465,802 Grains, oilseeds, dry beans, and : dry peas .........................................farms: 4,757 1,637 652 696 575 359 $1,000: 1,727,708 1,208,891 261,740 167,298 62,473 17,717 Sales of $50,000 or more ........................farms: 3,235 1,418 583 601 443 190 $1,000: 1,701,529 1,203,362 260,304 165,066 59,630 13,168 Corn ............................................farms: 1,796 718 215 185 193 134 $1,000: 419,544 324,237 46,138 25,009 14,743 5,493 Sales of $50,000 or more ......................farms: 1,130 620 188 142 129 51 $1,000: 407,430 321,619 45,543 24,008 13,007 3,253 Wheat ...........................................farms: 1,499 818 165 120 117 74 $1,000: 341,702 300,843 17,589 9,808 8,054 3,129 Sales of $50,000 or more ......................farms: 914 679 95 56 56 28 $1,000: 329,286 296,812 15,845 8,067 6,528 2,034 Soybeans ........................................farms: 2 - - 1 1 - $1,000: (D) - - (D) (D) - Sales of $50,000 or more ......................farms: 1 - - - 1 - $1,000: (D) - - - (D) - Sorghum .........................................farms: 200 96 21 18 22 12 $1,000: (D) 12,287 1,534 (D) (D) 284 Sales of $50,000 or more ......................farms: 76 56 12 4 4 - $1,000: 13,369 11,367 1,410 233 359 - Barley ..........................................farms: 261 104 26 19 29 20 $1,000: 29,212 20,973 4,015 1,269 1,866 708 Sales of $50,000 or more ......................farms: 105 59 16 9 16 5 $1,000: 27,084 20,082 3,872 1,172 1,554 404 Rice ............................................farms: 1,391 329 309 378 221 96 $1,000: 782,644 441,979 180,641 119,416 32,909 6,337 Sales of $50,000 or more ......................farms: 1,306 323 309 377 213 84 $1,000: 780,488 441,817 180,641 (D) 32,712 (D) Other grains, oilseeds, : dry beans, and dry peas ........................farms: 953 383 97 109 78 59 $1,000: 138,816 108,573 11,823 11,208 4,044 1,766 Sales of $50,000 or more ......................farms: 438 269 60 67 29 13 $1,000: 132,134 106,472 11,219 10,469 3,228 746 : Tobacco .......................................... farms: - - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - - Sales of $50,000 or more ........................farms: - - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - - Cotton and cottonseed .............................farms: 630 429 82 48 32 16 $1,000: 655,094 614,340 27,088 8,477 3,789 925 Sales of $50,000 or more ........................farms: 584 417 82 46 27 12 $1,000: 653,962 613,980 27,088 (D) 3,669 (D) Vegetables, melons, potatoes, : and sweet potatoes ...............................farms: 6,155 1,086 217 238 362 456 $1,000: 6,327,838 6,101,037 94,014 48,549 34,979 21,897 Sales of $50,000 or more ........................farms: 1,961 1,058 196 191 244 272 $1,000: 6,293,658 6,100,656 93,751 47,754 32,899 18,598 : Fruits, tree nuts, and berries ....................farms: 36,574 3,547 2,114 2,698 4,882 4,722 $1,000: 17,638,972 14,057,039 1,368,750 878,981 734,897 318,839 Sales of $50,000 or more ........................farms: 17,379 3,492 2,083 2,633 4,727 4,444 $1,000: 17,344,347 14,055,849 1,368,039 877,720 731,775 310,964 Fruits and tree nuts ............................farms: 35,526 3,338 2,054 2,648 4,781 4,628 $1,000: 15,655,703 12,161,754 1,328,034 861,870 719,515 312,467 Sales of $50,000 or more ......................farms: 16,846 3,279 2,022 2,578 4,620 4,347 $1,000: 15,369,315 12,160,531 1,327,270 860,635 716,315 304,564 Berries .........................................farms: 1,701 298 79 82 157 153 $1,000: 1,983,269 1,895,285 40,716 17,111 15,382 6,372 Sales of $50,000 or more ......................farms: 610 291 67 59 113 80 $1,000: 1,972,002 1,895,150 40,542 16,788 14,518 5,004 Nursery, greenhouse, floriculture, : and sod (see text) ...............................farms: 3,890 439 196 227 426 366 $1,000: 2,547,307 2,258,798 118,630 71,049 53,997 21,010 Sales of $50,000 or more ........................farms: 1,465 413 186 215 374 277 $1,000: 2,520,294 2,258,369 118,433 70,945 53,262 19,285 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 66. Summary by Combined Government Payments and Market Value of Agricultural Products Sold: 2012 (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: 7,150 10,265 7,846 5,904 4,718 14,629 percent: 9.2 13.2 10.1 7.6 6.1 18.8 Land in farms .........................................acres: 1,077,158 1,202,868 443,967 348,965 248,043 1,840,120 Average size of farm ..............................acres: 151 117 57 59 53 126 : MARKET VALUE OF AGRICULTURAL : PRODUCTS SOLD AND GOVERNMENT : PAYMENTS : : Total .................................................farms: 7,150 10,265 7,846 5,904 4,718 14,629 $1,000: 251,973 164,131 54,638 21,010 7,802 1,729 Average per farm ................................dollars: 35,241 15,989 6,964 3,559 1,654 118 Farms by economic class: : Less than $1,000 (see text) ............................: - - - - - 14,629 $1,000 to $2,499 .......................................: - - - - 4,718 - $2,500 to $4,999 .......................................: - - - 5,904 - - $5,000 to $9,999 .......................................: - - 7,846 - - - $10,000 to $24,999 .....................................: - 10,265 - - - - : $25,000 to $49,999 .....................................: 7,150 - - - - - $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: 7,150 10,265 7,846 5,904 4,718 14,629 $1,000: 247,254 160,031 53,168 20,156 7,491 1,652 Grains, oilseeds, dry beans, and : dry peas .........................................farms: 288 206 142 86 71 45 $1,000: 6,734 2,055 529 179 72 21 Sales of $50,000 or more ........................farms: - - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - - Corn ............................................farms: 124 80 46 47 32 22 $1,000: 2,800 844 184 56 24 14 Sales of $50,000 or more ......................farms: - - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - - Wheat ...........................................farms: 88 50 30 24 10 3 $1,000: 1,567 505 134 57 15 1 Sales of $50,000 or more ......................farms: - - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - - Soybeans ........................................farms: - - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - - Sales of $50,000 or more ......................farms: - - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - - Sorghum .........................................farms: 20 3 5 3 - - $1,000: 209 10 14 9 - - Sales of $50,000 or more ......................farms: - - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - - Barley ..........................................farms: 19 8 10 3 15 8 $1,000: 271 21 67 9 13 2 Sales of $50,000 or more ......................farms: - - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - - Rice ............................................farms: 34 21 3 - - - $1,000: 1,108 232 22 - - - Sales of $50,000 or more ......................farms: - - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - - Other grains, oilseeds, : dry beans, and dry peas ........................farms: 56 62 53 28 16 12 $1,000: 779 443 108 48 21 3 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: 9 8 6 - - - $1,000: 311 130 33 - - - Sales of $50,000 or more ........................farms: - - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - - Vegetables, melons, potatoes, : and sweet potatoes ...............................farms: 493 880 1,036 647 507 233 $1,000: 10,722 9,172 4,959 1,703 701 105 Sales of $50,000 or more ........................farms: - - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - - : Fruits, tree nuts, and berries ....................farms: 4,657 5,836 4,085 2,393 1,201 439 $1,000: 156,178 88,046 26,112 7,984 1,909 236 Sales of $50,000 or more ........................farms: - - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - - Fruits and tree nuts ............................farms: 4,512 5,688 3,939 2,346 1,175 417 $1,000: 151,611 85,408 25,106 7,834 1,873 231 Sales of $50,000 or more ......................farms: - - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - - Berries .........................................farms: 222 284 260 91 41 34 $1,000: 4,567 2,638 1,007 150 36 5 Sales of $50,000 or more ......................farms: - - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - - Nursery, greenhouse, floriculture, : and sod (see text) ...............................farms: 429 715 514 279 216 83 $1,000: 11,374 8,770 2,585 771 286 36 Sales of $50,000 or more ........................farms: - - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - - ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 66. Summary by Combined Government Payments and Market Value of Agricultural Products Sold: 2012 (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. : : Cut Christmas trees and : short-rotation woody crops .......................farms: 328 1 - 2 8 10 $1,000: 2,706 (D) - (D) 503 365 Sales of $50,000 or more ........................farms: 9 1 - - 3 5 $1,000: 904 (D) - - 455 (D) Cut Christmas trees .............................farms: 301 1 - 1 6 8 $1,000: 2,499 (D) - (D) (D) (D) Sales of $50,000 or more ......................farms: 8 1 - - 3 4 $1,000: 846 (D) - - 455 (D) Short-rotation woody crops ......................farms: 38 - - 1 2 2 $1,000: 206 - - (D) (D) (D) Sales of $50,000 or more ......................farms: 1 - - - - 1 $1,000: (D) - - - - (D) Other crops and hay (see text) ....................farms: 5,744 1,178 403 478 676 535 $1,000: 1,467,274 1,187,198 113,642 72,636 51,706 19,561 Sales of $50,000 or more ........................farms: 2,246 1,025 320 326 382 193 $1,000: 1,425,574 1,183,752 112,038 69,890 46,566 13,327 Maple syrup (see text) ..........................farms: - - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - - Sales of $50,000 or more ......................farms: - - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - - : Cattle and calves .................................farms: 12,594 1,632 370 577 970 878 $1,000: 3,259,325 2,780,508 132,574 120,574 106,289 46,367 Sales of $50,000 or more ........................farms: 3,515 1,493 283 417 710 612 $1,000: 3,170,394 2,777,195 131,044 117,950 102,416 41,789 Milk from cows (see text) .........................farms: 1,554 1,286 108 65 60 11 $1,000: 6,945,102 (D) 67,517 20,844 8,924 555 Sales of $50,000 or more ........................farms: 1,520 1,285 108 65 55 7 $1,000: 6,944,530 (D) 67,517 20,844 8,749 (D) Hogs and pigs .....................................farms: 1,163 22 13 15 47 52 $1,000: 51,526 43,219 2,135 (D) 2,629 737 Sales of $50,000 or more ........................farms: 43 9 5 5 19 5 $1,000: 48,608 43,016 2,053 768 2,401 370 Sheep, goats, wool, mohair, and : milk (see text) ..................................farms: 4,376 82 52 79 177 196 $1,000: 108,136 58,504 15,086 9,287 8,456 3,637 Sales of $50,000 or more ........................farms: 196 50 25 33 57 31 $1,000: 91,373 58,192 14,673 9,006 7,419 2,083 Horses, ponies, mules, burros, and : donkeys ..........................................farms: 3,050 46 28 57 134 215 $1,000: 62,241 (D) 3,308 8,989 10,062 7,600 Sales of $50,000 or more ........................farms: 212 12 7 31 70 92 $1,000: 35,731 8,702 3,135 8,699 9,395 5,801 Poultry and eggs ..................................farms: 3,758 145 38 67 150 143 $1,000: 1,663,919 1,626,383 12,786 12,113 6,875 2,010 Sales of $50,000 or more ........................farms: 248 127 16 35 44 26 $1,000: 1,658,976 1,626,289 12,652 11,963 6,490 1,583 Aquaculture .......................................farms: 229 42 13 30 21 19 $1,000: 103,016 78,367 8,798 10,338 3,292 1,113 Sales of $50,000 or more ........................farms: 119 42 13 29 20 15 $1,000: 101,782 78,367 8,798 (D) (D) (D) Other animals and other animal : products (see text) ..............................farms: 1,766 28 23 38 132 127 $1,000: 67,309 34,108 7,146 7,057 7,938 3,469 Sales of $50,000 or more ........................farms: 150 12 14 26 58 40 $1,000: 58,094 33,986 7,076 6,996 7,365 2,671 : Value of- : Government payments .................................farms: 7,593 2,087 791 894 981 682 $1,000: 146,919 79,701 22,337 16,250 11,579 5,521 : Landlord's share of total : sales (see text) ...................................farms: 2,147 586 367 370 337 173 $1,000: 266,275 199,074 36,571 18,469 9,059 2,021 : Agricultural products sold directly to : individuals for human : consumption (see text) .............................farms: 8,588 216 123 225 488 579 $1,000: 169,915 66,928 17,109 21,346 23,694 14,035 : FARM PRODUCTION EXPENSES : : Total farm production expenses 1/ .....................farms: 77,857 6,367 3,197 4,132 6,951 6,698 $1,000: 35,455,667 29,649,017 1,753,492 1,239,522 1,019,855 464,964 Average per farm ................................dollars: 455,395 4,656,670 548,481 299,981 146,721 69,418 : Fertilizer, lime, and soil : conditioners purchased .............................farms: 38,958 4,957 2,475 3,013 4,695 4,391 $1,000: 1,806,062 1,524,289 108,002 73,329 48,443 21,180 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 .........................................: 24,634 257 272 669 2,137 3,089 $5,000 to $24,999 ....................................: 7,312 711 827 1,351 2,093 1,217 $25,000 to $49,999 ...................................: 2,319 630 587 611 362 58 $50,000 or more ......................................: 4,693 3,359 789 382 103 27 : Chemicals purchased .................................farms: 44,536 5,570 2,887 3,559 5,756 5,063 $1,000: 2,190,674 1,864,521 131,198 83,998 58,420 22,999 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 .........................................: 28,059 387 354 796 2,473 3,605 $5,000 to $24,999 ....................................: 8,444 762 851 1,535 2,745 1,381 $25,000 to $49,999 ...................................: 2,676 662 701 793 416 57 $50,000 or more ......................................: 5,357 3,759 981 435 122 20 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 66. Summary by Combined Government Payments and Market Value of Agricultural Products Sold: 2012 (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. : : Cut Christmas trees and : short-rotation woody crops .......................farms: 24 65 69 25 57 67 $1,000: 363 684 430 89 (D) (D) Sales of $50,000 or more ........................farms: - - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - - Cut Christmas trees .............................farms: 20 62 68 23 47 65 $1,000: 297 675 422 83 63 (D) Sales of $50,000 or more ......................farms: - - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - - Short-rotation woody crops ......................farms: 7 5 3 3 13 2 $1,000: 66 9 8 6 (D) (D) Sales of $50,000 or more ......................farms: - - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - - Other crops and hay (see text) ....................farms: 552 668 477 353 248 176 $1,000: 11,369 7,210 2,499 1,011 358 83 Sales of $50,000 or more ........................farms: - - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - - Maple syrup (see text) ..........................farms: - - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - - Sales of $50,000 or more ......................farms: - - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - - : Cattle and calves .................................farms: 1,181 2,104 1,638 1,549 1,240 455 $1,000: 30,446 25,808 9,690 4,901 1,871 295 Sales of $50,000 or more ........................farms: - - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - - Milk from cows (see text) .........................farms: 7 1 10 3 3 - $1,000: 172 (D) (D) 9 (D) - Sales of $50,000 or more ........................farms: - - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - - Hogs and pigs .....................................farms: 76 120 204 169 237 208 $1,000: 393 457 461 254 194 (D) Sales of $50,000 or more ........................farms: - - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - - Sheep, goats, wool, mohair, and : milk (see text) ..................................farms: 283 627 560 604 810 906 $1,000: 3,578 4,957 1,902 1,339 996 395 Sales of $50,000 or more ........................farms: - - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - - Horses, ponies, mules, burros, and : donkeys ..........................................farms: 438 776 507 424 311 114 $1,000: 10,189 8,781 2,437 1,210 433 (D) Sales of $50,000 or more ........................farms: - - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - - Poultry and eggs ..................................farms: 235 495 590 502 553 840 $1,000: 1,168 887 640 416 383 257 Sales of $50,000 or more ........................farms: - - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - - Aquaculture .......................................farms: 17 43 11 10 16 7 $1,000: 554 (D) (D) 23 (D) 2 Sales of $50,000 or more ........................farms: - - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - - Other animals and other animal : products (see text) ..............................farms: 221 345 273 164 221 194 $1,000: 3,700 2,582 801 267 189 52 Sales of $50,000 or more ........................farms: - - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - - : Value of- : Government payments .................................farms: 603 563 337 279 214 162 $1,000: 4,719 4,100 1,470 853 312 77 : Landlord's share of total : sales (see text) ...................................farms: 110 67 54 30 39 14 $1,000: 684 234 84 56 18 3 : Agricultural products sold directly to : individuals for human : consumption (see text) .............................farms: 782 1,556 1,660 1,185 1,065 709 $1,000: 9,527 9,437 4,422 2,096 1,081 240 : FARM PRODUCTION EXPENSES : : Total farm production expenses 1/ .....................farms: 7,150 10,265 7,846 5,904 4,718 14,629 $1,000: 325,438 305,394 131,636 92,687 67,482 406,180 Average per farm ................................dollars: 45,516 29,751 16,777 15,699 14,303 27,765 : Fertilizer, lime, and soil : conditioners purchased .............................farms: 4,168 4,983 3,663 2,433 1,556 2,624 $1,000: 11,892 7,532 3,109 1,582 1,158 5,546 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 .........................................: 3,575 4,693 3,595 2,402 1,534 2,411 $5,000 to $24,999 ....................................: 552 279 63 30 17 172 $25,000 to $49,999 ...................................: 30 9 5 1 3 23 $50,000 or more ......................................: 11 2 - - 2 18 : Chemicals purchased .................................farms: 4,783 5,677 3,770 2,460 1,615 3,396 $1,000: 12,192 7,182 2,110 1,226 1,004 5,824 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 .........................................: 4,142 5,429 3,719 2,429 1,593 3,132 $5,000 to $24,999 ....................................: 601 236 47 29 20 237 $25,000 to $49,999 ...................................: 23 7 4 2 - 11 $50,000 or more ......................................: 17 5 - - 2 16 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 66. Summary by Combined Government Payments and Market Value of Agricultural Products Sold: 2012 (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. : : Seeds, plants, vines, and : trees purchased ....................................farms: 27,527 4,692 2,088 2,216 2,855 2,418 $1,000: 1,317,934 1,164,467 56,646 38,587 21,404 9,996 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $999 ...........................................: 11,381 145 209 348 794 1,039 $1,000 to $4,999 .....................................: 6,676 526 518 578 948 845 $5,000 to $24,999 ....................................: 5,157 1,099 701 947 949 468 $25,000 to $49,999 ...................................: 1,473 615 391 191 101 48 $50,000 or more ......................................: 2,840 2,307 269 152 63 18 : Livestock and poultry purchased or : leased .............................................farms: 12,585 1,254 345 459 839 722 $1,000: 1,254,286 1,132,137 31,579 25,748 23,809 8,467 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 .........................................: 7,903 117 58 87 261 296 $5,000 to $24,999 ....................................: 2,950 239 88 183 354 329 $25,000 to $99,999 ...................................: 995 394 111 113 164 95 $100,000 to $249,999 .................................: 335 182 43 53 53 2 $250,000 or more .....................................: 402 322 45 23 7 - : Breeding livestock purchased or : leased ...........................................farms: 6,850 823 208 285 530 482 $1,000: 255,730 205,660 11,014 8,961 10,668 4,315 Other livestock and poultry : purchased or leased (see text) ...................farms: 7,673 615 191 241 444 360 $1,000: 998,556 926,477 20,564 16,787 13,141 4,153 : Feed purchased ......................................farms: 30,014 1,978 510 791 1,467 1,389 $1,000: 6,069,374 5,698,359 91,931 54,559 49,122 23,278 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 .........................................: 16,191 82 53 137 375 458 $5,000 to $24,999 ....................................: 9,417 110 101 194 515 608 $25,000 to $99,999 ...................................: 2,042 74 99 254 479 309 $100,000 to $249,999 .................................: 596 125 120 183 87 14 $250,000 or more .....................................: 1,768 1,587 137 23 11 - : Gasoline, fuels, and oils purchased .................farms: 70,844 6,271 3,094 3,941 6,577 6,268 $1,000: 1,552,328 1,233,860 97,063 65,079 58,332 26,505 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 .........................................: 51,974 229 432 1,143 3,534 4,747 $5,000 to $24,999 ....................................: 11,182 1,063 1,383 2,112 2,610 1,390 $25,000 to $49,999 ...................................: 2,745 1,069 730 455 288 95 $50,000 or more ......................................: 4,943 3,910 549 231 145 36 : Utilities ...........................................farms: 60,680 6,364 3,197 4,121 6,268 5,710 $1,000: 1,684,343 1,315,757 106,817 76,700 65,658 36,754 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $999 ...........................................: 16,704 35 39 146 462 987 $1,000 to $4,999 .....................................: 23,136 214 360 853 2,343 2,728 $5,000 to $24,999 ....................................: 12,275 848 1,444 2,272 2,867 1,719 $25,000 to $49,999 ...................................: 3,178 1,053 735 581 424 209 $50,000 or more ......................................: 5,387 4,214 619 269 172 67 : Supplies, repairs, and maintenance costs ............farms: 63,106 6,363 3,196 4,130 6,269 5,724 $1,000: 2,042,434 1,643,841 118,405 82,227 74,820 36,700 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 .........................................: 41,934 185 359 1,022 2,768 3,653 $5,000 to $24,999 ....................................: 12,194 900 1,355 2,138 2,771 1,836 $25,000 to $49,999 ...................................: 3,091 895 767 597 479 167 $50,000 or more ......................................: 5,887 4,383 715 373 251 68 : Hired farm labor ....................................farms: 33,955 6,006 2,692 3,046 4,420 3,331 $1,000: 5,877,973 4,795,429 337,480 239,984 198,080 79,607 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 .........................................: 9,680 25 60 190 679 943 $5,000 to $24,999 ....................................: 8,646 175 336 710 1,484 1,465 $25,000 to $99,999 ...................................: 8,011 939 1,214 1,423 1,824 810 $100,000 to $249,999 .................................: 3,496 1,465 714 573 328 90 $250,000 or more .....................................: 4,122 3,402 368 150 105 23 : Contract labor ......................................farms: 25,067 3,845 1,840 2,188 3,636 3,116 $1,000: 3,378,012 2,759,702 198,276 140,533 136,025 57,138 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $999 ...........................................: 2,190 21 25 33 46 133 $1,000 to $4,999 .....................................: 5,812 100 116 167 455 708 $5,000 to $24,999 ....................................: 7,825 373 409 620 1,328 1,543 $25,000 to $49,999 ...................................: 2,941 364 272 434 884 508 $50,000 or more ......................................: 6,299 2,987 1,018 934 923 224 : Customwork and custom hauling .......................farms: 19,644 3,870 1,666 1,914 2,791 2,242 $1,000: 1,258,384 1,018,753 86,152 61,450 45,274 18,638 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $999 ...........................................: 3,589 25 29 71 220 352 $1,000 to $4,999 .....................................: 4,990 118 136 271 728 856 $5,000 to $24,999 ....................................: 5,384 546 567 827 1,330 902 $25,000 to $49,999 ...................................: 1,859 548 383 363 345 79 $50,000 or more ......................................: 3,822 2,633 551 382 168 53 : Cash rent for land, buildings, : and grazing fees ...................................farms: 15,007 3,609 1,293 1,359 1,733 1,267 $1,000: 1,511,985 1,236,192 90,757 55,495 51,702 22,642 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 .........................................: 5,241 110 103 161 387 421 $5,000 to $9,999 .....................................: 1,649 123 90 141 269 262 $10,000 to $24,999 ...................................: 2,878 530 308 373 558 436 $25,000 or more ......................................: 5,239 2,846 792 684 519 148 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 66. Summary by Combined Government Payments and Market Value of Agricultural Products Sold: 2012 (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. : : Seeds, plants, vines, and : trees purchased ....................................farms: 2,367 2,942 2,375 1,688 1,274 2,612 $1,000: 6,388 5,542 2,413 1,491 1,023 9,978 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $999 ...........................................: 1,214 1,800 1,748 1,351 1,057 1,676 $1,000 to $4,999 .....................................: 844 903 545 283 182 504 $5,000 to $24,999 ....................................: 289 224 79 51 33 317 $25,000 to $49,999 ...................................: 10 8 3 3 2 101 $50,000 or more ......................................: 10 7 - - - 14 : Livestock and poultry purchased or : leased .............................................farms: 978 1,543 1,232 1,200 1,224 2,789 $1,000: 7,630 7,714 3,648 2,847 1,940 8,767 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 .........................................: 568 1,082 986 1,038 1,142 2,268 $5,000 to $24,999 ....................................: 343 441 238 156 81 498 $25,000 to $99,999 ...................................: 65 15 8 6 1 23 $100,000 to $249,999 .................................: 2 - - - - - $250,000 or more .....................................: - 5 - - - - : Breeding livestock purchased or : leased ...........................................farms: 557 842 595 561 599 1,368 $1,000: 3,722 3,070 1,448 1,173 921 4,779 Other livestock and poultry : purchased or leased (see text) ...................farms: 571 915 831 808 831 1,866 $1,000: 3,908 4,644 2,200 1,674 1,020 3,988 : Feed purchased ......................................farms: 2,072 3,709 2,923 2,723 2,690 9,762 $1,000: 25,085 29,571 14,914 12,712 9,662 60,181 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 .........................................: 873 1,937 1,937 1,975 2,122 6,242 $5,000 to $24,999 ....................................: 938 1,591 922 698 548 3,192 $25,000 to $99,999 ...................................: 240 156 62 48 17 304 $100,000 to $249,999 .................................: 20 25 2 1 3 16 $250,000 or more .....................................: 1 - - 1 - 8 : Gasoline, fuels, and oils purchased .................farms: 6,624 9,094 6,760 5,076 4,024 13,115 $1,000: 19,290 18,660 6,973 5,204 3,516 17,846 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 .........................................: 5,616 8,256 6,513 4,909 3,935 12,660 $5,000 to $24,999 ....................................: 938 768 242 164 88 424 $25,000 to $49,999 ...................................: 49 42 - 2 1 14 $50,000 or more ......................................: 21 28 5 1 - 17 : Utilities ...........................................farms: 5,837 7,603 5,565 3,925 2,951 9,139 $1,000: 25,399 23,610 8,721 5,564 3,792 15,570 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $999 ...........................................: 1,443 2,613 2,698 2,036 1,662 4,583 $1,000 to $4,999 .....................................: 3,022 3,719 2,650 1,766 1,220 4,261 $5,000 to $24,999 ....................................: 1,257 1,198 212 119 66 273 $25,000 to $49,999 ...................................: 100 63 2 4 1 6 $50,000 or more ......................................: 15 10 3 - 2 16 : Supplies, repairs, and maintenance costs ............farms: 5,922 7,930 5,853 4,229 3,254 10,236 $1,000: 25,480 23,763 8,182 4,993 3,720 20,303 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 .........................................: 4,464 6,804 5,651 4,089 3,180 9,759 $5,000 to $24,999 ....................................: 1,321 1,030 197 140 71 435 $25,000 to $49,999 ...................................: 100 71 2 - 2 11 $50,000 or more ......................................: 37 25 3 - 1 31 : Hired farm labor ....................................farms: 2,882 3,413 2,168 1,496 928 3,573 $1,000: 53,388 46,668 20,747 13,921 10,136 82,533 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 .........................................: 1,192 1,869 1,491 1,013 633 1,585 $5,000 to $24,999 ....................................: 1,148 1,135 483 313 188 1,209 $25,000 to $99,999 ...................................: 438 316 156 151 89 651 $100,000 to $249,999 .................................: 91 79 34 19 13 90 $250,000 or more .....................................: 13 14 4 - 5 38 : Contract labor ......................................farms: 2,735 2,838 1,625 953 510 1,781 $1,000: 35,768 19,364 7,407 3,663 2,582 17,553 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $999 ...........................................: 209 516 455 302 175 275 $1,000 to $4,999 .....................................: 852 1,269 802 442 213 688 $5,000 to $24,999 ....................................: 1,351 922 324 191 102 662 $25,000 to $49,999 ...................................: 221 96 30 17 14 101 $50,000 or more ......................................: 102 35 14 1 6 55 : Customwork and custom hauling .......................farms: 1,835 1,784 994 645 419 1,484 $1,000: 9,032 6,219 2,262 1,340 955 8,310 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $999 ...........................................: 431 702 538 371 249 601 $1,000 to $4,999 .....................................: 864 790 345 221 131 530 $5,000 to $24,999 ....................................: 495 265 102 44 29 277 $25,000 to $49,999 ...................................: 41 18 9 9 10 54 $50,000 or more ......................................: 4 9 - - - 22 : Cash rent for land, buildings, : and grazing fees ...................................farms: 1,228 1,623 786 514 403 1,192 $1,000: 16,558 17,554 2,898 1,382 1,258 15,547 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 .........................................: 632 1,035 670 448 351 923 $5,000 to $9,999 .....................................: 261 271 59 30 32 111 $10,000 to $24,999 ...................................: 243 234 46 34 17 99 $25,000 or more ......................................: 92 83 11 2 3 59 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 66. Summary by Combined Government Payments and Market Value of Agricultural Products Sold: 2012 (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. : : Rent and lease expenses for machinery, : equipment, and farm share of vehicles ..............farms: 7,895 2,416 821 723 927 594 $1,000: 400,054 355,190 17,223 10,726 7,797 3,442 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $999 ...........................................: 1,914 117 77 87 199 184 $1,000 to $4,999 .....................................: 2,150 244 189 216 346 234 $5,000 to $24,999 ....................................: 1,990 639 365 295 321 151 $25,000 to $49,999 ...................................: 567 307 101 88 39 16 $50,000 or more ......................................: 1,274 1,109 89 37 22 9 : Interest expense ....................................farms: 26,459 4,583 1,888 2,111 3,040 2,230 $1,000: 1,217,781 850,775 72,811 59,645 56,159 30,774 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 .........................................: 8,135 293 299 505 1,040 848 $5,000 to $24,999 ....................................: 11,048 933 756 928 1,350 1,045 $25,000 to $99,999 ...................................: 5,129 1,611 676 576 596 318 $100,000 or more .....................................: 2,147 1,746 157 102 54 19 : Secured by real estate ............................farms: 20,307 3,122 1,337 1,512 2,352 1,747 $1,000: 941,302 622,970 60,348 49,285 49,341 26,634 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $999 .........................................: 1,166 40 39 55 124 105 $1,000 to $4,999 ...................................: 4,137 142 107 218 534 455 $5,000 to $24,999 ..................................: 9,276 605 509 683 1,116 878 $25,000 to $49,999 .................................: 2,690 486 315 294 366 226 $50,000 or more ....................................: 3,038 1,849 367 262 212 83 : Not secured by real estate ........................farms: 13,273 3,197 1,143 1,218 1,474 1,018 $1,000: 276,479 227,806 12,463 10,360 6,818 4,139 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $999 .........................................: 2,988 105 132 152 338 333 $1,000 to $4,999 ...................................: 4,701 303 348 488 696 445 $5,000 to $24,999 ..................................: 3,514 1,005 532 492 408 233 $25,000 to $49,999 .................................: 835 611 97 69 31 4 $50,000 or more ....................................: 1,235 1,173 34 17 1 3 : Property taxes paid .................................farms: 71,398 5,743 2,871 3,682 6,304 6,072 $1,000: 827,587 449,632 54,652 48,778 55,426 38,636 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 .........................................: 45,137 578 504 1,018 2,766 3,687 $5,000 to $9,999 .....................................: 12,923 479 604 1,060 1,950 1,504 $10,000 to $24,999 ...................................: 7,776 1,203 1,089 1,176 1,267 695 $25,000 or more ......................................: 5,562 3,483 674 428 321 186 : All other production : expenses (see text) ................................farms: 43,111 6,333 3,181 4,098 4,411 3,338 $1,000: 3,066,456 2,606,113 154,501 122,683 69,384 28,209 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 .........................................: 22,864 213 309 877 1,621 1,930 $5,000 to $24,999 ....................................: 10,967 980 1,248 1,976 2,162 1,189 $25,000 to $49,999 ...................................: 2,928 850 713 592 357 132 $50,000 to $99,999 ...................................: 2,313 1,012 536 410 189 76 $100,000 or more .....................................: 4,039 3,278 375 243 82 11 : Production expenses paid by : landlords 1/ .........................................farms: 1,305 444 186 140 156 73 $1,000: 54,690 44,041 4,902 2,631 1,696 590 : Depreciation expenses claimed .........................farms: 39,342 6,357 3,185 4,117 4,529 3,639 $1,000: 2,256,892 1,719,456 151,713 119,498 85,756 42,896 : NET CASH FARM INCOME (SEE TEXT) : : Net cash farm income of operations ....................farms: 77,857 6,367 3,197 4,132 6,951 6,698 $1,000: 8,523,285 7,915,153 627,451 315,351 185,122 70,129 Average per farm ................................dollars: 109,474 1,243,153 196,262 76,319 26,632 10,470 : Farms with net gains 2/ ............................number: 36,283 5,299 2,646 3,263 5,172 4,864 Average net gain ..............................dollars: 314,056 1,747,641 304,061 155,265 77,336 40,839 : Gain of- : Less than $1,000 .....................................: 1,602 8 4 9 20 32 $1,000 to $4,999 .....................................: 4,785 9 8 29 106 196 $5,000 to $9,999 .....................................: 3,597 20 21 47 146 263 $10,000 to $24,999 ...................................: 5,723 33 42 138 459 1,055 $25,000 to $49,999 ...................................: 4,813 60 74 248 973 1,886 $50,000 or more ......................................: 15,763 5,169 2,497 2,792 3,468 1,432 : Farms with net losses ..............................number: 41,574 1,068 551 869 1,779 1,834 Average net loss ..............................dollars: 69,072 1,259,922 321,406 220,113 120,774 70,073 : Loss of- : Less than $1,000 .....................................: 1,982 - 2 6 31 45 $1,000 to $4,999 .....................................: 8,924 6 8 36 87 154 $5,000 to $9,999 .....................................: 7,815 6 9 36 124 170 $10,000 to $24,999 ...................................: 10,269 30 45 72 296 395 $25,000 to $49,999 ...................................: 5,478 50 42 108 313 368 $50,000 or more ......................................: 7,106 976 445 611 928 702 : Net cash farm income of operators .....................farms: 77,857 6,367 3,197 4,132 6,951 6,698 $1,000: 8,177,199 7,637,078 587,687 297,718 176,246 68,669 Average per farm ................................dollars: 105,028 1,199,478 183,825 72,052 25,356 10,252 : Operators reporting net gains 2/ ....................farms: 36,052 5,243 2,592 3,224 5,129 4,851 Average net gain ..............................dollars: 308,890 1,727,332 297,712 152,978 76,672 40,730 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 66. Summary by Combined Government Payments and Market Value of Agricultural Products Sold: 2012 (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. : : Rent and lease expenses for machinery, : equipment, and farm share of vehicles ..............farms: 540 545 312 222 157 638 $1,000: 1,411 1,580 422 402 200 1,663 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $999 ...........................................: 235 262 193 110 105 345 $1,000 to $4,999 .....................................: 246 212 94 90 45 234 $5,000 to $24,999 ....................................: 50 62 25 22 7 53 $25,000 to $49,999 ...................................: 6 8 - - - 2 $50,000 or more ......................................: 3 1 - - - 4 : Interest expense ....................................farms: 2,210 2,569 1,615 1,149 906 4,158 $1,000: 25,092 29,143 14,642 13,089 8,874 56,775 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 .........................................: 866 1,072 730 484 424 1,574 $5,000 to $24,999 ....................................: 1,106 1,227 752 534 398 2,019 $25,000 to $99,999 ...................................: 229 250 132 123 83 535 $100,000 or more .....................................: 9 20 1 8 1 30 : Secured by real estate ............................farms: 1,732 2,067 1,295 953 766 3,424 $1,000: 22,068 26,200 12,774 11,889 8,152 51,640 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $999 .........................................: 132 160 119 70 91 231 $1,000 to $4,999 ...................................: 411 550 395 294 220 811 $5,000 to $24,999 ..................................: 974 1,128 673 470 374 1,866 $25,000 to $49,999 .................................: 167 158 96 98 76 408 $50,000 or more ....................................: 48 71 12 21 5 108 : Not secured by real estate ........................farms: 1,005 1,063 694 461 327 1,673 $1,000: 3,024 2,943 1,868 1,200 722 5,135 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $999 .........................................: 356 395 311 182 143 541 $1,000 to $4,999 ...................................: 447 474 259 212 148 881 $5,000 to $24,999 ..................................: 197 188 117 67 36 239 $25,000 to $49,999 .................................: 4 6 7 - - 6 $50,000 or more ....................................: 1 - - - - 6 : Property taxes paid .................................farms: 6,587 9,375 7,195 5,436 4,319 13,814 $1,000: 31,392 40,557 25,504 17,505 13,481 52,025 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 .........................................: 4,601 7,046 5,731 4,489 3,635 11,082 $5,000 to $9,999 .....................................: 1,376 1,645 1,122 698 543 1,942 $10,000 to $24,999 ...................................: 510 567 304 218 121 626 $25,000 or more ......................................: 100 117 38 31 20 164 : All other production : expenses (see text) ................................farms: 3,437 4,385 2,969 2,263 1,826 6,870 $1,000: 19,440 20,736 7,683 5,767 4,180 27,759 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 .........................................: 2,459 3,577 2,611 2,019 1,638 5,610 $5,000 to $24,999 ....................................: 884 702 323 212 173 1,118 $25,000 to $49,999 ...................................: 61 62 25 26 10 100 $50,000 to $99,999 ...................................: 22 24 10 4 3 27 $100,000 or more .....................................: 11 20 - 2 2 15 : Production expenses paid by : landlords 1/ .........................................farms: 72 68 58 41 21 46 $1,000: 317 224 91 87 44 68 : Depreciation expenses claimed .........................farms: 3,455 4,075 2,474 1,765 1,362 4,384 $1,000: 31,511 27,651 15,769 11,859 9,725 41,058 : NET CASH FARM INCOME (SEE TEXT) : : Net cash farm income of operations ....................farms: 7,150 10,265 7,846 5,904 4,718 14,629 $1,000: -31,563 -101,220 -53,949 -54,372 -38,630 -310,189 Average per farm ................................dollars: -4,414 -9,861 -6,876 -9,209 -8,188 -21,204 : Farms with net gains 2/ ............................number: 4,450 5,215 2,825 1,208 470 871 Average net gain ..............................dollars: 21,054 10,812 8,250 8,625 32,677 28,919 : Gain of- : Less than $1,000 .....................................: 80 309 449 379 221 91 $1,000 to $4,999 .....................................: 465 1,351 1,611 681 149 180 $5,000 to $9,999 .....................................: 608 1,703 603 41 22 123 $10,000 to $24,999 ...................................: 1,945 1,641 99 54 27 230 $25,000 to $49,999 ...................................: 1,219 133 27 26 25 142 $50,000 or more ......................................: 133 78 36 27 26 105 : Farms with net losses ..............................number: 2,700 5,050 5,021 4,696 4,248 13,758 Average net loss ..............................dollars: 46,391 31,209 15,386 13,797 12,709 24,377 : Loss of- : Less than $1,000 .....................................: 87 271 469 426 308 337 $1,000 to $4,999 .....................................: 336 1,010 1,468 1,450 1,452 2,917 $5,000 to $9,999 .....................................: 385 878 1,103 1,032 1,001 3,071 $10,000 to $24,999 ...................................: 736 1,464 1,198 1,079 990 3,964 $25,000 to $49,999 ...................................: 526 736 524 470 335 2,006 $50,000 or more ......................................: 630 691 259 239 162 1,463 : Net cash farm income of operators .....................farms: 7,150 10,265 7,846 5,904 4,718 14,629 $1,000: -31,945 -101,243 -53,942 -54,341 -38,603 -310,124 Average per farm ................................dollars: -4,468 -9,863 -6,875 -9,204 -8,182 -21,199 : Operators reporting net gains 2/ ....................farms: 4,434 5,210 2,822 1,208 468 871 Average net gain ..............................dollars: 21,052 10,826 8,250 8,616 32,813 28,924 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 66. Summary by Combined Government Payments and Market Value of Agricultural Products Sold: 2012 (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 (SEE TEXT) - Con. : : Net cash farm income of operators - Con. : Operators reporting net gains 2/ - Con. : : Gain of- : Less than $1,000 .....................................: 1,605 9 5 9 22 31 $1,000 to $4,999 .....................................: 4,774 9 9 34 105 194 $5,000 to $9,999 .....................................: 3,610 23 22 52 149 264 $10,000 to $24,999 ...................................: 5,758 37 56 133 469 1,073 $25,000 to $49,999 ...................................: 4,811 66 76 253 982 1,865 $50,000 or more ......................................: 15,494 5,099 2,424 2,743 3,402 1,424 : Operators reporting net losses ......................farms: 41,805 1,124 605 908 1,822 1,847 Average net loss ..............................dollars: 70,779 1,262,744 304,102 215,290 119,103 69,797 : Loss of- : Less than $1,000 .....................................: 2,006 - 5 6 33 39 $1,000 to $4,999 .....................................: 8,944 6 10 42 92 158 $5,000 to $9,999 .....................................: 7,798 6 10 30 118 171 $10,000 to $24,999 ...................................: 10,315 37 49 76 315 402 $25,000 to $49,999 ...................................: 5,518 49 56 120 321 376 $50,000 or more ......................................: 7,224 1,026 475 634 943 701 : COMMODITY CREDIT CORPORATION : LOANS (SEE TEXT) : : Total .................................................farms: 521 192 115 115 87 4 $1,000: 122,036 84,739 21,005 12,044 4,165 (D) : INCOME FROM FARM-RELATED SOURCES : : Total income from farm-related sources, gross : before taxes and expenses (see text) .................farms: 23,685 3,460 1,552 1,804 2,686 2,246 $1,000: 1,204,560 579,759 125,392 101,439 96,589 63,770 Customwork and other agricultural : services ...........................................farms: 5,255 1,119 519 492 637 507 $1,000: 383,434 229,194 47,921 27,191 27,065 12,470 : Gross cash rent or share payments ...................farms: 6,000 866 340 413 636 597 $1,000: 256,997 127,728 24,201 19,379 19,126 14,612 Sales of forest products, excluding : Christmas trees, short rotation woody : crops, and maple products ..........................farms: 862 33 19 52 43 88 $1,000: 27,613 948 (D) 580 3,665 2,154 Agri-tourism and recreational services : (see text) .........................................farms: 1,699 104 80 120 167 128 $1,000: 64,520 12,406 5,862 15,708 3,812 6,250 Patronage dividends and refunds : from cooperatives ..................................farms: 7,469 1,903 747 775 1,146 764 $1,000: 171,066 117,700 18,145 14,471 10,658 4,800 Crop and livestock insurance : payments received ..................................farms: 1,568 293 173 152 235 163 $1,000: 62,457 28,847 8,506 8,399 6,600 4,089 Amount from state and local government : agricultural program payments ......................farms: 343 64 29 23 46 38 $1,000: 4,218 1,590 (D) 496 610 261 Other farm-related income : sources (see text) .................................farms: 5,192 548 201 170 341 337 $1,000: 234,255 61,346 19,283 15,214 25,054 19,134 : LAND USE : : Total cropland ........................................farms: 57,731 5,863 3,022 3,798 6,341 6,031 acres: 9,591,783 6,541,234 848,922 598,683 551,512 251,807 Harvested cropland ..................................farms: 53,372 5,791 2,992 3,768 6,252 5,961 acres: 8,007,461 5,898,258 727,927 501,051 385,923 181,474 Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 49 acres ........................................: 38,391 354 344 1,113 3,975 5,093 50 to 99 acres .......................................: 4,412 241 555 1,068 1,295 548 100 to 199 acres .....................................: 3,567 705 858 812 651 248 200 to 499 acres .....................................: 3,538 1,631 858 651 276 57 500 to 999 acres .....................................: 1,780 1,258 328 103 48 15 1,000 to 1,999 acres .................................: 950 878 41 19 7 - 2,000 acres or more ..................................: 734 724 8 2 - - : Cropland- : Other pasture and grazing land that could : have been used for crops without additional : improvements (see text) ..........................farms: 2,879 206 65 80 186 149 acres: 492,270 158,155 42,277 51,426 61,993 34,850 On which all crops failed or : were abandoned ...................................farms: 2,425 155 69 88 188 195 acres: 207,072 74,754 19,079 9,230 28,945 8,290 Idle or used for cover crops or soil : improvement, but not harvested and not : pastured or grazed (see text) ....................farms: 6,204 616 259 309 478 458 acres: 674,022 306,948 38,149 25,857 39,933 21,196 In cultivated summer fallow .......................farms: 1,477 258 91 116 146 108 acres: 210,958 103,119 21,490 11,119 34,718 5,997 : Total woodland ........................................farms: 7,345 218 140 236 459 551 acres: 1,575,520 126,767 57,222 145,388 277,073 162,196 Woodland pastured ...................................farms: 3,519 94 52 96 175 198 acres: 855,116 68,007 37,250 92,471 187,892 90,689 Woodland not pastured ...............................farms: 4,610 139 96 162 322 403 acres: 720,404 58,760 19,972 52,917 89,181 71,507 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 66. Summary by Combined Government Payments and Market Value of Agricultural Products Sold: 2012 (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 (SEE TEXT) - Con. : : Net cash farm income of operators - Con. : Operators reporting net gains 2/ - Con. : : Gain of- : Less than $1,000 .....................................: 78 306 449 386 219 91 $1,000 to $4,999 .....................................: 465 1,350 1,606 673 149 180 $5,000 to $9,999 .....................................: 605 1,703 605 42 22 123 $10,000 to $24,999 ...................................: 1,940 1,640 99 54 27 230 $25,000 to $49,999 ...................................: 1,216 133 27 26 25 142 $50,000 or more ......................................: 130 78 36 27 26 105 : Operators reporting net losses ......................farms: 2,716 5,055 5,024 4,696 4,250 13,758 Average net loss ..............................dollars: 46,130 31,187 15,371 13,788 12,696 24,372 : Loss of- : Less than $1,000 .....................................: 94 277 473 431 311 337 $1,000 to $4,999 .....................................: 341 1,009 1,471 1,445 1,451 2,919 $5,000 to $9,999 .....................................: 389 875 1,098 1,031 1,001 3,069 $10,000 to $24,999 ...................................: 736 1,465 1,200 1,080 991 3,964 $25,000 to $49,999 ...................................: 526 738 522 470 334 2,006 $50,000 or more ......................................: 630 691 260 239 162 1,463 : COMMODITY CREDIT CORPORATION : LOANS (SEE TEXT) : : Total .................................................farms: 1 4 - - 1 2 $1,000: (D) (D) - - (D) (D) : INCOME FROM FARM-RELATED SOURCES : : Total income from farm-related sources, gross : before taxes and expenses (see text) .................farms: 2,209 2,793 1,662 1,146 853 3,274 $1,000: 41,902 40,044 23,049 17,305 21,050 94,262 Customwork and other agricultural : services ...........................................farms: 532 801 215 181 85 167 $1,000: 7,945 11,046 10,276 1,251 500 8,575 : Gross cash rent or share payments ...................farms: 610 665 429 301 221 922 $1,000: 9,060 9,305 4,886 6,224 1,884 20,592 Sales of forest products, excluding : Christmas trees, short rotation woody : crops, and maple products ..........................farms: 90 109 145 80 55 148 $1,000: 618 763 (D) 2,861 11,925 2,599 Agri-tourism and recreational services : (see text) .........................................farms: 119 217 139 115 77 433 $1,000: 1,856 3,745 1,429 2,766 739 9,947 Patronage dividends and refunds : from cooperatives ..................................farms: 550 535 317 218 202 312 $1,000: 1,840 1,258 746 221 192 1,036 Crop and livestock insurance : payments received ..................................farms: 199 103 56 36 32 126 $1,000: 1,993 557 (D) (D) 2,214 762 Amount from state and local government : agricultural program payments ......................farms: 45 53 16 9 4 16 $1,000: 109 348 (D) (D) 68 237 Other farm-related income : sources (see text) .................................farms: 416 594 509 329 245 1,502 $1,000: 18,482 13,023 5,031 3,646 3,528 50,515 : LAND USE : : Total cropland ........................................farms: 6,067 8,002 6,044 3,963 2,605 5,995 acres: 195,553 168,673 78,417 49,736 36,575 270,671 Harvested cropland ..................................farms: 5,901 7,703 5,720 3,586 2,262 3,436 acres: 111,487 78,475 31,307 16,367 14,095 61,097 Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 49 acres ........................................: 5,424 7,406 5,638 3,550 2,233 3,261 50 to 99 acres .......................................: 310 221 55 31 17 71 100 to 199 acres .....................................: 136 66 25 5 8 53 200 to 499 acres .....................................: 28 8 2 - 2 25 500 to 999 acres .....................................: 2 2 - - - 24 1,000 to 1,999 acres .................................: 1 - - - 2 2 2,000 acres or more ..................................: - - - - - - : Cropland- : Other pasture and grazing land that could : have been used for crops without additional : improvements (see text) ..........................farms: 225 370 315 250 221 812 acres: 41,251 26,749 24,589 7,073 5,378 38,529 On which all crops failed or : were abandoned ...................................farms: 209 298 219 129 93 782 acres: 12,820 10,431 5,853 5,350 5,739 26,581 Idle or used for cover crops or soil : improvement, but not harvested and not : pastured or grazed (see text) ....................farms: 565 643 560 391 367 1,558 acres: 23,768 43,433 15,404 18,878 10,932 129,524 In cultivated summer fallow .......................farms: 106 170 94 92 53 243 acres: 6,227 9,585 1,264 2,068 431 14,940 : Total woodland ........................................farms: 710 1,013 887 674 586 1,871 acres: 157,658 147,048 88,888 91,777 64,146 257,357 Woodland pastured ...................................farms: 331 464 414 349 331 1,015 acres: 111,745 79,498 43,121 29,088 12,026 103,329 Woodland not pastured ...............................farms: 479 637 555 412 321 1,084 acres: 45,913 67,550 45,767 62,689 52,120 154,028 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 66. Summary by Combined Government Payments and Market Value of Agricultural Products Sold: 2012 (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. : : Permanent pasture and rangeland, : other than cropland and woodland : pastured (see text) ..................................farms: 21,886 998 444 689 1,240 1,101 acres: 13,036,448 3,806,592 1,324,294 1,621,072 2,113,576 1,038,830 : Land in farmsteads, homes, buildings, : livestock facilities, ponds, roads, : wasteland, etc. ......................................farms: 41,259 3,250 1,383 1,925 3,357 3,215 acres: 1,365,250 533,426 99,331 90,772 137,928 81,255 : Irrigated land ........................................farms: 53,546 5,750 2,967 3,696 5,981 5,659 acres: 7,861,964 5,749,231 720,538 506,993 363,028 174,338 Harvested cropland ..................................farms: 47,972 5,687 2,893 3,597 5,818 5,462 acres: 7,371,411 5,597,244 657,420 441,175 315,269 144,492 Pastureland and other land ..........................farms: 7,884 299 175 280 411 412 acres: 490,553 151,987 63,118 65,818 47,759 29,846 : CONSERVATION AND CROP INSURANCE : : Land enrolled in Conservation Reserve, : Wetlands Reserve, Farmable Wetlands, : or Conservation Reserve Enhancement : Programs .............................................farms: 470 23 15 23 25 21 acres: 105,504 16,637 7,779 4,795 12,055 5,039 : Land enrolled in crop insurance : programs (see text) ..................................farms: 13,813 3,079 1,734 2,005 2,673 1,704 acres: 4,929,132 3,332,078 509,356 429,253 348,619 148,657 : ORGANIC AGRICULTURE : : Total organic commodity sales (see text) ..............farms: 3,008 520 168 238 375 292 $1,000: 1,355,207 1,157,739 74,472 53,151 42,095 13,142 : VALUE OF LAND AND BUILDINGS : : Estimated market value of land and : buildings ............................................farms: 77,857 6,367 3,197 4,132 6,951 6,698 $1,000: 160,524,953 78,242,246 13,461,605 11,071,625 13,322,364 7,909,277 Average per farm ................................dollars: 2,061,792 12,288,715 4,210,699 2,679,483 1,916,611 1,180,842 Average per acre ................................dollars: 6,278 7,108 5,778 4,508 4,325 5,156 : Farms by value group: : $1 to $49,999 ..........................................: 3,768 65 29 74 142 260 $50,000 to $99,999 .....................................: 2,993 34 19 60 125 216 $100,000 to $199,999 ...................................: 6,849 54 48 89 226 406 $200,000 to $499,999 ...................................: 22,324 182 140 342 1,252 1,917 $500,000 to $999,999 ...................................: 17,939 274 290 663 1,976 1,891 : $1,000,000 to $1,999,999 ...............................: 9,621 534 613 1,235 1,651 1,105 $2,000,000 to $4,999,999 ...............................: 8,056 1,566 1,333 1,222 1,115 656 $5,000,000 to $9,999,999 ...............................: 3,283 1,555 486 285 275 158 $10,000,000 or more ....................................: 3,024 2,103 239 162 189 89 : VALUE OF MACHINERY AND EQUIPMENT : : Estimated market value of all machinery : and equipment ........................................farms: 77,851 6,366 3,197 4,132 6,951 6,698 $1,000: 9,709,545 5,793,309 783,583 645,695 594,360 339,757 : Farms by value group: : $1 to $4,999 ...........................................: 10,455 16 27 73 166 524 $5,000 to $9,999 .......................................: 8,336 9 24 61 272 539 $10,000 to $19,999 .....................................: 13,025 58 89 214 730 1,217 $20,000 to $49,999 .....................................: 18,826 191 306 693 1,818 2,110 $50,000 to $99,999 .....................................: 11,191 417 543 1,003 1,867 1,396 $100,000 to $199,999 ...................................: 6,916 857 805 986 1,409 691 $200,000 to $499,999 ...................................: 5,289 1,905 970 859 605 178 $500,000 or more .......................................: 3,813 2,913 433 243 84 43 : SELECTED MACHINERY AND EQUIPMENT : : Trucks, including pickups (see text) ..................farms: 55,175 5,814 2,738 3,428 5,547 4,804 number: 132,455 48,072 9,252 8,614 11,430 8,056 : Tractors, all .........................................farms: 53,296 5,739 2,681 3,368 5,575 5,022 number: 147,163 55,603 11,049 10,257 13,467 9,787 Less than 40 horsepower (PTO) .......................farms: 31,264 2,641 1,171 1,508 2,645 2,621 number: 49,313 10,411 2,415 2,675 4,185 3,804 40 to 99 horsepower (PTO) ...........................farms: 30,456 4,855 2,195 2,671 4,116 3,294 number: 68,295 26,625 6,057 5,676 7,382 4,993 100 horsepower (PTO) or more ........................farms: 10,631 3,637 1,127 1,076 1,199 719 number: 29,555 18,567 2,577 1,906 1,900 990 : Grain and bean combines, self-propelled ...............farms: 1,710 734 291 256 174 82 number: 2,497 1,230 437 348 200 97 : Cotton pickers and strippers, : self-propelled .......................................farms: 475 332 57 37 22 9 number: 870 679 75 45 32 13 Forage harvesters, self-propelled .....................farms: 1,629 403 122 139 213 165 number: 2,188 710 171 182 259 197 Hay balers ............................................farms: 3,674 695 228 282 399 277 number: 4,822 1,087 323 422 545 360 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 66. Summary by Combined Government Payments and Market Value of Agricultural Products Sold: 2012 (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. : : Permanent pasture and rangeland, : other than cropland and woodland : pastured (see text) ..................................farms: 1,676 2,854 2,259 2,129 1,872 6,624 acres: 651,973 806,827 230,226 171,221 122,430 1,149,407 : Land in farmsteads, homes, buildings, : livestock facilities, ponds, roads, : wasteland, etc. ......................................farms: 3,674 5,303 3,965 3,162 2,793 9,232 acres: 71,974 80,320 46,436 36,231 24,892 162,685 : Irrigated land ........................................farms: 5,748 7,483 5,567 3,680 2,461 4,554 acres: 108,459 91,529 30,550 23,174 10,820 83,304 Harvested cropland ..................................farms: 5,339 6,712 4,955 3,026 1,850 2,633 acres: 83,704 53,560 18,793 9,320 5,723 44,711 Pastureland and other land ..........................farms: 672 1,059 904 813 748 2,111 acres: 24,755 37,969 11,757 13,854 5,097 38,593 : CONSERVATION AND CROP INSURANCE : : Land enrolled in Conservation Reserve, : Wetlands Reserve, Farmable Wetlands, : or Conservation Reserve Enhancement : Programs .............................................farms: 45 79 62 71 79 27 acres: 14,120 22,632 10,697 6,818 4,401 531 : Land enrolled in crop insurance : programs (see text) ..................................farms: 1,229 778 230 105 45 231 acres: 69,598 34,216 12,275 13,035 5,165 26,880 : ORGANIC AGRICULTURE : : Total organic commodity sales (see text) ..............farms: 348 371 303 204 121 68 $1,000: 8,422 4,026 1,355 590 184 31 : VALUE OF LAND AND BUILDINGS : : Estimated market value of land and : buildings ............................................farms: 7,150 10,265 7,846 5,904 4,718 14,629 $1,000: 6,779,052 7,759,912 4,318,040 3,394,577 2,439,558 11,826,697 Average per farm ................................dollars: 948,119 755,958 550,349 574,962 517,075 808,442 Average per acre ................................dollars: 6,293 6,451 9,726 9,728 9,835 6,427 : Farms by value group: : $1 to $49,999 ..........................................: 304 594 590 454 384 872 $50,000 to $99,999 .....................................: 239 487 485 335 302 691 $100,000 to $199,999 ...................................: 697 1,256 888 699 628 1,858 $200,000 to $499,999 ...................................: 2,289 3,457 2,887 2,413 1,936 5,509 $500,000 to $999,999 ...................................: 1,906 2,665 2,146 1,417 1,110 3,601 : $1,000,000 to $1,999,999 ...............................: 995 1,116 584 391 240 1,157 $2,000,000 to $4,999,999 ...............................: 563 502 214 143 90 652 $5,000,000 to $9,999,999 ...............................: 105 141 35 32 19 192 $10,000,000 or more ....................................: 52 47 17 20 9 97 : VALUE OF MACHINERY AND EQUIPMENT : : Estimated market value of all machinery : and equipment ........................................farms: 7,150 10,265 7,846 5,904 4,718 14,624 $1,000: 293,253 315,223 201,020 152,380 105,479 485,487 : Farms by value group: : $1 to $4,999 ...........................................: 723 1,677 1,855 1,460 1,351 2,583 $5,000 to $9,999 .......................................: 872 1,469 1,240 879 746 2,225 $10,000 to $19,999 .....................................: 1,480 2,304 1,535 1,312 1,001 3,085 $20,000 to $49,999 .....................................: 2,205 3,036 2,171 1,408 1,078 3,810 $50,000 to $99,999 .....................................: 1,161 1,177 709 567 405 1,946 $100,000 to $199,999 ...................................: 538 435 239 194 98 664 $200,000 to $499,999 ...................................: 149 149 87 81 34 272 $500,000 or more .......................................: 22 18 10 3 5 39 : SELECTED MACHINERY AND EQUIPMENT : : Trucks, including pickups (see text) ..................farms: 5,044 6,761 4,863 3,787 2,933 9,456 number: 7,657 9,827 6,551 5,073 3,930 13,993 : Tractors, all .........................................farms: 5,225 6,527 4,556 3,473 2,390 8,740 number: 8,897 10,032 6,454 5,082 3,397 13,138 Less than 40 horsepower (PTO) .......................farms: 3,031 4,250 3,206 2,495 1,761 5,935 number: 3,969 5,422 3,899 3,135 2,133 7,265 40 to 99 horsepower (PTO) ...........................farms: 2,933 2,897 1,695 1,279 800 3,721 number: 4,202 3,788 2,121 1,628 1,031 4,792 100 horsepower (PTO) or more ........................farms: 539 670 379 247 188 850 number: 726 822 434 319 233 1,081 : Grain and bean combines, self-propelled ...............farms: 52 39 35 19 6 22 number: 56 41 36 19 6 27 : Cotton pickers and strippers, : self-propelled .......................................farms: 7 8 3 - - - number: 8 12 6 - - - Forage harvesters, self-propelled .....................farms: 138 124 81 70 33 141 number: 174 138 86 79 33 159 Hay balers ............................................farms: 349 386 285 204 130 439 number: 441 468 319 227 135 495 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 66. Summary by Combined Government Payments and Market Value of Agricultural Products Sold: 2012 (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: 32,646 5,003 2,438 2,894 4,343 3,873 acres treated: 6,314,533 4,762,238 590,345 379,199 267,997 120,804 Manure used ...........................................farms: 6,794 1,073 386 483 702 587 acres treated: 712,975 510,999 59,698 42,123 35,663 20,243 : Acres treated to control- : Insects .............................................farms: 25,064 4,448 2,233 2,636 3,845 3,251 acres: 5,293,093 4,113,016 476,600 311,989 198,274 82,726 Weeds, grass, or brush ..............................farms: 32,402 4,783 2,371 2,836 4,410 3,936 acres: 6,116,162 4,555,774 581,668 393,877 263,137 121,098 Nematodes ...........................................farms: 4,485 1,166 454 487 591 514 acres: 725,589 608,869 45,428 30,770 19,743 9,143 Diseases in crops and orchards ......................farms: 14,196 2,442 1,275 1,430 2,153 1,831 acres: 2,038,769 1,534,023 202,709 130,301 90,607 38,399 Chemicals used to control growth, : thin fruit, ripen, or defoliate ......................farms: 9,810 1,939 923 1,134 1,773 1,171 acres on which used: 1,460,135 1,104,112 118,392 81,742 76,556 31,017 : LAND USE PRACTICES : : Land drained by tile ..................................farms: 1,913 535 150 181 227 187 acres: 476,794 411,223 19,341 18,225 7,235 5,074 Land artificially drained by ditches ..................farms: 7,166 1,193 566 662 774 616 acres: 1,872,676 1,347,012 191,154 144,253 69,871 28,378 Land under conservation easement ......................farms: 1,603 155 111 139 184 158 acres: 929,985 360,270 77,938 111,557 123,188 66,579 Cropland on which no-till practices were : used .................................................farms: 4,213 489 183 214 347 376 acres: 205,383 141,879 15,184 13,507 13,887 5,401 Cropland on which conservation tillage, : including no till, practices were : used .................................................farms: 1,945 623 140 109 170 153 acres: 566,983 472,843 28,601 17,436 28,563 3,916 Cropland on which conventional tillage : practices were used ..................................farms: 11,762 2,859 899 1,044 1,214 1,050 acres: 3,083,056 2,315,788 291,957 187,217 123,692 52,387 Cropland planted to a cover crop : (excluding CRP) ......................................farms: 4,899 659 327 398 683 537 acres: 340,532 245,656 32,158 17,594 19,116 7,641 : ENERGY : : Renewable energy producing systems ....................farms: 5,845 308 176 206 418 410 Solar panels ........................................farms: 5,445 279 156 196 368 386 Wind turbines .......................................farms: 324 20 15 13 29 29 Methane digesters ...................................farms: 41 11 - 3 3 2 Geoexchange systems .................................farms: 104 3 2 3 15 4 : Small hydro systems .................................farms: 190 5 3 5 10 9 Biodiesel ...........................................farms: 165 13 3 8 10 15 Ethanol .............................................farms: 56 1 4 2 1 5 Other ...............................................farms: 49 1 - 1 5 - : Wind rights leased to others ..........................farms: 113 10 3 8 11 18 : TENURE : : Full owners ...........................................farms: 60,492 2,670 1,704 2,553 4,936 5,234 Part owners ...........................................farms: 9,490 2,406 972 906 1,138 753 Tenants ...............................................farms: 7,875 1,291 521 673 877 711 : OWNED AND RENTED LAND : : Land owned ............................................farms: 70,216 5,108 2,700 3,481 6,102 6,009 acres: 16,064,215 6,315,830 1,337,991 1,558,514 1,756,229 1,028,543 Owned land in farms .................................farms: 69,982 5,076 2,676 3,459 6,074 5,987 acres: 14,281,177 5,795,193 1,214,167 1,432,827 1,569,183 859,598 : Land rented or leased from others .....................farms: 17,477 3,712 1,501 1,593 2,037 1,467 acres: 11,608,764 5,371,369 1,129,269 1,105,952 1,523,231 700,485 Rented or leased land in farms ......................farms: 17,365 3,697 1,493 1,579 2,015 1,464 acres: 11,287,824 5,212,826 1,115,602 1,023,088 1,510,906 674,490 : Land rented or leased to others .......................farms: 6,066 872 348 408 642 612 acres: 2,103,978 679,180 137,491 208,551 199,371 194,940 : NUMBER OF OPERATORS : : Total operators ......................................number: 126,099 13,289 5,635 6,819 11,050 10,324 Farms by number of operators: : 1 operator .............................................: 40,197 2,574 1,579 2,219 3,856 3,747 2 operators ............................................: 30,790 2,157 1,089 1,379 2,359 2,447 3 operators ............................................: 5,058 1,064 380 394 570 407 4 operators ............................................: 1,137 277 105 95 126 71 5 or more operators ....................................: 675 295 44 45 40 26 : Total women operators ..............................number: 41,256 2,261 1,169 1,454 2,947 3,088 Farms by number of women operators: : 1 operator ...........................................: 35,652 1,620 936 1,244 2,496 2,656 2 operators ..........................................: 2,226 212 88 74 171 178 3 operators ..........................................: 253 44 19 11 31 12 4 operators ..........................................: 44 6 - 6 4 5 5 or more operators ..................................: 37 10 - 1 - 4 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 66. Summary by Combined Government Payments and Market Value of Agricultural Products Sold: 2012 (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: 3,462 3,793 2,514 1,625 969 1,732 acres treated: 69,434 42,859 16,843 8,453 5,176 51,185 Manure used ...........................................farms: 611 767 703 452 397 633 acres treated: 14,548 6,816 4,018 8,183 1,678 9,006 : Acres treated to control- : Insects .............................................farms: 2,608 2,558 1,380 791 506 808 acres: 39,086 22,196 5,676 9,125 2,404 32,001 Weeds, grass, or brush ..............................farms: 3,542 3,818 2,370 1,501 872 1,963 acres: 72,153 40,518 15,483 16,326 5,464 50,664 Nematodes ...........................................farms: 367 408 181 109 59 149 acres: 4,004 2,713 1,219 341 155 3,204 Diseases in crops and orchards ......................farms: 1,418 1,646 821 511 259 410 acres: 17,294 9,923 2,694 956 1,004 10,859 Chemicals used to control growth, : thin fruit, ripen, or defoliate ......................farms: 862 822 426 269 137 354 acres on which used: 17,608 10,666 2,498 1,567 974 15,003 : LAND USE PRACTICES : : Land drained by tile ..................................farms: 167 174 95 52 50 95 acres: 6,730 2,737 723 2,095 793 2,618 Land artificially drained by ditches ..................farms: 586 749 545 369 323 783 acres: 19,956 20,468 8,537 7,089 6,280 29,678 Land under conservation easement ......................farms: 193 200 90 114 79 180 acres: 74,251 32,577 10,364 11,880 2,970 58,411 Cropland on which no-till practices were : used .................................................farms: 457 645 574 352 283 293 acres: 4,475 4,133 2,121 1,312 913 2,571 Cropland on which conservation tillage, : including no till, practices were : used .................................................farms: 142 196 115 99 87 111 acres: 8,048 2,854 704 1,218 334 2,466 Cropland on which conventional tillage : practices were used ..................................farms: 970 1,115 905 592 427 687 acres: 35,115 28,244 13,206 9,614 3,615 22,221 Cropland planted to a cover crop : (excluding CRP) ......................................farms: 559 607 383 305 152 289 acres: 5,358 3,346 1,264 2,510 1,227 4,662 : ENERGY : : Renewable energy producing systems ....................farms: 588 873 756 515 432 1,163 Solar panels ........................................farms: 545 838 708 476 423 1,070 Wind turbines .......................................farms: 31 38 32 31 19 67 Methane digesters ...................................farms: 1 5 1 6 - 9 Geoexchange systems .................................farms: 3 15 12 9 8 30 : Small hydro systems .................................farms: 16 37 35 21 7 42 Biodiesel ...........................................farms: 15 15 15 23 3 45 Ethanol .............................................farms: 7 5 10 6 3 12 Other ...............................................farms: 12 4 2 6 4 14 : Wind rights leased to others ..........................farms: 7 10 10 11 3 22 : TENURE : : Full owners ...........................................farms: 5,746 8,445 6,812 5,119 4,129 13,144 Part owners ...........................................farms: 739 895 405 348 233 695 Tenants ...............................................farms: 665 925 629 437 356 790 : OWNED AND RENTED LAND : : Land owned ............................................farms: 6,503 9,374 7,231 5,472 4,373 13,863 acres: 679,025 839,373 395,236 344,590 248,600 1,560,284 Owned land in farms .................................farms: 6,485 9,340 7,217 5,467 4,362 13,839 acres: 559,636 720,022 335,768 281,834 201,806 1,311,143 : Land rented or leased from others .....................farms: 1,423 1,826 1,040 788 594 1,496 acres: 526,315 486,758 109,212 75,601 46,447 534,125 Rented or leased land in farms ......................farms: 1,404 1,820 1,034 785 589 1,485 acres: 517,522 482,846 108,199 67,131 46,237 528,977 : Land rented or leased to others .......................farms: 564 662 451 331 251 925 acres: 128,182 123,263 60,481 71,226 47,004 254,289 : NUMBER OF OPERATORS : : Total operators ......................................number: 11,055 15,818 12,161 9,267 7,364 23,317 Farms by number of operators: : 1 operator .............................................: 3,941 5,564 4,131 3,057 2,397 7,132 2 operators ............................................: 2,699 4,055 3,322 2,519 2,076 6,688 3 operators ............................................: 375 528 318 234 190 598 4 operators ............................................: 102 83 41 56 39 142 5 or more operators ....................................: 33 35 34 38 16 69 : Total women operators ..............................number: 3,496 5,540 4,675 3,686 3,090 9,850 Farms by number of women operators: : 1 operator ...........................................: 3,016 4,930 4,092 3,219 2,677 8,766 2 operators ..........................................: 203 256 223 180 160 481 3 operators ..........................................: 14 23 14 20 27 38 4 operators ..........................................: 8 6 1 3 3 2 5 or more operators ..................................: - 1 14 7 - - ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 66. Summary by Combined Government Payments and Market Value of Agricultural Products Sold: 2012 (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 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ PRINCIPAL OPERATOR CHARACTERISTICS : : Sex of operator: : Male .....................................................: 63,873 6,097 2,988 3,813 6,149 5,730 Female ...................................................: 13,984 270 209 319 802 968 : Primary occupation: : Farming ..................................................: 42,469 5,511 2,553 3,116 4,780 3,884 Other ....................................................: 35,388 856 644 1,016 2,171 2,814 : Place of residence: : On farm operated .........................................: 54,775 2,957 1,602 2,140 4,126 4,356 Not on farm operated .....................................: 23,082 3,410 1,595 1,992 2,825 2,342 : Days worked off farm: : None .....................................................: 31,311 3,978 1,740 1,980 3,034 2,540 Any ......................................................: 46,546 2,389 1,457 2,152 3,917 4,158 1 to 49 days ...........................................: 7,304 386 203 294 614 583 50 to 99 days ..........................................: 4,230 143 127 216 394 440 100 to 199 days ........................................: 7,065 224 182 332 697 730 200 days or more .......................................: 27,947 1,636 945 1,310 2,212 2,405 : Years on present farm: : 2 years or less ..........................................: 3,151 135 70 101 236 270 3 or 4 years .............................................: 4,634 208 115 150 370 360 5 to 9 years .............................................: 12,863 606 383 637 1,023 1,234 10 years or more .........................................: 57,209 5,418 2,629 3,244 5,322 4,834 : Average years on present farm ............................: 20.2 25.5 24.3 23.5 21.9 20.3 : Years operating any farm (see text): : 2 years or less ..........................................: 2,182 50 35 50 150 177 3 or 4 years .............................................: 3,648 130 82 108 265 285 5 to 9 years .............................................: 10,663 410 232 421 763 1,019 10 years or more .........................................: 61,364 5,777 2,848 3,553 5,773 5,217 : Average years operating any farm .........................: 22.7 28.9 28.0 26.9 25.3 23.0 : Age group: : Under 25 years ...........................................: 253 6 10 5 31 20 25 to 34 years ...........................................: 2,968 235 179 211 292 281 35 to 44 years ...........................................: 6,255 646 263 320 540 535 45 to 49 years ...........................................: 6,107 639 263 320 537 500 50 to 54 years ...........................................: 9,839 900 396 540 874 839 55 to 59 years ...........................................: 11,513 1,060 573 687 1,094 1,022 60 to 64 years ...........................................: 11,869 1,032 499 663 1,063 1,027 65 to 69 years ...........................................: 10,683 645 380 499 861 864 70 years and over ........................................: 18,370 1,204 634 887 1,659 1,610 : Average age ..............................................: 60.1 58.2 58.6 59.3 60.0 60.1 : Spanish, Hispanic, or Latino origin (see text) .............: 9,815 605 401 519 984 1,086 : Race: : American Indian or Alaska Native .........................: 1,192 29 31 56 102 86 Asian ....................................................: 4,802 429 339 418 712 599 Black or African American ................................: 345 7 2 5 20 19 Native Hawaiian or Other Pacific Islander ................: 321 20 15 3 31 37 White ....................................................: 70,537 5,855 2,790 3,630 6,045 5,912 More than one race reported ..............................: 660 27 20 20 41 45 : Farms by number of persons living in : operator's household: : 1 person .................................................: 10,856 563 383 532 951 956 2 people .................................................: 39,377 3,136 1,556 2,051 3,502 3,373 3 people .................................................: 10,481 877 383 522 846 870 4 people .................................................: 9,895 940 514 603 901 882 5 or more people .........................................: 7,248 851 361 424 751 617 : Percent of operator's total : household income from farming: : Less than 25 percent .....................................: 53,231 1,441 841 1,393 2,845 3,561 25 to 49 percent .........................................: 6,732 643 404 598 1,088 1,115 50 to 74 percent .........................................: 8,038 1,351 712 902 1,473 1,109 75 to 99 percent .........................................: 5,290 1,413 701 678 978 497 100 percent ..............................................: 4,566 1,519 539 561 567 416 : Operator is a hired manager ...........................farms: 7,130 1,894 681 628 923 643 acres: 5,266,987 3,540,445 345,868 468,163 503,623 140,362 : Farms with- : Internet access ..........................................: 59,543 5,651 2,620 3,262 5,160 4,840 Dial-up service ........................................: 4,703 286 141 193 326 414 DSL service ............................................: 20,030 1,999 944 1,187 1,711 1,602 Cable modem service ....................................: 9,578 870 464 537 799 711 Fiber-optic service ....................................: 1,719 236 90 119 204 122 Mobile broadband plan for a computer : or cell phone .........................................: 12,454 1,504 673 805 1,242 1,010 Satellite service ......................................: 15,193 1,564 718 886 1,378 1,133 Broadband over Power Lines (BPL) .......................: 2,135 362 146 173 234 216 Other Internet service .................................: 2,805 380 84 94 258 265 : Farms by number of households sharing : in net income of operation: : 1 household ..............................................: 61,016 3,282 1,878 2,623 4,924 5,123 2 households .............................................: 11,316 1,580 757 929 1,349 1,098 3 households .............................................: 3,013 793 320 315 360 254 4 households .............................................: 1,351 358 126 157 192 145 5 or more households .....................................: 1,161 354 116 108 126 78 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 66. Summary by Combined Government Payments and Market Value of Agricultural Products Sold: 2012 (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 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ PRINCIPAL OPERATOR CHARACTERISTICS : : Sex of operator: : Male .....................................................: 6,080 8,383 6,117 4,528 3,432 10,556 Female ...................................................: 1,070 1,882 1,729 1,376 1,286 4,073 : Primary occupation: : Farming ..................................................: 3,867 4,936 3,505 2,468 1,896 5,953 Other ....................................................: 3,283 5,329 4,341 3,436 2,822 8,676 : Place of residence: : On farm operated .........................................: 4,947 7,776 6,145 4,705 3,964 12,057 Not on farm operated .....................................: 2,203 2,489 1,701 1,199 754 2,572 : Days worked off farm: : None .....................................................: 2,614 3,569 2,719 2,011 1,567 5,559 Any ......................................................: 4,536 6,696 5,127 3,893 3,151 9,070 1 to 49 days ...........................................: 715 1,023 938 627 466 1,455 50 to 99 days ..........................................: 533 665 417 328 268 699 100 to 199 days ........................................: 738 1,055 760 629 447 1,271 200 days or more .......................................: 2,550 3,953 3,012 2,309 1,970 5,645 : Years on present farm: : 2 years or less ..........................................: 266 380 335 272 308 778 3 or 4 years .............................................: 369 635 557 393 440 1,037 5 to 9 years .............................................: 1,244 1,940 1,532 1,169 828 2,267 10 years or more .........................................: 5,271 7,310 5,422 4,070 3,142 10,547 : Average years on present farm ............................: 20.2 18.8 18.2 18.5 17.3 19.0 : Years operating any farm (see text): : 2 years or less ..........................................: 191 282 268 209 238 532 3 or 4 years .............................................: 266 486 454 337 382 853 5 to 9 years .............................................: 1,022 1,697 1,373 997 754 1,975 10 years or more .........................................: 5,671 7,800 5,751 4,361 3,344 11,269 : Average years operating any farm .........................: 22.9 21.0 20.0 20.5 19.3 21.0 : Age group: : Under 25 years ...........................................: 23 52 26 23 27 30 25 to 34 years ...........................................: 263 344 244 208 227 484 35 to 44 years ...........................................: 570 822 587 433 399 1,140 45 to 49 years ...........................................: 516 871 604 416 419 1,022 50 to 54 years ...........................................: 854 1,258 973 747 575 1,883 55 to 59 years ...........................................: 967 1,355 1,167 814 711 2,063 60 to 64 years ...........................................: 1,037 1,505 1,181 861 672 2,329 65 to 69 years ...........................................: 1,052 1,510 1,094 905 621 2,252 70 years and over ........................................: 1,868 2,548 1,970 1,497 1,067 3,426 : Average age ..............................................: 60.8 60.3 60.7 60.8 59.2 60.5 : Spanish, Hispanic, or Latino origin (see text) .............: 1,094 1,394 934 727 482 1,589 : Race: : American Indian or Alaska Native .........................: 106 161 142 116 87 276 Asian ....................................................: 482 563 381 250 174 455 Black or African American ................................: 31 42 42 35 27 115 Native Hawaiian or Other Pacific Islander ................: 30 39 40 24 14 68 White ....................................................: 6,440 9,384 7,183 5,401 4,348 13,549 More than one race reported ..............................: 61 76 58 78 68 166 : Farms by number of persons living in : operator's household: : 1 person .................................................: 1,054 1,482 1,158 837 602 2,338 2 people .................................................: 3,637 5,129 4,006 2,999 2,314 7,674 3 people .................................................: 909 1,449 1,107 859 670 1,989 4 people .................................................: 943 1,242 984 754 640 1,492 5 or more people .........................................: 607 963 591 455 492 1,136 : Percent of operator's total : household income from farming: : Less than 25 percent .....................................: 4,669 8,326 6,956 5,419 4,336 13,444 25 to 49 percent .........................................: 1,065 810 361 191 110 347 50 to 74 percent .........................................: 843 636 291 151 163 407 75 to 99 percent .........................................: 338 234 110 46 51 244 100 percent ..............................................: 235 259 128 97 58 187 : Operator is a hired manager ...........................farms: 471 616 396 297 148 433 acres: 55,933 39,379 17,933 12,467 46,464 96,350 : Farms with- : Internet access ..........................................: 5,296 7,703 6,020 4,374 3,711 10,906 Dial-up service ........................................: 480 683 519 386 319 956 DSL service ............................................: 1,686 2,449 1,994 1,370 1,273 3,815 Cable modem service ....................................: 839 1,326 1,111 799 629 1,493 Fiber-optic service ....................................: 119 211 142 110 96 270 Mobile broadband plan for a computer : or cell phone .........................................: 1,069 1,552 1,044 831 658 2,066 Satellite service ......................................: 1,300 1,880 1,349 1,090 861 3,034 Broadband over Power Lines (BPL) .......................: 124 232 141 98 105 304 Other Internet service .................................: 259 360 295 181 182 447 : Farms by number of households sharing : in net income of operation: : 1 household ..............................................: 5,598 8,526 6,752 5,220 4,075 13,015 2 households .............................................: 1,158 1,365 874 528 476 1,202 3 households .............................................: 198 231 137 85 75 245 4 households .............................................: 100 73 28 39 43 90 5 or more households .....................................: 96 70 55 32 49 77 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 66. Summary by Combined Government Payments and Market Value of Agricultural Products Sold: 2012 (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 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ FARMS BY TYPE OF : ORGANIZATION (SEE TEXT) : : Operation with 50 percent or more ownership : interest held by operator and/or persons : related by blood, marriage, : or adoption ..........................................farms: 72,641 4,965 2,712 3,621 6,301 6,267 acres: 20,951,605 7,940,053 2,054,284 2,109,827 2,743,712 1,404,508 Limited Liability Corporation .........................farms: 4,453 705 382 423 622 510 acres: 2,772,951 1,090,800 386,369 343,238 527,112 107,054 : LEGAL STATUS FOR TAX PURPOSES (SEE TEXT) : : Family or individual .................................farms: 59,732 2,084 1,551 2,365 4,716 5,134 acres: 12,000,544 2,969,265 1,184,256 1,427,189 1,657,998 1,024,890 Partnership ...........................................farms: 8,984 2,113 852 934 1,171 807 acres: 6,934,159 3,868,641 726,388 637,731 838,806 191,865 Registered under state law ..........................farms: 7,283 1,882 770 789 946 632 acres: 5,929,592 3,196,871 672,771 594,027 731,631 150,317 : Corporation ...........................................farms: 6,361 1,967 660 661 721 537 acres: 5,359,671 3,639,248 303,482 319,769 402,202 245,628 Family held .........................................farms: 5,345 1,632 567 583 616 448 acres: 4,209,678 2,793,052 286,295 239,926 384,031 114,142 More than 10 stockholders .........................farms: 264 126 15 28 17 15 10 or less stockholders ...........................farms: 5,081 1,506 552 555 599 433 : Other than family held ..............................farms: 1,016 335 93 78 105 89 acres: 1,149,993 846,196 17,187 79,843 18,171 131,486 More than 10 stockholders .........................farms: 171 93 10 6 13 11 10 or less stockholders ...........................farms: 845 242 83 72 92 78 : Other-cooperative, estate : or trust, institutional, etc .........................farms: 2,780 203 134 172 343 220 acres: 1,274,627 530,865 115,643 71,226 181,083 71,705 : HIRED FARM LABOR : : Hired farm labor ......................................farms: 33,955 6,006 2,692 3,046 4,420 3,331 workers: 465,422 314,195 30,611 25,365 31,742 16,056 Workers by days worked: : 150 days or more ..................................farms: 20,018 5,655 2,276 2,263 2,735 1,651 workers: 205,851 160,770 12,355 8,663 8,748 4,062 Less than 150 days ................................farms: 22,621 3,341 1,562 1,876 2,891 2,271 workers: 259,571 153,425 18,256 16,702 22,994 11,994 Migrant farm labor on farms with hired : labor (see text) .....................................farms: 2,921 891 351 314 452 268 Migrant farm labor on farms reporting : only contract labor (see text) .......................farms: 755 24 31 86 136 127 : Unpaid workers (see text) .............................farms: 31,965 809 734 1,177 2,387 2,693 workers: 72,020 1,735 1,446 2,556 5,084 6,060 : FARMS BY SIZE : : 1 to 9 acres ...............................................: 24,637 91 106 186 375 885 10 to 49 acres .............................................: 25,811 350 233 734 3,064 3,846 50 to 69 acres .............................................: 3,700 123 131 453 783 453 70 to 99 acres .............................................: 3,601 149 294 549 706 314 100 to 139 acres ...........................................: 3,222 251 395 500 469 205 140 to 179 acres ...........................................: 2,533 287 311 362 314 151 180 to 219 acres ...........................................: 1,477 250 267 199 146 79 220 to 259 acres ...........................................: 1,189 240 186 164 89 86 260 to 499 acres ...........................................: 3,983 1,174 595 466 260 181 500 to 999 acres ...........................................: 3,230 1,327 395 182 210 191 1,000 to 1,999 acres .......................................: 2,040 1,024 112 122 181 144 2,000 acres or more ........................................: 2,434 1,101 172 215 354 163 : FARMS BY NORTH AMERICAN : INDUSTRY CLASSIFICATION : SYSTEM (NAICS) : : Oilseed and grain farming (1111) ...........................: 2,296 294 359 465 385 260 Vegetable and melon farming (1112) .........................: 4,191 663 126 137 223 311 Fruit and tree nut farming (1113) ..........................: 35,945 2,819 1,965 2,543 4,661 4,583 Greenhouse, nursery, and floriculture : production (1114) .........................................: 3,390 364 175 203 352 298 Other crop farming (1119) ..................................: 5,815 542 216 240 371 297 Tobacco farming (11191) ..................................: - - - - - - Cotton farming (11192) ...................................: 194 87 30 18 22 14 Sugarcane farming, hay farming, and all : other crop farming (11193,11194,11199) ..................: 5,621 455 186 222 349 283 Beef cattle ranching and farming (112111) ..................: 11,767 212 170 336 643 651 Cattle feedlots (112112) ...................................: 156 25 15 16 27 19 Dairy cattle and milk production (11212) ...................: 1,594 1,255 107 59 54 7 Hog and pig farming (1122) .................................: 446 4 2 2 13 8 Poultry and egg production (1123) ..........................: 1,202 116 15 32 41 31 Sheep and goat farming (1124) ..............................: 3,246 19 21 23 46 43 Animal aquaculture and other animal : production (1125, 1129) ...................................: 7,809 54 26 76 135 190 : LIVESTOCK : : Cattle and calves inventory ...........................farms: 16,764 1,653 385 555 1,019 880 number: 5,370,531 4,418,405 200,010 183,846 219,136 94,481 Farms with- : 1 to 9 .................................................: 7,396 60 22 48 154 150 10 to 49 ...............................................: 4,687 45 47 79 150 195 50 to 99 ...............................................: 1,128 26 17 44 106 158 100 to 199 .............................................: 914 40 43 86 226 260 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 66. Summary by Combined Government Payments and Market Value of Agricultural Products Sold: 2012 (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 BY TYPE OF : ORGANIZATION (SEE TEXT) : : Operation with 50 percent or more ownership : interest held by operator and/or persons : related by blood, marriage, : or adoption ..........................................farms: 6,785 9,887 7,622 5,756 4,613 14,112 acres: 1,004,096 1,144,598 408,760 331,990 240,682 1,569,095 Limited Liability Corporation .........................farms: 465 430 230 147 91 448 acres: 77,202 46,036 51,685 53,269 8,323 81,863 : LEGAL STATUS FOR TAX PURPOSES (SEE TEXT) : : Family or individual .................................farms: 5,810 8,865 6,985 5,374 4,300 12,548 acres: 843,044 965,348 362,879 288,383 172,715 1,104,577 Partnership ...........................................farms: 686 700 406 237 205 873 acres: 130,995 92,022 33,599 37,235 50,340 326,537 Registered under state law ..........................farms: 518 527 285 159 136 639 acres: 107,154 71,295 27,076 33,046 47,865 297,539 : Corporation ...........................................farms: 368 363 235 147 83 619 acres: 39,118 89,147 33,889 16,333 3,536 267,319 Family held .........................................farms: 318 319 191 122 76 473 acres: 30,435 72,796 21,609 14,889 1,434 251,069 More than 10 stockholders .........................farms: 10 11 10 7 - 25 10 or less stockholders ...........................farms: 308 308 181 115 76 448 : Other than family held ..............................farms: 50 44 44 25 7 146 acres: 8,683 16,351 12,280 1,444 2,102 16,250 More than 10 stockholders .........................farms: 3 4 4 3 2 22 10 or less stockholders ...........................farms: 47 40 40 22 5 124 : Other-cooperative, estate : or trust, institutional, etc .........................farms: 286 337 220 146 130 589 acres: 64,001 56,351 13,600 7,014 21,452 141,687 : HIRED FARM LABOR : : Hired farm labor ......................................farms: 2,882 3,413 2,168 1,496 928 3,573 workers: 11,769 12,631 5,909 3,799 2,397 10,948 Workers by days worked: : 150 days or more ..................................farms: 1,175 1,144 706 439 291 1,683 workers: 2,386 2,259 1,251 814 576 3,967 Less than 150 days ................................farms: 2,137 2,662 1,675 1,156 694 2,356 workers: 9,383 10,372 4,658 2,985 1,821 6,981 Migrant farm labor on farms with hired : labor (see text) .....................................farms: 193 173 87 52 27 113 Migrant farm labor on farms reporting : only contract labor (see text) .......................farms: 142 92 45 26 10 36 : Unpaid workers (see text) .............................farms: 3,249 4,894 3,799 2,733 2,365 7,125 workers: 7,380 11,440 8,467 6,116 5,527 16,209 : FARMS BY SIZE : : 1 to 9 acres ...............................................: 1,902 4,735 4,523 3,321 2,696 5,817 10 to 49 acres .............................................: 3,509 3,274 2,056 1,615 1,405 5,725 50 to 69 acres .............................................: 315 306 255 207 122 552 70 to 99 acres .............................................: 255 373 191 173 136 461 100 to 139 acres ...........................................: 185 275 168 167 99 508 140 to 179 acres ...........................................: 143 249 145 113 105 353 180 to 219 acres ...........................................: 84 116 98 49 31 158 220 to 259 acres ...........................................: 82 101 57 32 21 131 260 to 499 acres ...........................................: 224 355 190 110 47 381 500 to 999 acres ...........................................: 212 229 108 66 34 276 1,000 to 1,999 acres .......................................: 134 159 31 31 9 93 2,000 acres or more ........................................: 105 93 24 20 13 174 : FARMS BY NORTH AMERICAN : INDUSTRY CLASSIFICATION : SYSTEM (NAICS) : : Oilseed and grain farming (1111) ...........................: 202 133 67 55 38 38 Vegetable and melon farming (1112) .........................: 291 586 729 470 427 228 Fruit and tree nut farming (1113) ..........................: 4,471 5,511 3,802 2,284 1,129 2,177 Greenhouse, nursery, and floriculture : production (1114) .........................................: 325 625 407 233 209 199 Other crop farming (1119) ..................................: 370 575 514 464 388 1,838 Tobacco farming (11191) ..................................: - - - - - - Cotton farming (11192) ...................................: 9 8 6 - - - Sugarcane farming, hay farming, and all : other crop farming (11193,11194,11199) ..................: 361 567 508 464 388 1,838 Beef cattle ranching and farming (112111) ..................: 871 1,626 1,412 1,414 1,171 3,261 Cattle feedlots (112112) ...................................: 29 17 8 - - - Dairy cattle and milk production (11212) ...................: 4 - 10 3 - 95 Hog and pig farming (1122) .................................: 10 28 51 54 109 165 Poultry and egg production (1123) ..........................: 32 41 54 82 202 556 Sheep and goat farming (1124) ..............................: 107 324 264 373 612 1,414 Animal aquaculture and other animal : production (1125, 1129) ...................................: 438 799 528 472 433 4,658 : LIVESTOCK : : Cattle and calves inventory ...........................farms: 1,272 2,173 1,686 1,614 1,387 4,140 number: 66,888 67,776 27,777 22,064 9,749 60,399 Farms with- : 1 to 9 .................................................: 365 675 753 950 1,106 3,113 10 to 49 ...............................................: 372 1,114 865 639 276 905 50 to 99 ...............................................: 347 301 52 23 3 51 100 to 199 .............................................: 154 63 11 - - 31 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 66. Summary by Combined Government Payments and Market Value of Agricultural Products Sold: 2012 (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. : : Cattle and calves inventory - Con. : Farms with- - Con. : : 200 to 499 .............................................: 896 119 126 164 311 104 500 or more ............................................: 1,743 1,363 130 134 72 13 : Cows and heifers that calved ........................farms: 12,566 1,480 293 450 779 681 number: 2,399,249 1,951,402 92,433 93,967 99,124 48,869 : Beef cows .........................................farms: 10,925 335 197 386 725 662 number: 583,594 171,632 68,300 86,689 95,940 48,578 Farms with- : 1 to 9 .............................................: 6,173 46 25 45 129 120 10 to 49 ...........................................: 2,704 45 28 59 103 137 50 to 99 ...........................................: 801 41 14 38 85 228 100 to 199 .........................................: 542 34 17 55 217 153 200 to 499 .........................................: 479 62 52 146 181 23 500 or more ........................................: 226 107 61 43 10 1 Milk cows .........................................farms: 1,931 1,223 106 72 76 31 number: 1,815,655 1,779,770 24,133 7,278 3,184 291 Farms with- : 1 to 9 .............................................: 457 1 4 7 18 20 10 to 49 ...........................................: 62 1 3 5 26 11 50 to 99 ...........................................: 52 2 1 24 25 - 100 to 199 .........................................: 110 24 48 31 7 - 200 to 499 .........................................: 258 206 47 5 - - 500 or more ........................................: 992 989 3 - - - : Other cattle (see text) .............................farms: 13,380 1,525 356 488 911 758 number: 2,971,282 2,467,003 107,577 89,879 120,012 45,612 : Cattle and calves sold ................................farms: 12,594 1,632 370 577 970 878 number: 3,671,078 3,012,905 146,388 190,530 163,608 57,377 $1,000: 3,259,325 2,780,508 132,574 120,574 106,289 46,367 Calves weighing less than 500 pounds ................farms: 5,347 1,120 164 235 381 349 number: 1,252,820 1,031,346 27,761 84,146 66,046 14,618 : Cattle, including calves weighing : 500 pounds or more .................................farms: 11,228 1,520 351 563 912 829 number: 2,418,258 1,981,559 118,627 106,384 97,562 42,759 Cattle on feed (see text) .........................farms: 262 91 22 23 35 35 number: 712,651 695,725 7,854 3,020 3,423 1,381 : Hogs and pigs inventory ...............................farms: 1,437 29 16 16 56 51 number: 111,893 83,405 6,396 3,198 4,249 1,292 Farms with- : 1 to 24 ................................................: 1,228 10 5 5 40 35 25 to 49 ...............................................: 95 4 2 2 4 5 50 to 99 ...............................................: 52 2 4 1 6 7 100 to 199 .............................................: 39 6 - 2 2 4 200 to 499 .............................................: 11 2 1 4 3 - 500 or more ............................................: 12 5 4 2 1 - : Used or to be used for breeding .....................farms: 732 20 11 10 29 32 number: 8,322 (D) 782 522 448 353 Other hogs and pigs .................................farms: 1,179 21 16 15 51 44 number: 103,571 (D) 5,614 2,676 3,801 939 : Hogs and pigs sold ....................................farms: 1,163 22 13 15 47 52 number: 290,488 226,570 19,882 9,077 13,286 3,411 $1,000: 51,526 43,219 2,135 (D) 2,629 737 : Sheep and lambs inventory (see text) ..................farms: 4,224 78 56 66 171 164 number: 668,517 329,950 137,839 47,545 41,894 17,989 Ewes 1 year old or older ............................farms: 3,222 58 53 49 134 131 number: 306,987 129,035 77,837 16,092 23,305 9,147 Sheep and lambs sold ..................................farms: 2,593 65 45 56 126 137 number: 440,092 264,035 75,680 24,402 20,310 11,524 : Total horses and ponies inventory .....................farms: 14,932 301 179 284 645 680 number: 142,555 7,178 3,522 4,489 7,682 10,110 Owned horses and ponies : inventory ..........................................farms: 14,353 284 177 266 605 642 number: 107,774 4,456 2,795 3,585 5,311 8,254 Owned horses and ponies sold ..........................farms: 2,959 46 27 57 133 215 number: 10,452 655 213 683 678 1,191 : Goats, all inventory ..................................farms: 4,474 50 26 54 122 126 number: 140,042 13,546 5,938 17,385 19,139 9,443 Goats, all sold .......................................farms: 2,133 27 15 34 65 71 number: 62,844 5,432 1,801 10,934 9,467 6,790 : POULTRY : : Layers inventory (see text) ...........................farms: 6,744 70 51 72 206 231 number: 19,000,779 18,533,857 218,479 32,388 39,715 9,918 Farms with- : 1 to 399 ...............................................: 6,653 25 42 68 196 228 400 to 3,199 ...........................................: 39 5 3 2 8 3 3,200 to 9,999 .........................................: 4 1 - 1 1 - 10,000 to 19,999 .......................................: 4 1 - 1 1 - 20,000 to 49,999 .......................................: 5 1 4 - - - 50,000 to 99,999 .......................................: 8 6 2 - - - 100,000 or more ........................................: 31 31 - - - - : Pullets for laying flock replacement : inventory ............................................farms: 873 31 9 7 25 22 number: 4,633,558 4,379,015 (D) (D) 182,461 2,184 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 66. Summary by Combined Government Payments and Market Value of Agricultural Products Sold: 2012 (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. : : Cattle and calves inventory - Con. : Farms with- - Con. : : 200 to 499 .............................................: 32 13 4 - 2 21 500 or more ............................................: 2 7 1 2 - 19 : Cows and heifers that calved ........................farms: 925 1,684 1,226 1,233 999 2,816 number: 35,002 33,068 13,037 8,118 4,982 19,247 : Beef cows .........................................farms: 910 1,652 1,195 1,218 953 2,692 number: 34,901 32,934 12,896 8,042 4,868 18,814 Farms with- : 1 to 9 .............................................: 253 681 703 976 860 2,335 10 to 49 ...........................................: 365 831 476 239 89 332 50 to 99 ...........................................: 243 120 13 3 2 14 100 to 199 .........................................: 42 17 2 - - 5 200 to 499 .........................................: 6 2 1 - 2 4 500 or more ........................................: 1 1 - - - 2 Milk cows .........................................farms: 26 53 58 37 69 180 number: 101 134 141 76 114 433 Farms with- : 1 to 9 .............................................: 22 53 58 36 69 169 10 to 49 ...........................................: 4 - - 1 - 11 50 to 99 ...........................................: - - - - - - 100 to 199 .........................................: - - - - - - 200 to 499 .........................................: - - - - - - 500 or more ........................................: - - - - - - : Other cattle (see text) .............................farms: 1,101 1,776 1,370 1,250 991 2,854 number: 31,886 34,708 14,740 13,946 4,767 41,152 : Cattle and calves sold ................................farms: 1,181 2,104 1,638 1,549 1,240 455 number: 39,655 37,199 12,884 6,804 3,063 665 $1,000: 30,446 25,808 9,690 4,901 1,871 295 Calves weighing less than 500 pounds ................farms: 469 863 605 503 420 238 number: 10,420 11,067 3,786 2,078 1,161 391 : Cattle, including calves weighing : 500 pounds or more .................................farms: 1,105 1,896 1,466 1,365 983 238 number: 29,235 26,132 9,098 4,726 1,902 274 Cattle on feed (see text) .........................farms: 31 17 8 - - - number: 816 323 109 - - - : Hogs and pigs inventory ...............................farms: 75 144 238 187 256 369 number: 1,675 2,129 4,151 1,690 2,171 1,537 Farms with- : 1 to 24 ................................................: 56 111 191 166 243 366 25 to 49 ...............................................: 9 22 20 19 5 3 50 to 99 ...............................................: 4 9 15 2 2 - 100 to 199 .............................................: 5 2 12 - 6 - 200 to 499 .............................................: 1 - - - - - 500 or more ............................................: - - - - - - : Used or to be used for breeding .....................farms: 38 62 129 103 151 147 number: 480 544 (D) 514 876 531 Other hogs and pigs .................................farms: 59 130 205 146 202 290 number: 1,195 1,585 (D) 1,176 1,295 1,006 : Hogs and pigs sold ....................................farms: 76 120 204 169 237 208 number: 4,510 4,050 5,312 1,951 1,721 718 $1,000: 393 457 461 254 194 (D) : Sheep and lambs inventory (see text) ..................farms: 232 478 455 486 577 1,461 number: 18,123 24,876 13,845 12,299 8,955 15,202 Ewes 1 year old or older ............................farms: 193 367 364 394 431 1,048 number: 11,546 13,815 6,765 6,987 4,620 7,838 Sheep and lambs sold ..................................farms: 177 390 344 381 435 437 number: 12,420 14,088 7,129 5,388 3,479 1,637 : Total horses and ponies inventory .....................farms: 1,037 1,815 1,392 1,249 1,100 6,250 number: 11,703 18,732 9,428 8,689 6,139 54,883 Owned horses and ponies : inventory ..........................................farms: 990 1,717 1,320 1,202 1,056 6,094 number: 8,400 13,934 7,147 6,663 5,083 42,146 Owned horses and ponies sold ..........................farms: 435 758 496 411 293 88 number: 1,963 2,829 991 718 429 102 : Goats, all inventory ..................................farms: 234 502 448 454 693 1,765 number: 13,519 14,572 9,520 7,790 10,192 18,998 Goats, all sold .......................................farms: 153 308 256 295 443 466 number: 5,363 8,161 4,784 4,156 4,092 1,864 : POULTRY : : Layers inventory (see text) ...........................farms: 422 815 930 817 900 2,230 number: 27,435 27,798 39,712 19,800 20,384 31,293 Farms with- : 1 to 399 ...............................................: 413 809 927 817 900 2,228 400 to 3,199 ...........................................: 8 6 2 - - 2 3,200 to 9,999 .........................................: 1 - - - - - 10,000 to 19,999 .......................................: - - 1 - - - 20,000 to 49,999 .......................................: - - - - - - 50,000 to 99,999 .......................................: - - - - - - 100,000 or more ........................................: - - - - - - : Pullets for laying flock replacement : inventory ............................................farms: 35 96 124 136 167 221 number: 17,888 2,889 4,487 2,521 2,766 2,892 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 66. Summary by Combined Government Payments and Market Value of Agricultural Products Sold: 2012 (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. : : Layers sold (see text) ................................farms: 831 39 11 9 23 27 number: 8,195,242 8,005,011 131,361 1,685 18,251 1,395 : Pullets for laying flock replacement : sold .................................................farms: 86 9 - 2 7 3 number: 3,508,788 3,310,646 - (D) 185,708 (D) : Broilers and other meat-type chickens : sold .................................................farms: 421 41 11 18 18 17 number: 273,277,272 268,559,077 2,401,040 1,630,440 488,595 96,107 Farms with- : 1 to 1,999 .............................................: 336 1 1 4 11 12 2,000 to 59,999 ........................................: 26 2 1 3 6 5 60,000 to 99,999 .......................................: - - - - - - 100,000 or more ........................................: 59 38 9 11 1 - : Turkeys inventory (see text) ..........................farms: 682 32 1 3 18 14 number: 4,532,307 (D) (D) (D) 24,170 443 Turkeys sold (see text) ...............................farms: 302 40 1 2 16 10 number: 15,384,675 (D) (D) (D) 25,355 315 : CROPS HARVESTED : : Barley for grain ......................................farms: 264 104 26 19 29 21 acres: 81,954 51,276 15,092 4,951 5,383 3,354 bushels: 5,312,595 3,765,764 736,942 230,660 369,132 142,463 Irrigated ...........................................farms: 144 72 18 9 17 5 acres: 44,819 33,618 6,359 1,569 2,439 683 Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..........................................: 60 6 5 4 1 1 25 to 99 acres .........................................: 59 20 5 2 7 9 100 to 249 acres .......................................: 68 32 2 5 15 8 250 to 499 acres .......................................: 30 20 5 2 2 1 500 acres or more ......................................: 47 26 9 6 4 2 : Corn for grain ........................................farms: 733 360 83 58 49 33 acres: 180,672 146,499 18,962 8,620 3,050 1,674 bushels: 31,922,610 26,412,943 3,169,803 1,385,249 545,264 235,684 Irrigated ...........................................farms: 733 360 83 58 49 33 acres: 175,863 142,419 18,687 8,216 3,000 1,674 Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..........................................: 163 12 3 7 10 8 25 to 99 acres .........................................: 211 78 33 22 29 23 100 to 249 acres .......................................: 152 100 23 16 10 2 250 to 499 acres .......................................: 103 81 12 10 - - 500 acres or more ......................................: 104 89 12 3 - - : Corn for silage or greenchop ..........................farms: 1,895 1,112 177 143 156 102 acres: 487,570 423,498 27,472 16,026 11,549 5,006 tons: 12,575,973 10,981,587 701,251 424,432 274,632 107,618 Irrigated ...........................................farms: 1,802 1,069 164 136 147 99 acres: 461,898 402,831 25,665 14,750 10,596 4,450 Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..........................................: 249 19 9 26 24 17 25 to 99 acres .........................................: 538 203 66 50 91 80 100 to 249 acres .......................................: 512 343 64 56 41 5 250 to 499 acres .......................................: 329 282 36 11 - - 500 acres or more ......................................: 267 265 2 - - - : Cotton, all ...........................................farms: 630 429 82 48 32 16 acres: 367,766 341,601 16,778 5,410 2,864 743 bales: 1,201,860 1,120,703 53,163 16,764 8,060 1,960 Irrigated ...........................................farms: 630 429 82 48 32 16 acres: 367,766 341,601 16,778 5,410 2,864 743 Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..........................................: 31 7 - 1 3 - 25 to 99 acres .........................................: 102 34 10 23 16 16 100 to 249 acres .......................................: 180 101 45 23 11 - 250 to 499 acres .......................................: 153 123 27 1 2 - 500 acres or more ......................................: 164 164 - - - - : Dry edible beans, excluding limas .....................farms: 308 129 42 34 21 19 acres: 39,511 29,806 4,389 3,744 622 538 cwt: 955,995 761,701 90,012 76,972 13,219 7,361 Irrigated ...........................................farms: 269 123 39 32 18 15 acres: 36,866 28,215 3,895 (D) 490 510 Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..........................................: 95 4 7 8 11 10 25 to 99 acres .........................................: 93 38 18 11 9 9 100 to 249 acres .......................................: 69 45 14 9 1 - 250 to 499 acres .......................................: 38 29 3 6 - - 500 acres or more ......................................: 13 13 - - - - : Oats for grain ........................................farms: 240 88 13 20 18 12 acres: 25,065 18,016 1,609 1,535 1,419 921 bushels: 2,246,420 1,619,946 136,927 136,583 152,399 57,787 Irrigated ...........................................farms: 145 68 9 10 12 4 acres: 15,901 12,754 959 607 679 281 Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..........................................: 86 10 1 4 3 3 25 to 99 acres .........................................: 75 23 7 8 9 5 100 to 249 acres .......................................: 54 32 3 8 6 4 250 to 499 acres .......................................: 16 14 2 - - - 500 acres or more ......................................: 9 9 - - - - : Peanuts for nuts ......................................farms: 15 - - - 5 - acres: 27 - - - 7 - pounds: 84,093 - - - 21,803 - ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 66. Summary by Combined Government Payments and Market Value of Agricultural Products Sold: 2012 (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. : : Layers sold (see text) ................................farms: 51 106 125 118 149 173 number: 10,303 6,867 7,452 3,225 6,624 3,068 : Pullets for laying flock replacement : sold .................................................farms: 12 12 8 12 9 12 number: 949 1,246 1,184 676 394 130 : Broilers and other meat-type chickens : sold .................................................farms: 36 50 78 53 46 53 number: 63,385 19,778 10,936 4,763 1,991 1,160 Farms with- : 1 to 1,999 .............................................: 29 48 78 53 46 53 2,000 to 59,999 ........................................: 7 2 - - - - 60,000 to 99,999 .......................................: - - - - - - 100,000 or more ........................................: - - - - - - : Turkeys inventory (see text) ..........................farms: 25 88 115 79 107 200 number: 233 1,034 987 465 718 1,417 Turkeys sold (see text) ...............................farms: 19 31 49 44 44 46 number: 2,605 908 612 480 1,568 539 : CROPS HARVESTED : : Barley for grain ......................................farms: 19 9 10 4 15 8 acres: 1,158 167 340 51 131 51 bushels: 43,929 6,175 11,360 1,906 3,573 691 Irrigated ...........................................farms: 7 4 - 2 7 3 acres: 112 9 - (D) 23 (D) Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..........................................: 6 6 6 3 14 8 25 to 99 acres .........................................: 7 3 4 1 1 - 100 to 249 acres .......................................: 6 - - - - - 250 to 499 acres .......................................: - - - - - - 500 acres or more ......................................: - - - - - - : Corn for grain ........................................farms: 32 25 22 34 20 17 acres: 824 472 108 285 36 142 bushels: 133,274 25,588 4,731 6,470 1,820 1,784 Irrigated ...........................................farms: 32 25 22 34 20 17 acres: 824 472 108 285 36 142 Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..........................................: 20 17 20 29 20 17 25 to 99 acres .........................................: 12 8 2 4 - - 100 to 249 acres .......................................: - - - 1 - - 250 to 499 acres .......................................: - - - - - - 500 acres or more ......................................: - - - - - - : Corn for silage or greenchop ..........................farms: 92 55 24 13 16 5 acres: 2,858 865 193 40 58 5 tons: 61,836 18,262 4,244 819 1,200 92 Irrigated ...........................................farms: 84 48 23 12 16 4 acres: 2,671 662 (D) (D) 58 (D) Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..........................................: 44 53 24 13 15 5 25 to 99 acres .........................................: 45 2 - - 1 - 100 to 249 acres .......................................: 3 - - - - - 250 to 499 acres .......................................: - - - - - - 500 acres or more ......................................: - - - - - - : Cotton, all ...........................................farms: 9 8 6 - - - acres: 236 107 27 - - - bales: 761 353 96 - - - Irrigated ...........................................farms: 9 8 6 - - - acres: 236 107 27 - - - Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..........................................: 6 8 6 - - - 25 to 99 acres .........................................: 3 - - - - - 100 to 249 acres .......................................: - - - - - - 250 to 499 acres .......................................: - - - - - - 500 acres or more ......................................: - - - - - - : Dry edible beans, excluding limas .....................farms: 14 19 15 12 3 - acres: 211 167 19 12 3 - cwt: 3,653 2,445 299 270 63 - Irrigated ...........................................farms: 9 9 11 12 1 - acres: 77 151 15 12 (D) - Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..........................................: 10 15 15 12 3 - 25 to 99 acres .........................................: 4 4 - - - - 100 to 249 acres .......................................: - - - - - - 250 to 499 acres .......................................: - - - - - - 500 acres or more ......................................: - - - - - - : Oats for grain ........................................farms: 24 21 19 16 9 - acres: 504 479 350 133 99 - bushels: 49,203 48,544 28,098 11,432 5,501 - Irrigated ...........................................farms: 12 14 7 7 2 - acres: 282 160 (D) 93 (D) - Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..........................................: 15 12 13 16 9 - 25 to 99 acres .........................................: 9 8 6 - - - 100 to 249 acres .......................................: - 1 - - - - 250 to 499 acres .......................................: - - - - - - 500 acres or more ......................................: - - - - - - : Peanuts for nuts ......................................farms: - 10 - - - - acres: - 20 - - - - pounds: - 62,290 - - - - ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 66. Summary by Combined Government Payments and Market Value of Agricultural Products Sold: 2012 (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 HARVESTED - Con. : : Peanuts for nuts - Con. : : Irrigated ...........................................farms: 15 - - - 5 - acres: 27 - - - 7 - Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..........................................: 15 - - - 5 - 25 to 99 acres .........................................: - - - - - - 100 to 249 acres .......................................: - - - - - - 250 to 499 acres .......................................: - - - - - - 500 acres or more ......................................: - - - - - - : Rice ..................................................farms: 1,392 329 309 378 221 96 acres: 561,968 305,435 136,319 89,043 24,902 5,056 cwt: 46,692,580 25,780,934 11,132,459 7,299,408 2,001,611 392,822 Irrigated ...........................................farms: 1,392 329 309 378 221 96 acres: 561,968 305,435 136,319 89,043 24,902 5,056 Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..........................................: 49 5 - - 7 4 25 to 99 acres .........................................: 232 10 10 18 78 90 100 to 249 acres .......................................: 385 23 23 203 134 2 250 to 499 acres .......................................: 366 48 162 154 2 - 500 acres or more ......................................: 360 243 114 3 - - : Sorghum for grain .....................................farms: 74 44 8 3 3 3 acres: 13,908 11,868 1,307 170 217 90 bushels: 1,263,924 1,104,021 106,680 16,150 17,979 8,250 Irrigated ...........................................farms: 62 34 6 3 3 3 acres: 10,997 (D) (D) 170 217 90 Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..........................................: 17 4 1 1 - - 25 to 99 acres .........................................: 18 9 1 2 3 3 100 to 249 acres .......................................: 19 12 5 - - - 250 to 499 acres .......................................: 13 13 - - - - 500 acres or more ......................................: 7 6 1 - - - : Soybeans for beans ....................................farms: 2 - - 1 1 - acres: (D) - - (D) (D) - bushels: (D) - - (D) (D) - Irrigated ...........................................farms: 1 - - 1 - - acres: (D) - - (D) - - Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..........................................: 1 - - 1 - - 25 to 99 acres .........................................: - - - - - - 100 to 249 acres .......................................: 1 - - - 1 - 250 to 499 acres .......................................: - - - - - - 500 acres or more ......................................: - - - - - - : Sugarbeets for sugar ..................................farms: 58 49 5 4 - - acres: 27,193 (D) (D) 204 - - tons: 1,179,753 1,159,119 14,504 6,130 - - Irrigated ...........................................farms: 58 49 5 4 - - acres: 26,567 (D) (D) 204 - - : Sunflower seed, all ...................................farms: 197 83 18 26 16 12 acres: 49,749 38,769 1,984 4,495 2,627 970 pounds: 68,792,639 55,601,656 2,249,501 5,682,439 3,141,900 1,188,176 Irrigated ...........................................farms: 152 59 17 25 16 10 acres: 34,815 24,719 (D) (D) 2,627 (D) Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..........................................: 42 6 2 - 3 2 25 to 99 acres .........................................: 52 17 7 9 4 4 100 to 249 acres .......................................: 43 10 8 11 6 6 250 to 499 acres .......................................: 31 21 1 6 3 - 500 acres or more ......................................: 29 29 - - - - : Wheat for grain, all ..................................farms: 1,503 820 165 120 117 76 acres: 491,846 413,722 31,969 17,854 15,253 6,937 bushels: 42,955,324 37,562,775 2,294,423 1,204,686 1,078,138 426,786 Irrigated ...........................................farms: 1,123 697 115 77 82 46 acres: 382,958 340,780 17,968 9,336 8,557 3,538 Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..........................................: 164 12 9 6 11 13 25 to 99 acres .........................................: 427 143 60 54 54 35 100 to 249 acres .......................................: 430 255 62 43 33 26 250 to 499 acres .......................................: 220 165 25 11 19 - 500 acres or more ......................................: 262 245 9 6 - 2 : Forage-land used for all hay and all : haylage, grass silage, and : greenchop (see text) .................................farms: 7,903 1,882 465 551 794 637 acres: 1,670,027 1,128,612 143,415 121,458 119,233 53,690 tons, dry: 9,363,421 7,364,886 712,767 486,739 397,307 172,865 Irrigated ...........................................farms: 5,498 1,710 397 459 605 435 acres: 1,346,666 1,000,703 110,717 86,504 72,948 31,369 Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..........................................: 2,621 41 29 47 109 100 25 to 99 acres .........................................: 2,274 279 112 160 292 357 100 to 249 acres .......................................: 1,435 520 139 182 248 152 250 to 499 acres .......................................: 728 395 98 102 104 18 500 acres or more ......................................: 845 647 87 60 41 10 : Alfalfa hay .........................................farms: 3,243 1,244 300 304 404 267 acres: 874,137 660,157 74,279 57,752 44,463 18,573 tons, dry: 5,607,210 4,514,087 440,405 306,686 200,554 82,514 Irrigated .........................................farms: 3,035 1,194 289 290 379 247 acres: 831,858 636,099 69,699 54,308 40,927 16,251 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 66. Summary by Combined Government Payments and Market Value of Agricultural Products Sold: 2012 (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 HARVESTED - Con. : : Peanuts for nuts - Con. : : Irrigated ...........................................farms: - 10 - - - - acres: - 20 - - - - Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..........................................: - 10 - - - - 25 to 99 acres .........................................: - - - - - - 100 to 249 acres .......................................: - - - - - - 250 to 499 acres .......................................: - - - - - - 500 acres or more ......................................: - - - - - - : Rice ..................................................farms: 34 21 3 1 - - acres: 960 237 (D) (D) - - cwt: 68,498 15,549 (D) (D) - - Irrigated ...........................................farms: 34 21 3 1 - - acres: 960 237 (D) (D) - - Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..........................................: 11 18 3 1 - - 25 to 99 acres .........................................: 23 3 - - - - 100 to 249 acres .......................................: - - - - - - 250 to 499 acres .......................................: - - - - - - 500 acres or more ......................................: - - - - - - : Sorghum for grain .....................................farms: 7 - 3 3 - - acres: 235 - 12 9 - - bushels: 8,357 - 1,200 1,287 - - Irrigated ...........................................farms: 7 - 3 3 - - acres: 235 - 12 9 - - Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..........................................: 5 - 3 3 - - 25 to 99 acres .........................................: - - - - - - 100 to 249 acres .......................................: 2 - - - - - 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: - - - - - - acres: - - - - - - tons: - - - - - - Irrigated ...........................................farms: - - - - - - acres: - - - - - - : Sunflower seed, all ...................................farms: 9 13 6 2 - 12 acres: 591 272 15 (D) - (D) pounds: 616,516 275,549 18,540 (D) - (D) Irrigated ...........................................farms: 4 10 3 2 - 6 acres: 456 266 12 (D) - 6 Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..........................................: 2 7 6 2 - 12 25 to 99 acres .........................................: 5 6 - - - - 100 to 249 acres .......................................: 2 - - - - - 250 to 499 acres .......................................: - - - - - - 500 acres or more ......................................: - - - - - - : Wheat for grain, all ..................................farms: 88 50 30 24 10 3 acres: 3,855 1,085 618 407 95 51 bushels: 277,545 77,884 18,603 10,986 3,099 399 Irrigated ...........................................farms: 53 21 19 5 5 3 acres: 1,881 519 275 45 23 36 Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..........................................: 26 30 24 20 10 3 25 to 99 acres .........................................: 54 20 3 4 - - 100 to 249 acres .......................................: 8 - 3 - - - 250 to 499 acres .......................................: - - - - - - 500 acres or more ......................................: - - - - - - : Forage-land used for all hay and all : haylage, grass silage, and : greenchop (see text) .................................farms: 709 815 606 459 365 620 acres: 37,057 31,660 13,915 7,902 4,955 8,130 tons, dry: 100,188 68,926 31,163 12,099 6,135 10,346 Irrigated ...........................................farms: 479 433 316 217 179 268 acres: 18,739 13,270 5,401 2,387 1,654 2,974 Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..........................................: 248 371 435 362 323 556 25 to 99 acres .........................................: 344 386 155 93 38 58 100 to 249 acres .......................................: 111 53 16 4 4 6 250 to 499 acres .......................................: 6 5 - - - - 500 acres or more ......................................: - - - - - - : Alfalfa hay .........................................farms: 191 228 103 95 43 64 acres: 6,915 7,169 1,979 1,319 541 990 tons, dry: 30,406 22,608 5,835 2,208 715 1,192 Irrigated .........................................farms: 182 197 88 73 37 59 acres: 6,537 4,721 1,357 689 487 783 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 66. Summary by Combined Government Payments and Market Value of Agricultural Products Sold: 2012 (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 HARVESTED - Con. : : Forage-land used for all hay and all : haylage, grass silage, and : greenchop (see text) - Con. : : Other tame hay ......................................farms: 1,699 279 79 139 171 124 acres: 212,238 127,434 15,698 19,920 21,571 7,351 tons, dry: 821,999 608,421 53,118 53,856 50,545 16,315 Irrigated .........................................farms: 1,217 205 63 104 113 87 acres: 155,054 98,145 13,316 14,846 11,809 4,364 : Field and grass seed crops, all .......................farms: 209 116 17 15 13 11 acres: 71,921 64,232 4,074 1,304 1,072 566 Irrigated ...........................................farms: 202 113 17 14 12 10 acres: 71,053 63,512 4,074 (D) (D) (D) : Land in vegetables (see text) .........................farms: 6,055 1,060 196 221 348 447 acres: 985,735 937,885 18,995 10,179 6,343 4,487 Irrigated ...........................................farms: 6,055 1,060 196 221 348 447 acres: 985,731 937,885 18,995 10,179 6,343 4,487 Farms by acres harvested: : 0.1 to 4.9 acres .......................................: 3,667 15 18 27 106 150 5.0 to 24.9 acres ......................................: 948 22 37 70 142 254 25.0 to 99.9 acres .....................................: 394 88 74 88 96 43 100.0 to 249.9 acres ...................................: 312 223 46 35 4 - 250.0 acres or more ....................................: 734 712 21 1 - - : Beans, snap .........................................farms: 652 50 23 35 52 60 acres: 9,419 8,003 577 225 182 224 Harvested for processing ..........................farms: 56 21 - 4 4 4 acres: 3,645 3,499 - 85 1 44 : Peas, green .........................................farms: 138 15 8 7 16 25 acres: 821 479 12 132 91 43 Harvested for processing ..........................farms: - - - - - - acres: - - - - - - Potatoes ............................................farms: 441 70 11 22 53 26 acres: 42,660 40,826 376 947 391 19 Harvested for processing ..........................farms: 36 20 - 2 6 - acres: 14,436 14,095 - (D) (D) - Farms by acres harvested: : 0.1 to 4.9 acres .....................................: 345 4 7 11 42 26 5.0 to 24.9 acres ....................................: 17 4 1 2 6 - 25.0 to 99.9 acres ...................................: 20 9 1 5 5 - 100.0 to 249.9 acres .................................: 16 10 2 4 - - 250.0 acres or more ..................................: 43 43 - - - - : Sweet corn ..........................................farms: 441 76 19 23 31 36 acres: 32,667 31,015 640 596 90 27 Harvested for processing ..........................farms: 12 4 - 2 - - acres: 561 255 - (D) - - Sweet potatoes ......................................farms: 188 44 10 22 13 20 acres: 18,189 15,964 468 1,359 126 240 Harvested for processing ..........................farms: 27 16 2 6 - 3 acres: 2,571 2,298 (D) 200 - (D) : Tomatoes in the open ................................farms: 3,176 481 91 86 154 209 acres: 295,247 285,157 6,081 1,508 680 663 Harvested for processing ..........................farms: 631 344 34 18 15 24 acres: 256,051 249,435 5,017 1,185 204 75 : Land in orchards ......................................farms: 38,098 3,373 2,075 2,664 4,802 4,656 acres: 3,138,943 2,168,980 310,373 212,144 190,035 97,107 Irrigated ...........................................farms: 34,580 3,318 2,006 2,544 4,485 4,319 acres: 3,072,245 2,155,679 301,384 204,358 178,313 90,783 Farms by bearing and nonbearing acres: : 0.1 to 4.9 acres .......................................: 13,263 29 14 38 99 126 5.0 to 24.9 acres ......................................: 12,094 84 62 170 1,770 3,343 25.0 to 99.9 acres .....................................: 7,356 320 647 1,773 2,688 1,143 100.0 to 249.9 acres ...................................: 2,969 904 1,088 626 233 42 250.0 acres or more ....................................: 2,416 2,036 264 57 12 2 : Apples ..............................................farms: 2,527 83 37 66 127 128 bearing and nonbearing acres: 18,205 7,832 2,045 1,393 1,694 848 : Grapes ..............................................farms: 11,462 1,339 802 1,042 1,842 1,616 bearing and nonbearing acres: 940,177 681,942 88,409 63,871 54,055 24,856 : Peaches, all ........................................farms: 2,201 232 123 136 203 148 bearing and nonbearing acres: 51,948 32,939 7,305 4,162 3,361 1,195 : Citrus fruit, all ...................................farms: 7,283 433 299 457 672 671 bearing and nonbearing acres: 293,387 169,670 33,486 29,049 24,132 11,977 : Almonds .............................................farms: 6,841 1,456 708 619 1,104 1,000 bearing and nonbearing acres: 935,804 (D) 91,904 49,445 (D) (D) : Pecans .............................................farms: 222 14 4 5 12 10 bearing and nonbearing acres: 3,309 1,404 135 416 224 274 : Walnuts, English ....................................farms: 5,712 746 400 467 732 657 bearing and nonbearing acres: 329,112 200,805 39,862 26,838 25,966 12,297 : Land in berries (see text) ............................farms: 1,985 304 80 87 165 159 acres: 52,626 47,267 1,504 582 824 436 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 66. Summary by Combined Government Payments and Market Value of Agricultural Products Sold: 2012 (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 HARVESTED - Con. : : Forage-land used for all hay and all : haylage, grass silage, and : greenchop (see text) - Con. : : Other tame hay ......................................farms: 166 175 158 95 118 195 acres: 7,169 5,655 2,568 1,479 1,067 2,326 tons, dry: 16,715 10,097 4,890 2,545 1,633 3,864 Irrigated .........................................farms: 124 129 122 59 96 115 acres: 4,433 3,721 1,843 706 788 1,083 : Field and grass seed crops, all .......................farms: 11 7 10 4 5 - acres: 376 170 85 (D) (D) - Irrigated ...........................................farms: 11 7 10 3 5 - acres: 376 170 85 (D) (D) - : Land in vegetables (see text) .........................farms: 474 871 1,022 650 499 267 acres: 2,247 2,599 1,655 709 382 255 Irrigated ...........................................farms: 474 871 1,022 650 499 267 acres: 2,243 2,599 1,655 709 382 255 Farms by acres harvested: : 0.1 to 4.9 acres .......................................: 328 686 961 634 484 258 5.0 to 24.9 acres ......................................: 140 185 58 16 15 9 25.0 to 99.9 acres .....................................: 5 - - - - - 100.0 to 249.9 acres ...................................: 1 - 3 - - - 250.0 acres or more ....................................: - - - - - - : Beans, snap .........................................farms: 79 107 124 82 28 12 acres: 76 58 40 27 4 4 Harvested for processing ..........................farms: 8 - 9 6 - - acres: 13 - 3 1 - - : Peas, green .........................................farms: 16 16 15 5 5 10 acres: 38 15 4 1 5 1 Harvested for processing ..........................farms: - - - - - - acres: - - - - - - Potatoes ............................................farms: 47 73 79 41 7 12 acres: 46 27 19 6 1 1 Harvested for processing ..........................farms: - - 4 4 - - acres: - - (Z) (Z) - - Farms by acres harvested: : 0.1 to 4.9 acres .....................................: 43 73 79 41 7 12 5.0 to 24.9 acres ....................................: 4 - - - - - 25.0 to 99.9 acres ...................................: - - - - - - 100.0 to 249.9 acres .................................: - - - - - - 250.0 acres or more ..................................: - - - - - - : Sweet corn ..........................................farms: 33 69 71 49 23 11 acres: 153 101 28 10 7 1 Harvested for processing ..........................farms: 1 2 3 - - - acres: (D) (D) 2 - - - Sweet potatoes ......................................farms: 7 17 33 16 6 - acres: 5 13 13 2 1 - Harvested for processing ..........................farms: - - - - - - acres: - - - - - - : Tomatoes in the open ................................farms: 292 544 617 324 269 109 acres: 401 377 213 67 81 20 Harvested for processing ..........................farms: 39 37 70 17 27 6 acres: 72 20 35 2 6 1 : Land in orchards ......................................farms: 4,562 5,785 4,072 2,458 1,269 2,382 acres: 58,772 36,569 11,311 5,334 3,107 45,212 Irrigated ...........................................farms: 4,157 5,146 3,502 2,079 1,043 1,981 acres: 53,433 32,277 9,177 4,604 2,729 39,508 Farms by bearing and nonbearing acres: : 0.1 to 4.9 acres .......................................: 925 3,557 3,613 2,293 1,157 1,412 5.0 to 24.9 acres ......................................: 3,228 2,073 433 142 99 690 25.0 to 99.9 acres .....................................: 389 147 23 23 9 194 100.0 to 249.9 acres ...................................: 15 4 3 - 4 50 250.0 acres or more ....................................: 5 4 - - - 36 : Apples ..............................................farms: 220 490 520 366 167 323 bearing and nonbearing acres: 1,332 1,600 777 295 108 281 : Grapes ..............................................farms: 1,384 1,572 713 406 247 499 bearing and nonbearing acres: 12,200 5,729 1,027 587 342 7,161 : Peaches, all ........................................farms: 172 315 321 223 98 230 bearing and nonbearing acres: 957 608 206 129 44 1,041 : Citrus fruit, all ...................................farms: 734 1,193 1,104 856 386 478 bearing and nonbearing acres: 8,830 5,760 2,033 1,108 397 6,947 : Almonds .............................................farms: 646 504 265 103 78 358 bearing and nonbearing acres: 9,445 4,630 929 540 492 11,366 : Pecans .............................................farms: 22 38 34 27 24 32 bearing and nonbearing acres: 262 252 96 62 43 140 : Walnuts, English ....................................farms: 677 847 539 211 90 346 bearing and nonbearing acres: 10,234 5,079 1,760 440 192 5,639 : Land in berries (see text) ............................farms: 249 322 304 138 72 105 acres: 416 373 138 74 29 984 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 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. Table 67. Summary by Legal Status For Tax Purposes: 2012 [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: 77,857 59,732 8,984 7,283 percent: 100.0 76.7 11.5 9.4 Land in farms .........................................acres: 25,569,001 12,000,544 6,934,159 5,929,592 Average size of farm ..............................acres: 328 201 772 814 : MARKET VALUE OF AGRICULTURAL : PRODUCTS SOLD AND GOVERNMENT : PAYMENTS : : Total .................................................farms: 77,857 59,732 8,984 7,283 $1,000: 42,774,392 12,239,120 14,060,107 12,555,360 Average per farm ................................dollars: 549,397 204,901 1,565,016 1,723,927 Farms by economic class: : Less than $1,000 (see text) ............................: 14,629 12,548 873 639 $1,000 to $2,499 .......................................: 4,718 4,300 205 136 $2,500 to $4,999 .......................................: 5,904 5,374 237 159 $5,000 to $9,999 .......................................: 7,846 6,985 406 285 $10,000 to $24,999 .....................................: 10,265 8,865 700 527 : $25,000 to $49,999 .....................................: 7,150 5,810 686 518 $50,000 to $99,999 .....................................: 6,698 5,134 807 632 $100,000 to $249,999 ...................................: 6,951 4,716 1,171 946 $250,000 to $499,999 ...................................: 4,132 2,365 934 789 : $500,000 to $999,999 ...................................: 3,197 1,551 852 770 $1,000,000 or more .....................................: 6,367 2,084 2,113 1,882 $1,000,000 to $2,499,999 .............................: 3,015 1,141 927 811 $2,500,000 to $4,999,999 .............................: 1,480 486 502 450 $5,000,000 or more ...................................: 1,872 457 684 621 : Total sales .........................................farms: 77,857 59,732 8,984 7,283 $1,000: 42,627,472 12,166,830 14,004,048 12,505,467 Grains, oilseeds, dry beans, and : dry peas .........................................farms: 4,757 2,718 1,259 1,089 $1,000: 1,727,708 602,788 744,366 686,119 Sales of $50,000 or more ........................farms: 3,235 1,592 1,045 919 $1,000: 1,701,529 584,933 739,681 682,284 Corn ............................................farms: 1,796 1,039 467 410 $1,000: 419,544 146,341 170,435 158,841 Sales of $50,000 or more ......................farms: 1,130 534 379 341 $1,000: 407,430 137,728 168,280 157,178 Wheat ...........................................farms: 1,499 725 446 403 $1,000: 341,702 107,259 129,546 119,765 Sales of $50,000 or more ......................farms: 914 346 329 301 $1,000: 329,286 99,987 126,533 117,087 Soybeans ........................................farms: 2 - - - $1,000: (D) - - - Sales of $50,000 or more ......................farms: 1 - - - $1,000: (D) - - - Sorghum .........................................farms: 200 117 45 38 $1,000: (D) 7,166 5,186 5,072 Sales of $50,000 or more ......................farms: 76 40 22 22 $1,000: 13,369 5,684 4,856 4,856 Barley ..........................................farms: 261 147 70 58 $1,000: 29,212 8,013 9,687 8,797 Sales of $50,000 or more ......................farms: 105 48 40 36 $1,000: 27,084 6,874 9,030 8,287 Rice ............................................farms: 1,391 776 434 374 $1,000: 782,644 294,378 375,751 342,848 Sales of $50,000 or more ......................farms: 1,306 713 420 361 $1,000: 780,488 292,808 375,317 (D) Other grains, oilseeds, : dry beans, and dry peas ........................farms: 953 528 228 204 $1,000: 138,816 39,632 53,762 50,795 Sales of $50,000 or more ......................farms: 438 171 149 140 $1,000: 132,134 35,624 52,531 49,764 : Tobacco .......................................... farms: - - - - $1,000: - - - - Sales of $50,000 or more ........................farms: - - - - $1,000: - - - - Cotton and cottonseed .............................farms: 630 270 250 233 $1,000: 655,094 126,647 274,680 258,764 Sales of $50,000 or more ........................farms: 584 241 244 227 $1,000: 653,962 125,837 274,533 258,617 Vegetables, melons, potatoes, : and sweet potatoes ...............................farms: 6,155 4,434 788 668 $1,000: 6,327,838 899,885 2,027,966 1,910,725 Sales of $50,000 or more ........................farms: 1,961 867 473 409 $1,000: 6,293,658 872,223 2,024,506 1,907,655 : Fruits, tree nuts, and berries ....................farms: 36,574 26,839 4,872 4,074 $1,000: 17,638,972 5,127,828 5,083,334 4,611,554 Sales of $50,000 or more ........................farms: 17,379 10,218 3,673 3,138 $1,000: 17,344,347 4,882,465 5,059,644 4,592,571 Fruits and tree nuts ............................farms: 35,526 26,135 4,743 3,962 $1,000: 15,655,703 4,813,927 4,442,791 3,979,813 Sales of $50,000 or more ......................farms: 16,846 9,955 3,584 3,054 $1,000: 15,369,315 4,575,429 4,419,773 3,961,266 Berries .........................................farms: 1,701 1,196 201 173 $1,000: 1,983,269 313,901 640,543 631,741 Sales of $50,000 or more ......................farms: 610 270 122 114 $1,000: 1,972,002 305,003 639,372 630,825 Nursery, greenhouse, floriculture, : and sod (see text) ...............................farms: 3,890 2,594 362 299 $1,000: 2,547,307 369,586 209,248 184,039 Sales of $50,000 or more ........................farms: 1,465 619 177 161 $1,000: 2,520,294 348,532 207,065 182,371 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 67. Summary by Legal Status For Tax Purposes: 2012 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ : Corporation : :---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------: : : Family held : Other than family held : Other- : :-------------------------------------------------------------------------------: cooperative, : : : 10 or less : : 10 or less : estate or trust, Item : Total : Total : stockholders : Total : stockholders :institutional, etc. ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ FARMS AND LAND IN FARMS : : Farms ................................................number: 6,361 5,345 5,081 1,016 845 2,780 percent: 8.2 6.9 6.5 1.3 1.1 3.6 Land in farms .........................................acres: 5,359,671 4,209,678 3,772,441 1,149,993 727,389 1,274,627 Average size of farm ..............................acres: 843 788 742 1,132 861 458 : MARKET VALUE OF AGRICULTURAL : PRODUCTS SOLD AND GOVERNMENT : PAYMENTS : : Total .................................................farms: 6,361 5,345 5,081 1,016 845 2,780 $1,000: 15,105,109 11,748,838 10,248,753 3,356,271 2,082,698 1,370,056 Average per farm ................................dollars: 2,374,644 2,198,099 2,017,074 3,303,416 2,464,732 492,826 Farms by economic class: : Less than $1,000 (see text) ............................: 619 473 448 146 124 589 $1,000 to $2,499 .......................................: 83 76 76 7 5 130 $2,500 to $4,999 .......................................: 147 122 115 25 22 146 $5,000 to $9,999 .......................................: 235 191 181 44 40 220 $10,000 to $24,999 .....................................: 363 319 308 44 40 337 : $25,000 to $49,999 .....................................: 368 318 308 50 47 286 $50,000 to $99,999 .....................................: 537 448 433 89 78 220 $100,000 to $249,999 ...................................: 721 616 599 105 92 343 $250,000 to $499,999 ...................................: 661 583 555 78 72 172 : $500,000 to $999,999 ...................................: 660 567 552 93 83 134 $1,000,000 or more .....................................: 1,967 1,632 1,506 335 242 203 $1,000,000 to $2,499,999 .............................: 846 719 681 127 104 101 $2,500,000 to $4,999,999 .............................: 441 377 355 64 47 51 $5,000,000 or more ...................................: 680 536 470 144 91 51 : Total sales .........................................farms: 6,361 5,345 5,081 1,016 845 2,780 $1,000: 15,090,068 11,734,814 10,235,127 3,355,254 2,081,761 1,366,526 Grains, oilseeds, dry beans, and : dry peas .........................................farms: 628 550 525 78 59 152 $1,000: 335,553 262,883 230,436 72,669 41,063 45,001 Sales of $50,000 or more ........................farms: 504 438 419 66 52 94 $1,000: 332,936 260,572 228,236 72,364 40,909 43,980 Corn ............................................farms: 240 211 204 29 26 50 $1,000: 92,701 71,121 (D) 21,581 (D) 10,067 Sales of $50,000 or more ......................farms: 187 163 157 24 22 30 $1,000: (D) (D) (D) (D) (D) (D) Wheat ...........................................farms: 263 235 223 28 18 65 $1,000: 90,769 69,833 61,220 20,936 8,554 14,129 Sales of $50,000 or more ......................farms: 206 184 172 22 14 33 $1,000: 89,341 68,653 60,040 20,689 (D) 13,425 Soybeans ........................................farms: - - - - - 2 $1,000: - - - - - (D) Sales of $50,000 or more ......................farms: - - - - - 1 $1,000: - - - - - (D) Sorghum .........................................farms: 27 24 22 3 2 11 $1,000: 2,896 2,598 (D) 298 (D) (D) Sales of $50,000 or more ......................farms: 12 11 9 1 - 2 $1,000: (D) 2,304 (D) (D) - (D) Barley ..........................................farms: 33 25 22 8 2 11 $1,000: 10,668 1,159 (D) 9,509 (D) 845 Sales of $50,000 or more ......................farms: 13 6 6 7 1 4 $1,000: 10,347 (D) (D) (D) (D) 833 Rice ............................................farms: 142 118 114 24 23 39 $1,000: 93,710 82,893 70,266 10,817 (D) 18,804 Sales of $50,000 or more ......................farms: 138 114 110 24 23 35 $1,000: 93,661 82,844 70,217 10,817 (D) 18,702 Other grains, oilseeds, : dry beans, and dry peas ........................farms: 169 150 145 19 12 28 $1,000: 44,808 35,280 (D) 9,529 1,142 614 Sales of $50,000 or more ......................farms: 112 99 97 13 8 6 $1,000: 43,615 34,143 (D) 9,471 (D) 365 : Tobacco .......................................... farms: - - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - - Sales of $50,000 or more ........................farms: - - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - - Cotton and cottonseed .............................farms: 93 76 71 17 12 17 $1,000: 241,698 56,863 46,910 184,835 (D) 12,069 Sales of $50,000 or more ........................farms: 87 72 67 15 12 12 $1,000: 241,613 (D) (D) (D) (D) 11,979 Vegetables, melons, potatoes, : and sweet potatoes ...............................farms: 750 618 592 132 99 183 $1,000: 3,216,028 2,537,899 2,191,013 678,129 340,010 183,959 Sales of $50,000 or more ........................farms: 555 469 446 86 56 66 $1,000: 3,214,087 2,536,540 2,189,744 677,548 339,455 182,841 : Fruits, tree nuts, and berries ....................farms: 3,425 2,967 2,804 458 390 1,438 $1,000: 6,646,485 5,329,829 4,517,238 1,316,656 920,251 781,324 Sales of $50,000 or more ........................farms: 2,761 2,371 2,222 390 325 727 $1,000: 6,633,328 5,318,095 4,505,794 1,315,233 918,867 768,910 Fruits and tree nuts ............................farms: 3,239 2,818 2,669 421 354 1,409 $1,000: 5,764,820 4,594,674 4,038,739 1,170,145 787,605 634,165 Sales of $50,000 or more ......................farms: 2,589 2,232 2,097 357 294 718 $1,000: 5,751,990 4,583,217 4,027,571 1,168,773 786,281 622,123 Berries .........................................farms: 249 201 183 48 45 55 $1,000: 881,665 735,155 478,499 146,510 132,646 147,160 Sales of $50,000 or more ......................farms: 202 160 143 42 39 16 $1,000: 880,852 734,431 (D) 146,421 132,557 146,776 Nursery, greenhouse, floriculture, : and sod (see text) ...............................farms: 802 645 622 157 137 132 $1,000: 1,906,437 1,268,854 1,172,532 637,583 355,824 62,036 Sales of $50,000 or more ........................farms: 625 508 490 117 100 44 $1,000: 1,903,709 1,266,613 1,170,411 637,097 (D) 60,987 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 67. Summary by Legal Status For Tax Purposes: 2012 (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. : : Cut Christmas trees and : short-rotation woody crops .......................farms: 328 273 31 24 $1,000: 2,706 1,837 (D) (D) Sales of $50,000 or more ........................farms: 9 5 3 3 $1,000: 904 419 (D) (D) Cut Christmas trees .............................farms: 301 251 26 21 $1,000: 2,499 1,671 (D) (D) Sales of $50,000 or more ......................farms: 8 4 3 3 $1,000: 846 (D) 245 245 Short-rotation woody crops ......................farms: 38 31 5 3 $1,000: 206 166 (D) (D) Sales of $50,000 or more ......................farms: 1 1 - - $1,000: (D) (D) - - Other crops and hay (see text) ....................farms: 5,744 3,969 984 831 $1,000: 1,467,274 609,691 469,130 415,896 Sales of $50,000 or more ........................farms: 2,246 1,129 637 562 $1,000: 1,425,574 578,501 462,915 411,226 Maple syrup (see text) ..........................farms: - - - - $1,000: - - - - Sales of $50,000 or more ......................farms: - - - - $1,000: - - - - : Cattle and calves .................................farms: 12,594 10,055 1,516 1,208 $1,000: 3,259,325 1,144,142 1,029,801 579,755 Sales of $50,000 or more ........................farms: 3,515 2,073 947 805 $1,000: 3,170,394 1,069,416 1,022,246 574,120 Milk from cows (see text) .........................farms: 1,554 821 544 479 $1,000: 6,945,102 2,984,064 3,072,536 2,784,818 Sales of $50,000 or more ........................farms: 1,520 787 544 479 $1,000: 6,944,530 2,983,492 3,072,536 2,784,818 Hogs and pigs .....................................farms: 1,163 982 68 48 $1,000: 51,526 (D) (D) (D) Sales of $50,000 or more ........................farms: 43 30 3 3 $1,000: 48,608 (D) (D) (D) Sheep, goats, wool, mohair, and : milk (see text) ..................................farms: 4,376 3,822 292 194 $1,000: 108,136 51,817 27,449 24,399 Sales of $50,000 or more ........................farms: 196 108 51 41 $1,000: 91,373 37,905 25,889 23,313 Horses, ponies, mules, burros, and : donkeys ..........................................farms: 3,050 2,515 282 190 $1,000: 62,241 38,546 8,415 4,737 Sales of $50,000 or more ........................farms: 212 113 28 18 $1,000: 35,731 17,571 5,137 2,494 Poultry and eggs ..................................farms: 3,758 3,192 271 184 $1,000: 1,663,919 (D) 1,015,689 1,004,724 Sales of $50,000 or more ........................farms: 248 124 70 62 $1,000: 1,658,976 (D) 1,015,297 1,004,470 Aquaculture .......................................farms: 229 96 16 14 $1,000: 103,016 (D) (D) (D) Sales of $50,000 or more ........................farms: 119 32 10 10 $1,000: 101,782 (D) (D) (D) Other animals and other animal : products (see text) ..............................farms: 1,766 1,403 144 113 $1,000: 67,309 18,146 4,205 2,809 Sales of $50,000 or more ........................farms: 150 81 15 13 $1,000: 58,094 11,218 3,444 (D) : Value of- : Government payments .................................farms: 7,593 4,911 1,737 1,471 $1,000: 146,919 72,290 56,059 49,893 : Landlord's share of total : sales (see text) ...................................farms: 2,147 1,307 459 376 $1,000: 266,275 91,325 91,407 82,014 : Agricultural products sold directly to : individuals for human : consumption (see text) .............................farms: 8,588 7,284 610 476 $1,000: 169,915 86,727 23,788 19,558 : FARM PRODUCTION EXPENSES : : Total farm production expenses 1/ .....................farms: 77,857 59,732 8,984 7,283 $1,000: 35,455,667 10,220,935 11,598,146 10,293,686 Average per farm ................................dollars: 455,395 171,113 1,290,978 1,413,385 : Fertilizer, lime, and soil : conditioners purchased .............................farms: 38,958 27,864 5,596 4,713 $1,000: 1,806,062 464,565 567,323 517,817 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 .........................................: 24,634 20,489 1,950 1,556 $5,000 to $24,999 ....................................: 7,312 4,601 1,451 1,207 $25,000 to $49,999 ...................................: 2,319 1,145 635 547 $50,000 or more ......................................: 4,693 1,629 1,560 1,403 : Chemicals purchased .................................farms: 44,536 31,681 6,496 5,475 $1,000: 2,190,674 572,199 656,859 602,173 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 .........................................: 28,059 23,075 2,399 1,920 $5,000 to $24,999 ....................................: 8,444 5,357 1,624 1,358 $25,000 to $49,999 ...................................: 2,676 1,388 701 609 $50,000 or more ......................................: 5,357 1,861 1,772 1,588 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 67. Summary by Legal Status For Tax Purposes: 2012 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ : Corporation : :---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------: : : Family held : Other than family held : Other- : :-------------------------------------------------------------------------------: cooperative, : : : 10 or less : : 10 or less : estate or trust, Item : Total : Total : stockholders : Total : stockholders :institutional, etc. ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ MARKET VALUE OF AGRICULTURAL : PRODUCTS SOLD AND GOVERNMENT : PAYMENTS - Con. : : Total - Con. : Total sales - Con. : : Cut Christmas trees and : short-rotation woody crops .......................farms: 7 7 6 - - 17 $1,000: 304 304 (D) - - (D) Sales of $50,000 or more ........................farms: 1 1 1 - - - $1,000: (D) (D) (D) - - - Cut Christmas trees .............................farms: 7 7 6 - - 17 $1,000: 304 304 (D) - - (D) Sales of $50,000 or more ......................farms: 1 1 1 - - - $1,000: (D) (D) (D) - - - Short-rotation woody crops ......................farms: - - - - - 2 $1,000: - - - - - (D) Sales of $50,000 or more ......................farms: - - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - - Other crops and hay (see text) ....................farms: 589 506 487 83 59 202 $1,000: 358,877 272,983 265,746 85,894 46,268 29,576 Sales of $50,000 or more ........................farms: 417 360 348 57 40 63 $1,000: 356,103 270,684 263,606 85,419 45,928 28,055 Maple syrup (see text) ..........................farms: - - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - - Sales of $50,000 or more ......................farms: - - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - - : Cattle and calves .................................farms: 632 577 539 55 48 391 $1,000: 1,018,841 881,043 813,603 137,798 (D) 66,542 Sales of $50,000 or more ........................farms: 370 339 312 31 28 125 $1,000: 1,015,374 877,939 810,570 137,435 (D) 63,357 Milk from cows (see text) .........................farms: 146 138 135 8 7 43 $1,000: 735,771 704,807 687,867 30,963 (D) 152,732 Sales of $50,000 or more ........................farms: 146 138 135 8 7 43 $1,000: 735,771 704,807 687,867 30,963 (D) 152,732 Hogs and pigs .....................................farms: 32 22 22 10 10 81 $1,000: 11,383 11,084 11,084 299 299 1,979 Sales of $50,000 or more ........................farms: 5 4 4 1 1 5 $1,000: (D) 10,882 10,882 (D) (D) 1,504 Sheep, goats, wool, mohair, and : milk (see text) ..................................farms: 125 100 90 25 21 137 $1,000: 24,825 23,343 23,317 1,481 251 4,046 Sales of $50,000 or more ........................farms: 34 30 30 4 2 3 $1,000: 24,232 22,848 22,848 1,384 (D) 3,347 Horses, ponies, mules, burros, and : donkeys ..........................................farms: 192 170 166 22 18 61 $1,000: 13,659 12,178 (D) 1,481 (D) 1,622 Sales of $50,000 or more ........................farms: 64 55 55 9 8 7 $1,000: 11,880 10,570 10,570 1,310 (D) 1,143 Poultry and eggs ..................................farms: 185 162 155 23 22 110 $1,000: 485,082 (D) 219,366 (D) (D) (D) Sales of $50,000 or more ........................farms: 53 48 44 5 4 1 $1,000: 484,651 (D) 219,061 (D) (D) (D) Aquaculture .......................................farms: 71 41 39 30 22 46 $1,000: 52,152 17,711 (D) 34,440 (D) 22,754 Sales of $50,000 or more ........................farms: 48 21 19 27 19 29 $1,000: 51,811 17,394 (D) 34,417 (D) 22,559 Other animals and other animal : products (see text) ..............................farms: 164 144 142 20 20 55 $1,000: 42,974 (D) 28,677 (D) (D) 1,985 Sales of $50,000 or more ........................farms: 47 40 38 7 7 7 $1,000: 41,608 (D) 27,424 (D) (D) 1,824 : Value of- : Government payments .................................farms: 704 630 605 74 66 241 $1,000: 15,041 14,024 13,626 1,017 937 3,530 : Landlord's share of total : sales (see text) ...................................farms: 345 319 309 26 23 36 $1,000: 70,972 65,362 64,186 5,610 5,358 12,570 : Agricultural products sold directly to : individuals for human : consumption (see text) .............................farms: 479 388 376 91 80 215 $1,000: 50,675 33,908 33,705 16,766 8,944 8,726 : FARM PRODUCTION EXPENSES : : Total farm production expenses 1/ .....................farms: 6,361 5,345 5,081 1,016 845 2,780 $1,000: 12,491,773 9,865,031 8,664,659 2,626,742 1,687,224 1,144,813 Average per farm ................................dollars: 1,963,806 1,845,656 1,705,306 2,585,376 1,996,715 411,803 : Fertilizer, lime, and soil : conditioners purchased .............................farms: 4,146 3,533 3,363 613 500 1,352 $1,000: 709,207 539,529 470,465 169,677 91,805 64,967 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 .........................................: 1,374 1,178 1,141 196 178 821 $5,000 to $24,999 ....................................: 968 827 795 141 116 292 $25,000 to $49,999 ...................................: 462 407 394 55 52 77 $50,000 or more ......................................: 1,342 1,121 1,033 221 154 162 : Chemicals purchased .................................farms: 4,734 4,033 3,834 701 571 1,625 $1,000: 866,216 666,720 592,743 199,496 106,047 95,400 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 .........................................: 1,604 1,386 1,336 218 199 981 $5,000 to $24,999 ....................................: 1,098 936 908 162 131 365 $25,000 to $49,999 ...................................: 486 417 399 69 63 101 $50,000 or more ......................................: 1,546 1,294 1,191 252 178 178 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 67. Summary by Legal Status For Tax Purposes: 2012 (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. : : Seeds, plants, vines, and : trees purchased ....................................farms: 27,527 18,932 4,346 3,685 $1,000: 1,317,934 270,272 369,520 329,676 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $999 ...........................................: 11,381 9,656 836 672 $1,000 to $4,999 .....................................: 6,676 4,737 994 809 $5,000 to $24,999 ....................................: 5,157 2,991 1,167 997 $25,000 to $49,999 ...................................: 1,473 712 415 364 $50,000 or more ......................................: 2,840 836 934 843 : Livestock and poultry purchased or : leased .............................................farms: 12,585 10,200 1,273 1,004 $1,000: 1,254,286 335,577 428,323 229,804 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 .........................................: 7,903 6,971 448 312 $5,000 to $24,999 ....................................: 2,950 2,295 367 293 $25,000 to $99,999 ...................................: 995 585 241 213 $100,000 to $249,999 .................................: 335 178 97 82 $250,000 or more .....................................: 402 171 120 104 : Breeding livestock purchased or : leased ...........................................farms: 6,850 5,424 831 667 $1,000: 255,730 110,009 105,202 54,160 Other livestock and poultry : purchased or leased (see text) ...................farms: 7,673 6,325 658 491 $1,000: 998,556 225,568 323,121 175,644 : Feed purchased ......................................farms: 30,014 24,752 2,679 2,051 $1,000: 6,069,374 2,153,171 2,655,677 2,332,867 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 .........................................: 16,191 14,389 878 611 $5,000 to $24,999 ....................................: 9,417 7,818 767 573 $25,000 to $99,999 ...................................: 2,042 1,391 273 203 $100,000 to $249,999 .................................: 596 352 111 95 $250,000 or more .....................................: 1,768 802 650 569 : Gasoline, fuels, and oils purchased .................farms: 70,844 54,131 8,340 6,762 $1,000: 1,552,328 455,017 515,634 475,305 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 .........................................: 51,974 43,943 4,018 3,006 $5,000 to $24,999 ....................................: 11,182 7,231 1,971 1,658 $25,000 to $49,999 ...................................: 2,745 1,319 718 628 $50,000 or more ......................................: 4,943 1,638 1,633 1,470 : Utilities ...........................................farms: 60,680 44,908 7,877 6,491 $1,000: 1,684,343 515,969 504,380 465,936 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $999 ...........................................: 16,704 14,664 992 694 $1,000 to $4,999 .....................................: 23,136 18,959 2,149 1,691 $5,000 to $24,999 ....................................: 12,275 7,976 2,124 1,794 $25,000 to $49,999 ...................................: 3,178 1,559 821 699 $50,000 or more ......................................: 5,387 1,750 1,791 1,613 : Supplies, repairs, and maintenance costs ............farms: 63,106 47,008 8,071 6,636 $1,000: 2,042,434 591,403 646,775 598,877 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 .........................................: 41,934 35,354 3,334 2,536 $5,000 to $24,999 ....................................: 12,194 7,944 2,127 1,755 $25,000 to $49,999 ...................................: 3,091 1,612 757 679 $50,000 or more ......................................: 5,887 2,098 1,853 1,666 : Hired farm labor ....................................farms: 33,955 21,725 5,795 4,878 $1,000: 5,877,973 1,408,511 1,577,816 1,433,463 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 .........................................: 9,680 8,206 710 502 $5,000 to $24,999 ....................................: 8,646 6,295 1,223 968 $25,000 to $99,999 ...................................: 8,011 4,576 1,701 1,481 $100,000 to $249,999 .................................: 3,496 1,535 910 789 $250,000 or more .....................................: 4,122 1,113 1,251 1,138 : Contract labor ......................................farms: 25,067 16,502 4,300 3,677 $1,000: 3,378,012 845,088 979,283 903,334 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $999 ...........................................: 2,190 1,873 146 100 $1,000 to $4,999 .....................................: 5,812 4,675 587 477 $5,000 to $24,999 ....................................: 7,825 5,599 1,176 963 $25,000 to $49,999 ...................................: 2,941 1,777 588 502 $50,000 or more ......................................: 6,299 2,578 1,803 1,635 : Customwork and custom hauling .......................farms: 19,644 13,309 3,567 2,989 $1,000: 1,258,384 422,216 481,759 438,406 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $999 ...........................................: 3,589 3,097 255 185 $1,000 to $4,999 .....................................: 4,990 4,020 527 406 $5,000 to $24,999 ....................................: 5,384 3,641 964 783 $25,000 to $49,999 ...................................: 1,859 1,054 409 355 $50,000 or more ......................................: 3,822 1,497 1,412 1,260 : Cash rent for land, buildings, : and grazing fees ...................................farms: 15,007 9,612 2,701 2,279 $1,000: 1,511,985 379,949 502,832 460,899 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 .........................................: 5,241 4,341 443 332 $5,000 to $9,999 .....................................: 1,649 1,179 260 204 $10,000 to $24,999 ...................................: 2,878 1,785 483 381 $25,000 or more ......................................: 5,239 2,307 1,515 1,362 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 67. Summary by Legal Status For Tax Purposes: 2012 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ : Corporation : :---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------: : : Family held : Other than family held : Other- : :-------------------------------------------------------------------------------: cooperative, : : : 10 or less : : 10 or less : estate or trust, Item : Total : Total : stockholders : Total : stockholders :institutional, etc. ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ FARM PRODUCTION EXPENSES - Con. : : Total farm production expenses 1/ - Con. : : Seeds, plants, vines, and : trees purchased ....................................farms: 3,346 2,838 2,701 508 401 903 $1,000: 636,172 448,556 403,980 187,615 97,271 41,970 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $999 ...........................................: 500 435 421 65 62 389 $1,000 to $4,999 .....................................: 742 640 617 102 85 203 $5,000 to $24,999 ....................................: 805 690 649 115 92 194 $25,000 to $49,999 ...................................: 317 273 266 44 39 29 $50,000 or more ......................................: 982 800 748 182 123 88 : Livestock and poultry purchased or : leased .............................................farms: 759 643 620 116 107 353 $1,000: 473,129 422,492 394,107 50,637 49,681 17,256 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 .........................................: 278 235 231 43 41 206 $5,000 to $24,999 ....................................: 209 169 162 40 38 79 $25,000 to $99,999 ...................................: 128 110 107 18 15 41 $100,000 to $249,999 .................................: 53 48 45 5 4 7 $250,000 or more .....................................: 91 81 75 10 9 20 : Breeding livestock purchased or : leased ...........................................farms: 415 371 360 44 40 180 $1,000: 35,020 33,572 (D) 1,447 (D) 5,499 Other livestock and poultry : purchased or leased (see text) ...................farms: 470 387 370 83 77 220 $1,000: 438,110 388,920 (D) 49,189 (D) 11,757 : Feed purchased ......................................farms: 1,573 1,321 1,269 252 226 1,010 $1,000: 1,149,927 1,005,383 892,379 144,545 140,471 110,599 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 .........................................: 399 336 327 63 57 525 $5,000 to $24,999 ....................................: 512 401 387 111 105 320 $25,000 to $99,999 ...................................: 303 272 258 31 27 75 $100,000 to $249,999 .................................: 104 85 84 19 14 29 $250,000 or more .....................................: 255 227 213 28 23 61 : Gasoline, fuels, and oils purchased .................farms: 5,984 5,053 4,797 931 769 2,389 $1,000: 536,190 419,450 379,032 116,740 65,524 45,487 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 .........................................: 2,345 1,951 1,871 394 360 1,668 $5,000 to $24,999 ....................................: 1,506 1,306 1,250 200 167 474 $25,000 to $49,999 ...................................: 614 540 517 74 57 94 $50,000 or more ......................................: 1,519 1,256 1,159 263 185 153 : Utilities ...........................................farms: 5,728 4,829 4,599 899 742 2,167 $1,000: 595,354 475,367 421,013 119,987 75,309 68,640 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $999 ...........................................: 483 397 377 86 76 565 $1,000 to $4,999 .....................................: 1,263 1,052 1,021 211 191 765 $5,000 to $24,999 ....................................: 1,684 1,439 1,390 245 212 491 $25,000 to $49,999 ...................................: 656 578 555 78 61 142 $50,000 or more ......................................: 1,642 1,363 1,256 279 202 204 : Supplies, repairs, and maintenance costs ............farms: 5,841 4,919 4,679 922 766 2,186 $1,000: 742,076 589,058 526,301 153,018 93,544 62,181 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 .........................................: 1,900 1,594 1,540 306 280 1,346 $5,000 to $24,999 ....................................: 1,604 1,353 1,295 251 225 519 $25,000 to $49,999 ...................................: 612 530 513 82 61 110 $50,000 or more ......................................: 1,725 1,442 1,331 283 200 211 : Hired farm labor ....................................farms: 5,005 4,234 4,021 771 620 1,430 $1,000: 2,696,816 2,072,269 1,845,802 624,547 411,118 194,830 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 .........................................: 405 322 307 83 68 359 $5,000 to $24,999 ....................................: 736 651 627 85 79 392 $25,000 to $99,999 ...................................: 1,362 1,174 1,129 188 167 372 $100,000 to $249,999 .................................: 896 765 738 131 107 155 $250,000 or more .....................................: 1,606 1,322 1,220 284 199 152 : Contract labor ......................................farms: 3,231 2,742 2,579 489 395 1,034 $1,000: 1,427,418 1,154,674 934,365 272,745 182,340 126,223 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $999 ...........................................: 108 93 88 15 15 63 $1,000 to $4,999 .....................................: 334 295 287 39 34 216 $5,000 to $24,999 ....................................: 741 633 608 108 96 309 $25,000 to $49,999 ...................................: 429 378 367 51 44 147 $50,000 or more ......................................: 1,619 1,343 1,229 276 206 299 : Customwork and custom hauling .......................farms: 2,052 1,787 1,696 265 206 716 $1,000: 306,965 239,534 214,523 67,431 51,331 47,445 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $999 ...........................................: 104 95 95 9 8 133 $1,000 to $4,999 .....................................: 260 232 218 28 25 183 $5,000 to $24,999 ....................................: 571 511 479 60 42 208 $25,000 to $49,999 ...................................: 313 271 265 42 36 83 $50,000 or more ......................................: 804 678 639 126 95 109 : Cash rent for land, buildings, : and grazing fees ...................................farms: 2,362 1,983 1,886 379 299 332 $1,000: 586,938 466,887 417,052 120,051 73,629 42,266 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 .........................................: 331 263 251 68 61 126 $5,000 to $9,999 .....................................: 184 160 154 24 23 26 $10,000 to $24,999 ...................................: 530 463 446 67 59 80 $25,000 or more ......................................: 1,317 1,097 1,035 220 156 100 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 67. Summary by Legal Status For Tax Purposes: 2012 (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. : : Rent and lease expenses for machinery, : equipment, and farm share of vehicles ..............farms: 7,895 4,382 1,713 1,492 $1,000: 400,054 85,606 141,327 131,997 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $999 ...........................................: 1,914 1,467 216 174 $1,000 to $4,999 .....................................: 2,150 1,407 381 325 $5,000 to $24,999 ....................................: 1,990 992 502 431 $25,000 to $49,999 ...................................: 567 207 160 147 $50,000 or more ......................................: 1,274 309 454 415 : Interest expense ....................................farms: 26,459 18,559 4,086 3,400 $1,000: 1,217,781 474,876 350,942 306,692 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 .........................................: 8,135 6,487 840 633 $5,000 to $24,999 ....................................: 11,048 8,333 1,382 1,107 $25,000 to $99,999 ...................................: 5,129 3,007 1,133 1,005 $100,000 or more .....................................: 2,147 732 731 655 : Secured by real estate ............................farms: 20,307 14,850 2,844 2,379 $1,000: 941,302 385,067 266,687 233,345 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $999 .........................................: 1,166 997 79 58 $1,000 to $4,999 ...................................: 4,137 3,513 320 245 $5,000 to $24,999 ..................................: 9,276 7,230 1,072 845 $25,000 to $49,999 .................................: 2,690 1,821 434 378 $50,000 or more ....................................: 3,038 1,289 939 853 : Not secured by real estate ........................farms: 13,273 8,549 2,416 1,998 $1,000: 276,479 89,809 84,255 73,347 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $999 .........................................: 2,988 2,332 318 249 $1,000 to $4,999 ...................................: 4,701 3,432 653 505 $5,000 to $24,999 ..................................: 3,514 2,075 705 585 $25,000 to $49,999 .................................: 835 332 274 251 $50,000 or more ....................................: 1,235 378 466 408 : Property taxes paid .................................farms: 71,398 55,168 8,118 6,568 $1,000: 827,587 371,834 213,301 188,767 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 .........................................: 45,137 38,564 3,226 2,364 $5,000 to $9,999 .....................................: 12,923 9,854 1,611 1,290 $10,000 to $24,999 ...................................: 7,776 4,625 1,573 1,375 $25,000 or more ......................................: 5,562 2,125 1,708 1,539 : All other production : expenses (see text) ................................farms: 43,111 29,993 6,616 5,527 $1,000: 3,066,456 874,682 1,006,396 877,673 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 .........................................: 22,864 18,978 2,027 1,553 $5,000 to $24,999 ....................................: 10,967 7,154 1,890 1,580 $25,000 to $49,999 ...................................: 2,928 1,483 713 633 $50,000 to $99,999 ...................................: 2,313 1,069 631 550 $100,000 or more .....................................: 4,039 1,309 1,355 1,211 : Production expenses paid by : landlords 1/ .........................................farms: 1,305 760 295 252 $1,000: 54,690 16,941 16,854 15,282 : Depreciation expenses claimed .........................farms: 39,342 26,660 6,434 5,414 $1,000: 2,256,892 734,144 679,860 616,649 : NET CASH FARM INCOME (SEE TEXT) : : Net cash farm income of operations ....................farms: 77,857 59,732 8,984 7,283 $1,000: 8,523,285 2,468,604 2,784,601 2,552,156 Average per farm ................................dollars: 109,474 41,328 309,951 350,426 : Farms with net gains 2/ ............................number: 36,283 25,778 5,452 4,515 Average net gain ..............................dollars: 314,056 141,408 651,180 714,100 : Gain of- : Less than $1,000 .....................................: 1,602 1,454 85 63 $1,000 to $4,999 .....................................: 4,785 4,227 277 197 $5,000 to $9,999 .....................................: 3,597 3,084 256 206 $10,000 to $24,999 ...................................: 5,723 4,662 524 368 $25,000 to $49,999 ...................................: 4,813 3,721 597 469 $50,000 or more ......................................: 15,763 8,630 3,713 3,212 : Farms with net losses ..............................number: 41,574 33,954 3,532 2,768 Average net loss ..............................dollars: 69,072 34,653 216,771 242,777 : Loss of- : Less than $1,000 .....................................: 1,982 1,781 105 68 $1,000 to $4,999 .....................................: 8,924 8,000 416 299 $5,000 to $9,999 .....................................: 7,815 6,914 438 299 $10,000 to $24,999 ...................................: 10,269 8,843 709 540 $25,000 to $49,999 ...................................: 5,478 4,368 521 391 $50,000 or more ......................................: 7,106 4,048 1,343 1,171 : Net cash farm income of operators .....................farms: 77,857 59,732 8,984 7,283 $1,000: 8,177,199 2,336,638 2,690,540 2,462,911 Average per farm ................................dollars: 105,028 39,119 299,481 338,173 : Operators reporting net gains 2/ ....................farms: 36,052 25,629 5,407 4,488 Average net gain ..............................dollars: 308,890 138,273 640,854 700,908 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 67. Summary by Legal Status For Tax Purposes: 2012 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ : Corporation : :---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------: : : Family held : Other than family held : Other- : :-------------------------------------------------------------------------------: cooperative, : : : 10 or less : : 10 or less : estate or trust, Item : Total : Total : stockholders : Total : stockholders :institutional, etc. ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ FARM PRODUCTION EXPENSES - Con. : : Total farm production expenses 1/ - Con. : : Rent and lease expenses for machinery, : equipment, and farm share of vehicles ..............farms: 1,570 1,280 1,196 290 225 230 $1,000: 154,765 111,825 95,209 42,940 27,148 18,357 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $999 ...........................................: 176 131 127 45 42 55 $1,000 to $4,999 .....................................: 309 261 247 48 41 53 $5,000 to $24,999 ....................................: 439 381 356 58 52 57 $25,000 to $49,999 ...................................: 178 140 134 38 29 22 $50,000 or more ......................................: 468 367 332 101 61 43 : Interest expense ....................................farms: 2,998 2,559 2,445 439 383 816 $1,000: 329,862 269,924 236,714 59,937 44,924 62,102 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 .........................................: 565 473 457 92 77 243 $5,000 to $24,999 ....................................: 1,002 864 839 138 131 331 $25,000 to $99,999 ...................................: 842 736 703 106 100 147 $100,000 or more .....................................: 589 486 446 103 75 95 : Secured by real estate ............................farms: 1,980 1,732 1,665 248 214 633 $1,000: 234,504 189,285 167,147 45,219 33,512 55,045 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $999 .........................................: 49 47 46 2 2 41 $1,000 to $4,999 ...................................: 195 178 174 17 15 109 $5,000 to $24,999 ..................................: 693 610 589 83 76 281 $25,000 to $49,999 .................................: 358 309 302 49 46 77 $50,000 or more ....................................: 685 588 554 97 75 125 : Not secured by real estate ........................farms: 1,895 1,593 1,513 302 261 413 $1,000: 95,358 80,639 69,567 14,719 11,413 7,056 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $999 .........................................: 242 212 204 30 27 96 $1,000 to $4,999 ...................................: 463 379 361 84 71 153 $5,000 to $24,999 ..................................: 632 541 526 91 84 102 $25,000 to $49,999 .................................: 203 177 168 26 23 26 $50,000 or more ....................................: 355 284 254 71 56 36 : Property taxes paid .................................farms: 5,680 4,824 4,581 856 705 2,432 $1,000: 213,192 157,099 140,654 56,093 29,494 29,260 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 .........................................: 1,937 1,614 1,558 323 289 1,410 $5,000 to $9,999 .....................................: 1,007 883 854 124 110 451 $10,000 to $24,999 ...................................: 1,235 1,086 1,043 149 123 343 $25,000 or more ......................................: 1,501 1,241 1,126 260 183 228 : All other production : expenses (see text) ................................farms: 4,952 4,162 3,948 790 647 1,550 $1,000: 1,067,547 826,265 700,320 241,282 147,587 117,832 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 .........................................: 1,064 867 833 197 170 795 $5,000 to $24,999 ....................................: 1,497 1,284 1,243 213 190 426 $25,000 to $49,999 ...................................: 615 531 501 84 72 117 $50,000 to $99,999 ...................................: 520 451 431 69 55 93 $100,000 or more .....................................: 1,256 1,029 940 227 160 119 : Production expenses paid by : landlords 1/ .........................................farms: 207 174 167 33 24 43 $1,000: 15,587 14,104 13,474 1,483 946 5,308 : Depreciation expenses claimed .........................farms: 4,827 4,090 3,877 737 601 1,421 $1,000: 765,819 586,150 517,335 179,669 101,443 77,069 : NET CASH FARM INCOME (SEE TEXT) : : Net cash farm income of operations ....................farms: 6,361 5,345 5,081 1,016 845 2,780 $1,000: 2,992,736 2,207,545 1,874,498 785,191 429,497 277,344 Average per farm ................................dollars: 470,482 413,011 368,923 772,826 508,281 99,764 : Farms with net gains 2/ ............................number: 3,756 3,192 3,015 564 465 1,297 Average net gain ..............................dollars: 1,016,582 894,233 814,041 1,709,026 1,244,543 293,892 : Gain of- : Less than $1,000 .....................................: 20 20 20 - - 43 $1,000 to $4,999 .....................................: 115 96 93 19 16 166 $5,000 to $9,999 .....................................: 149 133 123 16 16 108 $10,000 to $24,999 ...................................: 338 277 269 61 56 199 $25,000 to $49,999 ...................................: 310 271 254 39 39 185 $50,000 or more ......................................: 2,824 2,395 2,256 429 338 596 : Farms with net losses ..............................number: 2,605 2,153 2,066 452 380 1,483 Average net loss ..............................dollars: 316,908 300,439 280,656 395,354 392,673 70,016 : Loss of- : Less than $1,000 .....................................: 40 34 34 6 4 56 $1,000 to $4,999 .....................................: 210 169 164 41 35 298 $5,000 to $9,999 .....................................: 197 166 153 31 31 266 $10,000 to $24,999 ...................................: 399 326 318 73 60 318 $25,000 to $49,999 ...................................: 395 339 338 56 48 194 $50,000 or more ......................................: 1,364 1,119 1,059 245 202 351 : Net cash farm income of operators .....................farms: 6,361 5,345 5,081 1,016 845 2,780 $1,000: 2,880,311 2,108,068 1,774,261 772,243 416,265 269,710 Average per farm ................................dollars: 452,808 394,400 349,195 760,082 492,621 97,018 : Operators reporting net gains 2/ ....................farms: 3,721 3,165 2,988 556 457 1,295 Average net gain ..............................dollars: 1,008,749 884,666 802,968 1,715,087 1,243,314 288,533 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 67. Summary by Legal Status For Tax Purposes: 2012 (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 (SEE TEXT) - Con. : : Net cash farm income of operators - Con. : Operators reporting net gains 2/ - Con. : : Gain of- : Less than $1,000 .....................................: 1,605 1,449 86 64 $1,000 to $4,999 .....................................: 4,774 4,223 277 198 $5,000 to $9,999 .....................................: 3,610 3,091 263 211 $10,000 to $24,999 ...................................: 5,758 4,694 528 372 $25,000 to $49,999 ...................................: 4,811 3,717 582 464 $50,000 or more ......................................: 15,494 8,455 3,671 3,179 : Operators reporting net losses ......................farms: 41,805 34,103 3,577 2,795 Average net loss ..............................dollars: 70,779 35,397 216,538 244,280 : Loss of- : Less than $1,000 .....................................: 2,006 1,797 108 72 $1,000 to $4,999 .....................................: 8,944 8,019 418 298 $5,000 to $9,999 .....................................: 7,798 6,897 436 297 $10,000 to $24,999 ...................................: 10,315 8,877 719 542 $25,000 to $49,999 ...................................: 5,518 4,403 524 395 $50,000 or more ......................................: 7,224 4,110 1,372 1,191 : COMMODITY CREDIT CORPORATION : LOANS (SEE TEXT) : : Total .................................................farms: 521 261 183 165 $1,000: 122,036 37,573 65,201 58,599 : INCOME FROM FARM-RELATED SOURCES : : Total income from farm-related sources, gross : before taxes and expenses (see text) .................farms: 23,685 16,521 3,717 3,060 $1,000: 1,204,560 450,419 322,639 290,482 Customwork and other agricultural : services ...........................................farms: 5,255 3,500 954 806 $1,000: 383,434 132,417 92,541 87,156 : Gross cash rent or share payments ...................farms: 6,000 3,907 979 836 $1,000: 256,997 90,979 69,690 65,384 Sales of forest products, excluding : Christmas trees, short rotation woody : crops, and maple products ..........................farms: 862 689 89 74 $1,000: 27,613 7,758 17,506 (D) Agri-tourism and recreational services : (see text) .........................................farms: 1,699 1,157 211 159 $1,000: 64,520 23,935 7,185 5,714 Patronage dividends and refunds : from cooperatives ..................................farms: 7,469 4,812 1,526 1,275 $1,000: 171,066 66,299 60,582 55,573 Crop and livestock insurance : payments received ..................................farms: 1,568 994 327 281 $1,000: 62,457 23,733 27,274 25,171 Amount from state and local government : agricultural program payments ......................farms: 343 225 67 57 $1,000: 4,218 1,897 1,284 (D) Other farm-related income : sources (see text) .................................farms: 5,192 3,890 632 499 $1,000: 234,255 103,400 46,577 33,543 : LAND USE : : Total cropland ........................................farms: 57,731 42,488 7,669 6,353 acres: 9,591,783 3,407,181 3,110,938 2,795,063 Harvested cropland ..................................farms: 53,372 39,028 7,236 6,027 acres: 8,007,461 2,697,483 2,643,790 2,390,033 Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 49 acres ........................................: 38,391 31,498 3,223 2,551 50 to 99 acres .......................................: 4,412 2,818 898 710 100 to 199 acres .....................................: 3,567 2,012 800 689 200 to 499 acres .....................................: 3,538 1,628 1,002 906 500 to 999 acres .....................................: 1,780 631 653 570 1,000 to 1,999 acres .................................: 950 274 384 347 2,000 acres or more ..................................: 734 167 276 254 : Cropland- : Other pasture and grazing land that could : have been used for crops without additional : improvements (see text) ..........................farms: 2,879 2,276 275 219 acres: 492,270 260,251 91,405 77,496 On which all crops failed or : were abandoned ...................................farms: 2,425 1,852 270 221 acres: 207,072 86,254 85,091 76,754 Idle or used for cover crops or soil : improvement, but not harvested and not : pastured or grazed (see text) ....................farms: 6,204 4,291 846 719 acres: 674,022 260,883 227,452 206,311 In cultivated summer fallow .......................farms: 1,477 1,020 217 174 acres: 210,958 102,310 63,200 44,469 : Total woodland ........................................farms: 7,345 5,748 728 590 acres: 1,575,520 917,756 281,648 249,547 Woodland pastured ...................................farms: 3,519 2,877 294 219 acres: 855,116 545,369 125,890 108,091 Woodland not pastured ...............................farms: 4,610 3,492 500 426 acres: 720,404 372,387 155,758 141,456 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 67. Summary by Legal Status For Tax Purposes: 2012 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ : Corporation : :---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------: : : Family held : Other than family held : Other- : :-------------------------------------------------------------------------------: cooperative, : : : 10 or less : : 10 or less : estate or trust, Item : Total : Total : stockholders : Total : stockholders :institutional, etc. ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ NET CASH FARM INCOME (SEE TEXT) - Con. : : Net cash farm income of operators - Con. : Operators reporting net gains 2/ - Con. : : Gain of- : Less than $1,000 .....................................: 27 27 27 - - 43 $1,000 to $4,999 .....................................: 111 92 89 19 16 163 $5,000 to $9,999 .....................................: 145 129 119 16 16 111 $10,000 to $24,999 ...................................: 338 276 268 62 57 198 $25,000 to $49,999 ...................................: 325 288 271 37 37 187 $50,000 or more ......................................: 2,775 2,353 2,214 422 331 593 : Operators reporting net losses ......................farms: 2,640 2,180 2,093 460 388 1,485 Average net loss ..............................dollars: 330,775 317,385 298,618 394,229 391,572 69,993 : Loss of- : Less than $1,000 .....................................: 45 39 39 6 4 56 $1,000 to $4,999 .....................................: 209 166 161 43 37 298 $5,000 to $9,999 .....................................: 196 166 153 30 30 269 $10,000 to $24,999 ...................................: 402 328 320 74 61 317 $25,000 to $49,999 ...................................: 397 340 339 57 49 194 $50,000 or more ......................................: 1,391 1,141 1,081 250 207 351 : COMMODITY CREDIT CORPORATION : LOANS (SEE TEXT) : : Total .................................................farms: 62 60 57 2 2 15 $1,000: (D) 15,326 9,515 (D) (D) (D) : INCOME FROM FARM-RELATED SOURCES : : Total income from farm-related sources, gross : before taxes and expenses (see text) .................farms: 2,527 2,162 2,046 365 296 920 $1,000: 379,400 323,738 290,404 55,662 34,022 52,101 Customwork and other agricultural : services ...........................................farms: 655 572 547 83 67 146 $1,000: 150,261 128,676 116,348 21,586 11,635 8,215 : Gross cash rent or share payments ...................farms: 723 630 568 93 64 391 $1,000: 83,416 68,002 55,789 15,414 5,833 12,912 Sales of forest products, excluding : Christmas trees, short rotation woody : crops, and maple products ..........................farms: 64 56 48 8 8 20 $1,000: 1,807 (D) (D) (D) (D) 542 Agri-tourism and recreational services : (see text) .........................................farms: 272 228 219 44 37 59 $1,000: 32,579 30,443 26,691 2,136 (D) 821 Patronage dividends and refunds : from cooperatives ..................................farms: 850 750 715 100 81 281 $1,000: 27,635 24,134 21,033 3,501 2,165 16,550 Crop and livestock insurance : payments received ..................................farms: 188 161 153 27 19 59 $1,000: 10,008 7,621 7,259 2,388 1,929 1,442 Amount from state and local government : agricultural program payments ......................farms: 42 39 39 3 2 9 $1,000: 1,031 (D) (D) (D) (D) 5 Other farm-related income : sources (see text) .................................farms: 520 435 415 85 76 150 $1,000: 72,663 62,473 61,050 10,190 10,157 11,615 : LAND USE : : Total cropland ........................................farms: 5,443 4,614 4,387 829 675 2,131 acres: 2,708,097 2,078,866 1,849,364 629,231 320,509 365,567 Harvested cropland ..................................farms: 5,203 4,435 4,221 768 637 1,905 acres: 2,393,329 1,848,376 1,666,099 544,953 277,553 272,859 Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 49 acres ........................................: 2,331 1,985 1,927 346 324 1,339 50 to 99 acres .......................................: 524 444 422 80 64 172 100 to 199 acres .....................................: 600 522 494 78 58 155 200 to 499 acres .....................................: 783 672 633 111 94 125 500 to 999 acres .....................................: 434 379 350 55 39 62 1,000 to 1,999 acres .................................: 264 220 208 44 29 28 2,000 acres or more ..................................: 267 213 187 54 29 24 : Cropland- : Other pasture and grazing land that could : have been used for crops without additional : improvements (see text) ..........................farms: 235 199 194 36 29 93 acres: 113,226 87,191 83,427 26,035 17,587 27,388 On which all crops failed or : were abandoned ...................................farms: 202 159 149 43 25 101 acres: 22,450 19,079 17,078 3,371 2,719 13,277 Idle or used for cover crops or soil : improvement, but not harvested and not : pastured or grazed (see text) ....................farms: 702 558 509 144 97 365 acres: 137,692 102,605 64,280 35,087 15,051 47,995 In cultivated summer fallow .......................farms: 167 120 116 47 22 73 acres: 41,400 21,615 18,480 19,785 7,599 4,048 : Total woodland ........................................farms: 528 455 421 73 59 341 acres: 266,576 237,531 198,017 29,045 25,866 109,540 Woodland pastured ...................................farms: 189 171 158 18 12 159 acres: 108,086 102,278 95,816 5,808 4,551 75,771 Woodland not pastured ...............................farms: 407 341 313 66 54 211 acres: 158,490 135,253 102,201 23,237 21,315 33,769 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 67. Summary by Legal Status For Tax Purposes: 2012 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ : : : Partnership : : :----------------------------------------------------------- : : : : : : : : Registered : : Family or : : under Item : Total : individual : Total : state law ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ LAND USE - Con. : : Permanent pasture and rangeland, : other than cropland and woodland : pastured (see text) ..................................farms: 21,886 17,993 1,889 1,442 acres: 13,036,448 7,096,902 3,191,884 2,566,018 : Land in farmsteads, homes, buildings, : livestock facilities, ponds, roads, : wasteland, etc. ......................................farms: 41,259 31,896 4,503 3,597 acres: 1,365,250 578,705 349,689 318,964 : Irrigated land ........................................farms: 53,546 39,435 7,063 5,883 acres: 7,861,964 2,627,590 2,578,544 2,301,787 Harvested cropland ..................................farms: 47,972 34,567 6,763 5,662 acres: 7,371,411 2,371,474 2,461,606 2,226,736 Pastureland and other land ..........................farms: 7,884 6,619 557 430 acres: 490,553 256,116 116,938 75,051 : CONSERVATION AND CROP INSURANCE : : Land enrolled in Conservation Reserve, : Wetlands Reserve, Farmable Wetlands, : or Conservation Reserve Enhancement : Programs .............................................farms: 470 337 71 57 acres: 105,504 59,150 29,639 25,689 : Land enrolled in crop insurance : programs (see text) ..................................farms: 13,813 8,140 3,100 2,678 acres: 4,929,132 1,694,271 1,799,823 1,615,181 : ORGANIC AGRICULTURE : : Total organic commodity sales (see text) ..............farms: 3,008 1,994 425 352 $1,000: 1,355,207 293,058 316,971 289,328 : VALUE OF LAND AND BUILDINGS : : Estimated market value of land and : buildings ............................................farms: 77,857 59,732 8,984 7,283 $1,000: 160,524,953 73,400,265 40,782,185 35,940,719 Average per farm ................................dollars: 2,061,792 1,228,827 4,539,424 4,934,878 Average per acre ................................dollars: 6,278 6,116 5,881 6,061 : Farms by value group: : $1 to $49,999 ..........................................: 3,768 3,218 245 191 $50,000 to $99,999 .....................................: 2,993 2,563 226 162 $100,000 to $199,999 ...................................: 6,849 5,979 443 321 $200,000 to $499,999 ...................................: 22,324 19,284 1,445 1,057 $500,000 to $999,999 ...................................: 17,939 14,763 1,531 1,165 : $1,000,000 to $1,999,999 ...............................: 9,621 6,781 1,441 1,177 $2,000,000 to $4,999,999 ...............................: 8,056 4,660 1,702 1,474 $5,000,000 to $9,999,999 ...............................: 3,283 1,464 988 879 $10,000,000 or more ....................................: 3,024 1,020 963 857 : VALUE OF MACHINERY AND EQUIPMENT : : Estimated market value of all machinery : and equipment ........................................farms: 77,851 59,731 8,982 7,281 $1,000: 9,709,545 4,005,275 2,775,171 2,500,154 : Farms by value group: : $1 to $4,999 ...........................................: 10,455 9,182 584 416 $5,000 to $9,999 .......................................: 8,336 7,299 499 353 $10,000 to $19,999 .....................................: 13,025 11,072 908 677 $20,000 to $49,999 .....................................: 18,826 15,387 1,715 1,344 $50,000 to $99,999 .....................................: 11,191 8,377 1,434 1,139 $100,000 to $199,999 ...................................: 6,916 4,464 1,240 1,053 $200,000 to $499,999 ...................................: 5,289 2,714 1,314 1,152 $500,000 or more .......................................: 3,813 1,236 1,288 1,147 : SELECTED MACHINERY AND EQUIPMENT : : Trucks, including pickups (see text) ..................farms: 55,175 41,799 6,578 5,363 number: 132,455 75,873 24,909 21,483 : Tractors, all .........................................farms: 53,296 39,770 6,735 5,495 number: 147,163 82,288 29,479 25,611 Less than 40 horsepower (PTO) .......................farms: 31,264 24,175 3,346 2,638 number: 49,313 33,179 6,713 5,477 40 to 99 horsepower (PTO) ...........................farms: 30,456 21,141 4,659 3,920 number: 68,295 37,133 13,913 12,131 100 horsepower (PTO) or more ........................farms: 10,631 6,065 2,421 2,070 number: 29,555 11,976 8,853 8,003 : Grain and bean combines, self-propelled ...............farms: 1,710 847 548 466 number: 2,497 1,171 883 776 : Cotton pickers and strippers, : self-propelled .......................................farms: 475 200 199 185 number: 870 304 385 359 Forage harvesters, self-propelled .....................farms: 1,629 1,021 336 282 number: 2,188 1,251 531 452 Hay balers ............................................farms: 3,674 2,573 617 521 number: 4,822 3,250 903 753 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 67. Summary by Legal Status For Tax Purposes: 2012 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ : Corporation : :---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------: : : Family held : Other than family held : Other- : :-------------------------------------------------------------------------------: cooperative, : : : 10 or less : : 10 or less : estate or trust, Item : Total : Total : stockholders : Total : stockholders :institutional, etc. ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ LAND USE - Con. : : Permanent pasture and rangeland, : other than cropland and woodland : pastured (see text) ..................................farms: 1,218 1,050 998 168 138 786 acres: 2,049,697 1,650,529 1,509,891 399,168 340,432 697,965 : Land in farmsteads, homes, buildings, : livestock facilities, ponds, roads, : wasteland, etc. ......................................farms: 3,278 2,747 2,604 531 434 1,582 acres: 335,301 242,752 215,169 92,549 40,582 101,555 : Irrigated land ........................................farms: 5,159 4,404 4,186 755 627 1,889 acres: 2,385,658 1,850,455 1,645,379 535,203 270,119 270,172 Harvested cropland ..................................farms: 4,929 4,193 3,991 736 610 1,713 acres: 2,293,450 1,762,133 1,580,912 531,317 266,336 244,881 Pastureland and other land ..........................farms: 431 386 360 45 39 277 acres: 92,208 88,322 64,467 3,886 3,783 25,291 : CONSERVATION AND CROP INSURANCE : : Land enrolled in Conservation Reserve, : Wetlands Reserve, Farmable Wetlands, : or Conservation Reserve Enhancement : Programs .............................................farms: 29 18 14 11 6 33 acres: 10,202 6,279 3,353 3,923 1,378 6,513 : Land enrolled in crop insurance : programs (see text) ..................................farms: 2,031 1,754 1,664 277 206 542 acres: 1,290,031 1,001,376 891,686 288,655 108,759 145,007 : ORGANIC AGRICULTURE : : Total organic commodity sales (see text) ..............farms: 482 386 361 96 80 107 $1,000: 685,835 437,117 379,273 248,718 148,807 59,343 : VALUE OF LAND AND BUILDINGS : : Estimated market value of land and : buildings ............................................farms: 6,361 5,345 5,081 1,016 845 2,780 $1,000: 39,793,623 31,272,824 28,611,862 8,520,799 5,560,842 6,548,880 Average per farm ................................dollars: 6,255,875 5,850,856 5,631,148 8,386,613 6,580,878 2,355,712 Average per acre ................................dollars: 7,425 7,429 7,584 7,409 7,645 5,138 : Farms by value group: : $1 to $49,999 ..........................................: 198 158 154 40 38 107 $50,000 to $99,999 .....................................: 137 107 103 30 30 67 $100,000 to $199,999 ...................................: 260 195 186 65 54 167 $200,000 to $499,999 ...................................: 899 745 723 154 144 696 $500,000 to $999,999 ...................................: 991 838 820 153 138 654 : $1,000,000 to $1,999,999 ...............................: 1,012 864 833 148 123 387 $2,000,000 to $4,999,999 ...............................: 1,278 1,115 1,054 163 130 416 $5,000,000 to $9,999,999 ...............................: 684 599 545 85 71 147 $10,000,000 or more ....................................: 902 724 663 178 117 139 : VALUE OF MACHINERY AND EQUIPMENT : : Estimated market value of all machinery : and equipment ........................................farms: 6,358 5,345 5,081 1,013 845 2,780 $1,000: 2,605,973 2,011,398 1,817,519 594,575 328,513 323,126 : Farms by value group: : $1 to $4,999 ...........................................: 317 244 233 73 64 372 $5,000 to $9,999 .......................................: 290 249 234 41 33 248 $10,000 to $19,999 .....................................: 597 506 484 91 88 448 $20,000 to $49,999 .....................................: 1,059 853 824 206 187 665 $50,000 to $99,999 .....................................: 951 811 774 140 124 429 $100,000 to $199,999 ...................................: 941 809 772 132 114 271 $200,000 to $499,999 ...................................: 1,043 903 871 140 108 218 $500,000 or more .......................................: 1,160 970 889 190 127 129 : SELECTED MACHINERY AND EQUIPMENT : : Trucks, including pickups (see text) ..................farms: 5,080 4,321 4,112 759 616 1,718 number: 27,464 22,749 20,589 4,715 2,990 4,209 : Tractors, all .........................................farms: 5,022 4,304 4,092 718 577 1,769 number: 30,374 25,368 22,969 5,006 2,908 5,022 Less than 40 horsepower (PTO) .......................farms: 2,698 2,289 2,178 409 330 1,045 number: 7,768 6,218 5,766 1,550 827 1,653 40 to 99 horsepower (PTO) ...........................farms: 3,559 3,086 2,914 473 365 1,097 number: 14,775 12,611 11,350 2,164 1,445 2,474 100 horsepower (PTO) or more ........................farms: 1,742 1,529 1,437 213 153 403 number: 7,831 6,539 5,853 1,292 636 895 : Grain and bean combines, self-propelled ...............farms: 252 215 201 37 22 63 number: 362 312 295 50 27 81 : Cotton pickers and strippers, : self-propelled .......................................farms: 66 50 48 16 11 10 number: 164 85 (D) 79 (D) 17 Forage harvesters, self-propelled .....................farms: 190 167 158 23 20 82 number: 303 270 248 33 28 103 Hay balers ............................................farms: 340 299 288 41 32 144 number: 495 433 422 62 45 174 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 67. Summary by Legal Status For Tax Purposes: 2012 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ : : : Partnership : : :----------------------------------------------------------- : : : : : : : : Registered : : Family or : : under Item : Total : individual : Total : state law ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ FERTILIZERS AND CHEMICALS : : Commercial fertilizer, lime, and soil : conditioners used ....................................farms: 32,646 22,418 5,211 4,437 acres treated: 6,314,533 1,990,317 2,179,444 1,983,845 Manure used ...........................................farms: 6,794 4,885 1,026 847 acres treated: 712,975 281,354 261,270 242,693 : Acres treated to control- : Insects .............................................farms: 25,064 16,261 4,424 3,809 acres: 5,293,093 1,575,143 1,786,679 1,631,390 Weeds, grass, or brush ..............................farms: 32,402 22,287 5,156 4,397 acres: 6,116,162 1,916,888 2,139,203 1,919,225 Nematodes ...........................................farms: 4,485 2,584 898 795 acres: 725,589 199,326 277,536 259,622 Diseases in crops and orchards ......................farms: 14,196 9,172 2,425 2,101 acres: 2,038,769 611,595 686,460 621,734 Chemicals used to control growth, : thin fruit, ripen, or defoliate ......................farms: 9,810 6,158 1,924 1,652 acres on which used: 1,460,135 498,501 439,147 395,941 : LAND USE PRACTICES : : Land drained by tile ..................................farms: 1,913 1,017 397 343 acres: 476,794 139,942 139,887 116,231 Land artificially drained by ditches ..................farms: 7,166 4,770 1,288 1,116 acres: 1,872,676 612,857 669,903 626,575 Land under conservation easement ......................farms: 1,603 989 284 234 acres: 929,985 336,000 383,427 (D) Cropland on which no-till practices were : used .................................................farms: 4,213 3,075 554 460 acres: 205,383 81,211 78,904 74,115 Cropland on which conservation tillage, : including no till, practices were : used .................................................farms: 1,945 1,156 408 347 acres: 566,983 129,348 199,941 172,906 Cropland on which conventional tillage : practices were used ..................................farms: 11,762 7,682 2,242 1,918 acres: 3,083,056 992,902 1,137,929 1,037,930 Cropland planted to a cover crop : (excluding CRP) ......................................farms: 4,899 3,138 744 654 acres: 340,532 91,034 80,386 75,436 : ENERGY : : Renewable energy producing systems ....................farms: 5,845 4,573 580 486 Solar panels ........................................farms: 5,445 4,270 529 444 Wind turbines .......................................farms: 324 249 31 29 Methane digesters ...................................farms: 41 23 10 10 Geoexchange systems .................................farms: 104 87 8 3 : Small hydro systems .................................farms: 190 159 17 11 Biodiesel ...........................................farms: 165 124 16 13 Ethanol .............................................farms: 56 40 11 8 Other ...............................................farms: 49 35 9 5 : Wind rights leased to others ..........................farms: 113 85 20 17 : TENURE : : Full owners ...........................................farms: 60,492 48,165 6,074 4,850 Part owners ...........................................farms: 9,490 6,371 1,610 1,338 Tenants ...............................................farms: 7,875 5,196 1,300 1,095 : OWNED AND RENTED LAND : : Land owned ............................................farms: 70,216 54,709 7,713 6,210 acres: 16,064,215 7,291,827 3,921,779 3,498,780 Owned land in farms .................................farms: 69,982 54,536 7,684 6,188 acres: 14,281,177 6,448,910 3,566,633 3,177,355 : Land rented or leased from others .....................farms: 17,477 11,645 2,926 2,448 acres: 11,608,764 5,718,350 3,442,522 2,824,133 Rented or leased land in farms ......................farms: 17,365 11,567 2,910 2,433 acres: 11,287,824 5,551,634 3,367,526 2,752,237 : Land rented or leased to others .......................farms: 6,066 3,995 959 821 acres: 2,103,978 1,009,633 430,142 393,321 : NUMBER OF OPERATORS : : Total operators ......................................number: 126,099 91,391 17,542 14,417 Farms by number of operators: : 1 operator .............................................: 40,197 32,711 3,296 2,665 2 operators ............................................: 30,790 23,645 3,852 3,034 3 operators ............................................: 5,058 2,656 1,273 1,081 4 operators ............................................: 1,137 511 359 315 5 or more operators ....................................: 675 209 204 188 : Total women operators ..............................number: 41,256 32,396 4,342 3,477 Farms by number of women operators: : 1 operator ...........................................: 35,652 29,090 3,041 2,407 2 operators ..........................................: 2,226 1,369 481 389 3 operators ..........................................: 253 121 75 66 4 operators ..........................................: 44 24 7 7 5 or more operators ..................................: 37 20 14 10 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 67. Summary by Legal Status For Tax Purposes: 2012 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ : Corporation : :---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------: : : Family held : Other than family held : Other- : :-------------------------------------------------------------------------------: cooperative, : : : 10 or less : : 10 or less : estate or trust, Item : Total : Total : stockholders : Total : stockholders :institutional, etc. ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ FERTILIZERS AND CHEMICALS : : Commercial fertilizer, lime, and soil : conditioners used ....................................farms: 3,854 3,297 3,132 557 446 1,163 acres treated: 1,941,872 1,485,036 1,339,780 456,836 224,190 202,900 Manure used ...........................................farms: 679 593 573 86 79 204 acres treated: 153,965 140,691 111,436 13,274 11,619 16,386 : Acres treated to control- : Insects .............................................farms: 3,429 2,903 2,755 526 420 950 acres: 1,758,911 1,338,272 1,210,531 420,639 202,186 172,360 Weeds, grass, or brush ..............................farms: 3,736 3,186 3,029 550 445 1,223 acres: 1,827,172 1,387,729 1,253,743 439,443 211,108 232,899 Nematodes ...........................................farms: 827 698 651 129 110 176 acres: 228,748 187,492 162,167 41,256 39,402 19,979 Diseases in crops and orchards ......................farms: 2,032 1,719 1,604 313 240 567 acres: 637,399 515,952 447,803 121,447 81,203 103,315 Chemicals used to control growth, : thin fruit, ripen, or defoliate ......................farms: 1,342 1,149 1,080 193 168 386 acres on which used: 483,872 339,521 292,296 144,351 57,831 38,615 : LAND USE PRACTICES : : Land drained by tile ..................................farms: 431 342 308 89 57 68 acres: 183,038 141,690 128,895 41,348 6,223 13,927 Land artificially drained by ditches ..................farms: 871 719 677 152 113 237 acres: 543,477 348,854 315,446 194,623 62,861 46,439 Land under conservation easement ......................farms: 219 177 169 42 24 111 acres: 179,985 161,071 (D) 18,914 12,373 30,573 Cropland on which no-till practices were : used .................................................farms: 428 333 320 95 86 156 acres: 33,852 30,519 28,442 3,333 2,997 11,416 Cropland on which conservation tillage, : including no till, practices were : used .................................................farms: 298 253 248 45 32 83 acres: 211,693 131,367 105,401 80,326 33,631 26,001 Cropland on which conventional tillage : practices were used ..................................farms: 1,480 1,250 1,188 230 168 358 acres: 874,803 636,325 569,724 238,478 80,589 77,422 Cropland planted to a cover crop : (excluding CRP) ......................................farms: 820 666 601 154 112 197 acres: 161,259 120,138 99,113 41,121 17,265 7,853 : ENERGY : : Renewable energy producing systems ....................farms: 476 418 386 58 46 216 Solar panels ........................................farms: 441 390 362 51 40 205 Wind turbines .......................................farms: 27 24 21 3 1 17 Methane digesters ...................................farms: 6 6 6 - - 2 Geoexchange systems .................................farms: 6 6 6 - - 3 : Small hydro systems .................................farms: 11 11 10 - - 3 Biodiesel ...........................................farms: 16 11 10 5 4 9 Ethanol .............................................farms: 3 1 1 2 2 2 Other ...............................................farms: 1 - - 1 1 4 : Wind rights leased to others ..........................farms: 5 5 5 - - 3 : TENURE : : Full owners ...........................................farms: 3,843 3,240 3,061 603 510 2,410 Part owners ...........................................farms: 1,306 1,136 1,088 170 115 203 Tenants ...............................................farms: 1,212 969 932 243 220 167 : OWNED AND RENTED LAND : : Land owned ............................................farms: 5,177 4,399 4,169 778 630 2,617 acres: 3,707,015 2,933,966 2,541,541 773,049 448,761 1,143,594 Owned land in farms .................................farms: 5,149 4,376 4,149 773 625 2,613 acres: 3,297,940 2,576,816 2,264,107 721,124 406,143 967,694 : Land rented or leased from others .....................farms: 2,528 2,115 2,030 413 335 378 acres: 2,137,158 1,672,892 1,543,317 464,266 332,922 310,734 Rented or leased land in farms ......................farms: 2,518 2,105 2,020 413 335 370 acres: 2,061,731 1,632,862 1,508,334 428,869 321,246 306,933 : Land rented or leased to others .......................farms: 744 652 589 92 61 368 acres: 484,502 397,180 312,417 87,322 54,294 179,701 : NUMBER OF OPERATORS : : Total operators ......................................number: 12,423 10,389 9,734 2,034 1,653 4,743 Farms by number of operators: : 1 operator .............................................: 2,770 2,294 2,196 476 391 1,420 2 operators ............................................: 2,247 1,932 1,853 315 276 1,046 3 operators ............................................: 913 778 725 135 112 216 4 operators ............................................: 216 183 173 33 27 51 5 or more operators ....................................: 215 158 134 57 39 47 : Total women operators ..............................number: 2,967 2,537 2,430 430 374 1,551 Farms by number of women operators: : 1 operator ...........................................: 2,283 1,968 1,889 315 280 1,238 2 operators ..........................................: 269 232 218 37 33 107 3 operators ..........................................: 32 25 25 7 4 25 4 operators ..........................................: 7 5 5 2 1 6 5 or more operators ..................................: 3 2 2 1 1 - ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 67. Summary by Legal Status For Tax Purposes: 2012 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ : : : Partnership : : :----------------------------------------------------------- : : : : : : : : Registered : : Family or : : under Item : Total : individual : Total : state law ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ PRINCIPAL OPERATOR CHARACTERISTICS : : Sex of operator: : Male .....................................................: 63,873 48,215 7,919 6,452 Female ...................................................: 13,984 11,517 1,065 831 : Primary occupation: : Farming ..................................................: 42,469 30,947 5,902 4,870 Other ....................................................: 35,388 28,785 3,082 2,413 : Place of residence: : On farm operated .........................................: 54,775 45,423 4,599 3,597 Not on farm operated .....................................: 23,082 14,309 4,385 3,686 : Days worked off farm: : None .....................................................: 31,311 23,238 4,029 3,264 Any ......................................................: 46,546 36,494 4,955 4,019 1 to 49 days ...........................................: 7,304 5,818 702 571 50 to 99 days ..........................................: 4,230 3,356 455 382 100 to 199 days ........................................: 7,065 5,667 733 617 200 days or more .......................................: 27,947 21,653 3,065 2,449 : Years on present farm: : 2 years or less ..........................................: 3,151 2,446 289 242 3 or 4 years .............................................: 4,634 3,625 479 393 5 to 9 years .............................................: 12,863 9,978 1,404 1,172 10 years or more .........................................: 57,209 43,683 6,812 5,476 : Average years on present farm ............................: 20.2 20.0 21.4 21.3 : Years operating any farm (see text): : 2 years or less ..........................................: 2,182 1,711 171 139 3 or 4 years .............................................: 3,648 2,953 326 267 5 to 9 years .............................................: 10,663 8,417 1,077 884 10 years or more .........................................: 61,364 46,651 7,410 5,993 : Average years operating any farm .........................: 22.7 22.3 24.9 24.9 : Age group: : Under 25 years ...........................................: 253 203 32 22 25 to 34 years ...........................................: 2,968 2,198 396 350 35 to 44 years ...........................................: 6,255 4,670 780 642 45 to 49 years ...........................................: 6,107 4,633 733 593 50 to 54 years ...........................................: 9,839 7,426 1,150 954 55 to 59 years ...........................................: 11,513 8,635 1,376 1,136 60 to 64 years ...........................................: 11,869 9,050 1,363 1,106 65 to 69 years ...........................................: 10,683 8,495 1,131 893 70 years and over ........................................: 18,370 14,422 2,023 1,587 : Average age ..............................................: 60.1 60.3 59.5 59.1 : Spanish, Hispanic, or Latino origin (see text) .............: 9,815 7,788 1,045 829 : Race: : American Indian or Alaska Native .........................: 1,192 1,008 80 58 Asian ....................................................: 4,802 3,426 679 554 Black or African American ................................: 345 277 29 25 Native Hawaiian or Other Pacific Islander ................: 321 258 24 22 White ....................................................: 70,537 54,202 8,134 6,593 More than one race reported ..............................: 660 561 38 31 : Farms by number of persons living in : operator's household: : 1 person .................................................: 10,856 8,514 1,051 850 2 people .................................................: 39,377 30,257 4,582 3,671 3 people .................................................: 10,481 8,153 1,150 950 4 people .................................................: 9,895 7,356 1,238 1,014 5 or more people .........................................: 7,248 5,452 963 798 : Percent of operator's total : household income from farming: : Less than 25 percent .....................................: 53,231 43,304 4,869 3,848 25 to 49 percent .........................................: 6,732 4,885 1,015 827 50 to 74 percent .........................................: 8,038 5,390 1,353 1,127 75 to 99 percent .........................................: 5,290 3,288 941 798 100 percent ..............................................: 4,566 2,865 806 683 : Operator is a hired manager ...........................farms: 7,130 3,130 1,518 1,356 acres: 5,266,987 1,088,593 1,412,443 1,267,511 : Farms with- : Internet access ..........................................: 59,543 44,942 7,059 5,803 Dial-up service ........................................: 4,703 3,771 503 400 DSL service ............................................: 20,030 14,958 2,363 1,968 Cable modem service ....................................: 9,578 7,024 1,246 1,034 Fiber-optic service ....................................: 1,719 1,134 238 203 Mobile broadband plan for a computer : or cell phone .........................................: 12,454 9,161 1,573 1,303 Satellite service ......................................: 15,193 11,350 1,902 1,590 Broadband over Power Lines (BPL) .......................: 2,135 1,462 294 256 Other Internet service .................................: 2,805 2,085 348 278 : Farms by number of households sharing : in net income of operation: : 1 household ..............................................: 61,016 50,286 4,439 3,473 2 households .............................................: 11,316 6,956 2,781 2,272 3 households .............................................: 3,013 1,349 993 860 4 households .............................................: 1,351 623 443 392 5 or more households .....................................: 1,161 518 328 286 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 67. Summary by Legal Status For Tax Purposes: 2012 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ : Corporation : :---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------: : : Family held : Other than family held : Other- : :-------------------------------------------------------------------------------: cooperative, : : : 10 or less : : 10 or less : estate or trust, Item : Total : Total : stockholders : Total : stockholders :institutional, etc. ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ PRINCIPAL OPERATOR CHARACTERISTICS : : Sex of operator: : Male .....................................................: 5,576 4,712 4,468 864 701 2,163 Female ...................................................: 785 633 613 152 144 617 : Primary occupation: : Farming ..................................................: 4,282 3,690 3,517 592 482 1,338 Other ....................................................: 2,079 1,655 1,564 424 363 1,442 : Place of residence: : On farm operated .........................................: 3,084 2,741 2,643 343 294 1,669 Not on farm operated .....................................: 3,277 2,604 2,438 673 551 1,111 : Days worked off farm: : None .....................................................: 2,928 2,539 2,394 389 297 1,116 Any ......................................................: 3,433 2,806 2,687 627 548 1,664 1 to 49 days ...........................................: 525 424 409 101 92 259 50 to 99 days ..........................................: 286 238 226 48 45 133 100 to 199 days ........................................: 430 350 331 80 77 235 200 days or more .......................................: 2,192 1,794 1,721 398 334 1,037 : Years on present farm: : 2 years or less ..........................................: 277 213 200 64 53 139 3 or 4 years .............................................: 355 266 252 89 86 175 5 to 9 years .............................................: 1,017 826 789 191 153 464 10 years or more .........................................: 4,712 4,040 3,840 672 553 2,002 : Average years on present farm ............................: 21.0 21.7 21.6 17.1 16.6 20.1 : Years operating any farm (see text): : 2 years or less ..........................................: 196 152 143 44 35 104 3 or 4 years .............................................: 251 188 176 63 63 118 5 to 9 years .............................................: 784 632 608 152 120 385 10 years or more .........................................: 5,130 4,373 4,154 757 627 2,173 : Average years operating any farm .........................: 23.9 24.6 24.6 20.1 19.6 23.2 : Age group: : Under 25 years ...........................................: 9 5 3 4 4 9 25 to 34 years ...........................................: 273 207 205 66 61 101 35 to 44 years ...........................................: 607 493 467 114 96 198 45 to 49 years ...........................................: 566 457 422 109 81 175 50 to 54 years ...........................................: 950 798 764 152 131 313 55 to 59 years ...........................................: 1,051 876 838 175 140 451 60 to 64 years ...........................................: 1,031 882 840 149 124 425 65 to 69 years ...........................................: 703 611 590 92 80 354 70 years and over ........................................: 1,171 1,016 952 155 128 754 : Average age ..............................................: 58.2 58.6 58.5 56.1 55.9 61.5 : Spanish, Hispanic, or Latino origin (see text) .............: 730 613 588 117 102 252 : Race: : American Indian or Alaska Native .........................: 52 43 43 9 8 52 Asian ....................................................: 592 517 494 75 64 105 Black or African American ................................: 15 11 11 4 4 24 Native Hawaiian or Other Pacific Islander ................: 31 26 26 5 5 8 White ....................................................: 5,643 4,727 4,487 916 758 2,558 More than one race reported ..............................: 28 21 20 7 6 33 : Farms by number of persons living in : operator's household: : 1 person .................................................: 762 605 588 157 138 529 2 people .................................................: 3,116 2,649 2,500 467 381 1,422 3 people .................................................: 856 732 699 124 107 322 4 people .................................................: 1,014 856 822 158 126 287 5 or more people .........................................: 613 503 472 110 93 220 : Percent of operator's total : household income from farming: : Less than 25 percent .....................................: 3,072 2,517 2,381 555 462 1,986 25 to 49 percent .........................................: 611 534 512 77 67 221 50 to 74 percent .........................................: 1,030 879 846 151 122 265 75 to 99 percent .........................................: 855 726 691 129 105 206 100 percent ..............................................: 793 689 651 104 89 102 : Operator is a hired manager ...........................farms: 1,886 1,507 1,387 379 267 596 acres: 2,336,922 1,629,194 1,333,763 707,728 342,406 429,029 : Farms with- : Internet access ..........................................: 5,342 4,498 4,275 844 687 2,200 Dial-up service ........................................: 266 235 216 31 17 163 DSL service ............................................: 1,929 1,613 1,531 316 258 780 Cable modem service ....................................: 926 770 730 156 128 382 Fiber-optic service ....................................: 226 183 174 43 34 121 Mobile broadband plan for a computer : or cell phone .........................................: 1,300 1,124 1,079 176 132 420 Satellite service ......................................: 1,412 1,204 1,148 208 176 529 Broadband over Power Lines (BPL) .......................: 274 211 202 63 39 105 Other Internet service .................................: 276 227 216 49 36 96 : Farms by number of households sharing : in net income of operation: : 1 household ..............................................: 4,087 3,419 3,269 668 559 2,204 2 households .............................................: 1,248 1,071 1,026 177 153 331 3 households .............................................: 540 465 433 75 59 131 4 households .............................................: 230 183 166 47 38 55 5 or more households .....................................: 256 207 187 49 36 59 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 67. Summary by Legal Status For Tax Purposes: 2012 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ : : : Partnership : : :----------------------------------------------------------- : : : : : : : : Registered : : Family or : : under Item : Total : individual : Total : state law ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ FARMS BY TYPE OF : ORGANIZATION (SEE TEXT) : : Operation with 50 percent or more ownership : interest held by operator and/or persons : related by blood, marriage, : or adoption ..........................................farms: 72,641 59,732 6,247 5,083 acres: 20,951,605 12,000,544 4,686,662 4,181,937 Limited Liability Corporation .........................farms: 4,453 2,096 2,111 2,008 acres: 2,772,951 988,432 1,462,700 1,402,767 : LEGAL STATUS FOR TAX PURPOSES (SEE TEXT) : : Family or individual .................................farms: 59,732 59,732 - - acres: 12,000,544 12,000,544 - - Partnership ...........................................farms: 8,984 - 8,984 7,283 acres: 6,934,159 - 6,934,159 5,929,592 Registered under state law ..........................farms: 7,283 - 7,283 7,283 acres: 5,929,592 - 5,929,592 5,929,592 : Corporation ...........................................farms: 6,361 - - - acres: 5,359,671 - - - Family held .........................................farms: 5,345 - - - acres: 4,209,678 - - - More than 10 stockholders .........................farms: 264 - - - 10 or less stockholders ...........................farms: 5,081 - - - : Other than family held ..............................farms: 1,016 - - - acres: 1,149,993 - - - More than 10 stockholders .........................farms: 171 - - - 10 or less stockholders ...........................farms: 845 - - - : Other-cooperative, estate : or trust, institutional, etc .........................farms: 2,780 - - - acres: 1,274,627 - - - : HIRED FARM LABOR : : Hired farm labor ......................................farms: 33,955 21,725 5,795 4,878 workers: 465,422 150,767 113,104 102,216 Workers by days worked: : 150 days or more ..................................farms: 20,018 10,589 4,321 3,746 workers: 205,851 50,403 55,026 50,633 Less than 150 days ................................farms: 22,621 15,347 3,492 2,913 workers: 259,571 100,364 58,078 51,583 Migrant farm labor on farms with hired : labor (see text) .....................................farms: 2,921 1,669 602 522 Migrant farm labor on farms reporting : only contract labor (see text) .......................farms: 755 606 89 79 : Unpaid workers (see text) .............................farms: 31,965 26,476 2,929 2,228 workers: 72,020 58,753 7,010 5,385 : FARMS BY SIZE : : 1 to 9 acres ...............................................: 24,637 21,829 1,176 868 10 to 49 acres .............................................: 25,811 21,105 2,300 1,748 50 to 69 acres .............................................: 3,700 2,671 541 439 70 to 99 acres .............................................: 3,601 2,558 543 436 100 to 139 acres ...........................................: 3,222 2,249 483 408 140 to 179 acres ...........................................: 2,533 1,662 467 368 180 to 219 acres ...........................................: 1,477 913 277 238 220 to 259 acres ...........................................: 1,189 698 234 191 260 to 499 acres ...........................................: 3,983 2,311 853 750 500 to 999 acres ...........................................: 3,230 1,661 849 709 1,000 to 1,999 acres .......................................: 2,040 952 574 513 2,000 acres or more ........................................: 2,434 1,123 687 615 : FARMS BY NORTH AMERICAN : INDUSTRY CLASSIFICATION : SYSTEM (NAICS) : : Oilseed and grain farming (1111) ...........................: 2,296 1,473 546 447 Vegetable and melon farming (1112) .........................: 4,191 3,068 492 417 Fruit and tree nut farming (1113) ..........................: 35,945 26,785 4,592 3,809 Greenhouse, nursery, and floriculture : production (1114) .........................................: 3,390 2,288 302 249 Other crop farming (1119) ..................................: 5,815 4,224 826 684 Tobacco farming (11191) ..................................: - - - - Cotton farming (11192) ...................................: 194 99 67 67 Sugarcane farming, hay farming, and all : other crop farming (11193,11194,11199) ..................: 5,621 4,125 759 617 Beef cattle ranching and farming (112111) ..................: 11,767 10,145 851 640 Cattle feedlots (112112) ...................................: 156 111 20 15 Dairy cattle and milk production (11212) ...................: 1,594 878 528 463 Hog and pig farming (1122) .................................: 446 398 18 7 Poultry and egg production (1123) ..........................: 1,202 995 106 70 Sheep and goat farming (1124) ..............................: 3,246 2,954 186 111 Animal aquaculture and other animal : production (1125, 1129) ...................................: 7,809 6,413 517 371 : LIVESTOCK : : Cattle and calves inventory ...........................farms: 16,764 13,665 1,741 1,373 number: 5,370,531 2,258,362 2,115,908 1,665,543 Farms with- : 1 to 9 .................................................: 7,396 6,716 322 217 10 to 49 ...............................................: 4,687 3,963 338 254 50 to 99 ...............................................: 1,128 905 124 95 100 to 199 .............................................: 914 662 144 104 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 67. Summary by Legal Status For Tax Purposes: 2012 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ : Corporation : :---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------: : : Family held : Other than family held : Other- : :-------------------------------------------------------------------------------: cooperative, : : : 10 or less : : 10 or less : estate or trust, Item : Total : Total : stockholders : Total : stockholders :institutional, etc. ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ FARMS BY TYPE OF : ORGANIZATION (SEE TEXT) : : Operation with 50 percent or more ownership : interest held by operator and/or persons : related by blood, marriage, : or adoption ..........................................farms: 4,713 4,201 4,032 512 459 1,949 acres: 3,521,343 3,016,504 2,780,357 504,839 408,232 743,056 Limited Liability Corporation .........................farms: - - - - - 246 acres: - - - - - 321,819 : LEGAL STATUS FOR TAX PURPOSES (SEE TEXT) : : Family or individual .................................farms: - - - - - - acres: - - - - - - Partnership ...........................................farms: - - - - - - acres: - - - - - - Registered under state law ..........................farms: - - - - - - acres: - - - - - - : Corporation ...........................................farms: 6,361 5,345 5,081 1,016 845 - acres: 5,359,671 4,209,678 3,772,441 1,149,993 727,389 - Family held .........................................farms: 5,345 5,345 5,081 - - - acres: 4,209,678 4,209,678 3,772,441 - - - More than 10 stockholders .........................farms: 264 264 - - - - 10 or less stockholders ...........................farms: 5,081 5,081 5,081 - - - : Other than family held ..............................farms: 1,016 - - 1,016 845 - acres: 1,149,993 - - 1,149,993 727,389 - More than 10 stockholders .........................farms: 171 - - 171 - - 10 or less stockholders ...........................farms: 845 - - 845 845 - : Other-cooperative, estate : or trust, institutional, etc .........................farms: - - - - - 2,780 acres: - - - - - 1,274,627 : HIRED FARM LABOR : : Hired farm labor ......................................farms: 5,005 4,234 4,021 771 620 1,430 workers: 184,444 150,368 133,002 34,076 24,662 17,107 Workers by days worked: : 150 days or more ..................................farms: 4,167 3,496 3,306 671 534 941 workers: 92,613 74,792 62,842 17,821 11,934 7,809 Less than 150 days ................................farms: 2,949 2,521 2,394 428 355 833 workers: 91,831 75,576 70,160 16,255 12,728 9,298 Migrant farm labor on farms with hired : labor (see text) .....................................farms: 536 452 420 84 63 114 Migrant farm labor on farms reporting : only contract labor (see text) .......................farms: 43 43 42 - - 17 : Unpaid workers (see text) .............................farms: 1,491 1,304 1,263 187 173 1,069 workers: 3,400 2,849 2,769 551 506 2,857 : FARMS BY SIZE : : 1 to 9 acres ...............................................: 958 773 751 185 182 674 10 to 49 acres .............................................: 1,490 1,273 1,249 217 204 916 50 to 69 acres .............................................: 358 303 294 55 46 130 70 to 99 acres .............................................: 359 299 284 60 48 141 100 to 139 acres ...........................................: 325 281 266 44 33 165 140 to 179 acres ...........................................: 294 249 239 45 37 110 180 to 219 acres ...........................................: 226 188 178 38 29 61 220 to 259 acres ...........................................: 207 172 171 35 32 50 260 to 499 acres ...........................................: 652 562 515 90 70 167 500 to 999 acres ...........................................: 572 470 430 102 68 148 1,000 to 1,999 acres .......................................: 417 358 332 59 44 97 2,000 acres or more ........................................: 503 417 372 86 52 121 : FARMS BY NORTH AMERICAN : INDUSTRY CLASSIFICATION : SYSTEM (NAICS) : : Oilseed and grain farming (1111) ...........................: 201 171 165 30 26 76 Vegetable and melon farming (1112) .........................: 530 441 427 89 62 101 Fruit and tree nut farming (1113) ..........................: 3,187 2,749 2,591 438 370 1,381 Greenhouse, nursery, and floriculture : production (1114) .........................................: 708 572 548 136 120 92 Other crop farming (1119) ..................................: 467 368 351 99 66 298 Tobacco farming (11191) ..................................: - - - - - - Cotton farming (11192) ...................................: 23 19 19 4 2 5 Sugarcane farming, hay farming, and all : other crop farming (11193,11194,11199) ..................: 444 349 332 95 64 293 Beef cattle ranching and farming (112111) ..................: 391 336 312 55 46 380 Cattle feedlots (112112) ...................................: 20 12 11 8 8 5 Dairy cattle and milk production (11212) ...................: 143 136 133 7 7 45 Hog and pig farming (1122) .................................: 13 10 10 3 3 17 Poultry and egg production (1123) ..........................: 88 80 74 8 7 13 Sheep and goat farming (1124) ..............................: 45 36 33 9 7 61 Animal aquaculture and other animal : production (1125, 1129) ...................................: 568 434 426 134 123 311 : LIVESTOCK : : Cattle and calves inventory ...........................farms: 798 708 681 90 77 560 number: 861,679 740,946 713,043 120,733 (D) 134,582 Farms with- : 1 to 9 .................................................: 156 130 127 26 26 202 10 to 49 ...............................................: 216 194 186 22 15 170 50 to 99 ...............................................: 62 48 47 14 12 37 100 to 199 .............................................: 56 48 45 8 5 52 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 67. Summary by Legal Status For Tax Purposes: 2012 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ : : : Partnership : : :----------------------------------------------------------- : : : : : : : : Registered : : Family or : : under Item : Total : individual : Total : state law ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ LIVESTOCK - Con. : : Cattle and calves inventory - Con. : Farms with- - Con. : : 200 to 499 .............................................: 896 584 182 156 500 or more ............................................: 1,743 835 631 547 : Cows and heifers that calved ........................farms: 12,566 10,203 1,419 1,113 number: 2,399,249 1,123,032 946,220 837,177 : Beef cows .........................................farms: 10,925 9,236 917 676 number: 583,594 335,607 138,343 101,857 Farms with- : 1 to 9 .............................................: 6,173 5,610 290 188 10 to 49 ...........................................: 2,704 2,278 226 167 50 to 99 ...........................................: 801 602 108 82 100 to 199 .........................................: 542 372 103 82 200 to 499 .........................................: 479 280 115 98 500 or more ........................................: 226 94 75 59 Milk cows .........................................farms: 1,931 1,185 544 468 number: 1,815,655 787,425 807,877 735,320 Farms with- : 1 to 9 .............................................: 457 414 18 8 10 to 49 ...........................................: 62 58 3 3 50 to 99 ...........................................: 52 41 3 3 100 to 199 .........................................: 110 72 30 21 200 to 499 .........................................: 258 156 71 55 500 or more ........................................: 992 444 419 378 : Other cattle (see text) .............................farms: 13,380 10,692 1,524 1,214 number: 2,971,282 1,135,330 1,169,688 828,366 : Cattle and calves sold ................................farms: 12,594 10,055 1,516 1,208 number: 3,671,078 1,467,751 1,156,573 786,009 $1,000: 3,259,325 1,144,142 1,029,801 579,755 Calves weighing less than 500 pounds ................farms: 5,347 4,069 837 680 number: 1,252,820 599,714 373,165 303,845 : Cattle, including calves weighing : 500 pounds or more .................................farms: 11,228 8,915 1,379 1,114 number: 2,418,258 868,037 783,408 482,164 Cattle on feed (see text) .........................farms: 262 161 53 44 number: 712,651 82,066 170,558 22,959 : Hogs and pigs inventory ...............................farms: 1,437 1,213 78 52 number: 111,893 (D) (D) (D) Farms with- : 1 to 24 ................................................: 1,228 1,058 61 40 25 to 49 ...............................................: 95 71 7 4 50 to 99 ...............................................: 52 42 3 1 100 to 199 .............................................: 39 32 4 4 200 to 499 .............................................: 11 5 - - 500 or more ............................................: 12 5 3 3 : Used or to be used for breeding .....................farms: 732 614 33 20 number: 8,322 6,276 992 901 Other hogs and pigs .................................farms: 1,179 987 73 48 number: 103,571 (D) (D) (D) : Hogs and pigs sold ....................................farms: 1,163 982 68 48 number: 290,488 63,119 (D) (D) $1,000: 51,526 (D) (D) (D) : Sheep and lambs inventory (see text) ..................farms: 4,224 3,651 259 176 number: 668,517 352,073 136,286 110,861 Ewes 1 year old or older ............................farms: 3,222 2,790 197 130 number: 306,987 178,636 48,677 35,405 Sheep and lambs sold ..................................farms: 2,593 2,215 179 135 number: 440,092 203,145 108,515 99,661 : Total horses and ponies inventory .....................farms: 14,932 12,514 1,134 825 number: 142,555 98,868 14,990 11,444 Owned horses and ponies : inventory ..........................................farms: 14,353 12,099 1,068 777 number: 107,774 79,848 10,688 7,890 Owned horses and ponies sold ..........................farms: 2,959 2,438 273 183 number: 10,452 7,966 996 616 : Goats, all inventory ..................................farms: 4,474 3,927 292 181 number: 140,042 96,681 30,242 16,776 Goats, all sold .......................................farms: 2,133 1,879 134 78 number: 62,844 41,510 14,482 6,382 : POULTRY : : Layers inventory (see text) ...........................farms: 6,744 5,918 408 261 number: 19,000,779 2,882,308 (D) 6,438,920 Farms with- : 1 to 399 ...............................................: 6,653 5,879 381 237 400 to 3,199 ...........................................: 39 24 6 4 3,200 to 9,999 .........................................: 4 2 1 1 10,000 to 19,999 .......................................: 4 2 2 2 20,000 to 49,999 .......................................: 5 2 3 2 50,000 to 99,999 .......................................: 8 2 4 4 100,000 or more ........................................: 31 7 11 11 : Pullets for laying flock replacement : inventory ............................................farms: 873 748 73 46 number: 4,633,558 699,422 1,438,761 1,434,825 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 67. Summary by Legal Status For Tax Purposes: 2012 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ : Corporation : :---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------: : : Family held : Other than family held : Other- : :-------------------------------------------------------------------------------: cooperative, : : : 10 or less : : 10 or less : estate or trust, Item : Total : Total : stockholders : Total : stockholders :institutional, etc. ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ LIVESTOCK - Con. : : Cattle and calves inventory - Con. : Farms with- - Con. : : 200 to 499 .............................................: 86 85 80 1 1 44 500 or more ............................................: 222 203 196 19 18 55 : Cows and heifers that calved ........................farms: 565 504 482 61 52 379 number: 264,584 247,314 237,451 17,270 (D) 65,413 : Beef cows .........................................farms: 436 382 363 54 46 336 number: 82,705 72,947 67,584 9,758 (D) 26,939 Farms with- : 1 to 9 .............................................: 136 119 111 17 17 137 10 to 49 ...........................................: 97 82 80 15 11 103 50 to 99 ...........................................: 53 46 45 7 4 38 100 to 199 .........................................: 43 36 34 7 7 24 200 to 499 .........................................: 58 55 52 3 3 26 500 or more ........................................: 49 44 41 5 4 8 Milk cows .........................................farms: 149 139 136 10 9 53 number: 181,879 174,367 169,867 7,512 (D) 38,474 Farms with- : 1 to 9 .............................................: 9 7 7 2 2 16 10 to 49 ...........................................: 1 - - 1 1 - 50 to 99 ...........................................: 4 4 4 - - 4 100 to 199 .........................................: 4 3 3 1 - 4 200 to 499 .........................................: 26 25 25 1 1 5 500 or more ........................................: 105 100 97 5 5 24 : Other cattle (see text) .............................farms: 688 613 587 75 65 476 number: 597,095 493,632 475,592 103,463 (D) 69,169 : Cattle and calves sold ................................farms: 632 577 539 55 48 391 number: 967,482 868,329 809,131 99,153 (D) 79,272 $1,000: 1,018,841 881,043 813,603 137,798 (D) 66,542 Calves weighing less than 500 pounds ................farms: 272 252 230 20 14 169 number: 258,292 255,348 249,231 2,944 2,787 21,649 : Cattle, including calves weighing : 500 pounds or more .................................farms: 577 529 498 48 42 357 number: 709,190 612,981 559,900 96,209 (D) 57,623 Cattle on feed (see text) .........................farms: 39 30 27 9 9 9 number: 458,438 388,169 (D) 70,269 70,269 1,589 : Hogs and pigs inventory ...............................farms: 51 37 35 14 14 95 number: 3,830 2,986 (D) 844 844 4,916 Farms with- : 1 to 24 ................................................: 38 29 27 9 9 71 25 to 49 ...............................................: 3 2 2 1 1 14 50 to 99 ...............................................: 4 2 2 2 2 3 100 to 199 .............................................: 2 2 2 - - 1 200 to 499 .............................................: 3 1 1 2 2 3 500 or more ............................................: 1 1 1 - - 3 : Used or to be used for breeding .....................farms: 27 19 19 8 8 58 number: 331 85 85 246 246 723 Other hogs and pigs .................................farms: 38 29 27 9 9 81 number: 3,499 2,901 (D) 598 598 4,193 : Hogs and pigs sold ....................................farms: 32 22 22 10 10 81 number: (D) (D) (D) 787 787 9,718 $1,000: 11,383 11,084 11,084 299 299 1,979 : Sheep and lambs inventory (see text) ..................farms: 148 120 115 28 24 166 number: 143,896 122,485 122,398 21,411 4,095 36,262 Ewes 1 year old or older ............................farms: 99 84 81 15 11 136 number: 57,575 47,553 47,478 10,022 2,024 22,099 Sheep and lambs sold ..................................farms: 87 74 65 13 9 112 number: 109,034 102,697 102,534 6,337 1,011 19,398 : Total horses and ponies inventory .....................farms: 795 654 638 141 130 489 number: 20,388 16,673 16,322 3,715 3,291 8,309 Owned horses and ponies : inventory ..........................................farms: 751 620 608 131 121 435 number: 12,256 9,972 9,804 2,284 1,979 4,982 Owned horses and ponies sold ..........................farms: 187 165 161 22 18 61 number: 1,243 1,108 1,069 135 98 247 : Goats, all inventory ..................................farms: 124 105 102 19 17 131 number: 11,157 7,641 7,625 3,516 (D) 1,962 Goats, all sold .......................................farms: 54 39 36 15 15 66 number: 5,919 4,669 (D) 1,250 1,250 933 : POULTRY : : Layers inventory (see text) ...........................farms: 235 208 202 27 27 183 number: 9,595,674 (D) (D) (D) (D) (D) Farms with- : 1 to 399 ...............................................: 212 188 187 24 24 181 400 to 3,199 ...........................................: 8 6 5 2 2 1 3,200 to 9,999 .........................................: 1 1 1 - - - 10,000 to 19,999 .......................................: - - - - - - 20,000 to 49,999 .......................................: - - - - - - 50,000 to 99,999 .......................................: 1 1 1 - - 1 100,000 or more ........................................: 13 12 8 1 1 - : Pullets for laying flock replacement : inventory ............................................farms: 33 25 21 8 8 19 number: 2,494,872 2,494,632 602,931 240 240 503 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 67. Summary by Legal Status For Tax Purposes: 2012 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ : : : Partnership : : :----------------------------------------------------------- : : : : : : : : Registered : : Family or : : under Item : Total : individual : Total : state law ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ POULTRY - Con. : : Layers sold (see text) ................................farms: 831 699 59 40 number: 8,195,242 (D) 3,278,296 3,262,255 : Pullets for laying flock replacement : sold .................................................farms: 86 70 8 7 number: 3,508,788 (D) 1,434,708 (D) : Broilers and other meat-type chickens : sold .................................................farms: 421 333 41 29 number: 273,277,272 (D) 224,552,933 (D) Farms with- : 1 to 1,999 .............................................: 336 290 22 14 2,000 to 59,999 ........................................: 26 15 7 4 60,000 to 99,999 .......................................: - - - - 100,000 or more ........................................: 59 28 12 11 : Turkeys inventory (see text) ..........................farms: 682 583 56 34 number: 4,532,307 807,947 2,669,054 2,668,804 Turkeys sold (see text) ...............................farms: 302 245 30 24 number: 15,384,675 2,492,507 8,726,159 (D) : CROPS HARVESTED : : Barley for grain ......................................farms: 264 149 70 58 acres: 81,954 26,634 32,740 29,639 bushels: 5,312,595 1,509,257 1,791,066 1,659,343 Irrigated ...........................................farms: 144 69 49 42 acres: 44,819 11,466 16,165 (D) Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..........................................: 60 49 4 1 25 to 99 acres .........................................: 59 28 15 13 100 to 249 acres .......................................: 68 39 22 19 250 to 499 acres .......................................: 30 12 11 9 500 acres or more ......................................: 47 21 18 16 : Corn for grain ........................................farms: 733 402 199 179 acres: 180,672 70,315 63,563 60,212 bushels: 31,922,610 11,847,160 11,801,500 11,301,998 Irrigated ...........................................farms: 733 402 199 179 acres: 175,863 68,488 60,811 57,460 Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..........................................: 163 116 23 23 25 to 99 acres .........................................: 211 130 49 38 100 to 249 acres .......................................: 152 76 51 46 250 to 499 acres .......................................: 103 47 33 32 500 acres or more ......................................: 104 33 43 40 : Corn for silage or greenchop ..........................farms: 1,895 1,014 624 543 acres: 487,570 176,026 224,863 205,636 tons: 12,575,973 4,447,517 5,884,862 5,406,502 Irrigated ...........................................farms: 1,802 961 598 518 acres: 461,898 166,592 211,926 (D) Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..........................................: 249 210 17 14 25 to 99 acres .........................................: 538 347 140 113 100 to 249 acres .......................................: 512 247 181 154 250 to 499 acres .......................................: 329 127 150 136 500 acres or more ......................................: 267 83 136 126 : Cotton, all ...........................................farms: 630 270 250 233 acres: 367,766 75,261 162,674 153,632 bales: 1,201,860 252,929 548,180 521,147 Irrigated ...........................................farms: 630 270 250 233 acres: 367,766 75,261 162,674 153,632 Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..........................................: 31 16 6 6 25 to 99 acres .........................................: 102 70 18 15 100 to 249 acres .......................................: 180 83 69 63 250 to 499 acres .......................................: 153 65 61 61 500 acres or more ......................................: 164 36 96 88 : Dry edible beans, excluding limas .....................farms: 308 164 91 84 acres: 39,511 11,880 22,080 20,757 cwt: 955,995 258,970 568,387 527,659 Irrigated ...........................................farms: 269 133 86 79 acres: 36,866 10,515 20,916 19,593 Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..........................................: 95 72 9 7 25 to 99 acres .........................................: 93 51 24 23 100 to 249 acres .......................................: 69 28 27 24 250 to 499 acres .......................................: 38 12 20 20 500 acres or more ......................................: 13 1 11 10 : Oats for grain ........................................farms: 240 160 39 35 acres: 25,065 13,398 7,248 7,061 bushels: 2,246,420 1,186,158 632,259 611,332 Irrigated ...........................................farms: 145 91 30 27 acres: 15,901 8,504 4,654 (D) Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..........................................: 86 70 5 4 25 to 99 acres .........................................: 75 53 12 10 100 to 249 acres .......................................: 54 25 14 13 250 to 499 acres .......................................: 16 7 5 5 500 acres or more ......................................: 9 5 3 3 : Peanuts for nuts ......................................farms: 15 15 - - acres: 27 27 - - pounds: 84,093 84,093 - - ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 67. Summary by Legal Status For Tax Purposes: 2012 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ : Corporation : :---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------: : : Family held : Other than family held : Other- : :-------------------------------------------------------------------------------: cooperative, : : : 10 or less : : 10 or less : estate or trust, Item : Total : Total : stockholders : Total : stockholders :institutional, etc. ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ POULTRY - Con. : : Layers sold (see text) ................................farms: 36 34 30 2 2 37 number: 3,852,623 (D) (D) (D) (D) (D) : Pullets for laying flock replacement : sold .................................................farms: 5 5 4 - - 3 number: (D) (D) (D) - - 62 : Broilers and other meat-type chickens : sold .................................................farms: 36 30 30 6 6 11 number: 37,582,766 (D) (D) (D) (D) (D) Farms with- : 1 to 1,999 .............................................: 14 11 11 3 3 10 2,000 to 59,999 ........................................: 3 2 2 1 1 1 60,000 to 99,999 .......................................: - - - - - - 100,000 or more ........................................: 19 17 17 2 2 - : Turkeys inventory (see text) ..........................farms: 25 25 25 - - 18 number: 1,055,154 1,055,154 1,055,154 - - 152 Turkeys sold (see text) ...............................farms: 15 15 15 - - 12 number: 4,165,852 4,165,852 4,165,852 - - 157 : CROPS HARVESTED : : Barley for grain ......................................farms: 33 25 22 8 2 12 acres: 18,960 3,910 3,333 15,050 (D) 3,620 bushels: 1,868,560 235,917 230,376 1,632,643 (D) 143,712 Irrigated ...........................................farms: 20 14 14 6 - 6 acres: 15,926 (D) (D) (D) - 1,262 Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..........................................: 3 3 3 - - 4 25 to 99 acres .........................................: 12 12 10 - - 4 100 to 249 acres .......................................: 6 4 4 2 1 1 250 to 499 acres .......................................: 7 5 4 2 1 - 500 acres or more ......................................: 5 1 1 4 - 3 : Corn for grain ........................................farms: 110 98 97 12 11 22 acres: 42,858 30,361 (D) 12,497 (D) 3,936 bushels: 7,546,289 5,435,268 (D) 2,111,021 (D) 727,661 Irrigated ...........................................farms: 110 98 97 12 11 22 acres: 42,628 30,131 (D) 12,497 (D) 3,936 Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..........................................: 16 13 12 3 3 8 25 to 99 acres .........................................: 27 25 25 2 2 5 100 to 249 acres .......................................: 21 21 21 - - 4 250 to 499 acres .......................................: 21 19 19 2 2 2 500 acres or more ......................................: 25 20 20 5 4 3 : Corn for silage or greenchop ..........................farms: 201 181 173 20 18 56 acres: 74,580 66,896 56,087 7,684 (D) 12,101 tons: 1,934,896 1,728,800 1,470,370 206,096 (D) 308,698 Irrigated ...........................................farms: 190 170 163 20 18 53 acres: 72,239 64,555 (D) 7,684 (D) 11,141 Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..........................................: 10 10 10 - - 12 25 to 99 acres .........................................: 35 31 31 4 3 16 100 to 249 acres .......................................: 73 69 66 4 3 11 250 to 499 acres .......................................: 42 34 33 8 8 10 500 acres or more ......................................: 41 37 33 4 4 7 : Cotton, all ...........................................farms: 93 76 71 17 12 17 acres: 123,835 33,064 26,342 90,771 (D) 5,996 bales: 377,393 110,175 (D) 267,218 (D) 23,358 Irrigated ...........................................farms: 93 76 71 17 12 17 acres: 123,835 33,064 26,342 90,771 (D) 5,996 Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..........................................: 4 4 4 - - 5 25 to 99 acres .........................................: 13 11 11 2 - 1 100 to 249 acres .......................................: 25 23 22 2 2 3 250 to 499 acres .......................................: 24 20 18 4 4 3 500 acres or more ......................................: 27 18 16 9 6 5 : Dry edible beans, excluding limas .....................farms: 48 42 41 6 4 5 acres: 5,475 4,665 (D) 810 (D) 76 cwt: 127,367 106,229 (D) 21,138 (D) 1,271 Irrigated ...........................................farms: 46 40 39 6 4 4 acres: (D) (D) (D) 810 (D) (D) Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..........................................: 11 8 7 3 3 3 25 to 99 acres .........................................: 16 16 16 - - 2 100 to 249 acres .......................................: 14 13 13 1 1 - 250 to 499 acres .......................................: 6 4 4 2 - - 500 acres or more ......................................: 1 1 1 - - - : Oats for grain ........................................farms: 27 23 21 4 1 14 acres: 3,761 2,978 (D) 783 (D) 658 bushels: 360,387 290,469 (D) 69,918 (D) 67,616 Irrigated ...........................................farms: 18 14 14 4 1 6 acres: 2,434 1,651 1,651 783 (D) 309 Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..........................................: 4 4 4 - - 7 25 to 99 acres .........................................: 7 7 7 - - 3 100 to 249 acres .......................................: 11 9 7 2 - 4 250 to 499 acres .......................................: 4 2 2 2 1 - 500 acres or more ......................................: 1 1 1 - - - : Peanuts for nuts ......................................farms: - - - - - - acres: - - - - - - pounds: - - - - - - ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 67. Summary by Legal Status For Tax Purposes: 2012 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ : : : Partnership : : :----------------------------------------------------------- : : : : : : : : Registered : : Family or : : under Item : Total : individual : Total : state law ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ CROPS HARVESTED - Con. : : Peanuts for nuts - Con. : : Irrigated ...........................................farms: 15 15 - - acres: 27 27 - - Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..........................................: 15 15 - - 25 to 99 acres .........................................: - - - - 100 to 249 acres .......................................: - - - - 250 to 499 acres .......................................: - - - - 500 acres or more ......................................: - - - - : Rice ..................................................farms: 1,392 777 434 374 acres: 561,968 213,471 270,395 245,235 cwt: 46,692,580 17,590,318 22,553,749 20,529,486 Irrigated ...........................................farms: 1,392 777 434 374 acres: 561,968 213,471 270,395 245,235 Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..........................................: 49 36 6 6 25 to 99 acres .........................................: 232 176 36 27 100 to 249 acres .......................................: 385 244 73 60 250 to 499 acres .......................................: 366 197 116 100 500 acres or more ......................................: 360 124 203 181 : Sorghum for grain .....................................farms: 74 41 17 17 acres: 13,908 6,889 3,292 3,292 bushels: 1,263,924 661,669 287,333 287,333 Irrigated ...........................................farms: 62 35 14 14 acres: 10,997 5,172 2,898 2,898 Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..........................................: 17 11 3 3 25 to 99 acres .........................................: 18 11 5 5 100 to 249 acres .......................................: 19 12 1 1 250 to 499 acres .......................................: 13 2 8 8 500 acres or more ......................................: 7 5 - - : Soybeans for beans ....................................farms: 2 - - - acres: (D) - - - bushels: (D) - - - Irrigated ...........................................farms: 1 - - - acres: (D) - - - Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..........................................: 1 - - - 25 to 99 acres .........................................: - - - - 100 to 249 acres .......................................: 1 - - - 250 to 499 acres .......................................: - - - - 500 acres or more ......................................: - - - - : Sugarbeets for sugar ..................................farms: 58 25 16 14 acres: 27,193 (D) 8,848 (D) tons: 1,179,753 525,008 385,235 (D) Irrigated ...........................................farms: 58 25 16 14 acres: 26,567 (D) 8,848 (D) : Sunflower seed, all ...................................farms: 197 94 63 57 acres: 49,749 12,358 23,768 23,574 pounds: 68,792,639 15,214,860 34,488,438 34,210,580 Irrigated ...........................................farms: 152 72 48 44 acres: 34,815 9,633 17,383 (D) Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..........................................: 42 28 8 4 25 to 99 acres .........................................: 52 33 12 10 100 to 249 acres .......................................: 43 20 19 19 250 to 499 acres .......................................: 31 7 10 10 500 acres or more ......................................: 29 6 14 14 : Wheat for grain, all ..................................farms: 1,503 726 448 405 acres: 491,846 167,108 177,534 164,049 bushels: 42,955,324 13,590,224 16,285,770 15,004,634 Irrigated ...........................................farms: 1,123 501 357 325 acres: 382,958 113,807 146,686 135,514 Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..........................................: 164 132 11 10 25 to 99 acres .........................................: 427 251 106 92 100 to 249 acres .......................................: 430 177 144 134 250 to 499 acres .......................................: 220 82 83 74 500 acres or more ......................................: 262 84 104 95 : Forage-land used for all hay and all : haylage, grass silage, and : greenchop (see text) .................................farms: 7,903 5,496 1,426 1,192 acres: 1,670,027 736,132 540,956 480,914 tons, dry: 9,363,421 3,760,065 3,470,784 3,124,367 Irrigated ...........................................farms: 5,498 3,559 1,173 992 acres: 1,346,666 564,873 449,277 398,144 Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..........................................: 2,621 2,300 164 106 25 to 99 acres .........................................: 2,274 1,697 336 274 100 to 249 acres .......................................: 1,435 856 346 293 250 to 499 acres .......................................: 728 336 256 228 500 acres or more ......................................: 845 307 324 291 : Alfalfa hay .........................................farms: 3,243 1,910 811 698 acres: 874,137 345,669 299,105 260,600 tons, dry: 5,607,210 2,075,864 2,074,903 1,826,257 Irrigated .........................................farms: 3,035 1,765 775 664 acres: 831,858 326,744 286,605 (D) ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 67. Summary by Legal Status For Tax Purposes: 2012 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ : Corporation : :---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------: : : Family held : Other than family held : Other- : :-------------------------------------------------------------------------------: cooperative, : : : 10 or less : : 10 or less : estate or trust, Item : Total : Total : stockholders : Total : stockholders :institutional, etc. ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ CROPS HARVESTED - Con. : : Peanuts for nuts - 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 acres or more ......................................: - - - - - - : Rice ..................................................farms: 142 118 114 24 23 39 acres: 63,490 55,892 47,234 7,598 (D) 14,612 cwt: 5,385,207 4,753,712 4,014,598 631,495 (D) 1,163,306 Irrigated ...........................................farms: 142 118 114 24 23 39 acres: 63,490 55,892 47,234 7,598 (D) 14,612 Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..........................................: 4 4 4 - - 3 25 to 99 acres .........................................: 13 11 11 2 1 7 100 to 249 acres .......................................: 58 45 45 13 13 10 250 to 499 acres .......................................: 38 32 30 6 6 15 500 acres or more ......................................: 29 26 24 3 3 4 : Sorghum for grain .....................................farms: 11 11 9 - - 5 acres: 2,939 2,939 (D) - - 788 bushels: 251,828 251,828 (D) - - 63,094 Irrigated ...........................................farms: 9 9 7 - - 4 acres: (D) (D) (D) - - (D) Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..........................................: 1 1 1 - - 2 25 to 99 acres .........................................: 2 2 2 - - - 100 to 249 acres .......................................: 4 4 4 - - 2 250 to 499 acres .......................................: 2 2 2 - - 1 500 acres or more ......................................: 2 2 - - - - : Soybeans for beans ....................................farms: - - - - - 2 acres: - - - - - (D) bushels: - - - - - (D) Irrigated ...........................................farms: - - - - - 1 acres: - - - - - (D) Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..........................................: - - - - - 1 25 to 99 acres .........................................: - - - - - - 100 to 249 acres .......................................: - - - - - 1 250 to 499 acres .......................................: - - - - - - 500 acres or more ......................................: - - - - - - : Sugarbeets for sugar ..................................farms: 12 11 11 1 1 5 acres: (D) 4,902 4,902 (D) (D) 1,243 tons: (D) 210,144 210,144 (D) (D) (D) Irrigated ...........................................farms: 12 11 11 1 1 5 acres: (D) 4,902 4,902 (D) (D) 1,243 : Sunflower seed, all ...................................farms: 34 32 32 2 2 6 acres: (D) 13,061 13,061 (D) (D) (D) pounds: (D) 18,334,447 18,334,447 (D) (D) (D) Irrigated ...........................................farms: 26 24 24 2 2 6 acres: (D) 7,257 7,257 (D) (D) (D) Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..........................................: 3 3 3 - - 3 25 to 99 acres .........................................: 4 4 4 - - 3 100 to 249 acres .......................................: 4 2 2 2 2 - 250 to 499 acres .......................................: 14 14 14 - - - 500 acres or more ......................................: 9 9 9 - - - : Wheat for grain, all ..................................farms: 263 235 223 28 18 66 acres: 126,417 101,922 87,883 24,495 10,167 20,787 bushels: 11,281,538 8,619,669 7,487,334 2,661,869 972,752 1,797,792 Irrigated ...........................................farms: 218 194 182 24 15 47 acres: 108,961 85,407 71,368 23,554 (D) 13,504 Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..........................................: 11 11 11 - - 10 25 to 99 acres .........................................: 52 48 48 4 2 18 100 to 249 acres .......................................: 87 76 71 11 10 22 250 to 499 acres .......................................: 49 45 40 4 3 6 500 acres or more ......................................: 64 55 53 9 3 10 : Forage-land used for all hay and all : haylage, grass silage, and : greenchop (see text) .................................farms: 710 615 593 95 69 271 acres: 343,805 282,554 274,179 61,251 38,064 49,134 tons, dry: 1,899,956 1,518,916 1,460,258 381,040 267,636 232,616 Irrigated ...........................................farms: 590 507 489 83 59 176 acres: 297,196 244,459 236,494 52,737 (D) 35,320 Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..........................................: 76 67 65 9 8 81 25 to 99 acres .........................................: 147 129 123 18 15 94 100 to 249 acres .......................................: 189 162 155 27 20 44 250 to 499 acres .......................................: 110 96 95 14 6 26 500 acres or more ......................................: 188 161 155 27 20 26 : Alfalfa hay .........................................farms: 412 358 348 54 40 110 acres: 209,966 170,428 164,455 39,538 26,919 19,397 tons, dry: 1,338,343 1,035,303 995,830 303,040 226,098 118,100 Irrigated .........................................farms: 393 341 331 52 38 102 acres: (D) 166,444 160,471 (D) (D) (D) ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 67. Summary by Legal Status For Tax Purposes: 2012 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ : : : Partnership : : :----------------------------------------------------------- : : : : : : : : Registered : : Family or : : under Item : Total : individual : Total : state law ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ CROPS HARVESTED - Con. : : Forage-land used for all hay and all : haylage, grass silage, and : greenchop (see text) - Con. : : Other tame hay ......................................farms: 1,699 1,208 237 200 acres: 212,238 113,211 46,086 44,238 tons, dry: 821,999 432,164 204,046 194,537 Irrigated .........................................farms: 1,217 865 162 142 acres: 155,054 79,318 33,408 32,254 : Field and grass seed crops, all .......................farms: 209 124 48 43 acres: 71,921 29,759 22,523 21,848 Irrigated ...........................................farms: 202 119 47 43 acres: 71,053 29,316 (D) 21,848 : Land in vegetables (see text) .........................farms: 6,055 4,395 769 651 acres: 985,735 159,622 314,275 291,048 Irrigated ...........................................farms: 6,055 4,395 769 651 acres: 985,731 159,618 314,275 291,048 Farms by acres harvested: : 0.1 to 4.9 acres .......................................: 3,667 3,157 245 198 5.0 to 24.9 acres ......................................: 948 723 108 84 25.0 to 99.9 acres .....................................: 394 243 57 44 100.0 to 249.9 acres ...................................: 312 132 103 90 250.0 acres or more ....................................: 734 140 256 235 : Beans, snap .........................................farms: 652 496 55 43 acres: 9,419 2,241 4,995 4,743 Harvested for processing ..........................farms: 56 32 7 7 acres: 3,645 187 2,775 2,775 : Peas, green .........................................farms: 138 114 5 4 acres: 821 327 405 (D) Harvested for processing ..........................farms: - - - - acres: - - - - Potatoes ............................................farms: 441 306 57 49 acres: 42,660 5,118 15,239 13,727 Harvested for processing ..........................farms: 36 18 7 7 acres: 14,436 (D) 5,339 5,339 Farms by acres harvested: : 0.1 to 4.9 acres .....................................: 345 276 30 26 5.0 to 24.9 acres ....................................: 17 7 2 2 25.0 to 99.9 acres ...................................: 20 11 4 3 100.0 to 249.9 acres .................................: 16 6 5 5 250.0 acres or more ..................................: 43 6 16 13 : Sweet corn ..........................................farms: 441 306 56 48 acres: 32,667 (D) 12,426 (D) Harvested for processing ..........................farms: 12 9 3 2 acres: 561 166 395 (D) Sweet potatoes ......................................farms: 188 152 18 16 acres: 18,189 6,324 7,529 (D) Harvested for processing ..........................farms: 27 18 4 4 acres: 2,571 1,149 730 730 : Tomatoes in the open ................................farms: 3,176 2,345 385 335 acres: 295,247 58,623 106,739 101,096 Harvested for processing ..........................farms: 631 303 164 145 acres: 256,051 50,621 90,339 85,379 : Land in orchards ......................................farms: 38,098 28,235 4,989 4,159 acres: 3,138,943 1,078,825 899,376 803,603 Irrigated ...........................................farms: 34,580 25,318 4,689 3,914 acres: 3,072,245 1,041,113 884,396 791,588 Farms by bearing and nonbearing acres: : 0.1 to 4.9 acres .......................................: 13,263 11,821 611 473 5.0 to 24.9 acres ......................................: 12,094 9,563 1,268 1,023 25.0 to 99.9 acres .....................................: 7,356 4,699 1,503 1,220 100.0 to 249.9 acres ...................................: 2,969 1,435 795 712 250.0 acres or more ....................................: 2,416 717 812 731 : Apples ..............................................farms: 2,527 2,089 173 141 bearing and nonbearing acres: 18,205 9,092 3,995 2,598 : Grapes ..............................................farms: 11,462 7,753 1,770 1,544 bearing and nonbearing acres: 940,177 312,102 223,625 202,567 : Peaches, all ........................................farms: 2,201 1,688 231 192 bearing and nonbearing acres: 51,948 21,032 12,944 11,298 : Citrus fruit, all ...................................farms: 7,283 5,357 948 797 bearing and nonbearing acres: 293,387 110,061 101,529 89,891 : Almonds .............................................farms: 6,841 4,758 1,127 923 bearing and nonbearing acres: 935,804 (D) 310,899 (D) : Pecans .............................................farms: 222 191 16 10 bearing and nonbearing acres: 3,309 1,589 (D) 664 : Walnuts, English ....................................farms: 5,712 4,282 747 624 bearing and nonbearing acres: 329,112 135,626 90,360 81,819 : Land in berries (see text) ............................farms: 1,985 1,433 214 179 acres: 52,626 10,634 15,750 15,535 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 67. Summary by Legal Status For Tax Purposes: 2012 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ : Corporation : :---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------: : : Family held : Other than family held : Other- : :-------------------------------------------------------------------------------: cooperative, : : : 10 or less : : 10 or less : estate or trust, Item : Total : Total : stockholders : Total : stockholders :institutional, etc. ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ CROPS HARVESTED - Con. : : Forage-land used for all hay and all : haylage, grass silage, and : greenchop (see text) - Con. : : Other tame hay ......................................farms: 181 149 146 32 20 73 acres: 46,191 40,387 40,037 5,804 2,254 6,750 tons, dry: 164,504 148,816 146,591 15,688 7,489 21,285 Irrigated .........................................farms: 152 126 123 26 16 38 acres: 37,552 32,237 (D) 5,315 (D) 4,776 : Field and grass seed crops, all .......................farms: 33 27 27 6 2 4 acres: 18,376 7,579 7,579 10,797 (D) 1,263 Irrigated ...........................................farms: 32 26 26 6 2 4 acres: (D) (D) (D) 10,797 (D) 1,263 : Land in vegetables (see text) .........................farms: 711 591 565 120 95 180 acres: 481,333 380,142 336,842 101,191 49,418 30,505 Irrigated ...........................................farms: 711 591 565 120 95 180 acres: 481,333 380,142 336,842 101,191 49,418 30,505 Farms by acres harvested: : 0.1 to 4.9 acres .......................................: 163 127 126 36 36 102 5.0 to 24.9 acres ......................................: 84 66 63 18 15 33 25.0 to 99.9 acres .....................................: 78 70 67 8 5 16 100.0 to 249.9 acres ...................................: 67 61 61 6 6 10 250.0 acres or more ....................................: 319 267 248 52 33 19 : Beans, snap .........................................farms: 79 60 58 19 17 22 acres: 2,167 (D) (D) (D) 25 15 Harvested for processing ..........................farms: 14 12 10 2 1 3 acres: 682 (D) (D) (D) (D) 1 : Peas, green .........................................farms: 16 10 9 6 4 3 acres: 84 63 (D) 21 (D) 5 Harvested for processing ..........................farms: - - - - - - acres: - - - - - - Potatoes ............................................farms: 56 42 36 14 14 22 acres: 22,183 18,979 15,882 3,204 3,204 120 Harvested for processing ..........................farms: 9 8 6 1 1 2 acres: 7,746 (D) 6,646 (D) (D) (D) Farms by acres harvested: : 0.1 to 4.9 acres .....................................: 21 12 12 9 9 18 5.0 to 24.9 acres ....................................: 5 3 3 2 2 3 25.0 to 99.9 acres ...................................: 4 4 4 - - 1 100.0 to 249.9 acres .................................: 5 5 4 - - - 250.0 acres or more ..................................: 21 18 13 3 3 - : Sweet corn ..........................................farms: 63 48 46 15 11 16 acres: 12,679 12,659 (D) 20 9 (D) Harvested for processing ..........................farms: - - - - - - acres: - - - - - - Sweet potatoes ......................................farms: 14 13 13 1 1 4 acres: (D) 3,535 3,535 (D) (D) (D) Harvested for processing ..........................farms: 5 5 5 - - - acres: 692 692 692 - - - : Tomatoes in the open ................................farms: 344 289 279 55 47 102 acres: 115,549 85,556 82,275 29,993 (D) 14,336 Harvested for processing ..........................farms: 147 129 121 18 15 17 acres: 102,788 74,173 (D) 28,614 (D) 12,304 : Land in orchards ......................................farms: 3,399 2,960 2,800 439 368 1,475 acres: 1,030,839 842,972 756,085 187,867 139,531 129,903 Irrigated ...........................................farms: 3,221 2,810 2,657 411 343 1,352 acres: 1,019,084 832,537 746,354 186,547 138,510 127,653 Farms by bearing and nonbearing acres: : 0.1 to 4.9 acres .......................................: 417 377 359 40 35 414 5.0 to 24.9 acres ......................................: 729 643 628 86 78 534 25.0 to 99.9 acres .....................................: 845 717 687 128 117 309 100.0 to 249.9 acres ...................................: 609 538 510 71 60 130 250.0 acres or more ....................................: 799 685 616 114 78 88 : Apples ..............................................farms: 171 153 137 18 18 94 bearing and nonbearing acres: 4,548 3,884 3,474 665 665 570 : Grapes ..............................................farms: 1,528 1,282 1,205 246 196 411 bearing and nonbearing acres: 386,196 301,324 260,028 84,871 49,134 18,256 : Peaches, all ........................................farms: 209 174 162 35 32 73 bearing and nonbearing acres: 16,460 14,649 12,598 1,811 (D) 1,512 : Citrus fruit, all ...................................farms: 571 498 473 73 67 407 bearing and nonbearing acres: 62,550 54,692 48,178 7,858 (D) 19,248 : Almonds .............................................farms: 706 643 611 63 54 250 bearing and nonbearing acres: 279,614 229,368 203,880 50,246 47,126 (D) : Pecans .............................................farms: 9 7 7 2 2 6 bearing and nonbearing acres: (D) (D) (D) (D) (D) (D) : Walnuts, English ....................................farms: 478 429 413 49 47 205 bearing and nonbearing acres: 93,589 (D) 74,949 (D) (D) 9,537 : Land in berries (see text) ............................farms: 272 218 200 54 51 66 acres: 22,397 18,760 12,314 3,636 3,289 3,846 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 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. Table 68. Summary by North American Industry Classification System: 2012 [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: 77,857 2,296 4,191 35,945 3,390 5,815 - percent: 100.0 2.9 5.4 46.2 4.4 7.5 - Land in farms .................................acres: 25,569,001 1,292,643 1,557,453 5,417,746 306,417 3,370,432 - Average size of farm ......................acres: 328 563 372 151 90 580 - : MARKET VALUE OF AGRICULTURAL : PRODUCTS SOLD AND GOVERNMENT : PAYMENTS : : Total .........................................farms: 77,857 2,296 4,191 35,945 3,390 5,815 - $1,000: 42,774,392 1,177,056 6,413,372 17,440,281 2,513,647 2,775,684 - Average per farm ........................dollars: 549,397 512,655 1,530,273 485,194 741,489 477,332 - Farms by economic class: : Less than $1,000 (see text) ....................: 14,629 38 228 2,177 199 1,838 - $1,000 to $2,499 ...............................: 4,718 38 427 1,129 209 388 - $2,500 to $4,999 ...............................: 5,904 55 470 2,284 233 464 - $5,000 to $9,999 ...............................: 7,846 67 729 3,802 407 514 - $10,000 to $24,999 .............................: 10,265 133 586 5,511 625 575 - : $25,000 to $49,999 .............................: 7,150 202 291 4,471 325 370 - $50,000 to $99,999 .............................: 6,698 260 311 4,583 298 297 - $100,000 to $249,999 ...........................: 6,951 385 223 4,661 352 371 - $250,000 to $499,999 ...........................: 4,132 465 137 2,543 203 240 - : $500,000 to $999,999 ...........................: 3,197 359 126 1,965 175 216 - $1,000,000 or more .............................: 6,367 294 663 2,819 364 542 - $1,000,000 to $2,499,999 .....................: 3,015 216 177 1,569 166 290 - $2,500,000 to $4,999,999 .....................: 1,480 61 172 580 81 138 - $5,000,000 or more ...........................: 1,872 17 314 670 117 114 - : Total sales .................................farms: 77,857 2,296 4,191 35,945 3,390 5,815 - $1,000: 42,627,472 1,126,317 6,406,605 17,417,879 2,513,501 2,751,834 - Grains, oilseeds, dry beans, and : dry peas .................................farms: 4,757 2,296 428 677 32 882 - $1,000: 1,727,708 983,121 190,829 140,191 1,422 342,721 - Sales of $50,000 or more ................farms: 3,235 1,693 250 395 7 661 - $1,000: 1,701,529 971,575 189,446 135,352 1,278 338,427 - Corn ....................................farms: 1,796 656 151 313 11 431 - $1,000: 419,544 158,440 46,512 52,216 433 127,000 - Sales of $50,000 or more ..............farms: 1,130 370 95 192 2 330 - $1,000: 407,430 152,894 46,109 50,153 (D) 124,915 - Wheat ...................................farms: 1,499 417 230 264 5 456 - $1,000: 341,702 62,760 82,758 31,144 770 141,709 - Sales of $50,000 or more ..............farms: 914 200 170 135 3 336 - $1,000: 329,286 58,467 81,755 28,158 (D) 138,982 - Soybeans ................................farms: 2 2 - - - - - $1,000: (D) (D) - - - - - Sales of $50,000 or more ..............farms: 1 1 - - - - - $1,000: (D) (D) - - - - - Sorghum .................................farms: 200 59 13 26 - 60 - $1,000: (D) (D) (D) 1,615 - 4,207 - Sales of $50,000 or more ..............farms: 76 16 1 10 - 24 - $1,000: 13,369 3,538 (D) 1,307 - 3,657 - Barley ..................................farms: 261 95 49 32 - 53 - $1,000: 29,212 10,113 12,117 1,749 - 4,060 - Sales of $50,000 or more ..............farms: 105 37 21 11 - 26 - $1,000: 27,084 9,327 11,800 1,493 - 3,528 - Rice ....................................farms: 1,391 1,229 32 79 - 44 - $1,000: 782,644 700,906 (D) 38,999 - 22,543 - Sales of $50,000 or more ..............farms: 1,306 1,167 24 68 - 43 - $1,000: 780,488 699,137 (D) 38,754 - (D) - Other grains, oilseeds, : dry beans, and dry peas ................farms: 953 336 178 144 17 189 - $1,000: 138,816 46,347 30,387 14,467 219 43,202 - Sales of $50,000 or more ..............farms: 438 149 92 67 2 116 - $1,000: 132,134 43,175 29,835 13,398 (D) 42,112 - : Tobacco .................................. farms: - - - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - - - Sales of $50,000 or more ................farms: - - - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - - - Cotton and cottonseed .....................farms: 630 26 77 100 - 406 - $1,000: 655,094 5,636 63,846 48,469 - 530,222 - Sales of $50,000 or more ................farms: 584 20 77 87 - 380 - $1,000: 653,962 (D) 63,846 48,135 - 529,641 - Vegetables, melons, potatoes, : and sweet potatoes .......................farms: 6,155 68 4,170 992 303 488 - $1,000: 6,327,838 19,931 5,573,088 303,845 7,304 416,262 - Sales of $50,000 or more ................farms: 1,961 37 1,421 213 19 259 - $1,000: 6,293,658 19,724 5,547,771 298,465 5,905 414,688 - : Fruits, tree nuts, and berries ............farms: 36,574 210 967 34,116 282 524 - $1,000: 17,638,972 47,471 392,206 16,743,939 17,935 292,323 - Sales of $50,000 or more ................farms: 17,379 133 262 16,432 41 298 - $1,000: 17,344,347 45,882 388,121 16,461,476 15,719 290,390 - Fruits and tree nuts ....................farms: 35,526 210 772 33,333 257 490 - $1,000: 15,655,703 47,455 290,974 14,874,683 13,241 284,356 - Sales of $50,000 or more ..............farms: 16,846 133 207 15,966 35 292 - $1,000: 15,369,315 45,882 288,127 14,598,758 11,184 282,666 - Berries .................................farms: 1,701 5 315 1,241 38 83 - $1,000: 1,983,269 16 101,232 1,869,257 4,693 7,967 - ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 68. Summary by North American Industry Classification System: 2012 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : Other crop farming - con. : : : : : : : : (1119) : : : : : : : :-------------------------------: : : : : : : : : Sugarcane : : : : : : : : : farming, hay : : : : : : : Animal : : 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: 194 5,621 11,767 156 1,594 446 1,202 3,246 7,809 percent: 0.2 7.2 15.1 0.2 2.0 0.6 1.5 4.2 10.0 Land in farms .................................acres: 364,447 3,005,985 10,472,254 207,769 984,254 14,211 70,412 540,054 1,335,356 Average size of farm ......................acres: 1,879 535 890 1,332 617 32 59 166 171 : MARKET VALUE OF AGRICULTURAL : PRODUCTS SOLD AND GOVERNMENT : PAYMENTS : : Total .........................................farms: 194 5,621 11,767 156 1,594 446 1,202 3,246 7,809 $1,000: 555,391 2,220,294 1,509,866 1,001,646 7,908,066 48,783 1,667,733 90,664 227,593 Average per farm ........................dollars: 2,862,838 395,000 128,314 6,420,809 4,961,145 109,378 1,387,465 27,931 29,145 Farms by economic class: : Less than $1,000 (see text) ....................: - 1,838 3,261 - 95 165 556 1,414 4,658 $1,000 to $2,499 ...............................: - 388 1,171 - - 109 202 612 433 $2,500 to $4,999 ...............................: - 464 1,414 - 3 54 82 373 472 $5,000 to $9,999 ...............................: 6 508 1,412 8 10 51 54 264 528 $10,000 to $24,999 .............................: 8 567 1,626 17 - 28 41 324 799 : $25,000 to $49,999 .............................: 9 361 871 29 4 10 32 107 438 $50,000 to $99,999 .............................: 14 283 651 19 7 8 31 43 190 $100,000 to $249,999 ...........................: 22 349 643 27 54 13 41 46 135 $250,000 to $499,999 ...........................: 18 222 336 16 59 2 32 23 76 : $500,000 to $999,999 ...........................: 30 186 170 15 107 2 15 21 26 $1,000,000 or more .............................: 87 455 212 25 1,255 4 116 19 54 $1,000,000 to $2,499,999 .....................: 53 237 142 7 351 1 39 15 42 $2,500,000 to $4,999,999 .....................: 21 117 31 4 381 - 25 1 6 $5,000,000 or more ...........................: 13 101 39 14 523 3 52 3 6 : Total sales .................................farms: 194 5,621 11,767 156 1,594 446 1,202 3,246 7,809 $1,000: 552,319 2,199,514 1,501,824 1,001,515 7,875,433 48,716 1,667,435 89,704 226,711 Grains, oilseeds, dry beans, and : dry peas .................................farms: 89 793 107 6 291 5 10 9 14 $1,000: 53,749 288,972 11,925 35 56,221 186 414 598 45 Sales of $50,000 or more ................farms: 80 581 42 - 180 1 2 4 - $1,000: 53,518 284,909 10,949 - 53,501 (D) (D) 528 - Corn ....................................farms: 31 400 53 - 158 5 8 1 9 $1,000: 10,335 116,664 5,758 - 28,586 186 (D) (D) 27 Sales of $50,000 or more ..............farms: 28 302 25 - 113 1 2 - - $1,000: 10,280 114,635 5,316 - 27,172 (D) (D) - - Wheat ...................................farms: 63 393 35 3 85 - 1 3 - $1,000: 31,450 110,259 3,101 (D) 19,374 - (D) (D) - Sales of $50,000 or more ..............farms: 57 279 11 - 59 - - - - $1,000: 31,304 107,678 (D) - 18,646 - - - - Soybeans ................................farms: - - - - - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - - - - - Sales of $50,000 or more ..............farms: - - - - - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - - - - - Sorghum .................................farms: 4 56 9 2 31 - - - - $1,000: 458 3,749 (D) (D) 3,427 - - - - Sales of $50,000 or more ..............farms: 3 21 6 - 19 - - - - $1,000: (D) (D) (D) - 3,152 - - - - Barley ..................................farms: 5 48 17 3 8 - - 4 - $1,000: (D) (D) (D) (D) 259 - - 528 - Sales of $50,000 or more ..............farms: 4 22 4 - 2 - - 4 - $1,000: 675 2,853 (D) - (D) - - 528 - Rice ....................................farms: 2 42 2 - 5 - - - - $1,000: (D) (D) (D) - 1,068 - - - - Sales of $50,000 or more ..............farms: 2 41 2 - 2 - - - - $1,000: (D) 22,004 (D) - (D) - - - - Other grains, oilseeds, : dry beans, and dry peas ................farms: 15 174 27 2 53 - 1 1 5 $1,000: 10,320 32,882 634 (D) 3,507 - (D) (D) 18 Sales of $50,000 or more ..............farms: 11 105 3 - 9 - - - - $1,000: 10,260 31,852 (D) - 2,986 - - - - : Tobacco .................................. farms: - - - - - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - - - - - Sales of $50,000 or more ................farms: - - - - - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - - - - - Cotton and cottonseed .....................farms: 194 212 3 - 15 - 1 2 - $1,000: 357,993 172,229 503 - 6,020 - (D) (D) - Sales of $50,000 or more ................farms: 169 211 2 - 15 - 1 2 - $1,000: (D) (D) (D) - 6,020 - (D) (D) - Vegetables, melons, potatoes, : and sweet potatoes .......................farms: 41 447 28 3 13 3 32 12 43 $1,000: 80,921 335,340 382 117 6,781 3 36 17 73 Sales of $50,000 or more ................farms: 39 220 5 2 5 - - - - $1,000: (D) (D) (D) (D) 6,659 - - - - : Fruits, tree nuts, and berries ............farms: 26 498 158 4 152 4 55 15 87 $1,000: (D) (D) 12,279 277 115,965 178 13,353 84 2,963 Sales of $50,000 or more ................farms: 24 274 40 3 143 1 22 - 4 $1,000: (D) (D) 11,189 (D) 115,778 (D) 12,967 - (D) Fruits and tree nuts ....................farms: 26 464 152 4 152 4 51 15 86 $1,000: (D) (D) 12,250 277 (D) 178 13,348 (D) (D) Sales of $50,000 or more ..............farms: 24 268 40 3 143 1 22 - 4 $1,000: (D) (D) 11,189 (D) 115,718 (D) 12,967 - (D) Berries .................................farms: - 83 6 - 1 - 6 5 1 $1,000: - 7,967 29 - (D) - 6 (D) (D) --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 68. Summary by North American Industry Classification System: 2012 (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 - Con. : : Sales of $50,000 or more ..............farms: 610 - 63 532 6 8 - $1,000: 1,972,002 - 99,476 1,860,252 (D) 7,679 - Nursery, greenhouse, floriculture, : and sod (see text) .......................farms: 3,890 6 339 285 3,069 139 - $1,000: 2,547,307 30 (D) 32,477 2,480,210 7,860 - Sales of $50,000 or more ................farms: 1,465 - 33 44 1,368 18 - $1,000: 2,520,294 - 24,425 30,484 2,457,457 (D) - Cut Christmas trees and : short-rotation woody crops ...............farms: 328 - 12 36 268 8 - $1,000: 2,706 - (D) (D) 2,371 (D) - Sales of $50,000 or more ................farms: 9 - 1 - 8 - - $1,000: 904 - (D) - (D) - - Cut Christmas trees .....................farms: 301 - 10 30 249 8 - $1,000: 2,499 - (D) (D) 2,207 (D) - Sales of $50,000 or more ..............farms: 8 - 1 - 7 - - $1,000: 846 - (D) - (D) - - Short-rotation woody crops ..............farms: 38 - 2 6 30 - - $1,000: 206 - (D) (D) 164 - - Sales of $50,000 or more ..............farms: 1 - - - 1 - - $1,000: (D) - - - (D) - - Other crops and hay (see text) ............farms: 5,744 498 306 712 46 3,209 - $1,000: 1,467,274 50,402 143,738 81,228 3,731 1,107,988 - Sales of $50,000 or more ................farms: 2,246 189 161 275 16 1,382 - $1,000: 1,425,574 45,764 142,194 76,041 3,470 1,084,673 - Maple syrup (see text) ..................farms: - - - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - - - Sales of $50,000 or more ..............farms: - - - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - - - : Cattle and calves .........................farms: 12,594 120 89 705 39 412 - $1,000: 3,259,325 (D) (D) 35,839 234 40,470 - Sales of $50,000 or more ................farms: 3,515 40 15 85 1 104 - $1,000: 3,170,394 17,733 5,118 31,236 (D) 37,472 - Milk from cows (see text) .................farms: 1,554 1 1 7 - 3 - $1,000: 6,945,102 (D) (D) (D) - (D) - Sales of $50,000 or more ................farms: 1,520 1 1 4 - 3 - $1,000: 6,944,530 (D) (D) (D) - (D) - Hogs and pigs .............................farms: 1,163 10 41 103 16 32 - $1,000: 51,526 43 61 4,085 (D) 389 - Sales of $50,000 or more ................farms: 43 - - 9 - 5 - $1,000: 48,608 - - (D) - 299 - Sheep, goats, wool, mohair, and : milk (see text) ..........................farms: 4,376 33 115 334 28 151 - $1,000: 108,136 385 1,044 6,233 78 9,531 - Sales of $50,000 or more ................farms: 196 2 4 9 - 12 - $1,000: 91,373 (D) 939 (D) - 8,854 - Horses, ponies, mules, burros, and : donkeys ..................................farms: 3,050 13 19 142 3 51 - $1,000: 62,241 48 49 1,108 (D) 1,274 - Sales of $50,000 or more ................farms: 212 - - 2 - 4 - $1,000: 35,731 - - (D) - 1,062 - Poultry and eggs ..........................farms: 3,758 16 459 525 76 139 - $1,000: 1,663,919 46 478 6,638 53 (D) - Sales of $50,000 or more ................farms: 248 - - 8 - 2 - $1,000: 1,658,976 - - 6,084 - (D) - Aquaculture ...............................farms: 229 1 6 11 10 7 - $1,000: 103,016 (D) (Z) 178 (D) (Z) - Sales of $50,000 or more ................farms: 119 - - 1 1 - - $1,000: 101,782 - - (D) (D) - - Other animals and other animal : products (see text) ......................farms: 1,766 17 83 218 28 51 - $1,000: 67,309 (D) 14 (D) 87 591 - Sales of $50,000 or more ................farms: 150 2 - 6 - 2 - $1,000: 58,094 (D) - (D) - (D) - : Value of- : Government payments .........................farms: 7,593 1,544 278 1,881 36 1,887 - $1,000: 146,919 50,739 6,768 22,402 146 23,851 - : Landlord's share of total : sales (see text) ...........................farms: 2,147 443 125 1,149 23 247 - $1,000: 266,275 43,851 35,813 143,690 (D) 29,268 - : Agricultural products sold directly to : individuals for human : consumption (see text) .....................farms: 8,588 49 1,971 3,647 300 256 - $1,000: 169,915 1,097 55,040 84,279 4,012 2,000 - : FARM PRODUCTION EXPENSES : : Total farm production expenses 1/ .............farms: 77,857 2,296 4,191 35,945 3,390 5,815 - $1,000: 35,455,667 979,087 5,293,168 13,270,686 2,053,866 2,388,296 - Average per farm ........................dollars: 455,395 426,432 1,262,985 369,194 605,860 410,713 - ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 68. Summary by North American Industry Classification System: 2012 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : Other crop farming - con. : : : : : : : : (1119) : : : : : : : :-------------------------------: : : : : : : : : Sugarcane : : : : : : : : : farming, hay : : : : : : : Animal : : 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 - Con. : : Sales of $50,000 or more ..............farms: - 8 - - 1 - - - - $1,000: - 7,679 - - (D) - - - - Nursery, greenhouse, floriculture, : and sod (see text) .......................farms: - 139 12 - 2 3 10 8 17 $1,000: - 7,860 40 - (D) 1 35 11 (D) Sales of $50,000 or more ................farms: - 18 - - 2 - - - - $1,000: - (D) - - (D) - - - - Cut Christmas trees and : short-rotation woody crops ...............farms: - 8 2 - - - - - 2 $1,000: - (D) (D) - - - - - (D) Sales of $50,000 or more ................farms: - - - - - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - - - - - Cut Christmas trees .....................farms: - 8 2 - - - - - 2 $1,000: - (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 (see text) ............farms: 76 3,133 656 13 98 6 19 89 92 $1,000: 45,665 1,062,322 32,866 411 40,139 19 647 5,119 987 Sales of $50,000 or more ................farms: 66 1,316 129 2 74 - 3 9 6 $1,000: 45,389 1,039,285 27,872 (D) 39,610 - (D) 4,608 500 Maple syrup (see text) ..................farms: - - - - - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - - - - - Sales of $50,000 or more ..............farms: - - - - - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - - - - - : Cattle and calves .........................farms: 4 408 8,898 156 1,431 47 39 212 446 $1,000: (D) (D) 1,384,322 1,000,614 763,863 1,204 1,748 3,240 3,512 Sales of $50,000 or more ................farms: 1 103 1,952 101 1,196 2 3 7 9 $1,000: (D) (D) 1,314,066 999,336 758,659 (D) 1,593 2,385 1,595 Milk from cows (see text) .................farms: - 3 42 - 1,499 - - - 1 $1,000: - (D) 46,934 - 6,883,658 - - - (D) Sales of $50,000 or more ................farms: - 3 28 - 1,482 - - - 1 $1,000: - (D) 46,606 - 6,883,414 - - - (D) Hogs and pigs .............................farms: - 32 242 2 6 433 34 135 109 $1,000: - 389 1,661 (D) 41 44,491 127 172 434 Sales of $50,000 or more ................farms: - 5 2 - - 26 - - 1 $1,000: - 299 (D) - - 43,125 - - (D) Sheep, goats, wool, mohair, and : milk (see text) ..........................farms: 1 150 551 12 31 81 109 2,629 302 $1,000: (D) (D) 5,901 27 1,288 2,565 161 79,833 1,090 Sales of $50,000 or more ................farms: - 12 16 - 9 2 - 140 2 $1,000: - 8,854 4,144 - 1,149 (D) - 67,992 (D) Horses, ponies, mules, burros, and : donkeys ..................................farms: - 51 411 2 10 - 9 59 2,331 $1,000: - 1,274 2,492 (D) 150 - 24 125 56,962 Sales of $50,000 or more ................farms: - 4 4 - - - - - 202 $1,000: - 1,062 (D) - - - - - 34,137 Poultry and eggs ..........................farms: - 139 449 7 15 84 1,164 479 345 $1,000: - (D) 2,260 (D) (D) 69 1,650,776 170 (D) Sales of $50,000 or more ................farms: - 2 6 - 1 - 230 - 1 $1,000: - (D) 1,963 - (D) - 1,648,037 - (D) Aquaculture ...............................farms: - 7 7 - - - 3 2 182 $1,000: - (Z) (D) - - - 1 (D) 102,701 Sales of $50,000 or more ................farms: - - - - - - - - 117 $1,000: - - - - - - - - (D) Other animals and other animal : products (see text) ......................farms: - 51 95 - 3 3 55 79 1,134 $1,000: - 591 223 - (D) 1 (D) (D) 54,194 Sales of $50,000 or more ................farms: - 2 - - 1 - - - 139 $1,000: - (D) - - (D) - - - 45,816 : Value of- : Government payments .........................farms: 147 1,740 641 15 1,041 6 30 102 132 $1,000: 3,071 20,779 8,042 131 32,633 66 298 961 882 : Landlord's share of total : sales (see text) ...........................farms: 16 231 97 2 16 10 3 17 15 $1,000: 1,962 27,306 1,633 (D) (D) 5 92 84 80 : Agricultural products sold directly to : individuals for human : consumption (see text) .....................farms: - 256 831 19 19 168 359 628 341 $1,000: - 2,000 3,470 322 5,748 2,306 5,214 3,006 3,421 : FARM PRODUCTION EXPENSES : : Total farm production expenses 1/ .............farms: 194 5,621 11,767 156 1,594 446 1,202 3,246 7,809 $1,000: 457,046 1,931,250 1,617,283 1,000,314 6,683,443 40,675 1,448,191 115,913 564,744 Average per farm ........................dollars: 2,355,905 343,578 137,442 6,412,272 4,192,875 91,199 1,204,818 35,710 72,320 --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 68. Summary by North American Industry Classification System: 2012 (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. : : Fertilizer, lime, and soil : conditioners purchased .....................farms: 38,958 2,072 3,584 24,295 2,274 2,631 - $1,000: 1,806,062 125,494 511,839 726,151 100,188 269,749 - Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 .................................: 24,634 383 2,456 15,966 1,597 1,255 - $5,000 to $24,999 ............................: 7,312 602 350 4,947 325 534 - $25,000 to $49,999 ...........................: 2,319 376 113 1,342 120 158 - $50,000 or more ..............................: 4,693 711 665 2,040 232 684 - : Chemicals purchased .........................farms: 44,536 2,145 3,095 28,092 2,333 2,785 - $1,000: 2,190,674 115,367 512,001 1,159,332 92,463 213,695 - Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 .................................: 28,059 603 2,126 16,863 1,777 1,555 - $5,000 to $24,999 ............................: 8,444 519 254 6,418 289 485 - $25,000 to $49,999 ...........................: 2,676 341 114 1,792 93 178 - $50,000 or more ..............................: 5,357 682 601 3,019 174 567 - : Seeds, plants, vines, and : trees purchased ............................farms: 27,527 2,062 3,481 13,108 2,009 2,775 - $1,000: 1,317,934 51,571 456,870 359,380 273,965 123,564 - Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $999 ...................................: 11,381 174 1,713 5,862 633 737 - $1,000 to $4,999 .............................: 6,676 387 699 3,577 464 772 - $5,000 to $24,999 ............................: 5,157 936 380 2,255 367 634 - $25,000 to $49,999 ...........................: 1,473 307 97 536 131 204 - $50,000 or more ..............................: 2,840 258 592 878 414 428 - : Livestock and poultry purchased or : leased .....................................farms: 12,585 178 415 1,254 111 496 - $1,000: 1,254,286 3,000 5,282 32,002 245 9,168 - Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 .................................: 7,903 95 378 862 102 330 - $5,000 to $24,999 ............................: 2,950 66 23 246 8 111 - $25,000 to $99,999 ...........................: 995 11 5 86 1 36 - $100,000 to $249,999 .........................: 335 3 4 34 - 9 - $250,000 or more .............................: 402 3 5 26 - 10 - : Breeding livestock purchased or : leased ...................................farms: 6,850 98 84 355 32 282 - $1,000: 255,730 618 (D) 2,116 (D) 3,436 - Other livestock and poultry : purchased or leased (see text) ...........farms: 7,673 118 386 1,012 93 285 - $1,000: 998,556 2,382 (D) 29,887 (D) 5,731 - : Feed purchased ..............................farms: 30,014 269 860 3,039 277 1,012 - $1,000: 6,069,374 12,633 7,323 30,287 677 20,663 - Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 .................................: 16,191 147 739 2,188 245 671 - $5,000 to $24,999 ............................: 9,417 85 98 719 25 244 - $25,000 to $99,999 ...........................: 2,042 13 19 93 7 56 - $100,000 to $249,999 .........................: 596 11 1 15 - 23 - $250,000 or more .............................: 1,768 13 3 24 - 18 - : Gasoline, fuels, and oils purchased .........farms: 70,844 2,152 3,906 31,898 3,070 5,209 - $1,000: 1,552,328 78,984 317,341 547,808 89,143 202,625 - Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 .................................: 51,974 722 2,655 23,166 2,072 3,546 - $5,000 to $24,999 ............................: 11,182 748 486 5,566 566 764 - $25,000 to $49,999 ...........................: 2,745 268 140 1,317 163 244 - $50,000 or more ..............................: 4,943 414 625 1,849 269 655 - : Utilities ...................................farms: 60,680 2,008 3,398 30,600 2,797 4,174 - $1,000: 1,684,343 49,764 246,904 831,457 92,337 180,978 - Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $999 ...................................: 16,704 191 1,193 6,542 704 1,169 - $1,000 to $4,999 .............................: 23,136 513 1,023 12,272 941 1,458 - $5,000 to $24,999 ............................: 12,275 743 481 7,528 637 717 - $25,000 to $49,999 ...........................: 3,178 299 139 1,776 184 247 - $50,000 or more ..............................: 5,387 262 562 2,482 331 583 - : Supplies, repairs, and maintenance : costs ......................................farms: 63,106 2,028 3,505 30,051 2,794 4,414 - $1,000: 2,042,434 76,150 327,662 855,392 117,485 197,633 - Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 .................................: 41,934 688 2,258 18,987 1,836 2,755 - $5,000 to $24,999 ............................: 12,194 657 511 6,836 534 784 - $25,000 to $49,999 ...........................: 3,091 266 130 1,694 149 252 - $50,000 or more ..............................: 5,887 417 606 2,534 275 623 - : Hired farm labor ............................farms: 33,955 1,168 2,072 18,503 2,088 2,143 - $1,000: 5,877,973 100,468 901,494 2,702,080 859,896 346,948 - Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 .................................: 9,680 179 415 5,638 414 426 - $5,000 to $24,999 ............................: 8,646 300 433 5,060 451 524 - $25,000 to $99,999 ...........................: 8,011 404 430 4,363 514 604 - $100,000 to $249,999 .........................: 3,496 200 246 1,681 271 270 - $250,000 or more .............................: 4,122 85 548 1,761 438 319 - ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 68. Summary by North American Industry Classification System: 2012 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : Other crop farming - con. : : : : : : : : (1119) : : : : : : : :-------------------------------: : : : : : : : : Sugarcane : : : : : : : : : farming, hay : : : : : : : Animal : : 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. : : Fertilizer, lime, and soil : conditioners purchased .....................farms: 191 2,440 1,755 37 952 57 224 393 684 $1,000: 51,706 218,043 10,772 195 58,991 76 840 906 861 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 .................................: 32 1,223 1,494 26 183 56 202 376 640 $5,000 to $24,999 ............................: 31 503 172 9 304 - 13 12 44 $25,000 to $49,999 ...........................: 14 144 54 2 148 - 6 - - $50,000 or more ..............................: 114 570 35 - 317 1 3 5 - : Chemicals purchased .........................farms: 193 2,592 2,730 50 962 67 286 613 1,378 $1,000: 56,998 156,696 5,920 85 88,542 39 1,305 712 1,212 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 .................................: 33 1,522 2,566 47 260 66 260 599 1,337 $5,000 to $24,999 ............................: 35 450 127 3 286 1 17 6 39 $25,000 to $49,999 ...........................: 25 153 18 - 131 - 3 4 2 $50,000 or more ..............................: 100 467 19 - 285 - 6 4 - : Seeds, plants, vines, and : trees purchased ............................farms: 174 2,601 1,525 39 887 46 266 516 813 $1,000: 27,665 95,899 4,864 306 44,877 37 449 1,217 833 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $999 ...................................: 6 731 934 11 32 41 209 395 640 $1,000 to $4,999 .............................: 15 757 386 19 93 4 48 91 136 $5,000 to $24,999 ............................: 47 587 175 7 337 1 7 22 36 $25,000 to $49,999 ...........................: 34 170 17 1 174 - 1 4 1 $50,000 or more ..............................: 72 356 13 1 251 - 1 4 - : Livestock and poultry purchased or : leased .....................................farms: 1 495 4,692 112 742 282 686 1,536 2,081 $1,000: (D) (D) 485,458 456,285 76,035 4,720 145,646 17,406 19,038 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 .................................: - 330 2,691 14 148 233 477 1,324 1,249 $5,000 to $24,999 ............................: 1 110 1,348 34 157 39 63 155 700 $25,000 to $99,999 ...........................: - 36 358 27 278 1 50 38 104 $100,000 to $249,999 .........................: - 9 106 12 93 6 38 10 20 $250,000 or more .............................: - 10 189 25 66 3 58 9 8 : Breeding livestock purchased or : leased ...................................farms: 1 281 2,978 50 698 117 158 1,034 964 $1,000: (D) (D) 176,970 909 57,378 229 1,037 4,475 7,214 Other livestock and poultry : purchased or leased (see text) ...........farms: - 285 2,432 82 114 234 610 879 1,428 $1,000: - 5,731 308,487 455,377 18,657 4,491 144,610 12,931 11,825 : Feed purchased ..............................farms: 7 1,005 10,994 155 1,593 437 1,152 3,050 7,176 $1,000: (D) (D) 475,217 441,146 3,947,009 15,676 959,289 29,957 129,497 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 .................................: 4 667 6,207 38 82 297 645 2,096 2,836 $5,000 to $24,999 ............................: 2 242 3,422 40 42 121 279 811 3,531 $25,000 to $99,999 ...........................: 1 55 955 30 60 8 60 93 648 $100,000 to $249,999 .........................: - 23 241 24 99 6 41 29 106 $250,000 or more .............................: - 18 169 23 1,310 5 127 21 55 : Gasoline, fuels, and oils purchased .........farms: 188 5,021 11,083 147 1,572 406 1,083 2,942 7,376 $1,000: 52,007 150,618 54,057 7,685 170,888 987 48,267 7,579 26,964 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 .................................: 25 3,521 9,132 84 153 384 883 2,709 6,468 $5,000 to $24,999 ............................: 35 729 1,633 36 325 15 125 179 739 $25,000 to $49,999 ...........................: 30 214 170 11 290 4 25 27 86 $50,000 or more ..............................: 98 557 148 16 804 3 50 27 83 : Utilities ...................................farms: 179 3,995 7,711 119 1,580 300 832 1,920 5,241 $1,000: 33,683 147,295 36,242 5,956 182,677 886 27,728 4,027 25,388 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $999 ...................................: 5 1,164 3,492 21 102 135 317 1,119 1,719 $1,000 to $4,999 .............................: 26 1,432 2,954 52 33 147 317 668 2,758 $5,000 to $24,999 ............................: 38 679 1,067 22 241 16 99 115 609 $25,000 to $49,999 ...........................: 28 219 109 7 276 - 44 14 83 $50,000 or more ..............................: 82 501 89 17 928 2 55 4 72 : Supplies, repairs, and maintenance : costs ......................................farms: 175 4,239 9,066 135 1,567 335 919 2,285 6,007 $1,000: 49,041 148,593 62,869 9,264 290,465 1,324 63,154 6,954 34,083 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 .................................: 23 2,732 7,205 62 116 305 711 2,073 4,938 $5,000 to $24,999 ............................: 39 745 1,429 45 227 24 111 168 868 $25,000 to $49,999 ...........................: 26 226 242 8 212 1 35 22 80 $50,000 or more ..............................: 87 536 190 20 1,012 5 62 22 121 : Hired farm labor ............................farms: 152 1,991 2,827 60 1,449 112 427 632 2,474 $1,000: 58,323 288,626 110,067 30,189 585,580 2,383 86,165 11,414 141,289 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 .................................: 3 423 1,408 18 34 64 138 348 598 $5,000 to $24,999 ............................: 11 513 630 14 52 39 124 162 857 $25,000 to $99,999 ...........................: 53 551 576 11 253 3 63 91 699 $100,000 to $249,999 .........................: 50 220 151 3 380 2 46 24 222 $250,000 or more .............................: 35 284 62 14 730 4 56 7 98 --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 68. Summary by North American Industry Classification System: 2012 (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. : : Contract labor ..............................farms: 25,067 528 1,072 18,941 532 1,306 - $1,000: 3,378,012 19,547 715,496 2,341,920 70,439 121,942 - Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $999 ...................................: 2,190 19 82 1,468 86 102 - $1,000 to $4,999 .............................: 5,812 106 131 4,275 139 285 - $5,000 to $24,999 ............................: 7,825 203 200 6,112 146 411 - $25,000 to $49,999 ...........................: 2,941 91 92 2,323 47 127 - $50,000 or more ..............................: 6,299 109 567 4,763 114 381 - : Customwork and custom hauling ...............farms: 19,644 1,520 667 10,570 199 2,000 - $1,000: 1,258,384 79,900 185,763 536,543 10,752 159,331 - Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $999 ...................................: 3,589 73 89 1,588 78 221 - $1,000 to $4,999 .............................: 4,990 231 107 2,834 31 572 - $5,000 to $24,999 ............................: 5,384 459 101 3,484 57 544 - $25,000 to $49,999 ...........................: 1,859 282 68 1,024 11 202 - $50,000 or more ..............................: 3,822 475 302 1,640 22 461 - : Cash rent for land, buildings, : and grazing fees ...........................farms: 15,007 1,186 1,600 3,437 951 1,595 - $1,000: 1,511,985 105,692 439,721 485,306 54,764 189,779 - Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 .................................: 5,241 115 553 792 359 462 - $5,000 to $9,999 .............................: 1,649 92 156 423 159 152 - $10,000 to $24,999 ...........................: 2,878 230 210 806 215 259 - $25,000 or more ..............................: 5,239 749 681 1,416 218 722 - : Rent and lease expenses for machinery, : equipment, and farm share of vehicles ......farms: 7,895 584 832 3,935 367 752 - $1,000: 400,054 21,353 87,295 185,434 30,019 37,476 - Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $999 ...................................: 1,914 43 118 1,076 94 111 - $1,000 to $4,999 .............................: 2,150 108 154 1,126 100 225 - $5,000 to $24,999 ............................: 1,990 215 208 978 77 189 - $25,000 to $49,999 ...........................: 567 89 72 234 30 80 - $50,000 or more ..............................: 1,274 129 280 521 66 147 - : Interest expense ............................farms: 26,459 1,037 1,206 12,674 1,045 2,120 - $1,000: 1,217,781 24,366 98,750 668,052 39,515 83,454 - Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 .................................: 8,135 260 323 3,456 421 687 - $5,000 to $24,999 ............................: 11,048 505 447 5,331 378 862 - $25,000 to $99,999 ...........................: 5,129 228 227 2,764 170 419 - $100,000 or more .............................: 2,147 44 209 1,123 76 152 - : Secured by real estate ....................farms: 20,307 540 697 10,503 663 1,534 - $1,000: 941,302 13,139 56,582 562,300 27,891 64,188 - Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $999 .................................: 1,166 13 31 480 64 134 - $1,000 to $4,999 ...........................: 4,137 93 93 1,974 140 279 - $5,000 to $24,999 ..........................: 9,276 285 327 4,738 268 686 - $25,000 to $49,999 .........................: 2,690 94 79 1,551 87 226 - $50,000 or more ............................: 3,038 55 167 1,760 104 209 - : Not secured by real estate ................farms: 13,273 736 801 5,537 635 1,199 - $1,000: 276,479 11,226 42,169 105,751 11,625 19,266 - Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $999 .................................: 2,988 74 123 1,405 179 226 - $1,000 to $4,999 ...........................: 4,701 221 215 1,862 225 440 - $5,000 to $24,999 ..........................: 3,514 327 189 1,485 164 369 - $25,000 to $49,999 .........................: 835 64 83 360 28 68 - $50,000 or more ............................: 1,235 50 191 425 39 96 - : Property taxes paid .........................farms: 71,398 1,756 3,098 34,454 2,763 5,305 - $1,000: 827,587 24,143 57,678 450,957 34,588 64,719 - Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 .................................: 45,137 742 2,018 19,338 1,871 3,439 - $5,000 to $9,999 .............................: 12,923 410 443 7,236 444 854 - $10,000 to $24,999 ...........................: 7,776 405 286 4,723 270 575 - $25,000 or more ..............................: 5,562 199 351 3,157 178 437 - : All other production : expenses (see text) ........................farms: 43,111 1,725 2,086 17,639 1,827 2,833 - $1,000: 3,066,456 90,655 421,750 1,358,587 187,391 166,571 - Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 .................................: 22,864 327 1,047 7,802 840 1,465 - $5,000 to $24,999 ............................: 10,967 516 353 5,458 485 755 - $25,000 to $49,999 ...........................: 2,928 345 160 1,448 98 207 - $50,000 to $99,999 ...........................: 2,313 276 125 1,159 141 149 - $100,000 or more .............................: 4,039 261 401 1,772 263 257 - : Production expenses paid by : landlords 1/ .................................farms: 1,305 178 100 510 68 112 - $1,000: 54,690 6,002 12,976 23,285 2,706 4,055 - : Depreciation expenses claimed .................farms: 39,342 1,649 1,890 20,237 1,727 2,820 - $1,000: 2,256,892 66,914 222,234 1,144,023 104,506 182,903 - ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 68. Summary by North American Industry Classification System: 2012 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : Other crop farming - con. : : : : : : : : (1119) : : : : : : : :-------------------------------: : : : : : : : : Sugarcane : : : : : : : : : farming, hay : : : : : : : Animal : : 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. : : Contract labor ..............................farms: 108 1,198 843 41 412 10 127 220 1,035 $1,000: 25,309 96,633 11,925 4,463 50,477 87 24,958 2,085 14,673 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $999 ...................................: 4 98 190 10 6 3 31 94 99 $1,000 to $4,999 .............................: 7 278 359 8 38 2 29 60 380 $5,000 to $24,999 ............................: 23 388 202 8 85 4 29 42 383 $25,000 to $49,999 ...........................: 8 119 47 2 61 1 11 12 127 $50,000 or more ..............................: 66 315 45 13 222 - 27 12 46 : Customwork and custom hauling ...............farms: 127 1,873 2,029 64 1,158 36 129 331 941 $1,000: 15,926 143,405 28,656 5,175 216,730 (D) 27,353 (D) 4,962 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $999 ...................................: 6 215 895 21 9 23 28 185 379 $1,000 to $4,999 .............................: 6 566 634 12 63 5 29 74 398 $5,000 to $24,999 ............................: 30 514 341 16 170 5 37 43 127 $25,000 to $49,999 ...........................: 15 187 85 5 132 2 14 14 20 $50,000 or more ..............................: 70 391 74 10 784 1 21 15 17 : Cash rent for land, buildings, : and grazing fees ...........................farms: 133 1,462 3,627 61 891 64 136 434 1,025 $1,000: 18,460 171,319 113,431 5,936 88,326 763 6,951 5,722 15,595 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 .................................: 8 454 1,871 13 49 38 65 308 616 $5,000 to $9,999 .............................: 10 142 441 6 50 4 17 46 103 $10,000 to $24,999 ...........................: 14 245 654 10 216 14 30 39 195 $25,000 or more ..............................: 101 621 661 32 576 8 24 41 111 : Rent and lease expenses for machinery, : equipment, and farm share of vehicles ......farms: 90 662 497 25 310 29 71 134 359 $1,000: 6,275 31,200 5,304 (D) 18,097 62 9,409 (D) 2,994 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $999 ...................................: 4 107 187 4 33 5 24 77 142 $1,000 to $4,999 .............................: 6 219 170 9 49 22 16 34 137 $5,000 to $24,999 ............................: 27 162 119 7 106 2 14 15 60 $25,000 to $49,999 ...........................: 22 58 6 1 39 - 8 6 2 $50,000 or more ..............................: 31 116 15 4 83 - 9 2 18 : Interest expense ............................farms: 119 2,001 3,249 44 1,195 95 380 643 2,771 $1,000: 15,720 67,734 55,559 9,371 187,909 1,595 6,786 7,555 34,869 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 .................................: 13 674 1,393 10 93 30 131 233 1,098 $5,000 to $24,999 ............................: 35 827 1,416 12 194 44 183 346 1,330 $25,000 to $99,999 ...........................: 44 375 382 16 454 21 61 61 326 $100,000 or more .............................: 27 125 58 6 454 - 5 3 17 : Secured by real estate ....................farms: 80 1,454 2,484 29 848 73 309 534 2,093 $1,000: 12,593 51,595 43,615 3,997 126,991 1,303 5,594 6,172 29,532 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $999 .................................: - 134 215 4 15 5 7 34 164 $1,000 to $4,999 ...........................: 8 271 745 2 52 14 80 123 542 $5,000 to $24,999 ..........................: 20 666 1,197 4 155 34 163 335 1,084 $25,000 to $49,999 .........................: 22 204 193 11 136 17 38 33 225 $50,000 or more ............................: 30 179 134 8 490 3 21 9 78 : Not secured by real estate ................farms: 81 1,118 1,638 32 883 55 150 261 1,346 $1,000: 3,127 16,140 11,945 5,374 60,918 292 1,192 1,383 5,337 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $999 .................................: 2 224 483 6 40 5 52 126 269 $1,000 to $4,999 ...........................: 19 421 691 6 80 34 63 90 774 $5,000 to $24,999 ..........................: 32 337 386 11 220 15 29 36 283 $25,000 to $49,999 .........................: 12 56 44 - 164 1 2 4 17 $50,000 or more ............................: 16 80 34 9 379 - 4 5 3 : Property taxes paid .........................farms: 166 5,139 10,745 150 1,423 412 1,136 2,968 7,188 $1,000: 10,777 53,942 57,830 2,372 75,874 949 9,688 10,207 38,581 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 .................................: 37 3,402 8,340 76 315 374 859 2,477 5,288 $5,000 to $9,999 .............................: 27 827 1,470 32 168 29 160 382 1,295 $10,000 to $24,999 ...........................: 38 537 683 26 265 7 68 72 396 $25,000 or more ..............................: 64 373 252 16 675 2 49 37 209 : All other production : expenses (see text) ........................farms: 159 2,674 7,141 110 1,550 248 649 1,997 5,306 $1,000: 35,060 131,512 99,113 (D) 600,967 (D) 30,203 6,910 73,905 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 .................................: 38 1,427 5,338 52 135 195 440 1,725 3,498 $5,000 to $24,999 ............................: 37 718 1,330 28 228 50 109 222 1,433 $25,000 to $49,999 ...........................: 29 178 241 11 169 - 32 23 194 $50,000 to $99,999 ...........................: 19 130 134 6 199 1 24 23 76 $100,000 or more .............................: 36 221 98 13 819 2 44 4 105 : Production expenses paid by : landlords 1/ .................................farms: 19 93 180 - 82 4 11 17 43 $1,000: 588 3,467 2,324 - 2,447 1 66 431 397 : Depreciation expenses claimed .................farms: 163 2,657 4,787 93 1,491 144 438 957 3,109 $1,000: 44,306 138,596 85,981 17,352 322,237 2,338 57,987 9,317 41,099 --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 68. Summary by North American Industry Classification System: 2012 (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) ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- NET CASH FARM INCOME : (SEE TEXT) : : Net cash farm income of operations ............farms: 77,857 2,296 4,191 35,945 3,390 5,815 - $1,000: 8,523,285 270,838 1,245,314 4,676,790 502,077 508,350 - Average per farm ........................dollars: 109,474 117,961 297,140 130,110 148,105 87,420 - : Farms with net gains 2/ ....................number: 36,283 1,537 2,248 21,950 1,939 2,243 - Average net gain ......................dollars: 314,056 235,402 738,737 257,866 351,309 327,624 - : Gain of- : Less than $1,000 .............................: 1,602 14 166 799 83 112 - $1,000 to $4,999 .............................: 4,785 59 455 2,612 315 334 - $5,000 to $9,999 .............................: 3,597 75 263 2,147 228 211 - $10,000 to $24,999 ...........................: 5,723 150 281 3,558 328 384 - $25,000 to $49,999 ...........................: 4,813 223 258 3,252 236 174 - $50,000 or more ..............................: 15,763 1,016 825 9,582 749 1,028 - : Farms with net losses ......................number: 41,574 759 1,943 13,995 1,451 3,572 - Average net loss ......................dollars: 69,072 119,861 213,776 70,266 123,439 63,413 - : Loss of- : Less than $1,000 .............................: 1,982 28 154 861 122 155 - $1,000 to $4,999 .............................: 8,924 91 428 3,125 328 826 - $5,000 to $9,999 .............................: 7,815 93 371 2,370 258 612 - $10,000 to $24,999 ...........................: 10,269 119 390 3,065 263 850 - $25,000 to $49,999 ...........................: 5,478 100 162 1,885 131 399 - $50,000 or more ..............................: 7,106 328 438 2,689 349 730 - : Net cash farm income of operators .............farms: 77,857 2,296 4,191 35,945 3,390 5,815 - $1,000: 8,177,199 232,194 1,211,944 4,556,359 494,482 483,164 - Average per farm ........................dollars: 105,028 101,130 289,178 126,759 145,865 83,089 - : Operators reporting net gains 2/ ............farms: 36,052 1,484 2,239 21,868 1,936 2,220 - Average net gain ......................dollars: 308,890 222,770 730,387 254,178 347,850 321,498 - : Gain of- : Less than $1,000 .............................: 1,605 16 172 799 82 110 - $1,000 to $4,999 .............................: 4,774 58 445 2,626 315 329 - $5,000 to $9,999 .............................: 3,610 84 268 2,149 228 203 - $10,000 to $24,999 ...........................: 5,758 150 283 3,585 323 384 - $25,000 to $49,999 ...........................: 4,811 222 255 3,247 237 179 - $50,000 or more ..............................: 15,494 954 816 9,462 751 1,015 - : Operators reporting net losses ..............farms: 41,805 812 1,952 14,077 1,454 3,595 - Average net loss ......................dollars: 70,779 121,179 216,902 71,180 123,078 64,134 - : Loss of- : Less than $1,000 .............................: 2,006 22 160 872 125 157 - $1,000 to $4,999 .............................: 8,944 96 422 3,131 326 833 - $5,000 to $9,999 .............................: 7,798 91 369 2,361 259 609 - $10,000 to $24,999 ...........................: 10,315 132 392 3,069 264 856 - $25,000 to $49,999 ...........................: 5,518 112 162 1,907 130 400 - $50,000 or more ..............................: 7,224 359 447 2,737 350 740 - : COMMODITY CREDIT : CORPORATION LOANS : (SEE TEXT) : : Total .........................................farms: 521 357 25 27 - 95 - $1,000: 122,036 68,076 10,274 7,219 - 34,928 - : INCOME FROM FARM-RELATED : SOURCES : : Total income from farm-related sources, gross : before taxes and expenses (see text) .........farms: 23,685 1,171 1,274 10,929 777 2,021 - $1,000: 1,204,560 72,870 125,110 507,195 42,296 120,961 - Customwork and other agricultural : services ...................................farms: 5,255 404 410 2,902 266 588 - $1,000: 383,434 27,801 66,198 183,189 14,540 57,450 - : Gross cash rent or share payments ...........farms: 6,000 427 318 2,062 155 788 - $1,000: 256,997 27,665 33,261 96,190 14,827 35,130 - Sales of forest products, excluding : Christmas trees, short rotation woody : crops, and maple products ..................farms: 862 4 106 395 44 90 - $1,000: 27,613 (D) 519 3,924 2,996 623 - Agri-tourism and recreational services : (see text) .................................farms: 1,699 41 252 437 80 108 - $1,000: 64,520 715 4,240 36,996 2,310 1,166 - Patronage dividends and refunds : from cooperatives ..........................farms: 7,469 535 210 4,530 97 553 - $1,000: 171,066 9,291 4,463 91,721 321 11,705 - Crop and livestock insurance : payments received ..........................farms: 1,568 67 72 1,107 10 85 - $1,000: 62,457 1,920 5,799 44,554 (D) 4,153 - Amount from state and local government : agricultural program payments ..............farms: 343 16 52 163 6 34 - $1,000: 4,218 (D) 346 1,263 (D) 1,128 - Other farm-related income : sources (see text) .........................farms: 5,192 138 249 1,337 146 305 - $1,000: 234,255 5,196 10,283 49,357 7,189 9,606 - ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 68. Summary by North American Industry Classification System: 2012 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : Other crop farming - con. : : : : : : : : (1119) : : : : : : : :-------------------------------: : : : : : : : : Sugarcane : : : : : : : : : farming, hay : : : : : : : Animal : : 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) --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- NET CASH FARM INCOME : (SEE TEXT) : : Net cash farm income of operations ............farms: 194 5,621 11,767 156 1,594 446 1,202 3,246 7,809 $1,000: 111,847 396,503 -8,925 2,950 1,307,747 8,816 227,562 -14,957 -203,278 Average per farm ........................dollars: 576,533 70,540 -758 18,912 820,419 19,767 189,319 -4,608 -26,031 : Farms with net gains 2/ ....................number: 132 2,111 2,958 82 1,193 32 308 487 1,306 Average net gain ......................dollars: 1,012,615 284,792 102,805 371,706 1,262,261 472,724 1,066,811 51,269 66,667 : Gain of- : Less than $1,000 .............................: 1 111 239 2 6 2 21 72 86 $1,000 to $4,999 .............................: 8 326 621 13 13 2 45 124 192 $5,000 to $9,999 .............................: 10 201 370 7 8 4 22 95 167 $10,000 to $24,999 ...........................: 1 383 534 9 28 12 30 84 325 $25,000 to $49,999 ...........................: 4 170 342 6 30 4 36 40 212 $50,000 or more ..............................: 108 920 852 45 1,108 8 154 72 324 : Farms with net losses ......................number: 62 3,510 8,809 74 401 414 894 2,759 6,503 Average net loss ......................dollars: 351,900 58,317 35,534 372,022 494,089 15,244 112,993 14,471 44,648 : Loss of- : Less than $1,000 .............................: - 155 388 2 - 12 32 105 123 $1,000 to $4,999 .............................: 4 822 2,187 4 13 100 211 801 810 $5,000 to $9,999 .............................: - 612 2,026 17 36 106 206 722 998 $10,000 to $24,999 ...........................: 8 842 2,426 8 52 128 219 792 1,957 $25,000 to $49,999 ...........................: 3 396 1,034 10 31 46 129 238 1,313 $50,000 or more ..............................: 47 683 748 33 269 22 97 101 1,302 : Net cash farm income of operators .............farms: 194 5,621 11,767 156 1,594 446 1,202 3,246 7,809 $1,000: 110,473 372,690 -11,087 -70,165 1,309,373 8,099 184,026 -17,539 -203,651 Average per farm ........................dollars: 569,450 66,303 -942 -449,777 821,439 18,160 153,100 -5,403 -26,079 : Operators reporting net gains 2/ ............farms: 132 2,088 2,923 67 1,193 32 302 482 1,306 Average net gain ......................dollars: 1,003,024 278,413 96,935 313,016 1,262,954 450,436 956,753 48,057 66,697 : Gain of- : Less than $1,000 .............................: 1 109 237 2 6 2 21 72 86 $1,000 to $4,999 .............................: 8 321 618 13 13 2 43 120 192 $5,000 to $9,999 .............................: 10 193 373 7 8 4 23 96 167 $10,000 to $24,999 ...........................: 1 383 537 9 30 12 35 84 326 $25,000 to $49,999 ...........................: 4 175 339 6 27 4 44 40 211 $50,000 or more ..............................: 108 907 819 30 1,109 8 136 70 324 : Operators reporting net losses ..............farms: 62 3,533 8,844 89 401 414 900 2,764 6,503 Average net loss ......................dollars: 353,642 59,054 33,291 1,024,013 492,098 15,252 116,570 14,726 44,711 : Loss of- : Less than $1,000 .............................: - 157 392 2 - 12 34 107 123 $1,000 to $4,999 .............................: 4 829 2,196 4 13 100 211 802 810 $5,000 to $9,999 .............................: - 609 2,028 18 36 103 207 718 999 $10,000 to $24,999 ...........................: 7 849 2,434 7 55 131 220 796 1,959 $25,000 to $49,999 ...........................: 2 398 1,036 16 30 46 129 240 1,310 $50,000 or more ..............................: 49 691 758 42 267 22 99 101 1,302 : COMMODITY CREDIT : CORPORATION LOANS : (SEE TEXT) : : Total .........................................farms: 39 56 - - 8 - - 4 5 $1,000: 11,074 23,853 - - 1,385 - - (D) (D) : INCOME FROM FARM-RELATED : SOURCES : : Total income from farm-related sources, gross : before taxes and expenses (see text) .........farms: 114 1,907 2,751 50 981 65 281 718 2,667 $1,000: 13,502 107,459 98,493 1,618 83,125 708 8,020 10,292 133,873 Customwork and other agricultural : services ...................................farms: 50 538 318 2 161 5 39 64 96 $1,000: 7,043 50,407 16,075 (D) 13,327 40 (D) 1,271 2,896 : Gross cash rent or share payments ...........farms: 24 764 1,401 22 137 22 71 203 394 $1,000: 1,610 33,520 27,459 509 11,049 60 1,249 3,640 5,958 Sales of forest products, excluding : Christmas trees, short rotation woody : crops, and maple products ..................farms: - 90 126 - 7 - 6 29 55 $1,000: - 623 17,891 - 181 - (D) 106 1,350 Agri-tourism and recreational services : (see text) .................................farms: - 108 197 10 7 - 40 70 457 $1,000: - 1,166 5,985 95 46 - 1,314 347 11,305 Patronage dividends and refunds : from cooperatives ..........................farms: 80 473 489 17 790 - 69 72 107 $1,000: 3,936 7,769 1,445 41 49,524 - 2,091 145 319 Crop and livestock insurance : payments received ..........................farms: 4 81 104 - 32 2 10 32 47 $1,000: (D) (D) 1,899 - 452 (D) (D) 2,737 650 Amount from state and local government : agricultural program payments ..............farms: 2 32 24 2 25 - 1 12 8 $1,000: (D) (D) 197 (D) 658 - (D) 114 194 Other farm-related income : sources (see text) .........................farms: 12 293 556 5 153 36 106 322 1,839 $1,000: 543 9,063 27,541 (D) 7,887 (D) 2,731 1,931 111,202 --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 68. Summary by North American Industry Classification System: 2012 (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 : : Total cropland ................................farms: 57,731 2,296 4,191 35,945 3,390 5,643 - acres: 9,591,783 1,035,993 1,333,857 3,624,606 104,806 2,253,441 - Harvested cropland ..........................farms: 53,372 2,296 4,191 35,945 3,390 3,681 - acres: 8,007,461 906,450 1,193,744 3,300,597 90,176 1,737,863 - Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 49 acres ................................: 38,391 493 3,299 27,678 3,162 1,671 - 50 to 99 acres ...............................: 4,412 291 114 3,051 89 432 - 100 to 199 acres .............................: 3,567 402 117 2,152 46 407 - 200 to 499 acres .............................: 3,538 587 179 1,821 49 428 - 500 to 999 acres .............................: 1,780 320 175 688 29 310 - 1,000 to 1,999 acres .........................: 950 125 137 320 12 238 - 2,000 acres or more ..........................: 734 78 170 235 3 195 - : Cropland- : Other pasture and grazing land that could : have been used for crops without additional : improvements (see text) ..................farms: 2,879 38 106 526 69 238 - acres: 492,270 8,994 31,841 86,035 673 61,188 - On which all crops failed or : were abandoned ...........................farms: 2,425 68 178 930 104 773 - acres: 207,072 11,418 14,974 46,224 1,240 105,016 - Idle or used for cover crops or soil : improvement, but not harvested and not : pastured or grazed (see text) ............farms: 6,204 202 490 2,709 275 1,643 - acres: 674,022 65,266 66,176 151,601 11,891 270,642 - In cultivated summer fallow ...............farms: 1,477 160 200 422 62 400 - acres: 210,958 43,865 27,122 40,149 826 78,732 - : Total woodland ................................farms: 7,345 83 455 2,285 308 561 - acres: 1,575,520 9,750 20,330 250,873 64,370 142,354 - Woodland pastured ...........................farms: 3,519 33 137 530 80 207 - acres: 855,116 5,424 3,807 70,902 1,435 58,566 - Woodland not pastured .......................farms: 4,610 55 377 1,906 257 425 - acres: 720,404 4,326 16,523 179,971 62,935 83,788 - Permanent pasture and rangeland, : other than cropland and woodland : pastured (see text) ..........................farms: 21,886 268 570 2,822 237 1,333 - acres: 13,036,448 202,055 141,112 1,028,485 99,846 789,570 - : Land in farmsteads, homes, buildings, : livestock facilities, ponds, roads, : wasteland, etc. ..............................farms: 41,259 942 1,879 16,575 1,444 2,840 - acres: 1,365,250 44,845 62,154 513,782 37,395 185,067 - : Irrigated land ................................farms: 53,546 2,142 4,187 33,153 2,998 2,974 - acres: 7,861,964 813,828 1,150,099 3,219,500 71,860 1,537,093 - Harvested cropland ..........................farms: 47,972 2,138 4,187 33,101 2,988 2,822 - acres: 7,371,411 805,737 1,147,967 3,195,664 68,692 (D) - Pastureland and other land ..................farms: 7,884 117 201 976 98 440 - acres: 490,553 8,091 2,132 23,836 3,168 (D) - : CONSERVATION AND CROP INSURANCE : : Land enrolled in Conservation Reserve, : Wetlands Reserve, Farmable Wetlands, : or Conservation Reserve Enhancement : Programs .....................................farms: 470 28 2 22 1 308 - acres: 105,504 12,794 (D) 3,049 (D) 63,302 - : Land enrolled in crop insurance : programs (see text) ..........................farms: 13,813 1,208 521 10,253 192 890 - acres: 4,929,132 604,003 427,059 1,875,457 12,442 871,459 - : ORGANIC AGRICULTURE : : Total organic commodity sales (see text) ......farms: 3,008 83 625 1,757 134 119 - $1,000: 1,355,207 28,555 487,797 396,757 53,171 13,259 - : VALUE OF LAND AND BUILDINGS : : Estimated market value of land and : buildings ....................................farms: 77,857 2,296 4,191 35,945 3,390 5,815 - $1,000: 160,524,953 6,663,783 13,210,733 75,802,015 3,841,237 17,040,641 - Average per farm ........................dollars: 2,061,792 2,902,344 3,152,167 2,108,833 1,133,108 2,930,463 - Average per acre ........................dollars: 6,278 5,155 8,482 13,991 12,536 5,056 - : Farms by value group: : $1 to $49,999 ..................................: 3,768 78 572 1,099 393 244 - $50,000 to $99,999 .............................: 2,993 49 284 1,177 163 194 - $100,000 to $199,999 ...........................: 6,849 107 390 2,825 388 463 - $200,000 to $499,999 ...........................: 22,324 324 1,134 10,001 895 1,434 - $500,000 to $999,999 ...........................: 17,939 337 731 9,101 781 1,224 - : $1,000,000 to $1,999,999 .......................: 9,621 449 329 5,016 418 751 - $2,000,000 to $4,999,999 .......................: 8,056 566 272 3,966 222 757 - $5,000,000 to $9,999,999 .......................: 3,283 269 170 1,449 77 349 - $10,000,000 or more ............................: 3,024 117 309 1,311 53 399 - ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 68. Summary by North American Industry Classification System: 2012 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : Other crop farming - con. : : : : : : : : (1119) : : : : : : : :-------------------------------: : : : : : : : : Sugarcane : : : : : : : : : farming, hay : : : : : : : Animal : : 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 : : Total cropland ................................farms: 194 5,449 2,823 36 1,131 74 345 589 1,268 acres: 326,010 1,927,431 523,728 12,996 568,092 1,494 10,744 74,996 47,030 Harvested cropland ..........................farms: 194 3,487 1,771 29 1,068 39 209 235 518 acres: 308,268 1,429,595 205,970 4,085 535,497 658 6,293 16,637 9,491 Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 49 acres ................................: 28 1,643 1,105 11 83 38 179 191 481 50 to 99 acres ...............................: 14 418 241 8 122 - 16 21 27 100 to 199 acres .............................: 20 387 183 6 234 - 7 8 5 200 to 499 acres .............................: 36 392 149 2 310 1 3 6 3 500 to 999 acres .............................: 42 268 57 2 188 - 4 5 2 1,000 to 1,999 acres .........................: 35 203 24 - 90 - - 4 - 2,000 acres or more ..........................: 19 176 12 - 41 - - - - : Cropland- : Other pasture and grazing land that could : have been used for crops without additional : improvements (see text) ..................farms: 2 236 878 10 88 24 69 287 546 acres: (D) (D) 219,846 8,733 18,710 309 1,583 28,037 26,321 On which all crops failed or : were abandoned ...........................farms: 12 761 215 2 24 4 39 34 54 acres: 4,795 100,221 15,992 (D) 3,151 (D) 343 7,920 712 Idle or used for cover crops or soil : improvement, but not harvested and not : pastured or grazed (see text) ............farms: 10 1,633 365 1 47 14 88 102 268 acres: 10,187 260,455 69,687 (D) 6,879 (D) 2,431 18,515 10,343 In cultivated summer fallow ...............farms: 14 386 133 1 38 4 11 25 21 acres: (D) (D) 12,233 (D) 3,855 (D) 94 3,887 163 : Total woodland ................................farms: 3 558 1,902 21 53 70 173 528 906 acres: (D) (D) 836,519 27,867 6,263 3,789 8,453 45,521 159,431 Woodland pastured ...........................farms: 2 205 1,481 14 38 44 92 337 526 acres: (D) (D) 596,771 15,102 4,588 2,918 2,574 25,843 67,186 Woodland not pastured .......................farms: 1 424 670 10 24 32 106 254 494 acres: (D) (D) 239,748 12,765 1,675 871 5,879 19,678 92,245 Permanent pasture and rangeland, : other than cropland and woodland : pastured (see text) ..........................farms: 6 1,327 9,057 116 514 206 516 2,144 4,103 acres: (D) (D) 8,836,126 160,948 324,638 5,313 28,923 393,179 1,026,253 : Land in farmsteads, homes, buildings, : livestock facilities, ponds, roads, : wasteland, etc. ..............................farms: 93 2,747 6,735 76 1,148 365 983 2,376 5,896 acres: 37,529 147,538 275,881 5,958 85,261 3,615 22,292 26,358 102,642 : Irrigated land ................................farms: 194 2,780 4,051 46 1,108 98 307 880 1,602 acres: 295,030 1,242,063 448,644 13,063 514,124 1,025 6,762 23,343 62,623 Harvested cropland ..........................farms: 194 2,628 1,073 21 1,004 27 157 125 329 acres: (D) (D) 141,126 2,620 483,415 (D) 5,584 9,450 6,063 Pastureland and other land ..................farms: 3 437 3,387 36 235 82 169 787 1,356 acres: (D) (D) 307,518 10,443 30,709 (D) 1,178 13,893 56,560 : CONSERVATION AND CROP INSURANCE : : Land enrolled in Conservation Reserve, : Wetlands Reserve, Farmable Wetlands, : or Conservation Reserve Enhancement : Programs .....................................farms: - 308 82 - 5 - 3 6 13 acres: - 63,302 23,433 - 928 - (D) 345 618 : Land enrolled in crop insurance : programs (see text) ..........................farms: 116 774 414 4 252 2 13 26 38 acres: 216,974 654,485 934,307 (D) 157,692 (D) (D) 30,419 9,076 : ORGANIC AGRICULTURE : : Total organic commodity sales (see text) ......farms: - 119 68 1 142 9 49 5 16 $1,000: - 13,259 18,576 (D) 226,495 3 128,945 (D) 1,353 : VALUE OF LAND AND BUILDINGS : : Estimated market value of land and : buildings ....................................farms: 194 5,621 11,767 156 1,594 446 1,202 3,246 7,809 $1,000: 1,701,559 15,339,083 22,846,954 450,774 9,380,519 189,860 892,331 2,142,119 8,063,986 Average per farm ........................dollars: 8,770,921 2,728,889 1,941,612 2,889,578 5,884,893 425,696 742,372 659,926 1,032,653 Average per acre ........................dollars: 4,669 5,103 2,182 2,170 9,531 13,360 12,673 3,966 6,039 : Farms by value group: : $1 to $49,999 ..................................: - 244 511 2 90 44 92 218 425 $50,000 to $99,999 .............................: 3 191 444 3 47 27 71 210 324 $100,000 to $199,999 ...........................: 13 450 1,038 18 44 59 175 435 907 $200,000 to $499,999 ...........................: 18 1,416 3,625 20 97 202 432 1,389 2,771 $500,000 to $999,999 ...........................: 8 1,216 2,535 24 135 90 268 717 1,996 : $1,000,000 to $1,999,999 .......................: 15 736 1,470 23 213 13 88 161 690 $2,000,000 to $4,999,999 .......................: 59 698 1,212 43 423 11 50 62 472 $5,000,000 to $9,999,999 .......................: 42 307 500 14 282 - 16 26 131 $10,000,000 or more ............................: 36 363 432 9 263 - 10 28 93 --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 68. Summary by North American Industry Classification System: 2012 (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 MACHINERY AND EQUIPMENT : : Estimated market value of all machinery : and equipment ................................farms: 77,851 2,296 4,191 35,943 3,390 5,812 - $1,000: 9,709,545 762,736 1,276,261 3,715,445 389,758 1,168,893 - : Farms by value group: : $1 to $4,999 ...................................: 10,455 108 694 5,049 713 732 - $5,000 to $9,999 ...............................: 8,336 88 476 3,809 380 590 - $10,000 to $19,999 .............................: 13,025 168 536 5,968 633 824 - $20,000 to $49,999 .............................: 18,826 334 1,032 8,721 736 1,169 - $50,000 to $99,999 .............................: 11,191 236 444 5,314 372 885 - $100,000 to $199,999 ...........................: 6,916 392 265 3,244 246 578 - $200,000 to $499,999 ...........................: 5,289 435 243 2,374 190 515 - $500,000 or more ...............................: 3,813 535 501 1,464 120 519 - : SELECTED MACHINERY AND EQUIPMENT : : Trucks, including pickups (see text) ..........farms: 55,175 1,793 3,206 23,508 2,476 3,850 - number: 132,455 5,344 12,881 54,679 7,804 11,568 - : Tractors, all .................................farms: 53,296 1,800 3,003 24,936 1,848 4,094 - number: 147,163 6,938 16,431 68,620 5,838 14,715 - Less than 40 horsepower (PTO) ...............farms: 31,264 640 1,822 14,085 1,314 1,898 - number: 49,313 998 3,291 23,660 3,288 3,099 - 40 to 99 horsepower (PTO) ...................farms: 30,456 1,191 1,670 15,617 788 2,832 - number: 68,295 2,277 6,761 37,777 1,912 6,215 - 100 horsepower (PTO) or more ................farms: 10,631 1,326 964 3,358 259 1,793 - number: 29,555 3,663 6,379 7,183 638 5,401 - : Grain and bean combines, self-propelled .......farms: 1,710 845 118 156 9 355 - number: 2,497 1,397 174 194 (D) 477 - : Cotton pickers and strippers, : self-propelled ...............................farms: 475 21 52 75 - 311 - number: 870 32 79 112 - 628 - Forage harvesters, self-propelled .............farms: 1,629 121 40 289 3 644 - number: 2,188 169 56 368 3 936 - Hay balers ....................................farms: 3,674 173 113 302 20 1,562 - number: 4,822 239 168 393 (D) 2,221 - : FERTILIZERS AND CHEMICALS : : Commercial fertilizer, lime, and soil : conditioners used ............................farms: 32,646 2,042 3,065 20,561 1,649 2,301 - acres treated: 6,314,533 799,027 1,096,689 2,361,104 69,696 1,380,552 - Manure used ...................................farms: 6,794 270 813 3,167 235 560 - acres treated: 712,975 44,409 73,106 200,810 2,958 124,660 - : Acres treated to control- : Insects .....................................farms: 25,064 1,631 2,736 16,554 1,408 1,564 - acres: 5,293,093 578,029 988,590 2,225,423 64,018 1,103,065 - Weeds, grass, or brush ......................farms: 32,402 2,042 2,647 20,111 1,772 2,294 - acres: 6,116,162 838,242 958,501 2,245,599 73,990 1,347,979 - Nematodes ...................................farms: 4,485 84 958 2,955 170 236 - acres: 725,589 23,604 217,795 346,200 14,038 102,201 - Diseases in crops and orchards ..............farms: 14,196 647 1,280 11,051 609 370 - acres: 2,038,769 209,522 340,139 1,281,233 23,996 136,154 - Chemicals used to control growth, : thin fruit, ripen, or defoliate ..............farms: 9,810 132 360 8,455 132 510 - acres on which used: 1,460,135 27,304 120,969 989,998 2,381 294,406 - : LAND USE PRACTICES : : Land drained by tile ..........................farms: 1,913 68 182 1,108 65 270 - acres: 476,794 12,783 134,005 55,096 4,985 242,731 - Land artificially drained by ditches ..........farms: 7,166 993 485 2,707 270 890 - acres: 1,872,676 411,877 273,257 263,094 17,938 670,328 - Land under conservation easement ..............farms: 1,603 73 68 651 54 211 - acres: 929,985 28,206 9,588 77,421 (D) 103,934 - Cropland on which no-till practices were : used .........................................farms: 4,213 204 906 1,553 658 422 - acres: 205,383 36,652 50,252 30,294 4,477 47,464 - Cropland on which conservation tillage, : including no till, practices were : used .........................................farms: 1,945 233 491 509 92 351 - acres: 566,983 107,785 184,144 56,286 751 171,832 - Cropland on which conventional tillage : practices were used ..........................farms: 11,762 2,030 2,741 2,296 651 2,212 - acres: 3,083,056 753,324 836,559 253,467 30,696 890,197 - Cropland planted to a cover crop : (excluding CRP) ..............................farms: 4,899 75 812 3,340 168 276 - acres: 340,532 15,374 38,647 242,350 8,941 19,891 - : ENERGY : : Renewable energy producing systems ............farms: 5,845 71 413 2,765 210 359 - Solar panels ................................farms: 5,445 61 395 2,594 192 317 - Wind turbines ...............................farms: 324 12 22 109 8 27 - Methane digesters ...........................farms: 41 1 - 15 - 5 - Geoexchange systems .........................farms: 104 1 1 55 2 3 - : Small hydro systems .........................farms: 190 1 20 71 5 22 - ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 68. Summary by North American Industry Classification System: 2012 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : Other crop farming - con. : : : : : : : : (1119) : : : : : : : :-------------------------------: : : : : : : : : Sugarcane : : : : : : : : : farming, hay : : : : : : : Animal : : 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 MACHINERY AND EQUIPMENT : : Estimated market value of all machinery : and equipment ................................farms: 194 5,618 11,767 156 1,593 446 1,202 3,246 7,809 $1,000: 199,163 969,730 678,073 49,058 1,027,743 17,425 169,103 114,874 340,177 : Farms by value group: : $1 to $4,999 ...................................: 3 729 1,273 6 39 58 169 649 965 $5,000 to $9,999 ...............................: 6 584 1,296 7 11 72 207 464 936 $10,000 to $19,999 .............................: 2 822 2,225 11 40 99 225 597 1,699 $20,000 to $49,999 .............................: 16 1,153 3,229 37 81 117 277 937 2,156 $50,000 to $99,999 .............................: 25 860 1,987 27 149 55 141 367 1,214 $100,000 to $199,999 ...........................: 27 551 1,070 25 284 34 74 144 560 $200,000 to $499,999 ...........................: 43 472 582 26 507 10 71 76 260 $500,000 or more ...............................: 72 447 105 17 482 1 38 12 19 : SELECTED MACHINERY AND EQUIPMENT : : Trucks, including pickups (see text) ..........farms: 159 3,691 9,074 132 1,474 340 852 2,468 6,002 number: 1,059 10,509 16,362 500 7,701 602 1,604 3,620 9,790 : Tractors, all .................................farms: 156 3,938 8,168 123 1,464 277 704 1,941 4,938 number: 1,168 13,547 14,403 350 8,327 388 1,194 2,636 7,323 Less than 40 horsepower (PTO) ...............farms: 41 1,857 5,077 50 672 204 512 1,459 3,531 number: 50 3,049 6,709 77 1,260 239 678 1,720 4,294 40 to 99 horsepower (PTO) ...................farms: 100 2,732 4,166 76 1,244 91 300 629 1,852 number: 272 5,943 5,869 167 3,589 122 460 716 2,430 100 horsepower (PTO) or more ................farms: 138 1,655 1,202 49 1,025 22 42 149 442 number: 846 4,555 1,825 106 3,478 27 56 200 599 : Grain and bean combines, self-propelled .......farms: 29 326 72 2 140 - 1 12 - number: 53 424 81 (D) 148 - (D) 14 - : Cotton pickers and strippers, : self-propelled ...............................farms: 144 167 1 - 14 - 1 - - number: 322 306 (D) - 17 - (D) - - Forage harvesters, self-propelled .............farms: 12 632 310 4 138 - 15 19 46 number: 18 918 367 6 198 - 18 19 48 Hay balers ....................................farms: 29 1,533 992 19 247 1 31 87 127 number: 47 2,174 1,140 25 324 (D) 32 96 163 : FERTILIZERS AND CHEMICALS : : Commercial fertilizer, lime, and soil : conditioners used ............................farms: 191 2,110 1,342 29 933 23 97 201 403 acres treated: 292,135 1,088,417 146,785 8,593 410,559 861 4,829 24,652 11,186 Manure used ...................................farms: 42 518 541 12 541 26 102 174 353 acres treated: 12,467 112,193 45,702 1,030 201,108 105 3,143 4,360 11,584 : Acres treated to control- : Insects .....................................farms: 164 1,400 302 11 558 7 48 78 167 acres: 266,219 836,846 35,769 (D) 289,566 (D) 3,138 2,213 1,428 Weeds, grass, or brush ......................farms: 185 2,109 1,582 34 904 22 94 317 583 acres: 294,437 1,053,542 168,594 4,873 440,771 537 4,410 24,422 8,244 Nematodes ...................................farms: 40 196 24 2 45 - 4 - 7 acres: 20,070 82,131 3,626 (D) 17,983 - (D) - (D) Diseases in crops and orchards ..............farms: 28 342 70 - 106 5 24 4 30 acres: 10,807 125,347 6,890 - 39,168 33 1,485 8 141 Chemicals used to control growth, : thin fruit, ripen, or defoliate ..............farms: 139 371 49 2 127 - 27 - 16 acres on which used: 160,202 134,204 2,826 (D) 20,447 - 1,493 - (D) : LAND USE PRACTICES : : Land drained by tile ..........................farms: 10 260 102 8 51 - 8 9 42 acres: (D) (D) 7,993 4,680 9,852 - 150 3,844 675 Land artificially drained by ditches ..........farms: 74 816 893 8 243 18 73 180 406 acres: 150,067 520,261 95,692 1,252 121,942 132 1,270 8,446 7,448 Land under conservation easement ..............farms: 3 208 338 16 28 - 16 36 112 acres: (D) (D) 600,666 31,020 14,316 - (D) 6,284 50,438 Cropland on which no-till practices were : used .........................................farms: 11 411 202 3 119 - 33 24 89 acres: 2,236 45,228 6,290 (D) 27,923 - 342 (D) 682 Cropland on which conservation tillage, : including no till, practices were : used .........................................farms: 44 307 96 - 123 3 2 24 21 acres: 38,622 133,210 8,258 - 35,288 (D) (D) 2,418 171 Cropland on which conventional tillage : practices were used ..........................farms: 169 2,043 740 13 737 14 54 101 173 acres: 239,034 651,163 76,630 871 220,696 391 1,462 16,469 2,294 Cropland planted to a cover crop : (excluding CRP) ..............................farms: 5 271 103 1 38 1 26 12 47 acres: 3,127 16,764 6,569 (D) 7,873 (D) 228 (D) 423 : ENERGY : : Renewable energy producing systems ............farms: 1 358 939 19 33 50 150 264 572 Solar panels ................................farms: 1 316 888 13 21 41 145 246 532 Wind turbines ...............................farms: - 27 77 1 5 3 8 16 36 Methane digesters ...........................farms: - 5 6 - 10 - 2 - 2 Geoexchange systems .........................farms: - 3 15 - - 3 5 11 8 : Small hydro systems .........................farms: - 22 36 - - - 3 17 15 --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 68. Summary by North American Industry Classification System: 2012 (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) ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- ENERGY - Con. : : Renewable energy producing systems - Con. : : Biodiesel ...................................farms: 165 1 14 73 6 17 - Ethanol .....................................farms: 56 3 - 28 1 7 - Other .......................................farms: 49 - 2 23 1 5 - : Wind rights leased to others ..................farms: 113 8 1 34 1 24 - : TENURE : : Full owners ...................................farms: 60,492 889 2,236 31,200 2,306 4,052 - Part owners ...................................farms: 9,490 646 617 2,990 313 1,089 - Tenants .......................................farms: 7,875 761 1,338 1,755 771 674 - : OWNED AND RENTED LAND : : Land owned ....................................farms: 70,216 1,575 2,875 34,248 2,621 5,178 - acres: 16,064,215 682,119 625,769 4,791,173 298,314 2,194,605 - Owned land in farms .........................farms: 69,982 1,535 2,853 34,190 2,619 5,141 - acres: 14,281,177 545,154 585,903 4,255,173 255,155 1,944,138 - : Land rented or leased from others .............farms: 17,477 1,416 1,960 4,793 1,084 1,778 - acres: 11,608,764 768,039 1,027,747 1,192,945 54,005 1,452,777 - Rented or leased land in farms ..............farms: 17,365 1,407 1,955 4,745 1,084 1,763 - acres: 11,287,824 747,489 971,550 1,162,573 51,262 1,426,294 - : Land rented or leased to others ...............farms: 6,066 428 378 2,320 197 751 - acres: 2,103,978 157,515 96,063 566,372 45,902 276,950 - : NUMBER OF OPERATORS : : Total operators ..............................number: 126,099 3,836 7,640 56,126 5,586 9,256 - Farms by number of operators: : 1 operator .....................................: 40,197 1,198 1,897 20,249 1,815 3,234 - 2 operators ....................................: 30,790 834 1,712 12,629 1,227 2,024 - 3 operators ....................................: 5,058 164 387 2,384 240 376 - 4 operators ....................................: 1,137 66 82 428 52 127 - 5 or more operators ............................: 675 34 113 255 56 54 - : Total women operators ......................number: 41,256 954 2,501 15,515 1,782 2,581 - Farms by number of women operators: : 1 operator ...................................: 35,652 768 2,000 13,734 1,494 2,138 - 2 operators ..................................: 2,226 66 170 731 99 179 - 3 operators ..................................: 253 18 12 71 17 25 - 4 operators ..................................: 44 - 1 22 3 - - 5 or more operators ..........................: 37 - 20 3 4 2 - : PRINCIPAL OPERATOR : CHARACTERISTICS : : Sex of operator: : Male .............................................: 63,873 2,129 3,370 31,241 2,754 5,107 - Female ...........................................: 13,984 167 821 4,704 636 708 - : Primary occupation: : Farming ..........................................: 42,469 1,693 2,918 19,218 2,033 3,172 - Other ............................................: 35,388 603 1,273 16,727 1,357 2,643 - : Place of residence: : On farm operated .................................: 54,775 1,084 2,478 23,904 1,936 3,704 - Not on farm operated .............................: 23,082 1,212 1,713 12,041 1,454 2,111 - : Days worked off farm: : None .............................................: 31,311 1,064 1,716 13,679 1,453 2,460 - Any ..............................................: 46,546 1,232 2,475 22,266 1,937 3,355 - 1 to 49 days ...................................: 7,304 192 456 3,710 290 516 - 50 to 99 days ..................................: 4,230 111 238 2,219 163 284 - 100 to 199 days ................................: 7,065 192 414 3,388 288 439 - 200 days or more ...............................: 27,947 737 1,367 12,949 1,196 2,116 - : Years on present farm: : 2 years or less ..................................: 3,151 115 466 1,267 126 257 - 3 or 4 years .....................................: 4,634 125 505 2,048 225 302 - 5 to 9 years .....................................: 12,863 376 815 6,277 601 883 - 10 years or more .................................: 57,209 1,680 2,405 26,353 2,438 4,373 - : Average years on present farm ....................: 20.2 22.2 15.9 20.1 19.1 21.7 - : Years operating any farm (see text): : 2 years or less ..................................: 2,182 56 335 907 86 170 - 3 or 4 years .....................................: 3,648 79 414 1,635 179 240 - 5 to 9 years .....................................: 10,663 286 709 5,182 487 714 - 10 years or more .................................: 61,364 1,875 2,733 28,221 2,638 4,691 - : Average years operating any farm .................: 22.7 25.7 18.4 22.6 21.3 24.6 - : Age group: : Under 25 years ...................................: 253 30 21 73 5 25 - 25 to 34 years ...................................: 2,968 206 398 1,027 123 279 - 35 to 44 years ...................................: 6,255 267 569 2,612 280 459 - 45 to 49 years ...................................: 6,107 162 329 2,736 281 444 - ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 68. Summary by North American Industry Classification System: 2012 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : Other crop farming - con. : : : : : : : : (1119) : : : : : : : :-------------------------------: : : : : : : : : Sugarcane : : : : : : : : : farming, hay : : : : : : : Animal : : 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) --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- ENERGY - Con. : : Renewable energy producing systems - Con. : : Biodiesel ...................................farms: - 17 16 - 1 6 4 7 20 Ethanol .....................................farms: - 7 - 6 - - 2 4 5 Other .......................................farms: - 5 6 - - 3 - 2 7 : Wind rights leased to others ..................farms: - 24 27 3 - - 2 9 4 : TENURE : : Full owners ...................................farms: 54 3,998 8,318 106 787 377 1,059 2,650 6,512 Part owners ...................................farms: 93 996 2,274 38 507 37 68 296 615 Tenants .......................................farms: 47 627 1,175 12 300 32 75 300 682 : OWNED AND RENTED LAND : : Land owned ....................................farms: 147 5,031 10,637 145 1,302 414 1,131 2,953 7,137 acres: 267,190 1,927,415 5,375,938 145,346 722,636 11,820 67,210 203,060 946,225 Owned land in farms .........................farms: 147 4,994 10,592 144 1,294 414 1,127 2,946 7,127 acres: 260,017 1,684,121 4,848,242 123,348 681,351 11,572 62,219 165,332 803,590 : Land rented or leased from others .............farms: 141 1,637 3,473 50 813 69 144 596 1,301 acres: 105,037 1,347,740 5,806,092 84,421 304,952 2,639 8,380 374,722 532,045 Rented or leased land in farms ..............farms: 140 1,623 3,449 50 807 69 143 596 1,297 acres: 104,430 1,321,864 5,624,012 84,421 302,903 2,639 8,193 374,722 531,766 : Land rented or leased to others ...............farms: 22 729 1,158 15 137 13 87 214 368 acres: 7,780 269,170 709,776 21,998 43,334 248 5,178 37,728 142,914 : NUMBER OF OPERATORS : : Total operators ..............................number: 334 8,922 19,203 232 2,959 798 2,119 5,453 12,891 Farms by number of operators: : 1 operator .....................................: 104 3,130 5,584 97 671 172 453 1,374 3,453 2 operators ....................................: 58 1,966 5,363 44 606 214 635 1,624 3,878 3 operators ....................................: 18 358 568 13 233 43 85 179 386 4 operators ....................................: 11 116 170 2 58 16 21 55 60 5 or more operators ............................: 3 51 82 - 26 1 8 14 32 : Total women operators ......................number: 60 2,521 7,131 67 674 364 883 2,570 6,234 Farms by number of women operators: : 1 operator ...................................: 36 2,102 6,229 56 583 288 745 2,206 5,411 2 operators ..................................: 12 167 350 4 29 29 56 158 355 3 operators ..................................: - 25 46 1 11 6 7 10 29 4 operators ..................................: - - 11 - - - - 2 5 5 or more operators ..........................: - 2 4 - - - 1 2 1 : PRINCIPAL OPERATOR : CHARACTERISTICS : : Sex of operator: : Male .............................................: 185 4,922 9,685 133 1,470 312 847 2,070 4,755 Female ...........................................: 9 699 2,082 23 124 134 355 1,176 3,054 : Primary occupation: : Farming ..........................................: 164 3,008 5,715 102 1,439 185 683 1,502 3,809 Other ............................................: 30 2,613 6,052 54 155 261 519 1,744 4,000 : Place of residence: : On farm operated .................................: 82 3,622 9,544 95 1,174 391 1,016 2,846 6,603 Not on farm operated .............................: 112 1,999 2,223 61 420 55 186 400 1,206 : Days worked off farm: : None .............................................: 113 2,347 4,705 78 1,091 117 518 1,174 3,256 Any ..............................................: 81 3,274 7,062 78 503 329 684 2,072 4,553 1 to 49 days ...................................: 12 504 980 13 71 23 92 301 660 50 to 99 days ..................................: 6 278 631 11 34 37 52 146 304 100 to 199 days ................................: 8 431 1,162 24 43 36 121 307 651 200 days or more ...............................: 55 2,061 4,289 30 355 233 419 1,318 2,938 : Years on present farm: : 2 years or less ..................................: 5 252 429 2 57 34 76 129 193 3 or 4 years .....................................: 6 296 602 15 61 53 120 241 337 5 to 9 years .....................................: 21 862 1,493 20 160 98 201 626 1,313 10 years or more .................................: 162 4,211 9,243 119 1,316 261 805 2,250 5,966 : Average years on present farm ....................: 24.9 21.6 22.3 22.1 24.8 15.3 17.3 18.6 19.4 : Years operating any farm (see text): : 2 years or less ..................................: 1 169 312 2 19 30 54 86 125 3 or 4 years .....................................: 5 235 464 12 56 46 91 199 233 5 to 9 years .....................................: 16 698 1,244 16 120 81 182 538 1,104 10 years or more .................................: 172 4,519 9,747 126 1,399 289 875 2,423 6,347 : Average years operating any farm .................: 28.6 24.4 24.8 25.6 27.6 17.2 19.3 20.9 21.5 : Age group: : Under 25 years ...................................: - 25 38 - 5 6 3 29 18 25 to 34 years ...................................: 12 267 389 2 75 31 38 201 199 35 to 44 years ...................................: 15 444 822 10 191 69 94 291 591 45 to 49 years ...................................: 13 431 885 4 205 65 125 296 575 --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 68. Summary by North American Industry Classification System: 2012 (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) ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- PRINCIPAL OPERATOR : CHARACTERISTICS - Con. : : Age group: - Con. : : 50 to 54 years ...................................: 9,839 313 606 4,355 485 715 - 55 to 59 years ...................................: 11,513 320 670 5,264 609 831 - 60 to 64 years ...................................: 11,869 344 566 5,498 512 882 - 65 to 69 years ...................................: 10,683 234 488 4,993 468 754 - 70 years and over ................................: 18,370 420 544 9,387 627 1,426 - : Average age ......................................: 60.1 56.5 54.7 61.1 58.9 60.0 - : Spanish, Hispanic, or Latino origin (see text) .....: 9,815 275 725 5,158 688 776 - : Race: : American Indian or Alaska Native .................: 1,192 46 74 452 18 124 - Asian ............................................: 4,802 91 701 2,967 466 254 - Black or African American ........................: 345 7 50 106 8 38 - Native Hawaiian or Other Pacific Islander ........: 321 2 44 125 25 32 - White ............................................: 70,537 2,134 3,284 32,055 2,846 5,300 - More than one race reported ......................: 660 16 38 240 27 67 - : Farms by number of persons living in : operator's household: : 1 person .........................................: 10,856 296 487 4,957 514 870 - 2 people .........................................: 39,377 1,121 1,782 18,249 1,490 3,016 - 3 people .........................................: 10,481 287 680 4,570 531 780 - 4 people .........................................: 9,895 369 639 4,803 459 646 - 5 or more people .................................: 7,248 223 603 3,366 396 503 - : Percent of operator's total : household income from farming: : Less than 25 percent .............................: 53,231 890 2,467 23,178 2,025 4,025 - 25 to 49 percent .................................: 6,732 314 368 3,764 317 422 - 50 to 74 percent .................................: 8,038 477 518 4,459 386 542 - 75 to 99 percent .................................: 5,290 353 358 2,778 289 436 - 100 percent ......................................: 4,566 262 480 1,766 373 390 - : Operator is a hired manager ...................farms: 7,130 197 534 4,362 497 393 - acres: 5,266,987 257,443 578,361 1,719,313 (D) 720,931 - : Farms with- : Internet access ..................................: 59,543 1,803 3,305 27,199 2,605 4,176 - Dial-up service ................................: 4,703 131 184 2,005 169 332 - DSL service ....................................: 20,030 636 1,196 9,132 987 1,457 - Cable modem service ............................: 9,578 222 654 5,023 616 594 - Fiber-optic service ............................: 1,719 53 96 854 112 117 - Mobile broadband plan for a computer : or cell phone .................................: 12,454 502 783 5,635 455 947 - Satellite service ..............................: 15,193 521 661 6,359 473 1,108 - Broadband over Power Lines (BPL) ...............: 2,135 77 123 1,110 93 105 - Other Internet service .........................: 2,805 65 158 1,436 97 187 - : Farms by number of households sharing : in net income of operation: : 1 household ......................................: 61,016 1,510 3,113 27,326 2,630 4,491 - 2 households .....................................: 11,316 470 652 5,735 481 849 - 3 households .....................................: 3,013 151 200 1,539 157 247 - 4 households .....................................: 1,351 81 95 777 57 126 - 5 or more households .............................: 1,161 84 131 568 65 102 - : FARMS BY TYPE OF : ORGANIZATION (SEE TEXT) : : Operation with 50 percent or more ownership : interest held by operator and/or persons : related by blood, marriage, : or adoption ..................................farms: 72,641 2,045 3,770 33,266 3,079 5,305 - acres: 20,951,605 1,092,761 1,064,313 4,161,350 275,798 2,584,305 - Limited Liability Corporation .................farms: 4,453 88 207 2,741 143 269 - acres: 2,772,951 66,943 207,847 712,377 55,591 330,521 - : LEGAL STATUS FOR TAX PURPOSES : (SEE TEXT) : : Family or individual .........................farms: 59,732 1,473 3,068 26,785 2,288 4,224 - acres: 12,000,544 550,690 353,367 1,877,028 186,845 1,299,132 - Partnership ...................................farms: 8,984 546 492 4,592 302 826 - acres: 6,934,159 505,626 425,148 1,532,481 15,659 1,092,171 - Registered under state law ..................farms: 7,283 447 417 3,809 249 684 - acres: 5,929,592 463,428 387,704 1,412,374 12,090 978,862 - : Corporation ...................................farms: 6,361 201 530 3,187 708 467 - acres: 5,359,671 203,263 732,789 1,675,815 100,559 873,120 - Family held .................................farms: 5,345 171 441 2,749 572 368 - acres: 4,209,678 179,054 594,716 1,356,182 75,340 571,172 - More than 10 stockholders .................farms: 264 6 14 158 24 17 - 10 or less stockholders ...................farms: 5,081 165 427 2,591 548 351 - : Other than family held ......................farms: 1,016 30 89 438 136 99 - acres: 1,149,993 24,209 138,073 319,633 25,219 301,948 - ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 68. Summary by North American Industry Classification System: 2012 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : Other crop farming - con. : : : : : : : : (1119) : : : : : : : :-------------------------------: : : : : : : : : Sugarcane : : : : : : : : : farming, hay : : : : : : : Animal : : 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) --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- PRINCIPAL OPERATOR : CHARACTERISTICS - Con. : : Age group: - Con. : : 50 to 54 years ...................................: 27 688 1,389 18 262 71 160 417 1,048 55 to 59 years ...................................: 40 791 1,607 32 244 65 184 473 1,214 60 to 64 years ...................................: 26 856 1,859 26 208 41 194 447 1,292 65 to 69 years ...................................: 24 730 1,693 22 139 52 186 408 1,246 70 years and over ................................: 37 1,389 3,085 42 265 46 218 684 1,626 : Average age ......................................: 58.4 60.0 61.0 61.8 56.5 53.3 59.0 58.1 60.1 : Spanish, Hispanic, or Latino origin (see text) .....: 27 749 844 8 107 56 113 368 697 : Race: : American Indian or Alaska Native .................: 3 121 213 - 5 19 23 53 165 Asian ............................................: 6 248 102 1 21 6 46 54 93 Black or African American ........................: 1 37 69 1 - 9 7 15 35 Native Hawaiian or Other Pacific Islander ........: - 32 51 - 4 - 21 4 13 White ............................................: 183 5,117 11,211 154 1,562 405 1,089 3,076 7,421 More than one race reported ......................: 1 66 121 - 2 7 16 44 82 : Farms by number of persons living in : operator's household: : 1 person .........................................: 15 855 1,745 25 162 31 116 420 1,233 2 people .........................................: 110 2,906 6,373 88 664 172 601 1,560 4,261 3 people .........................................: 19 761 1,510 23 229 82 203 484 1,102 4 people .........................................: 29 617 1,335 16 255 90 164 449 670 5 or more people .................................: 21 482 804 4 284 71 118 333 543 : Percent of operator's total : household income from farming: : Less than 25 percent .............................: 62 3,963 9,461 108 379 396 922 2,861 6,519 25 to 49 percent .................................: 33 389 824 17 120 11 77 150 348 50 to 74 percent .................................: 35 507 753 16 261 20 68 133 405 75 to 99 percent .................................: 32 404 389 9 310 9 55 55 249 100 percent ......................................: 32 358 340 6 524 10 80 47 288 : Operator is a hired manager ...................farms: 35 358 381 17 257 14 86 95 297 acres: 201,459 519,472 1,452,949 (D) 270,673 (D) 20,475 85,884 83,274 : Farms with- : Internet access ..................................: 160 4,016 8,635 110 1,352 364 995 2,631 6,368 Dial-up service ................................: 10 322 942 2 80 38 88 256 476 DSL service ....................................: 51 1,406 2,710 42 352 147 346 841 2,184 Cable modem service ............................: 20 574 941 12 140 62 113 318 883 Fiber-optic service ............................: 7 110 139 5 35 15 22 40 231 Mobile broadband plan for a computer : or cell phone .................................: 50 897 1,735 22 310 58 180 552 1,275 Satellite service ..............................: 46 1,062 2,645 27 481 72 267 757 1,822 Broadband over Power Lines (BPL) ...............: 10 95 247 3 80 8 39 79 171 Other Internet service .........................: 2 185 327 6 111 8 58 119 233 : Farms by number of households sharing : in net income of operation: : 1 household ......................................: 109 4,382 9,758 132 950 400 976 2,808 6,922 2 households .....................................: 56 793 1,549 13 357 35 165 368 642 3 households .....................................: 16 231 308 7 161 5 36 60 142 4 households .....................................: 8 118 73 2 64 6 10 8 52 5 or more households .............................: 5 97 79 2 62 - 15 2 51 : FARMS BY TYPE OF : ORGANIZATION (SEE TEXT) : : Operation with 50 percent or more ownership : interest held by operator and/or persons : related by blood, marriage, : or adoption ..................................farms: 173 5,132 11,303 147 1,443 429 1,146 3,197 7,511 acres: 209,328 2,374,977 8,974,911 194,032 850,191 11,251 48,160 519,361 1,175,172 Limited Liability Corporation .................farms: 4 265 408 23 80 8 41 80 365 acres: 2,976 327,545 1,259,897 21,003 33,360 (D) 13,539 (D) 64,614 : LEGAL STATUS FOR TAX PURPOSES : (SEE TEXT) : : Family or individual .........................farms: 99 4,125 10,145 111 878 398 995 2,954 6,413 acres: 53,829 1,245,303 6,045,787 158,972 440,073 10,025 31,772 300,191 746,662 Partnership ...................................farms: 67 759 851 20 528 18 106 186 517 acres: 118,680 973,491 2,636,835 16,301 379,261 1,346 25,470 103,477 200,384 Registered under state law ..................farms: 67 617 640 15 463 7 70 111 371 acres: 118,680 860,182 2,015,246 14,895 342,466 1,262 23,939 86,965 190,361 : Corporation ...................................farms: 23 444 391 20 143 13 88 45 568 acres: 190,620 682,500 1,292,871 29,662 105,038 (D) (D) 48,507 284,984 Family held .................................farms: 19 349 336 12 136 10 80 36 434 acres: (D) (D) 981,265 27,818 101,127 1,000 11,064 45,178 265,762 More than 10 stockholders .................farms: - 17 24 1 3 - 6 3 8 10 or less stockholders ...................farms: 19 332 312 11 133 10 74 33 426 : Other than family held ......................farms: 4 95 55 8 7 3 8 9 134 acres: (D) (D) 311,606 1,844 3,911 (D) (D) 3,329 19,222 --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 68. Summary by North American Industry Classification System: 2012 (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 : (SEE TEXT) - Con. : : Corporation - Con. : Other than family held - Con. : : More than 10 stockholders .................farms: 171 4 27 68 16 33 - 10 or less stockholders ...................farms: 845 26 62 370 120 66 - : Other-cooperative, estate : or trust, institutional, etc .................farms: 2,780 76 101 1,381 92 298 - acres: 1,274,627 33,064 46,149 332,422 3,354 106,009 - : HIRED FARM LABOR : : Hired farm labor ..............................farms: 33,955 1,168 2,072 18,503 2,088 2,143 - workers: 465,422 6,426 68,356 281,162 46,887 17,429 - Workers by days worked: : 150 days or more ..........................farms: 20,018 788 1,405 9,976 1,512 1,432 - workers: 205,851 3,001 34,044 99,052 29,248 9,891 - Less than 150 days ........................farms: 22,621 837 1,394 13,213 1,192 1,334 - workers: 259,571 3,425 34,312 182,110 17,639 7,538 - Migrant farm labor on farms with hired : labor (see text) .............................farms: 2,921 64 285 2,092 94 162 - Migrant farm labor on farms reporting : only contract labor (see text) ...............farms: 755 10 26 635 22 21 - : Unpaid workers (see text) .....................farms: 31,965 616 1,437 14,035 1,228 2,095 - workers: 72,020 1,257 3,652 30,243 2,539 4,675 - : FARMS BY SIZE : : 1 to 9 acres .......................................: 24,637 53 1,870 12,108 2,015 353 - 10 to 49 acres .....................................: 25,811 335 1,117 13,244 937 1,947 - 50 to 69 acres .....................................: 3,700 111 128 1,964 94 318 - 70 to 99 acres .....................................: 3,601 165 96 1,810 67 450 - 100 to 139 acres ...................................: 3,222 159 116 1,424 77 376 - 140 to 179 acres ...................................: 2,533 181 72 1,071 30 360 - 180 to 219 acres ...................................: 1,477 112 74 648 21 174 - 220 to 259 acres ...................................: 1,189 109 35 481 20 142 - 260 to 499 acres ...................................: 3,983 454 161 1,385 51 487 - 500 to 999 acres ...................................: 3,230 341 179 924 36 530 - 1,000 to 1,999 acres ...............................: 2,040 160 144 469 23 332 - 2,000 acres or more ................................: 2,434 116 199 417 19 346 - : FARMS BY NORTH AMERICAN : INDUSTRY CLASSIFICATION : SYSTEM (NAICS) : : Oilseed and grain farming (1111) ...................: 2,296 2,296 - - - - - Vegetable and melon farming (1112) .................: 4,191 - 4,191 - - - - Fruit and tree nut farming (1113) ..................: 35,945 - - 35,945 - - - Greenhouse, nursery, and floriculture : production (1114) .................................: 3,390 - - - 3,390 - - Other crop farming (1119) ..........................: 5,815 - - - - 5,815 - Tobacco farming (11191) ..........................: - - - - - - - Cotton farming (11192) ...........................: 194 - - - - 194 - Sugarcane farming, hay farming, and all : other crop farming (11193,11194,11199) ..........: 5,621 - - - - 5,621 - Beef cattle ranching and farming (112111) ..........: 11,767 - - - - - - Cattle feedlots (112112) ...........................: 156 - - - - - - Dairy cattle and milk production (11212) ...........: 1,594 - - - - - - Hog and pig farming (1122) .........................: 446 - - - - - - Poultry and egg production (1123) ..................: 1,202 - - - - - - Sheep and goat farming (1124) ......................: 3,246 - - - - - - Animal aquaculture and other animal : production (1125, 1129) ...........................: 7,809 - - - - - - : LIVESTOCK : : Cattle and calves inventory ...................farms: 16,764 173 240 1,160 97 680 - number: 5,370,531 52,998 16,190 49,803 793 77,343 - Farms with- : 1 to 9 .........................................: 7,396 58 175 694 85 289 - 10 to 49 .......................................: 4,687 48 39 314 7 213 - 50 to 99 .......................................: 1,128 15 10 47 4 54 - 100 to 199 .....................................: 914 23 7 51 1 60 - 200 to 499 .....................................: 896 16 5 33 - 29 - 500 or more ....................................: 1,743 13 4 21 - 35 - : Cows and heifers that calved ................farms: 12,566 111 181 804 56 519 - number: 2,399,249 9,186 7,610 23,368 465 37,769 - : Beef cows .................................farms: 10,925 105 168 777 54 507 - number: 583,594 9,139 (D) (D) 458 37,053 - Farms with- : 1 to 9 .....................................: 6,173 46 134 494 45 256 - 10 to 49 ...................................: 2,704 25 17 191 8 136 - 50 to 99 ...................................: 801 16 8 40 - 48 - 100 to 199 .................................: 542 6 3 25 1 28 - 200 to 499 .................................: 479 8 5 22 - 22 - 500 or more ................................: 226 4 1 5 - 17 - ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 68. Summary by North American Industry Classification System: 2012 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : Other crop farming - con. : : : : : : : : (1119) : : : : : : : :-------------------------------: : : : : : : : : Sugarcane : : : : : : : : : farming, hay : : : : : : : Animal : : 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 : (SEE TEXT) - Con. : : Corporation - Con. : Other than family held - Con. : : More than 10 stockholders .................farms: 2 31 9 - - - 1 2 11 10 or less stockholders ...................farms: 2 64 46 8 7 3 7 7 123 : Other-cooperative, estate : or trust, institutional, etc .................farms: 5 293 380 5 45 17 13 61 311 acres: 1,318 104,691 496,761 2,834 59,882 (D) (D) 87,879 103,326 : HIRED FARM LABOR : : Hired farm labor ..............................farms: 152 1,991 2,827 60 1,449 112 427 632 2,474 workers: 2,108 15,321 9,853 876 19,797 451 3,784 1,599 8,802 Workers by days worked: : 150 days or more ..........................farms: 138 1,294 1,371 37 1,367 51 242 268 1,569 workers: 1,495 8,396 5,017 755 16,613 186 2,413 638 4,993 Less than 150 days ........................farms: 78 1,256 1,822 34 536 80 261 447 1,471 workers: 613 6,925 4,836 121 3,184 265 1,371 961 3,809 Migrant farm labor on farms with hired : labor (see text) .............................farms: 11 151 54 - 53 1 10 33 73 Migrant farm labor on farms reporting : only contract labor (see text) ...............farms: - 21 14 - 7 - 4 6 10 : Unpaid workers (see text) .....................farms: 22 2,073 5,664 50 412 235 629 1,722 3,842 workers: 36 4,639 13,525 136 877 695 1,537 4,374 8,510 : FARMS BY SIZE : : 1 to 9 acres .......................................: 9 344 2,394 14 88 239 580 1,351 3,572 10 to 49 acres .....................................: 19 1,928 3,499 23 190 149 400 1,235 2,735 50 to 69 acres .....................................: 7 311 557 5 74 4 55 132 258 70 to 99 acres .....................................: 2 448 606 10 84 14 44 106 149 100 to 139 acres ...................................: 5 371 596 2 141 8 34 100 189 140 to 179 acres ...................................: 11 349 436 6 88 9 22 85 173 180 to 219 acres ...................................: 8 166 247 2 78 13 15 19 74 220 to 259 acres ...................................: 4 138 212 15 55 3 2 52 63 260 to 499 acres ...................................: 21 466 861 21 273 6 22 61 201 500 to 999 acres ...................................: 41 489 708 22 272 - 19 31 168 1,000 to 1,999 acres ...............................: 44 288 631 7 170 1 5 24 74 2,000 acres or more ................................: 23 323 1,020 29 81 - 4 50 153 : 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) ..........................: 194 5,621 - - - - - - - Tobacco farming (11191) ..........................: - - - - - - - - - Cotton farming (11192) ...........................: 194 - - - - - - - - Sugarcane farming, hay farming, and all : other crop farming (11193,11194,11199) ..........: - 5,621 - - - - - - - Beef cattle ranching and farming (112111) ..........: - - 11,767 - - - - - - Cattle feedlots (112112) ...........................: - - - 156 - - - - - Dairy cattle and milk production (11212) ...........: - - - - 1,594 - - - - Hog and pig farming (1122) .........................: - - - - - 446 - - - Poultry and egg production (1123) ..................: - - - - - - 1,202 - - Sheep and goat farming (1124) ......................: - - - - - - - 3,246 - Animal aquaculture and other animal : production (1125, 1129) ...........................: - - - - - - - - 7,809 : LIVESTOCK : : Cattle and calves inventory ...................farms: 7 673 10,786 132 1,540 181 265 571 939 number: 205 77,138 1,498,967 516,558 3,125,329 1,679 5,018 11,252 14,601 Farms with- : 1 to 9 .........................................: 3 286 4,492 8 79 151 215 464 686 10 to 49 .......................................: 3 210 3,641 18 48 22 36 88 213 50 to 99 .......................................: - 54 885 26 41 5 8 9 24 100 to 199 .....................................: 1 59 656 33 71 2 2 1 7 200 to 499 .....................................: - 29 613 17 167 1 2 6 7 500 or more ....................................: - 35 499 30 1,134 - 2 3 2 : Cows and heifers that calved ................farms: 3 516 8,088 67 1,529 141 155 359 556 number: 105 37,664 505,240 13,137 1,789,369 692 2,534 4,831 5,048 : Beef cows .................................farms: 3 504 8,002 67 123 135 135 327 525 number: 105 36,948 472,769 13,137 11,253 652 2,490 4,783 4,437 Farms with- : 1 to 9 .....................................: - 256 4,161 9 54 125 114 283 452 10 to 49 ...................................: 2 134 2,162 26 25 9 15 30 60 50 to 99 ...................................: 1 47 647 12 15 - 2 7 6 100 to 199 .................................: - 28 451 9 12 - - 2 5 200 to 499 .................................: - 22 400 3 12 1 2 3 1 500 or more ................................: - 17 181 8 5 - 2 2 1 --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 68. Summary by North American Industry Classification System: 2012 (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) ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- LIVESTOCK - Con. : : Cattle and calves inventory - Con. : Cows and heifers that calved - Con. : : Milk cows .................................farms: 1,931 10 23 41 3 17 - number: 1,815,655 47 (D) (D) 7 716 - Farms with- : 1 to 9 .....................................: 457 9 22 36 3 14 - 10 to 49 ...................................: 62 1 - - - 1 - 50 to 99 ...................................: 52 - - - - - - 100 to 199 .................................: 110 - - 3 - - - 200 to 499 .................................: 258 - - 2 - 2 - 500 or more ................................: 992 - 1 - - - - : Other cattle (see text) .....................farms: 13,380 142 152 836 68 482 - number: 2,971,282 43,812 8,580 26,435 328 39,574 - : Cattle and calves sold ........................farms: 12,594 120 89 705 39 412 - number: 3,671,078 19,014 5,030 35,794 157 40,958 - $1,000: 3,259,325 (D) (D) 35,839 234 40,470 - Calves weighing less than 500 pounds ........farms: 5,347 31 19 218 15 130 - number: 1,252,820 4,151 443 4,521 24 5,931 - : Cattle, including calves weighing : 500 pounds or more .........................farms: 11,228 109 84 633 30 380 - number: 2,418,258 14,863 4,587 31,273 133 35,027 - Cattle on feed (see text) .................farms: 262 1 3 4 - 13 - number: 712,651 (D) (D) 331 - 4,127 - : Hogs and pigs inventory .......................farms: 1,437 5 75 116 17 53 - number: 111,893 257 415 7,409 200 1,568 - Farms with- : 1 to 24 ........................................: 1,228 1 71 95 13 37 - 25 to 49 .......................................: 95 2 4 6 3 9 - 50 to 99 .......................................: 52 1 - 3 1 4 - 100 to 199 .....................................: 39 1 - 2 - 2 - 200 to 499 .....................................: 11 - - 5 - 1 - 500 or more ....................................: 12 - - 5 - - - : Used or to be used for breeding .............farms: 732 5 30 53 6 36 - number: 8,322 72 88 1,575 46 609 - Other hogs and pigs .........................farms: 1,179 4 58 93 16 44 - number: 103,571 185 327 5,834 154 959 - : Hogs and pigs sold ............................farms: 1,163 10 41 103 16 32 - number: 290,488 (D) 326 26,703 224 1,873 - $1,000: 51,526 43 61 4,085 (D) 389 - : Sheep and lambs inventory (see text) ..........farms: 4,224 51 163 414 37 154 - number: 668,517 4,924 9,916 50,487 412 100,123 - Ewes 1 year old or older ....................farms: 3,222 26 97 300 23 112 - number: 306,987 3,161 5,649 24,820 (D) (D) - Sheep and lambs sold ..........................farms: 2,593 19 57 216 16 109 - number: 440,092 2,000 5,822 (D) (D) 45,465 - : Total horses and ponies inventory .............farms: 14,932 117 243 1,551 108 635 - number: 142,555 634 1,404 10,272 376 4,725 - Owned horses and ponies : inventory ..................................farms: 14,353 110 220 1,385 99 594 - number: 107,774 496 958 6,627 306 3,753 - Owned horses and ponies sold ..................farms: 2,959 13 16 134 1 49 - number: 10,452 26 41 408 (D) 138 - : Goats, all inventory ..........................farms: 4,474 56 191 440 40 167 - number: 140,042 1,673 1,429 8,339 294 4,105 - Goats, all sold ...............................farms: 2,133 16 64 136 16 67 - number: 62,844 252 362 2,993 189 1,747 - : POULTRY : : Layers inventory (see text) ...................farms: 6,744 34 622 1,238 176 262 - number: 19,000,779 579 24,000 95,199 3,452 9,507 - Farms with- : 1 to 399 .......................................: 6,653 34 617 1,234 175 259 - 400 to 3,199 ...................................: 39 - 5 3 1 3 - 3,200 to 9,999 .................................: 4 - - - - - - 10,000 to 19,999 ...............................: 4 - - - - - - 20,000 to 49,999 ...............................: 5 - - - - - - 50,000 to 99,999 ...............................: 8 - - 1 - - - 100,000 or more ................................: 31 - - - - - - : Pullets for laying flock replacement : inventory ....................................farms: 873 6 54 100 14 30 - number: 4,633,558 (D) 1,897 3,728 (D) 824 - : Layers sold (see text) ........................farms: 831 1 43 104 25 19 - number: 8,195,242 (D) 3,487 3,833 (D) 2,822 - : Pullets for laying flock replacement : sold .........................................farms: 86 - - 9 1 - - number: 3,508,788 - - (D) (D) - - ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 68. Summary by North American Industry Classification System: 2012 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : Other crop farming - con. : : : : : : : : (1119) : : : : : : : :-------------------------------: : : : : : : : : Sugarcane : : : : : : : : : farming, hay : : : : : : : Animal : : 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) --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- LIVESTOCK - Con. : : Cattle and calves inventory - Con. : Cows and heifers that calved - Con. : : Milk cows .................................farms: - 17 186 - 1,529 12 29 37 44 number: - 716 32,471 - 1,778,116 40 44 48 611 Farms with- : 1 to 9 .....................................: - 14 151 - 101 12 29 37 43 10 to 49 ...................................: - 1 16 - 44 - - - - 50 to 99 ...................................: - - 2 - 50 - - - - 100 to 199 .................................: - - 3 - 104 - - - - 200 to 499 .................................: - 2 1 - 253 - - - - 500 or more ................................: - - 13 - 977 - - - 1 : Other cattle (see text) .....................farms: 7 475 8,749 120 1,359 140 206 463 663 number: 100 39,474 993,727 503,421 1,335,960 987 2,484 6,421 9,553 : Cattle and calves sold ........................farms: 4 408 8,898 156 1,431 47 39 212 446 number: 86 40,872 1,612,667 708,478 1,235,479 2,728 1,451 4,370 4,952 $1,000: (D) (D) 1,384,322 1,000,614 763,863 1,204 1,748 3,240 3,512 Calves weighing less than 500 pounds ........farms: - 130 3,452 26 1,147 32 13 77 187 number: - 5,931 589,168 (D) 625,422 83 63 (D) 1,851 : Cattle, including calves weighing : 500 pounds or more .........................farms: 4 376 7,961 156 1,312 22 29 183 329 number: 86 34,941 1,023,499 (D) 610,057 2,645 1,388 (D) 3,101 Cattle on feed (see text) .................farms: - 13 33 156 48 2 - - 2 number: - 4,127 8,343 684,371 13,720 (D) - - (D) : Hogs and pigs inventory .......................farms: - 53 314 5 14 378 80 182 198 number: - 1,568 10,787 45 122 87,074 839 1,260 1,917 Farms with- : 1 to 24 ........................................: - 37 289 5 12 282 74 171 178 25 to 49 .......................................: - 9 7 - 2 38 4 8 12 50 to 99 .......................................: - 4 5 - - 29 1 3 5 100 to 199 .....................................: - 2 10 - - 20 1 - 3 200 to 499 .....................................: - 1 2 - - 3 - - - 500 or more ....................................: - - 1 - - 6 - - - : Used or to be used for breeding .............farms: - 36 134 3 8 227 46 104 80 number: - 609 1,988 (D) (D) 2,759 210 509 413 Other hogs and pigs .........................farms: - 44 263 3 8 335 62 122 171 number: - 959 8,799 (D) (D) 84,315 629 751 1,504 : Hogs and pigs sold ............................farms: - 32 242 2 6 433 34 135 109 number: - 1,873 11,912 (D) 279 243,898 1,033 1,355 2,736 $1,000: - 389 1,661 (D) 41 44,491 127 172 434 : Sheep and lambs inventory (see text) ..........farms: 1 153 697 5 32 97 205 1,948 421 number: (D) (D) 40,007 153 7,416 1,483 2,726 444,864 6,006 Ewes 1 year old or older ....................farms: 1 111 504 3 24 66 152 1,605 310 number: (D) 48,519 18,256 (D) 3,427 661 1,418 197,410 3,386 Sheep and lambs sold ..........................farms: 1 108 342 1 19 49 56 1,549 160 number: (D) (D) 26,033 (D) 3,503 14,413 607 312,329 4,322 : Total horses and ponies inventory .............farms: 1 634 4,620 52 115 174 354 901 6,062 number: (D) (D) 29,568 368 777 914 2,115 3,696 87,706 Owned horses and ponies : inventory ..................................farms: 1 593 4,399 50 114 167 335 867 6,013 number: (D) (D) 21,421 336 707 826 1,650 3,105 67,589 Owned horses and ponies sold ..................farms: - 49 401 2 10 - 9 49 2,275 number: - 138 1,125 (D) 37 - 11 139 8,518 : Goats, all inventory ..........................farms: - 167 747 13 54 108 234 1,783 641 number: - 4,105 13,471 607 1,957 1,139 3,706 98,690 4,632 Goats, all sold ...............................farms: - 67 247 11 13 48 43 1,283 189 number: - 1,747 8,916 380 682 538 399 44,116 2,270 : POULTRY : : Layers inventory (see text) ...................farms: 1 261 1,446 9 47 154 891 920 945 number: (D) (D) 34,195 1,534 1,301 3,140 18,797,906 15,248 14,718 Farms with- : 1 to 399 .......................................: 1 258 1,441 9 46 154 819 920 945 400 to 3,199 ...................................: - 3 4 - 1 - 22 - - 3,200 to 9,999 .................................: - - - - - - 4 - - 10,000 to 19,999 ...............................: - - 1 - - - 3 - - 20,000 to 49,999 ...............................: - - - - - - 5 - - 50,000 to 99,999 ...............................: - - - - - - 7 - - 100,000 or more ................................: - - - - - - 31 - - : Pullets for laying flock replacement : inventory ....................................farms: - 30 152 1 1 18 257 131 109 number: - 824 2,301 (D) (D) 235 4,620,014 1,543 2,448 : Layers sold (see text) ........................farms: - 19 95 - 4 26 229 144 141 number: - 2,822 10,218 - (D) 1,682 8,163,069 3,807 4,994 : Pullets for laying flock replacement : sold .........................................farms: - - 2 - - 3 37 14 20 number: - - (D) - - 60 3,505,710 142 1,322 --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 68. Summary by North American Industry Classification System: 2012 (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. : : Broilers and other meat-type chickens : sold .........................................farms: 421 4 48 36 7 16 - number: 273,277,272 1,608 13,175 1,644,980 (D) 11,807 - Farms with- : 1 to 1,999 .....................................: 336 4 47 30 7 14 - 2,000 to 59,999 ................................: 26 - 1 1 - 2 - 60,000 to 99,999 ...............................: - - - - - - - 100,000 or more ................................: 59 - - 5 - - - : Turkeys inventory (see text) ..................farms: 682 3 68 63 19 19 - number: 4,532,307 32 624 436 109 120 - Turkeys sold (see text) .......................farms: 302 2 27 21 1 3 - number: 15,384,675 (D) 333 223 (D) 1,076 - : CROPS HARVESTED : : Barley for grain ..............................farms: 264 95 49 33 1 53 - acres: 81,954 35,349 20,937 6,076 (D) 11,950 - bushels: 5,312,595 1,758,934 2,104,595 344,467 (D) 723,207 - Irrigated ...................................farms: 144 36 41 23 - 22 - acres: 44,819 16,080 19,592 2,009 - 2,626 - Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..................................: 60 24 14 8 1 6 - 25 to 99 acres .................................: 59 20 9 10 - 13 - 100 to 249 acres ...............................: 68 23 14 10 - 13 - 250 to 499 acres ...............................: 30 3 6 2 - 16 - 500 acres or more ..............................: 47 25 6 3 - 5 - : Corn for grain ................................farms: 733 259 109 115 4 167 - acres: 180,672 79,995 27,403 13,728 (D) 40,025 - bushels: 31,922,610 13,685,792 4,981,691 2,489,443 (D) 7,404,764 - Irrigated ...................................farms: 733 259 109 115 4 167 - acres: 175,863 76,757 26,999 13,098 (D) 39,602 - Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..................................: 163 47 32 34 3 26 - 25 to 99 acres .................................: 211 93 19 33 - 52 - 100 to 249 acres ...............................: 152 42 22 34 1 35 - 250 to 499 acres ...............................: 103 34 16 7 - 29 - 500 acres or more ..............................: 104 43 20 7 - 25 - : Corn for silage or greenchop ..................farms: 1,895 414 53 223 7 305 - acres: 487,570 65,334 12,988 36,332 (D) 77,114 - tons: 12,575,973 1,687,267 390,697 938,055 (D) 1,981,957 - Irrigated ...................................farms: 1,802 385 49 211 7 298 - acres: 461,898 61,596 12,425 35,074 (D) 73,203 - Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..................................: 249 124 16 46 6 24 - 25 to 99 acres .................................: 538 146 8 89 - 108 - 100 to 249 acres ...............................: 512 86 15 53 - 91 - 250 to 499 acres ...............................: 329 35 7 24 1 47 - 500 acres or more ..............................: 267 23 7 11 - 35 - : Cotton, all ...................................farms: 630 26 77 100 - 406 - acres: 367,766 3,887 36,294 29,674 - 293,434 - bales: 1,201,860 11,731 128,303 103,940 - 942,377 - Irrigated ...................................farms: 630 26 77 100 - 406 - acres: 367,766 3,887 36,294 29,674 - 293,434 - Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..................................: 31 2 - 9 - 20 - 25 to 99 acres .................................: 102 12 5 19 - 57 - 100 to 249 acres ...............................: 180 6 28 38 - 100 - 250 to 499 acres ...............................: 153 6 28 21 - 97 - 500 acres or more ..............................: 164 - 16 13 - 132 - : Dry edible beans, excluding limas .............farms: 308 90 77 69 3 61 - acres: 39,511 14,171 9,116 6,639 (D) 8,636 - cwt: 955,995 299,948 191,368 (D) (D) 261,215 - Irrigated ...................................farms: 269 76 58 68 3 61 - acres: 36,866 11,984 8,706 (D) (D) 8,636 - Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..................................: 95 19 40 23 2 6 - 25 to 99 acres .................................: 93 29 10 24 1 28 - 100 to 249 acres ...............................: 69 20 16 14 - 19 - 250 to 499 acres ...............................: 38 15 8 8 - 6 - 500 acres or more ..............................: 13 7 3 - - 2 - : Oats for grain ................................farms: 240 65 31 33 1 43 - acres: 25,065 4,387 3,007 4,176 (D) 3,788 - bushels: 2,246,420 361,079 281,895 406,018 (D) 325,262 - Irrigated ...................................farms: 145 35 27 25 - 21 - acres: 15,901 2,540 2,860 2,303 - 1,736 - Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..................................: 86 28 15 9 1 16 - 25 to 99 acres .................................: 75 23 7 14 - 11 - 100 to 249 acres ...............................: 54 12 7 6 - 13 - 250 to 499 acres ...............................: 16 1 1 2 - 3 - 500 acres or more ..............................: 9 1 1 2 - - - : Peanuts for nuts ..............................farms: 15 - 10 2 3 - - acres: 27 - 20 (D) (D) - - pounds: 84,093 - 62,290 (D) (D) - - ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 68. Summary by North American Industry Classification System: 2012 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : Other crop farming - con. : : : : : : : : (1119) : : : : : : : :-------------------------------: : : : : : : : : Sugarcane : : : : : : : : : farming, hay : : : : : : : Animal : : 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. : : Broilers and other meat-type chickens : sold .........................................farms: - 16 29 - 1 10 175 62 33 number: - 11,807 15,089 - (D) 910 271,583,573 3,705 1,942 Farms with- : 1 to 1,999 .....................................: - 14 27 - 1 10 101 62 33 2,000 to 59,999 ................................: - 2 2 - - - 20 - - 60,000 to 99,999 ...............................: - - - - - - - - - 100,000 or more ................................: - - - - - - 54 - - : Turkeys inventory (see text) ..................farms: - 19 97 - - 16 175 124 98 number: - 120 886 - - 99 (D) 544 (D) Turkeys sold (see text) .......................farms: - 3 28 - 3 21 109 41 46 number: - 1,076 (D) - 57 123 15,237,404 238 (D) : CROPS HARVESTED : : Barley for grain ..............................farms: 5 48 18 3 8 - - 4 - acres: 1,160 10,790 2,179 (D) (D) - - 3,200 - bushels: 91,252 631,955 131,273 (D) 147,749 - - (D) - Irrigated ...................................farms: 3 19 9 2 7 - - 4 - acres: (D) (D) 357 (D) (D) - - 2,600 - Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..................................: - 6 5 2 - - - - - 25 to 99 acres .................................: 1 12 6 - 1 - - - - 100 to 249 acres ...............................: 2 11 4 1 3 - - - - 250 to 499 acres ...............................: 2 14 1 - 2 - - - - 500 acres or more ..............................: - 5 2 - 2 - - 4 - : Corn for grain ................................farms: 21 146 12 - 56 2 3 - 6 acres: 5,964 34,061 442 - 18,671 (D) (D) - 6 bushels: 986,059 6,418,705 69,866 - 3,215,799 (D) (D) - 355 Irrigated ...................................farms: 21 146 12 - 56 2 3 - 6 acres: 5,645 33,957 442 - 18,557 (D) (D) - 6 Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..................................: 3 23 9 - 3 1 2 - 6 25 to 99 acres .................................: 5 47 2 - 11 - 1 - - 100 to 249 acres ...............................: 7 28 - - 17 1 - - - 250 to 499 acres ...............................: 2 27 1 - 16 - - - - 500 acres or more ..............................: 4 21 - - 9 - - - - : Corn for silage or greenchop ..................farms: 13 292 56 - 820 3 9 1 4 acres: 3,247 73,867 11,975 - 282,493 60 749 (D) (D) tons: 83,972 1,897,985 317,482 - 7,237,045 (D) 9,538 (D) 4,032 Irrigated ...................................farms: 12 286 50 - 789 1 9 - 3 acres: (D) (D) 10,781 - 267,582 (D) 749 - (D) Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..................................: - 24 6 - 18 1 5 - 3 25 to 99 acres .................................: 4 104 24 - 158 2 2 1 - 100 to 249 acres ...............................: 5 86 13 - 252 - 1 - 1 250 to 499 acres ...............................: 2 45 6 - 208 - 1 - - 500 acres or more ..............................: 2 33 7 - 184 - - - - : Cotton, all ...................................farms: 194 212 3 - 15 - 1 2 - acres: 189,180 104,254 448 - 3,839 - (D) (D) - bales: 585,164 357,213 1,346 - 13,553 - (D) (D) - Irrigated ...................................farms: 194 212 3 - 15 - 1 2 - acres: 189,180 104,254 448 - 3,839 - (D) (D) - Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..................................: 20 - - - - - - - - 25 to 99 acres .................................: 29 28 1 - 5 - 1 2 - 100 to 249 acres ...............................: 33 67 2 - 6 - - - - 250 to 499 acres ...............................: 42 55 - - 1 - - - - 500 acres or more ..............................: 70 62 - - 3 - - - - : Dry edible beans, excluding limas .............farms: 6 55 1 - 2 - 1 - 4 acres: (D) (D) (D) - (D) - (D) - 4 cwt: (D) (D) (D) - (D) - (D) - 76 Irrigated ...................................farms: 6 55 - - 2 - 1 - - acres: (D) (D) - - (D) - (D) - - Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..................................: - 6 - - - - 1 - 4 25 to 99 acres .................................: 1 27 1 - - - - - - 100 to 249 acres ...............................: 4 15 - - - - - - - 250 to 499 acres ...............................: 1 5 - - 1 - - - - 500 acres or more ..............................: - 2 - - 1 - - - - : Oats for grain ................................farms: 1 42 19 - 45 - - 1 2 acres: (D) (D) 278 - 9,281 - - (D) (D) bushels: (D) (D) 21,839 - 835,123 - - (D) (D) Irrigated ...................................farms: 1 20 2 - 34 - - - 1 acres: (D) (D) (D) - 6,390 - - - (D) Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..................................: - 16 14 - 2 - - 1 - 25 to 99 acres .................................: - 11 5 - 13 - - - 2 100 to 249 acres ...............................: - 13 - - 16 - - - - 250 to 499 acres ...............................: 1 2 - - 9 - - - - 500 acres or more ..............................: - - - - 5 - - - - : Peanuts for nuts ..............................farms: - - - - - - - - - acres: - - - - - - - - - pounds: - - - - - - - - - --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 68. Summary by North American Industry Classification System: 2012 (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 HARVESTED - Con. : : Peanuts for nuts - Con. : : Irrigated ...................................farms: 15 - 10 2 3 - - acres: 27 - 20 (D) (D) - - Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..................................: 15 - 10 2 3 - - 25 to 99 acres .................................: - - - - - - - 100 to 249 acres ...............................: - - - - - - - 250 to 499 acres ...............................: - - - - - - - 500 acres or more ..............................: - - - - - - - : Rice ..........................................farms: 1,392 1,229 32 79 1 44 - acres: 561,968 504,606 12,713 27,100 (D) 16,245 - cwt: 46,692,580 41,880,841 (D) 2,331,979 (D) 1,284,727 - Irrigated ...................................farms: 1,392 1,229 32 79 1 44 - acres: 561,968 504,606 12,713 27,100 (D) 16,245 - Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..................................: 49 28 8 9 1 - - 25 to 99 acres .................................: 232 201 4 20 - 6 - 100 to 249 acres ...............................: 385 345 8 17 - 14 - 250 to 499 acres ...............................: 366 329 1 21 - 13 - 500 acres or more ..............................: 360 326 11 12 - 11 - : Sorghum for grain .............................farms: 74 24 7 5 - 21 - acres: 13,908 4,487 (D) 1,835 - 2,950 - bushels: 1,263,924 391,340 (D) 152,511 - 276,018 - Irrigated ...................................farms: 62 23 7 4 - 16 - acres: 10,997 (D) (D) (D) - 1,635 - Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..................................: 17 6 5 - - 6 - 25 to 99 acres .................................: 18 8 - 1 - 5 - 100 to 249 acres ...............................: 19 3 2 1 - 6 - 250 to 499 acres ...............................: 13 4 - 2 - 3 - 500 acres or more ..............................: 7 3 - 1 - 1 - : Soybeans for beans ............................farms: 2 2 - - - - - acres: (D) (D) - - - - - bushels: (D) (D) - - - - - Irrigated ...................................farms: 1 1 - - - - - acres: (D) (D) - - - - - Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..................................: 1 1 - - - - - 25 to 99 acres .................................: - - - - - - - 100 to 249 acres ...............................: 1 1 - - - - - 250 to 499 acres ...............................: - - - - - - - 500 acres or more ..............................: - - - - - - - : Sugarbeets for sugar ..........................farms: 58 - 7 - - 49 - acres: 27,193 - (D) - - (D) - tons: 1,179,753 - (D) - - 1,009,904 - Irrigated ...................................farms: 58 - 7 - - 49 - acres: 26,567 - (D) - - 23,231 - : Sunflower seed, all ...........................farms: 197 102 38 16 7 32 - acres: 49,749 19,720 14,701 2,538 (D) 12,710 - pounds: 68,792,639 25,656,350 22,429,751 3,379,435 (D) 17,281,103 - Irrigated ...................................farms: 152 87 25 9 4 25 - acres: 34,815 14,909 10,563 2,335 (D) 6,934 - Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..................................: 42 12 9 7 7 5 - 25 to 99 acres .................................: 52 35 2 6 - 9 - 100 to 249 acres ...............................: 43 36 5 1 - 1 - 250 to 499 acres ...............................: 31 12 10 1 - 8 - 500 acres or more ..............................: 29 7 12 1 - 9 - : Wheat for grain, all ..........................farms: 1,503 417 230 265 5 457 - acres: 491,846 102,688 117,076 52,306 1,124 181,562 - bushels: 42,955,324 8,126,085 9,981,061 4,124,934 111,103 17,642,534 - Irrigated ...................................farms: 1,123 260 186 194 3 394 - acres: 382,958 62,108 100,737 36,395 (D) 158,235 - Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..................................: 164 71 32 26 - 23 - 25 to 99 acres .................................: 427 141 39 102 1 115 - 100 to 249 acres ...............................: 430 109 58 85 2 130 - 250 to 499 acres ...............................: 220 53 37 29 2 80 - 500 acres or more ..............................: 262 43 64 23 - 109 - : Forage-land used for all hay and all : haylage, grass silage, and : greenchop (see text) .........................farms: 7,903 536 297 790 55 3,185 - acres: 1,670,027 64,429 116,295 89,031 5,692 876,138 - tons, dry: 9,363,421 351,095 641,830 493,220 23,839 5,007,757 - Irrigated ...................................farms: 5,498 441 215 584 33 2,288 - acres: 1,346,666 52,692 101,635 71,606 4,754 711,476 - Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..................................: 2,621 137 82 260 28 972 - 25 to 99 acres .................................: 2,274 231 57 278 15 873 - 100 to 249 acres ...............................: 1,435 95 56 160 7 608 - 250 to 499 acres ...............................: 728 42 30 57 3 300 - 500 acres or more ..............................: 845 31 72 35 2 432 - ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 68. Summary by North American Industry Classification System: 2012 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : Other crop farming - con. : : : : : : : : (1119) : : : : : : : :-------------------------------: : : : : : : : : Sugarcane : : : : : : : : : farming, hay : : : : : : : Animal : : 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 HARVESTED - Con. : : Peanuts for nuts - 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 acres or more ..............................: - - - - - - - - - : Rice ..........................................farms: 2 42 2 - 5 - - - - acres: (D) (D) (D) - (D) - - - - cwt: (D) (D) (D) - 61,605 - - - - Irrigated ...................................farms: 2 42 2 - 5 - - - - acres: (D) (D) (D) - (D) - - - - Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..................................: - - - - 3 - - - - 25 to 99 acres .................................: - 6 1 - - - - - - 100 to 249 acres ...............................: 1 13 - - 1 - - - - 250 to 499 acres ...............................: 1 12 1 - 1 - - - - 500 acres or more ..............................: - 11 - - - - - - - : Sorghum for grain .............................farms: - 21 3 - 14 - - - - acres: - 2,950 (D) - 3,787 - - - - bushels: - 276,018 (D) - 374,678 - - - - Irrigated ...................................farms: - 16 - - 12 - - - - acres: - 1,635 - - (D) - - - - Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..................................: - 6 - - - - - - - 25 to 99 acres .................................: - 5 - - 4 - - - - 100 to 249 acres ...............................: - 6 2 - 5 - - - - 250 to 499 acres ...............................: - 3 1 - 3 - - - - 500 acres or more ..............................: - 1 - - 2 - - - - : 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: - 49 - 2 - - - - - acres: - (D) - (D) - - - - - tons: - 1,009,904 - (D) - - - - - Irrigated ...................................farms: - 49 - 2 - - - - - acres: - 23,231 - (D) - - - - - : Sunflower seed, all ...........................farms: - 32 - 2 - - - - - acres: - 12,710 - (D) - - - - - pounds: - 17,281,103 - (D) - - - - - Irrigated ...................................farms: - 25 - 2 - - - - - acres: - 6,934 - (D) - - - - - Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..................................: - 5 - 2 - - - - - 25 to 99 acres .................................: - 9 - - - - - - - 100 to 249 acres ...............................: - 1 - - - - - - - 250 to 499 acres ...............................: - 8 - - - - - - - 500 acres or more ..............................: - 9 - - - - - - - : Wheat for grain, all ..........................farms: 63 394 35 3 87 - 1 3 - acres: 37,671 143,891 5,636 (D) 30,793 - (D) 585 - bushels: 4,130,511 13,512,023 366,641 (D) 2,592,025 - (D) 5,874 - Irrigated ...................................farms: 59 335 14 2 68 - 1 1 - acres: 37,074 121,161 3,768 (D) 20,779 - (D) (D) - Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..................................: - 23 6 2 3 - 1 - - 25 to 99 acres .................................: 13 102 16 1 11 - - 1 - 100 to 249 acres ...............................: 20 110 9 - 37 - - - - 250 to 499 acres ...............................: 17 63 2 - 15 - - 2 - 500 acres or more ..............................: 13 96 2 - 21 - - - - : Forage-land used for all hay and all : haylage, grass silage, and : greenchop (see text) .........................farms: 71 3,114 1,542 26 865 19 67 162 359 acres: 30,474 845,664 181,947 3,678 310,336 269 2,015 11,914 8,283 tons, dry: 201,078 4,806,679 557,220 11,301 2,201,059 288 7,106 47,995 20,711 Irrigated ...................................farms: 67 2,221 870 21 749 10 29 69 189 acres: 29,149 682,327 122,409 2,518 266,982 124 1,456 5,959 5,055 Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..................................: 1 971 661 7 31 18 53 97 275 25 to 99 acres .................................: 13 860 491 10 184 1 9 50 75 100 to 249 acres ...............................: 31 577 214 5 275 - 4 6 5 250 to 499 acres ...............................: 14 286 90 2 196 - 1 4 3 500 acres or more ..............................: 12 420 86 2 179 - - 5 1 --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 68. Summary by North American Industry Classification System: 2012 (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 HARVESTED - Con. : : Forage-land used for all hay and all : haylage, grass silage, and : greenchop (see text) - Con. : : Alfalfa hay .................................farms: 3,243 215 154 369 19 1,684 - acres: 874,137 33,093 72,138 54,197 2,109 538,973 - tons, dry: 5,607,210 203,828 463,435 352,010 9,224 3,508,572 - Irrigated .................................farms: 3,035 197 143 344 17 1,592 - acres: 831,858 31,470 68,391 51,795 (D) 515,657 - : Other tame hay ..............................farms: 1,699 52 67 95 13 663 - acres: 212,238 6,129 24,078 3,357 745 111,277 - tons, dry: 821,999 18,090 77,549 6,770 3,925 531,763 - Irrigated .................................farms: 1,217 37 48 55 5 508 - acres: 155,054 4,285 16,545 1,677 628 87,185 - : Field and grass seed crops, all ...............farms: 209 22 20 14 1 135 - acres: 71,921 2,333 11,195 1,244 (D) 52,746 - Irrigated ...................................farms: 202 17 20 14 1 133 - acres: 71,053 (D) 11,195 1,244 (D) (D) - : Land in vegetables (see text) .................farms: 6,055 57 4,089 993 289 480 - acres: 985,735 5,918 809,615 54,939 1,054 112,658 - Irrigated ...................................farms: 6,055 57 4,089 993 289 480 - acres: 985,731 5,918 809,611 54,939 1,054 112,658 - Farms by acres harvested: : 0.1 to 4.9 acres ...............................: 3,667 24 2,371 674 255 210 - 5.0 to 24.9 acres ..............................: 948 7 736 147 30 21 - 25.0 to 99.9 acres .............................: 394 9 260 62 2 58 - 100.0 to 249.9 acres ...........................: 312 11 173 50 1 74 - 250.0 acres or more ............................: 734 6 549 60 1 117 - : Beans, snap .................................farms: 652 2 479 118 15 23 - acres: 9,419 (D) 6,798 (D) 17 (D) - Harvested for processing ..................farms: 56 - 46 8 1 1 - acres: 3,645 - (D) 77 (D) (D) - : Peas, green .................................farms: 138 4 101 16 5 9 - acres: 821 13 571 (D) 19 3 - Harvested for processing ..................farms: - - - - - - - acres: - - - - - - - Potatoes ....................................farms: 441 5 300 72 9 41 - acres: 42,660 1 34,226 (D) 7 2,727 - Harvested for processing ..................farms: 36 - 31 - - 4 - acres: 14,436 - 14,100 - - (D) - Farms by acres harvested: : 0.1 to 4.9 acres .............................: 345 5 227 62 9 29 - 5.0 to 24.9 acres ............................: 17 - 16 - - 1 - 25.0 to 99.9 acres ...........................: 20 - 14 2 - 3 - 100.0 to 249.9 acres .........................: 16 - 11 - - 5 - 250.0 acres or more ..........................: 43 - 32 8 - 3 - : Sweet corn ..................................farms: 441 5 298 66 19 33 - acres: 32,667 267 28,637 985 18 2,604 - Harvested for processing ..................farms: 12 - 6 4 - 2 - acres: 561 - 238 (D) - (D) - Sweet potatoes ..............................farms: 188 - 153 25 8 2 - acres: 18,189 - 16,473 (D) 1 (D) - Harvested for processing ..................farms: 27 - 22 5 - - - acres: 2,571 - 2,491 80 - - - : Tomatoes in the open ........................farms: 3,176 27 2,134 534 135 273 - acres: 295,247 3,545 203,162 20,269 123 67,116 - Harvested for processing ..................farms: 631 15 381 91 2 133 - acres: 256,051 (D) 174,108 18,704 (D) 60,031 - : Land in orchards ..............................farms: 38,098 256 990 35,191 334 651 - acres: 3,138,943 18,751 62,780 2,948,744 3,883 72,213 - Irrigated ...................................farms: 34,580 246 760 32,181 264 568 - acres: 3,072,245 17,802 62,273 2,888,520 3,673 68,602 - Farms by bearing and nonbearing acres: : 0.1 to 4.9 acres ...............................: 13,263 40 697 11,710 239 234 - 5.0 to 24.9 acres ..............................: 12,094 56 95 11,632 75 108 - 25.0 to 99.9 acres .............................: 7,356 99 78 6,920 10 131 - 100.0 to 249.9 acres ...........................: 2,969 45 58 2,705 7 96 - 250.0 acres or more ............................: 2,416 16 62 2,224 3 82 - : Apples ......................................farms: 2,527 12 317 1,809 82 143 - bearing and nonbearing acres: 18,205 3 690 16,746 194 404 - : Grapes ......................................farms: 11,462 15 245 10,806 59 171 - bearing and nonbearing acres: 940,177 391 6,298 919,811 870 7,105 - : Peaches, all ................................farms: 2,201 13 227 1,716 49 90 - bearing and nonbearing acres: 51,948 (D) 596 50,317 38 339 - : Citrus fruit, all ...........................farms: 7,283 13 272 6,660 99 122 - bearing and nonbearing acres: 293,387 (D) 6,079 281,507 804 2,898 - : Almonds .....................................farms: 6,841 84 170 6,142 28 202 - bearing and nonbearing acres: 935,804 7,207 30,804 847,944 200 33,077 - ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 68. Summary by North American Industry Classification System: 2012 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : Other crop farming - con. : : : : : : : : (1119) : : : : : : : :-------------------------------: : : : : : : : : Sugarcane : : : : : : : : : farming, hay : : : : : : : Animal : : 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 HARVESTED - Con. : : Forage-land used for all hay and all : haylage, grass silage, and : greenchop (see text) - Con. : : Alfalfa hay .................................farms: 65 1,619 307 7 377 8 10 34 59 acres: 26,941 512,032 51,059 716 114,646 116 597 3,237 3,256 tons, dry: 180,590 3,327,982 220,373 3,351 812,185 58 1,816 20,867 11,491 Irrigated .................................farms: 62 1,530 273 6 359 8 10 33 53 acres: 26,303 489,354 45,717 (D) 109,513 116 589 (D) 2,985 : Other tame hay ..............................farms: 5 658 529 10 86 2 16 50 116 acres: 620 110,657 43,534 1,204 15,087 (D) (D) 5,027 1,730 tons, dry: 2,839 528,924 91,078 2,864 66,697 (D) (D) 19,763 3,340 Irrigated .................................farms: 2 506 378 9 51 2 8 28 88 acres: (D) (D) 31,577 (D) 8,780 (D) 34 2,378 1,364 : Field and grass seed crops, all ...............farms: 7 128 5 - 6 - 1 2 3 acres: 1,771 50,975 701 - 1,580 - (D) (D) (D) Irrigated ...................................farms: 7 126 5 - 6 - 1 2 3 acres: 1,771 (D) 701 - 1,580 - (D) (D) (D) : Land in vegetables (see text) .................farms: 40 440 28 3 13 3 32 17 51 acres: 24,692 87,967 212 21 1,256 (Z) 15 12 36 Irrigated ...................................farms: 40 440 28 3 13 3 32 17 51 acres: 24,692 87,967 212 21 1,256 (Z) 15 12 36 Farms by acres harvested: : 0.1 to 4.9 acres ...............................: - 210 23 - 7 3 32 17 51 5.0 to 24.9 acres ..............................: - 21 2 3 2 - - - - 25.0 to 99.9 acres .............................: 9 49 3 - - - - - - 100.0 to 249.9 acres ...........................: 20 54 - - 3 - - - - 250.0 acres or more ............................: 11 106 - - 1 - - - - : Beans, snap .................................farms: - 23 3 - 3 - 4 - 5 acres: - (D) 1 - (Z) - 1 - 2 Harvested for processing ..................farms: - 1 - - - - - - - acres: - (D) - - - - - - - : Peas, green .................................farms: - 9 3 - - - - - - acres: - 3 (D) - - - - - - Harvested for processing ..................farms: - - - - - - - - - acres: - - - - - - - - - Potatoes ....................................farms: - 41 6 - - - - - 8 acres: - 2,727 (D) - - - - - 1 Harvested for processing ..................farms: - 4 1 - - - - - - acres: - (D) (D) - - - - - - Farms by acres harvested: : 0.1 to 4.9 acres .............................: - 29 5 - - - - - 8 5.0 to 24.9 acres ............................: - 1 - - - - - - - 25.0 to 99.9 acres ...........................: - 3 1 - - - - - - 100.0 to 249.9 acres .........................: - 5 - - - - - - - 250.0 acres or more ..........................: - 3 - - - - - - - : Sweet corn ..................................farms: 2 31 6 1 6 - 3 - 4 acres: (D) (D) (D) (D) (D) - (Z) - (Z) Harvested for processing ..................farms: - 2 - - - - - - - acres: - (D) - - - - - - - Sweet potatoes ..............................farms: - 2 - - - - - - - acres: - (D) - - - - - - - Harvested for processing ..................farms: - - - - - - - - - acres: - - - - - - - - - : Tomatoes in the open ........................farms: 20 253 20 - 9 - 9 14 21 acres: 20,491 46,624 4 - 1,019 - 2 1 6 Harvested for processing ..................farms: 20 113 1 - 1 - 3 - 4 acres: 20,448 39,582 (D) - (D) - (Z) - 2 : Land in orchards ..............................farms: 35 616 210 4 162 20 106 52 122 acres: 4,928 67,285 5,231 155 22,287 119 3,737 133 910 Irrigated ...................................farms: 33 535 171 1 160 17 87 35 90 acres: 4,536 64,067 4,640 (D) 22,087 115 3,591 (D) 819 Farms by bearing and nonbearing acres: : 0.1 to 4.9 acres ...............................: - 234 113 - 6 17 64 47 96 5.0 to 24.9 acres ..............................: 6 102 63 2 18 2 17 4 22 25.0 to 99.9 acres .............................: 13 118 20 2 74 1 17 1 3 100.0 to 249.9 acres ...........................: 10 86 10 - 44 - 4 - - 250.0 acres or more ............................: 6 76 4 - 20 - 4 - 1 : Apples ......................................farms: - 143 55 - 2 10 37 27 33 bearing and nonbearing acres: - 404 29 - (D) 3 (D) 23 52 : Grapes ......................................farms: 3 168 47 - 27 7 40 18 27 bearing and nonbearing acres: 362 6,743 637 - 4,360 1 674 11 20 : Peaches, all ................................farms: 1 89 35 - 4 10 27 8 22 bearing and nonbearing acres: (D) (D) 50 - (D) 3 52 2 52 : Citrus fruit, all ...........................farms: 1 121 45 2 7 4 21 10 28 bearing and nonbearing acres: (D) (D) 1,309 (D) (D) (Z) 195 3 80 : Almonds .....................................farms: 13 189 38 - 104 11 25 20 17 bearing and nonbearing acres: 1,080 31,997 1,126 - 12,999 (D) 2,216 (D) 107 --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 68. Summary by North American Industry Classification System: 2012 (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 HARVESTED - Con. : : Land in orchards - Con. : Farms by bearing and nonbearing : acres: - Con. : : Pecans .....................................farms: 222 1 9 199 2 4 - bearing and nonbearing acres: 3,309 (D) 35 3,234 (D) 1 - : Walnuts, English ............................farms: 5,712 131 134 5,145 22 132 - bearing and nonbearing acres: 329,112 8,443 7,462 299,587 461 9,785 - : Land in berries (see text) ....................farms: 1,985 5 412 1,345 58 124 - acres: 52,626 (D) 2,898 49,146 235 315 - ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 68. Summary by North American Industry Classification System: 2012 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : Other crop farming - con. : : : : : : : : (1119) : : : : : : : :-------------------------------: : : : : : : : : Sugarcane : : : : : : : : : farming, hay : : : : : : : Animal : : 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 HARVESTED - Con. : : Land in orchards - Con. : Farms by bearing and nonbearing : acres: - Con. : : Pecans .....................................farms: - 4 6 - - - - - 1 bearing and nonbearing acres: - 1 (D) - - - - - (D) : Walnuts, English ............................farms: 5 127 77 1 30 3 22 7 8 bearing and nonbearing acres: 147 9,638 1,146 (D) 1,827 (Z) 329 (D) (D) : Land in berries (see text) ....................farms: - 124 13 - 1 3 10 5 9 acres: - 315 18 - (D) 1 2 1 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. Table 69. Summary by Age and Primary Occupation of Principal Operator: 2012 [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : : Farming : :---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : Total farming : : Age of operator (years) : and other : :----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : occupations : Total : Under 25 : 25 to 34 : 35 to 44 : 45 to 54 : 55 to 64 : 65 and over ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- FARMS AND LAND IN FARMS : : Farms ...........................................number: 77,857 42,469 151 1,663 3,117 7,658 12,433 17,447 percent: 100.0 54.5 0.2 2.1 4.0 9.8 16.0 22.4 Land in farms ....................................acres: 25,569,001 19,154,716 18,221 528,013 1,355,232 3,590,288 5,991,645 7,671,317 Average size of farm .........................acres: 328 451 121 318 435 469 482 440 : MARKET VALUE OF AGRICULTURAL : PRODUCTS SOLD AND GOVERNMENT : PAYMENTS : : Total ............................................farms: 77,857 42,469 151 1,663 3,117 7,658 12,433 17,447 $1,000: 42,774,392 36,151,362 72,031 877,169 3,550,610 9,529,368 11,641,270 10,480,914 Average per farm ...........................dollars: 549,397 851,241 477,027 527,462 1,139,111 1,244,368 936,320 600,729 Farms by economic class: : Less than $1,000 (see text) .......................: 14,629 5,953 19 175 380 902 1,640 2,837 $1,000 to $2,499 ..................................: 4,718 1,896 11 88 122 311 492 872 $2,500 to $4,999 ..................................: 5,904 2,468 12 96 131 377 601 1,251 $5,000 to $9,999 ..................................: 7,846 3,505 15 127 210 528 964 1,661 $10,000 to $24,999 ................................: 10,265 4,936 16 153 327 878 1,260 2,302 : $25,000 to $49,999 ................................: 7,150 3,867 16 160 293 584 1,041 1,773 $50,000 to $99,999 ................................: 6,698 3,884 17 159 267 664 1,171 1,606 $100,000 to $249,999 ..............................: 6,951 4,780 24 211 366 895 1,487 1,797 $250,000 to $499,999 ..............................: 4,132 3,116 5 165 240 616 1,043 1,047 : $500,000 to $999,999 ..............................: 3,197 2,553 10 134 201 549 856 803 $1,000,000 or more ................................: 6,367 5,511 6 195 580 1,354 1,878 1,498 $1,000,000 to $2,499,999 ........................: 3,015 2,546 - 123 277 555 847 744 $2,500,000 to $4,999,999 ........................: 1,480 1,319 3 44 113 330 506 323 $5,000,000 or more ..............................: 1,872 1,646 3 28 190 469 525 431 : Total sales ....................................farms: 77,857 42,469 151 1,663 3,117 7,658 12,433 17,447 $1,000: 42,627,472 36,026,807 71,665 870,608 3,536,581 9,500,813 11,600,682 10,446,458 Grains, oilseeds, dry beans, and : dry peas ....................................farms: 4,757 3,788 35 266 374 786 1,245 1,082 $1,000: 1,727,708 1,551,617 3,548 70,248 156,396 345,350 551,816 424,259 Sales of $50,000 or more ...................farms: 3,235 2,800 21 199 268 597 940 775 $1,000: 1,701,529 1,533,399 3,326 69,313 154,533 341,661 545,439 419,127 Corn .......................................farms: 1,796 1,441 6 80 137 319 475 424 $1,000: 419,544 389,136 385 15,646 31,613 88,503 136,926 116,063 Sales of $50,000 or more .................farms: 1,130 1,033 6 51 98 225 360 293 $1,000: 407,430 381,346 385 15,313 30,849 86,596 134,439 113,764 Wheat ......................................farms: 1,499 1,302 9 75 110 279 449 380 $1,000: 341,702 320,552 (D) (D) 31,192 61,630 134,344 85,355 Sales of $50,000 or more .................farms: 914 846 4 36 72 177 297 260 $1,000: 329,286 310,102 443 6,557 30,214 59,149 130,816 82,922 Soybeans ...................................farms: 2 2 - - 1 1 - - $1,000: (D) (D) - - (D) (D) - - Sales of $50,000 or more .................farms: 1 1 - - - 1 - - $1,000: (D) (D) - - - (D) - - Sorghum ....................................farms: 200 170 - 14 16 38 58 44 $1,000: (D) (D) - 1,772 (D) (D) 3,839 4,106 Sales of $50,000 or more .................farms: 76 73 - 6 3 23 17 24 $1,000: 13,369 12,486 - 1,559 672 3,456 3,008 3,791 Barley .....................................farms: 261 207 - 5 16 38 77 71 $1,000: 29,212 18,267 - 26 1,331 3,336 7,257 6,317 Sales of $50,000 or more .................farms: 105 90 - - 6 18 35 31 $1,000: 27,084 16,431 - - 1,164 2,929 6,578 5,760 Rice .......................................farms: 1,391 1,106 21 105 125 229 348 278 $1,000: 782,644 682,231 2,429 41,204 83,998 157,565 216,679 180,355 Sales of $50,000 or more .................farms: 1,306 1,054 12 99 118 222 336 267 $1,000: 780,488 680,864 (D) 40,984 (D) 157,435 216,368 180,002 Other grains, oilseeds, : dry beans, and dry peas ...................farms: 953 778 3 58 83 136 273 225 $1,000: 138,816 126,846 (D) (D) 7,361 30,348 52,770 32,063 Sales of $50,000 or more .................farms: 438 402 1 28 27 77 157 112 $1,000: 132,134 121,487 (D) (D) 6,703 29,360 50,948 30,313 : Tobacco ..................................... farms: - - - - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - - - - Sales of $50,000 or more ...................farms: - - - - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - - - - Cotton and cottonseed ........................farms: 630 575 - 26 57 110 192 190 $1,000: 655,094 602,932 - 12,984 47,176 88,605 292,608 161,559 Sales of $50,000 or more ...................farms: 584 547 - 22 53 106 186 180 $1,000: 653,962 602,189 - 12,877 47,074 88,479 292,447 161,312 Vegetables, melons, potatoes, : and sweet potatoes ..........................farms: 6,155 4,310 6 383 473 942 1,348 1,158 $1,000: 6,327,838 5,303,937 425 108,915 423,509 1,302,728 1,879,979 1,588,380 Sales of $50,000 or more ...................farms: 1,961 1,706 1 106 185 409 608 397 $1,000: 6,293,658 5,279,213 (D) (D) 419,785 1,297,694 1,872,961 1,582,118 : Fruits, tree nuts, and berries ...............farms: 36,574 20,352 38 594 1,392 3,647 5,930 8,751 $1,000: 17,638,972 14,333,159 37,705 322,816 1,303,239 3,380,481 4,467,005 4,821,913 Sales of $50,000 or more ...................farms: 17,379 11,977 20 386 906 2,306 3,845 4,514 $1,000: 17,344,347 14,194,127 37,392 318,936 1,294,630 3,358,261 4,431,670 4,753,238 Fruits and tree nuts .......................farms: 35,526 19,601 33 534 1,278 3,441 5,713 8,602 $1,000: 15,655,703 12,594,404 37,555 277,023 1,107,600 2,754,663 3,964,337 4,453,225 Sales of $50,000 or more .................farms: 16,846 11,524 20 371 846 2,171 3,683 4,433 $1,000: 15,369,315 12,460,440 37,392 273,949 1,099,955 2,733,462 3,929,895 4,385,787 Berries ....................................farms: 1,701 1,162 5 76 135 297 355 294 $1,000: 1,983,269 1,738,755 150 45,793 195,639 625,818 502,668 368,688 Sales of $50,000 or more .................farms: 610 533 - 20 62 158 196 97 $1,000: 1,972,002 1,731,565 - 44,914 194,566 624,205 501,064 366,816 Nursery, greenhouse, floriculture, : and sod (see text) ..........................farms: 3,890 2,435 5 132 230 568 836 664 $1,000: 2,547,307 1,858,000 10 20,523 137,771 625,948 788,570 285,178 Sales of $50,000 or more ...................farms: 1,465 1,074 - 36 102 294 398 244 $1,000: 2,520,294 1,841,254 - 19,461 136,449 622,445 783,255 279,643 ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 69. Summary by Age and Primary Occupation of Principal Operator: 2012 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : Other occupations :-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : : Age of operator (years) : :------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Total : Under 25 : 25 to 34 : 35 to 44 : 45 to 54 : 55 to 64 : 65 and over ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- FARMS AND LAND IN FARMS : : Farms ...........................................number: 35,388 102 1,305 3,138 8,288 10,949 11,606 percent: 45.5 0.1 1.7 4.0 10.6 14.1 14.9 Land in farms ....................................acres: 6,414,285 6,346 180,874 412,317 1,432,293 1,531,599 2,850,856 Average size of farm .........................acres: 181 62 139 131 173 140 246 : MARKET VALUE OF AGRICULTURAL : PRODUCTS SOLD AND GOVERNMENT : PAYMENTS : : Total ............................................farms: 35,388 102 1,305 3,138 8,288 10,949 11,606 $1,000: 6,623,030 1,783 182,342 518,148 1,370,200 1,776,399 2,774,158 Average per farm ...........................dollars: 187,155 17,478 139,726 165,121 165,323 162,243 239,028 Farms by economic class: : Less than $1,000 (see text) .......................: 8,676 11 309 760 2,003 2,752 2,841 $1,000 to $2,499 ..................................: 2,822 16 139 277 683 891 816 $2,500 to $4,999 ..................................: 3,436 11 112 302 786 1,074 1,151 $5,000 to $9,999 ..................................: 4,341 11 117 377 1,049 1,384 1,403 $10,000 to $24,999 ................................: 5,329 36 191 495 1,251 1,600 1,756 : $25,000 to $49,999 ................................: 3,283 7 103 277 786 963 1,147 $50,000 to $99,999 ................................: 2,814 3 122 268 675 878 868 $100,000 to $249,999 ..............................: 2,171 7 81 174 516 670 723 $250,000 to $499,999 ..............................: 1,016 - 46 80 244 307 339 : $500,000 to $999,999 ..............................: 644 - 45 62 110 216 211 $1,000,000 or more ................................: 856 - 40 66 185 214 351 $1,000,000 to $2,499,999 ........................: 469 - 29 35 97 115 193 $2,500,000 to $4,999,999 ........................: 161 - 5 11 39 39 67 $5,000,000 or more ..............................: 226 - 6 20 49 60 91 : Total sales ....................................farms: 35,388 102 1,305 3,138 8,288 10,949 11,606 $1,000: 6,600,665 1,720 181,039 516,052 1,365,092 1,770,475 2,766,286 Grains, oilseeds, dry beans, and : dry peas ....................................farms: 969 12 107 100 240 222 288 $1,000: 176,091 (D) 11,269 (D) (D) 40,967 64,680 Sales of $50,000 or more ...................farms: 435 - 41 43 102 109 140 $1,000: 168,130 - 10,383 18,695 36,913 39,634 62,506 Corn .......................................farms: 355 - 38 38 87 89 103 $1,000: 30,408 - 836 1,068 5,512 9,763 13,229 Sales of $50,000 or more .................farms: 97 - 4 6 18 29 40 $1,000: 26,084 - 332 515 3,834 8,956 12,447 Wheat ......................................farms: 197 - 18 14 47 49 69 $1,000: 21,151 - 569 (D) (D) 2,047 12,090 Sales of $50,000 or more .................farms: 68 - 6 2 17 14 29 $1,000: 19,184 - 436 (D) 5,030 (D) 11,372 Soybeans ...................................farms: - - - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - - - Sales of $50,000 or more .................farms: - - - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - - - Sorghum ....................................farms: 30 - 1 8 8 5 8 $1,000: 1,204 - (D) 276 (D) 86 736 Sales of $50,000 or more .................farms: 3 - - 1 - - 2 $1,000: 883 - - (D) - - (D) Barley .....................................farms: 54 - 6 7 11 18 12 $1,000: 10,945 - (D) 9,309 (D) 625 899 Sales of $50,000 or more .................farms: 15 - - 5 1 5 4 $1,000: 10,653 - - (D) (D) 567 778 Rice .......................................farms: 285 6 33 28 69 61 88 $1,000: 100,413 12 9,615 7,900 25,935 26,266 30,685 Sales of $50,000 or more .................farms: 252 - 33 28 61 56 74 $1,000: 99,625 - 9,615 7,900 25,730 26,095 30,284 Other grains, oilseeds, : dry beans, and dry peas ...................farms: 175 6 14 12 47 49 47 $1,000: 11,970 (D) (D) 302 2,195 2,179 7,042 Sales of $50,000 or more .................farms: 36 - - 3 9 13 11 $1,000: 10,647 - - 154 1,954 1,865 6,674 : Tobacco ..................................... farms: - - - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - - - Sales of $50,000 or more ...................farms: - - - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - - - Cotton and cottonseed ........................farms: 55 - 3 4 10 19 19 $1,000: 52,161 - 18 154 5,278 3,568 43,144 Sales of $50,000 or more ...................farms: 37 - - - 6 13 18 $1,000: 51,773 - - - 5,176 (D) (D) Vegetables, melons, potatoes, : and sweet potatoes ..........................farms: 1,845 24 146 267 456 553 399 $1,000: 1,023,902 289 21,730 117,245 163,428 250,872 470,338 Sales of $50,000 or more ...................farms: 255 - 28 34 50 66 77 $1,000: 1,014,445 - 21,339 115,651 161,377 247,900 468,178 : Fruits, tree nuts, and berries ...............farms: 16,222 33 442 1,255 3,675 5,048 5,769 $1,000: 3,305,813 887 96,200 219,985 740,215 767,066 1,481,460 Sales of $50,000 or more ...................farms: 5,402 6 188 459 1,222 1,688 1,839 $1,000: 3,150,219 612 91,842 208,058 703,555 720,272 1,425,880 Fruits and tree nuts .......................farms: 15,925 33 421 1,211 3,586 4,957 5,717 $1,000: 3,061,300 887 92,641 164,778 725,454 674,066 1,403,474 Sales of $50,000 or more .................farms: 5,322 6 176 452 1,199 1,663 1,826 $1,000: 2,908,875 612 88,422 153,354 689,639 628,379 1,348,469 Berries ....................................farms: 539 - 29 65 154 162 129 $1,000: 244,513 - 3,559 55,207 14,761 93,000 77,986 Sales of $50,000 or more .................farms: 77 - 12 7 22 24 12 $1,000: 240,437 - 3,420 54,704 13,630 91,533 77,150 Nursery, greenhouse, floriculture, : and sod (see text) ..........................farms: 1,455 9 54 137 311 467 477 $1,000: 689,307 90 35,688 32,188 136,933 218,261 266,147 Sales of $50,000 or more ...................farms: 391 - 23 29 97 120 122 $1,000: 679,041 - 35,537 31,109 134,914 214,883 262,597 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 69. Summary by Age and Primary Occupation of Principal Operator: 2012 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : : Farming : :---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : Total farming : : Age of operator (years) : and other : :----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : occupations : Total : Under 25 : 25 to 34 : 35 to 44 : 45 to 54 : 55 to 64 : 65 and over ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- MARKET VALUE OF AGRICULTURAL : PRODUCTS SOLD AND GOVERNMENT : PAYMENTS - Con. : : Total - Con. : Total sales - Con. : : Cut Christmas trees and : short-rotation woody crops ..................farms: 328 158 - - 1 11 40 106 $1,000: 2,706 1,810 - - (D) (D) 580 1,096 Sales of $50,000 or more ...................farms: 9 6 - - - - 4 2 $1,000: 904 700 - - - - (D) (D) Cut Christmas trees ........................farms: 301 150 - - 1 10 35 104 $1,000: 2,499 1,718 - - (D) (D) (D) (D) Sales of $50,000 or more .................farms: 8 6 - - - - 4 2 $1,000: 846 (D) - - - - (D) (D) Short-rotation woody crops .................farms: 38 14 - - - 1 5 8 $1,000: 206 92 - - - (D) (D) (D) Sales of $50,000 or more .................farms: 1 - - - - - - - $1,000: (D) - - - - - - - Other crops and hay (see text) ...............farms: 5,744 4,025 30 203 285 771 1,276 1,460 $1,000: 1,467,274 1,276,394 (D) (D) 83,015 324,902 487,303 339,424 Sales of $50,000 or more ...................farms: 2,246 1,955 14 106 143 435 678 579 $1,000: 1,425,574 1,248,331 1,139 38,639 80,755 319,990 479,282 328,526 Maple syrup (see text) .....................farms: - - - - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - - - - Sales of $50,000 or more .................farms: - - - - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - - - - : Cattle and calves ............................farms: 12,594 7,400 31 246 524 1,274 2,072 3,253 $1,000: 3,259,325 2,900,049 5,179 64,383 324,049 789,979 928,588 787,872 Sales of $50,000 or more ...................farms: 3,515 2,848 9 98 235 626 870 1,010 $1,000: 3,170,394 2,847,922 5,113 62,894 320,902 782,912 913,609 762,492 Milk from cows (see text) ....................farms: 1,554 1,436 5 73 179 417 417 345 $1,000: 6,945,102 6,544,428 (D) (D) 999,863 2,051,472 1,881,333 1,388,800 Sales of $50,000 or more ...................farms: 1,520 1,410 5 73 179 405 412 336 $1,000: 6,944,530 6,543,878 (D) (D) 999,863 2,051,304 1,881,239 1,388,512 Hogs and pigs ................................farms: 1,163 541 7 62 70 97 138 167 $1,000: 51,526 49,411 21 492 (D) (D) (D) 2,531 Sales of $50,000 or more ...................farms: 43 36 - 5 2 10 13 6 $1,000: 48,608 47,822 - 370 (D) (D) (D) 1,963 Sheep, goats, wool, mohair, and : milk (see text) .............................farms: 4,376 2,204 14 134 157 387 599 913 $1,000: 108,136 92,307 17 2,712 (D) (D) (D) 55,980 Sales of $50,000 or more ...................farms: 196 162 - 9 25 26 45 57 $1,000: 91,373 82,517 - 1,834 (D) (D) 16,020 51,346 Horses, ponies, mules, burros, and : donkeys .....................................farms: 3,050 1,595 14 32 144 328 491 586 $1,000: 62,241 40,648 136 344 2,458 8,482 17,069 12,159 Sales of $50,000 or more ...................farms: 212 142 - 1 7 45 49 40 $1,000: 35,731 26,485 - (D) (D) 5,862 12,483 6,890 Poultry and eggs .............................farms: 3,758 1,977 7 104 183 404 645 634 $1,000: 1,663,919 1,330,043 14 24,966 15,178 518,407 223,043 548,434 Sales of $50,000 or more ...................farms: 248 209 - 8 13 47 72 69 $1,000: 1,658,976 1,327,021 - 24,715 14,925 517,759 222,131 547,491 Aquaculture ..................................farms: 229 147 - 8 15 45 41 38 $1,000: 103,016 85,201 - 1,166 4,981 30,290 26,759 22,004 Sales of $50,000 or more ...................farms: 119 88 - 4 7 32 27 18 $1,000: 101,782 84,354 - 1,077 4,907 30,062 26,443 21,865 Other animals and other animal : products (see text) .........................farms: 1,766 1,016 8 67 91 229 292 329 $1,000: 67,309 56,871 120 838 1,781 23,226 24,036 6,869 Sales of $50,000 or more ...................farms: 150 115 - 5 9 30 38 33 $1,000: 58,094 51,051 - 737 1,337 21,705 22,146 5,125 : Value of- : Government payments ............................farms: 7,593 5,594 37 296 526 1,129 1,751 1,855 $1,000: 146,919 124,555 366 6,561 14,030 28,555 40,588 34,455 : Landlord's share of total : sales (see text) ..............................farms: 2,147 1,713 16 119 185 358 607 428 $1,000: 266,275 224,828 211 7,377 25,211 46,233 89,934 55,863 : Agricultural products sold directly to : individuals for human : consumption (see text) ........................farms: 8,588 4,943 23 349 440 964 1,456 1,711 $1,000: 169,915 145,611 101 14,769 11,345 30,779 53,254 35,363 : FARM PRODUCTION EXPENSES : : Total farm production expenses 1/ ................farms: 77,857 42,469 151 1,663 3,117 7,658 12,433 17,447 $1,000: 35,455,667 29,866,963 48,700 727,826 3,015,677 7,984,645 9,653,431 8,436,683 Average per farm ...........................dollars: 455,395 703,265 322,516 437,658 967,494 1,042,654 776,436 483,561 : Fertilizer, lime, and soil : conditioners purchased ........................farms: 38,958 23,661 91 1,149 1,956 4,529 7,198 8,738 $1,000: 1,806,062 1,523,737 3,552 38,056 127,658 378,572 563,198 412,702 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 ....................................: 24,634 12,657 44 580 892 2,122 3,591 5,428 $5,000 to $24,999 ...............................: 7,312 5,096 33 263 473 1,040 1,569 1,718 $25,000 to $49,999 ..............................: 2,319 1,863 5 100 184 425 638 511 $50,000 or more .................................: 4,693 4,045 9 206 407 942 1,400 1,081 : Chemicals purchased ............................farms: 44,536 26,929 84 1,089 2,145 4,994 8,259 10,358 $1,000: 2,190,674 1,829,148 4,293 40,481 171,549 465,353 614,236 533,236 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 ....................................: 28,059 14,440 35 554 1,010 2,390 4,107 6,344 $5,000 to $24,999 ...............................: 8,444 5,801 25 247 507 1,083 1,880 2,059 $25,000 to $49,999 ..............................: 2,676 2,127 11 97 174 466 683 696 $50,000 or more .................................: 5,357 4,561 13 191 454 1,055 1,589 1,259 ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 69. Summary by Age and Primary Occupation of Principal Operator: 2012 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : Other occupations :-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : : Age of operator (years) : :------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Total : Under 25 : 25 to 34 : 35 to 44 : 45 to 54 : 55 to 64 : 65 and over ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- MARKET VALUE OF AGRICULTURAL : PRODUCTS SOLD AND GOVERNMENT : PAYMENTS - Con. : : Total - Con. : Total sales - Con. : : Cut Christmas trees and : short-rotation woody crops ..................farms: 170 - 2 5 39 51 73 $1,000: 895 - (D) (D) 158 277 454 Sales of $50,000 or more ...................farms: 3 - - - - 1 2 $1,000: 204 - - - - (D) (D) Cut Christmas trees ........................farms: 151 - 2 5 31 48 65 $1,000: 781 - (D) (D) (D) (D) 415 Sales of $50,000 or more .................farms: 2 - - - - - 2 $1,000: (D) - - - - - (D) Short-rotation woody crops .................farms: 24 - - - 8 6 10 $1,000: 114 - - - (D) (D) 39 Sales of $50,000 or more .................farms: 1 - - - - 1 - $1,000: (D) - - - - (D) - Other crops and hay (see text) ...............farms: 1,719 - 101 206 403 493 516 $1,000: 190,881 - 2,607 51,681 20,992 61,064 54,536 Sales of $50,000 or more ...................farms: 291 - 11 26 49 85 120 $1,000: 177,243 - 1,500 49,931 17,129 57,583 51,100 Maple syrup (see text) .....................farms: - - - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - - - Sales of $50,000 or more .................farms: - - - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - - - : Cattle and calves ............................farms: 5,194 24 201 513 1,322 1,589 1,545 $1,000: 359,276 304 5,219 25,294 64,149 122,921 141,388 Sales of $50,000 or more ...................farms: 667 1 27 38 172 183 246 $1,000: 322,472 (D) (D) 22,221 56,018 111,004 129,214 Milk from cows (see text) ....................farms: 118 - 2 8 45 21 42 $1,000: 400,674 - (D) (D) 168,539 55,749 164,447 Sales of $50,000 or more ...................farms: 110 - 2 4 41 21 42 $1,000: 400,652 - (D) (D) 168,532 55,749 164,447 Hogs and pigs ................................farms: 622 4 33 126 251 135 73 $1,000: 2,114 60 39 186 710 667 452 Sales of $50,000 or more ...................farms: 7 - - - 4 2 1 $1,000: 786 - - - 230 (D) (D) Sheep, goats, wool, mohair, and : milk (see text) .............................farms: 2,172 18 138 287 658 613 458 $1,000: 15,829 56 (D) (D) 3,157 5,783 3,970 Sales of $50,000 or more ...................farms: 34 - 7 6 3 4 14 $1,000: 8,856 - 930 (D) (D) 3,425 2,498 Horses, ponies, mules, burros, and : donkeys .....................................farms: 1,455 4 38 147 398 478 390 $1,000: 21,593 2 198 1,821 4,846 5,711 9,015 Sales of $50,000 or more ...................farms: 70 - - 8 14 25 23 $1,000: 9,246 - - 650 1,403 2,089 5,105 Poultry and eggs .............................farms: 1,781 2 92 247 506 538 396 $1,000: 333,876 (D) 133 (D) (D) 230,169 60,284 Sales of $50,000 or more ...................farms: 39 - - 4 7 14 14 $1,000: 331,956 - - (D) (D) 229,675 59,902 Aquaculture ..................................farms: 82 - 9 5 23 14 31 $1,000: 17,815 - 2,146 47 9,536 2,991 3,095 Sales of $50,000 or more ...................farms: 31 - 5 - 11 4 11 $1,000: 17,428 - 2,127 - 9,450 2,948 2,903 Other animals and other animal : products (see text) .........................farms: 750 3 42 103 183 246 173 $1,000: 10,438 9 135 1,005 2,002 4,410 2,877 Sales of $50,000 or more ...................farms: 35 - - 1 7 14 13 $1,000: 7,043 - - (D) (D) 3,374 2,062 : Value of- : Government payments ............................farms: 1,999 8 96 212 445 582 656 $1,000: 22,364 63 1,303 2,096 5,108 5,923 7,871 : Landlord's share of total : sales (see text) ..............................farms: 434 4 36 57 96 154 87 $1,000: 41,446 35 1,738 1,466 10,034 7,955 20,219 : Agricultural products sold directly to : individuals for human : consumption (see text) ........................farms: 3,645 6 182 441 953 1,134 929 $1,000: 24,304 3 3,380 2,536 4,937 6,259 7,190 : FARM PRODUCTION EXPENSES : : Total farm production expenses 1/ ................farms: 35,388 102 1,305 3,138 8,288 10,949 11,606 $1,000: 5,588,704 2,582 147,323 475,739 1,160,767 1,455,650 2,346,642 Average per farm ...........................dollars: 157,927 25,311 112,892 151,606 140,054 132,948 202,192 : Fertilizer, lime, and soil : conditioners purchased ........................farms: 15,297 41 612 1,435 3,613 4,868 4,728 $1,000: 282,325 119 6,961 33,537 64,134 58,534 119,040 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 ....................................: 11,977 36 394 1,131 2,834 3,848 3,734 $5,000 to $24,999 ...............................: 2,216 5 140 205 531 724 611 $25,000 to $49,999 ..............................: 456 - 42 48 102 135 129 $50,000 or more .................................: 648 - 36 51 146 161 254 : Chemicals purchased ............................farms: 17,607 49 686 1,676 4,159 5,518 5,519 $1,000: 361,525 118 7,747 33,479 74,909 69,666 175,608 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 ....................................: 13,619 41 476 1,291 3,249 4,286 4,276 $5,000 to $24,999 ...............................: 2,643 8 135 251 613 886 750 $25,000 to $49,999 ..............................: 549 - 35 66 131 146 171 $50,000 or more .................................: 796 - 40 68 166 200 322 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 69. Summary by Age and Primary Occupation of Principal Operator: 2012 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : : Farming : :---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : Total farming : : Age of operator (years) : and other : :----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : occupations : Total : Under 25 : 25 to 34 : 35 to 44 : 45 to 54 : 55 to 64 : 65 and over ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- FARM PRODUCTION EXPENSES - Con. : : Total farm production expenses 1/ - Con. : : Seeds, plants, vines, and : trees purchased ...............................farms: 27,527 17,708 61 965 1,529 3,682 5,436 6,035 $1,000: 1,317,934 1,046,623 489 29,969 82,704 307,638 378,568 247,254 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $999 ......................................: 11,381 5,898 8 297 361 1,015 1,634 2,583 $1,000 to $4,999 ................................: 6,676 4,293 26 237 430 815 1,329 1,456 $5,000 to $24,999 ...............................: 5,157 3,871 23 252 389 915 1,240 1,052 $25,000 to $49,999 ..............................: 1,473 1,208 2 75 114 288 383 346 $50,000 or more .................................: 2,840 2,438 2 104 235 649 850 598 : Livestock and poultry purchased or : leased ........................................farms: 12,585 7,095 18 305 592 1,362 2,152 2,666 $1,000: 1,254,286 1,098,585 1,089 20,331 107,576 310,770 318,863 339,957 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 ....................................: 7,903 3,787 12 170 300 675 1,117 1,513 $5,000 to $24,999 ...............................: 2,950 1,847 1 62 149 356 546 733 $25,000 to $99,999 ..............................: 995 835 4 49 78 170 285 249 $100,000 to $249,999 ............................: 335 290 - 14 32 71 99 74 $250,000 or more ................................: 402 336 1 10 33 90 105 97 : Breeding livestock purchased or : leased ......................................farms: 6,850 4,037 15 178 308 793 1,220 1,523 $1,000: 255,730 235,503 1,056 10,209 54,642 93,905 52,730 22,961 Other livestock and poultry : purchased or leased (see text) ..............farms: 7,673 4,114 11 189 370 814 1,235 1,495 $1,000: 998,556 863,082 33 10,122 52,933 216,864 266,133 316,996 : Feed purchased .................................farms: 30,014 15,701 64 544 1,115 2,704 4,537 6,737 $1,000: 6,069,374 5,553,130 (D) (D) 692,351 1,790,985 1,580,584 1,331,377 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 ....................................: 16,191 7,121 44 249 426 1,037 1,977 3,388 $5,000 to $24,999 ...............................: 9,417 5,056 9 156 358 852 1,470 2,211 $25,000 to $99,999 ..............................: 2,042 1,407 6 44 93 260 433 571 $100,000 to $249,999 ............................: 596 487 3 20 32 96 185 151 $250,000 or more ................................: 1,768 1,630 2 75 206 459 472 416 : Gasoline, fuels, and oils purchased ............farms: 70,844 40,066 137 1,523 2,914 7,163 11,768 16,561 $1,000: 1,552,328 1,315,747 1,966 32,609 117,786 305,872 447,451 410,064 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 ....................................: 51,974 25,248 79 870 1,631 3,971 6,875 11,822 $5,000 to $24,999 ...............................: 11,182 8,155 44 368 634 1,614 2,652 2,843 $25,000 to $49,999 ..............................: 2,745 2,322 1 111 224 544 772 670 $50,000 or more .................................: 4,943 4,341 13 174 425 1,034 1,469 1,226 : Utilities ......................................farms: 60,680 35,472 120 1,315 2,682 6,487 10,620 14,248 $1,000: 1,684,343 1,410,030 1,799 34,372 119,340 332,463 458,067 463,989 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $999 ......................................: 16,704 7,524 17 277 435 1,140 1,970 3,685 $1,000 to $4,999 ................................: 23,136 12,377 53 456 918 2,014 3,522 5,414 $5,000 to $24,999 ...............................: 12,275 8,449 40 321 656 1,641 2,760 3,031 $25,000 to $49,999 ..............................: 3,178 2,510 5 105 240 578 815 767 $50,000 or more .................................: 5,387 4,612 5 156 433 1,114 1,553 1,351 : Supplies, repairs, and maintenance costs .......farms: 63,106 36,519 108 1,389 2,684 6,625 10,921 14,792 $1,000: 2,042,434 1,721,201 2,690 33,363 153,673 434,571 574,712 522,192 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 ....................................: 41,934 20,543 68 745 1,339 3,246 5,715 9,430 $5,000 to $24,999 ...............................: 12,194 8,453 19 340 626 1,622 2,689 3,157 $25,000 to $49,999 ..............................: 3,091 2,481 8 112 199 583 812 767 $50,000 or more .................................: 5,887 5,042 13 192 520 1,174 1,705 1,438 : Hired farm labor ...............................farms: 33,955 22,027 61 869 1,785 4,493 6,684 8,135 $1,000: 5,877,973 4,853,275 5,031 113,016 470,566 1,235,052 1,688,778 1,340,832 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 ....................................: 9,680 4,822 21 167 293 773 1,202 2,366 $5,000 to $24,999 ...............................: 8,646 5,269 23 206 366 1,059 1,542 2,073 $25,000 to $99,999 ..............................: 8,011 5,675 8 286 521 1,200 1,763 1,897 $100,000 to $249,999 ............................: 3,496 2,772 6 123 258 587 954 844 $250,000 or more ................................: 4,122 3,489 3 87 347 874 1,223 955 : Contract labor .................................farms: 25,067 14,930 25 518 1,135 2,861 4,548 5,843 $1,000: 3,378,012 2,737,952 1,587 47,330 233,386 767,208 824,115 864,327 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $999 ......................................: 2,190 933 - 21 50 144 210 508 $1,000 to $4,999 ................................: 5,812 2,906 3 125 182 503 801 1,292 $5,000 to $24,999 ...............................: 7,825 4,455 - 134 370 862 1,278 1,811 $25,000 to $49,999 ..............................: 2,941 1,909 8 73 142 345 624 717 $50,000 or more .................................: 6,299 4,727 14 165 391 1,007 1,635 1,515 : Customwork and custom hauling ..................farms: 19,644 12,867 54 528 1,097 2,477 3,913 4,798 $1,000: 1,258,384 1,084,178 1,630 29,857 107,316 252,184 391,638 301,553 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $999 ......................................: 3,589 1,688 2 43 81 236 468 858 $1,000 to $4,999 ................................: 4,990 2,847 11 110 227 455 844 1,200 $5,000 to $24,999 ...............................: 5,384 3,642 29 187 321 703 1,036 1,366 $25,000 to $49,999 ..............................: 1,859 1,439 7 56 126 323 496 431 $50,000 or more .................................: 3,822 3,251 5 132 342 760 1,069 943 : Cash rent for land, buildings, : and grazing fees ..............................farms: 15,007 10,703 61 745 1,186 2,458 3,299 2,954 $1,000: 1,511,985 1,300,904 1,616 57,629 151,391 313,364 464,526 312,378 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 ....................................: 5,241 3,026 33 238 359 604 828 964 $5,000 to $9,999 ................................: 1,649 1,125 3 91 98 246 372 315 $10,000 to $24,999 ..............................: 2,878 2,106 13 108 215 486 687 597 $25,000 or more .................................: 5,239 4,446 12 308 514 1,122 1,412 1,078 ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 69. Summary by Age and Primary Occupation of Principal Operator: 2012 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : Other occupations :-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : : Age of operator (years) : :------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Total : Under 25 : 25 to 34 : 35 to 44 : 45 to 54 : 55 to 64 : 65 and over ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- FARM PRODUCTION EXPENSES - Con. : : Total farm production expenses 1/ - Con. : : Seeds, plants, vines, and : trees purchased ...............................farms: 9,819 26 535 1,038 2,408 2,982 2,830 $1,000: 271,311 15 8,368 30,420 56,099 63,065 113,344 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $999 ......................................: 5,483 23 241 559 1,354 1,691 1,615 $1,000 to $4,999 ................................: 2,383 3 173 271 584 747 605 $5,000 to $24,999 ...............................: 1,286 - 92 143 320 349 382 $25,000 to $49,999 ..............................: 265 - 7 27 64 74 93 $50,000 or more .................................: 402 - 22 38 86 121 135 : Livestock and poultry purchased or : leased ........................................farms: 5,490 31 262 679 1,506 1,659 1,353 $1,000: 155,701 83 1,492 7,875 16,724 54,000 75,528 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 ....................................: 4,116 23 203 519 1,150 1,244 977 $5,000 to $24,999 ...............................: 1,103 8 49 130 282 342 292 $25,000 to $99,999 ..............................: 160 - 9 20 46 29 56 $100,000 to $249,999 ............................: 45 - 1 - 14 25 5 $250,000 or more ................................: 66 - - 10 14 19 23 : Breeding livestock purchased or : leased ......................................farms: 2,813 17 151 364 750 828 703 $1,000: 20,227 60 741 1,653 5,122 6,542 6,110 Other livestock and poultry : purchased or leased (see text) ..............farms: 3,559 14 168 469 998 1,065 845 $1,000: 135,474 23 751 6,222 11,602 47,457 69,419 : Feed purchased .................................farms: 14,313 56 556 1,376 3,677 4,449 4,199 $1,000: 516,244 311 7,701 19,987 122,287 198,925 167,033 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 ....................................: 9,070 41 396 948 2,345 2,768 2,572 $5,000 to $24,999 ...............................: 4,361 14 131 365 1,113 1,449 1,289 $25,000 to $99,999 ..............................: 635 1 22 46 151 171 244 $100,000 to $249,999 ............................: 109 - 5 4 27 31 42 $250,000 or more ................................: 138 - 2 13 41 30 52 : Gasoline, fuels, and oils purchased ............farms: 30,778 86 1,155 2,816 7,318 9,520 9,883 $1,000: 236,581 140 4,894 20,683 46,781 51,055 113,028 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 ....................................: 26,726 79 967 2,463 6,346 8,341 8,530 $5,000 to $24,999 ...............................: 3,027 7 143 278 747 900 952 $25,000 to $49,999 ..............................: 423 - 33 39 81 109 161 $50,000 or more .................................: 602 - 12 36 144 170 240 : Utilities ......................................farms: 25,208 59 892 2,155 5,952 7,802 8,348 $1,000: 274,313 348 6,702 19,052 57,970 64,692 125,548 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $999 ......................................: 9,180 17 329 805 2,205 2,915 2,909 $1,000 to $4,999 ................................: 10,759 32 358 941 2,543 3,342 3,543 $5,000 to $24,999 ...............................: 3,826 4 158 312 892 1,135 1,325 $25,000 to $49,999 ..............................: 668 6 24 46 138 206 248 $50,000 or more .................................: 775 - 23 51 174 204 323 : Supplies, repairs, and maintenance costs .......farms: 26,587 77 931 2,383 6,293 8,293 8,610 $1,000: 321,233 126 7,694 23,557 67,681 87,976 134,198 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 ....................................: 21,391 70 725 1,949 5,073 6,762 6,812 $5,000 to $24,999 ...............................: 3,741 7 159 322 917 1,118 1,218 $25,000 to $49,999 ..............................: 610 - 24 47 112 193 234 $50,000 or more .................................: 845 - 23 65 191 220 346 : Hired farm labor ...............................farms: 11,928 22 364 976 2,672 3,532 4,362 $1,000: 1,024,698 705 32,278 84,697 200,831 271,637 434,549 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 ....................................: 4,858 10 137 395 1,050 1,494 1,772 $5,000 to $24,999 ...............................: 3,377 5 102 289 798 990 1,193 $25,000 to $99,999 ..............................: 2,336 4 72 172 561 669 858 $100,000 to $249,999 ............................: 724 3 30 69 139 192 291 $250,000 or more ................................: 633 - 23 51 124 187 248 : Contract labor .................................farms: 10,137 19 353 801 2,237 3,156 3,571 $1,000: 640,061 192 26,352 43,229 129,003 150,528 290,756 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $999 ......................................: 1,257 7 44 94 240 406 466 $1,000 to $4,999 ................................: 2,906 3 86 236 678 903 1,000 $5,000 to $24,999 ...............................: 3,370 6 107 273 782 1,055 1,147 $25,000 to $49,999 ..............................: 1,032 - 44 65 240 327 356 $50,000 or more .................................: 1,572 3 72 133 297 465 602 : Customwork and custom hauling ..................farms: 6,777 11 297 669 1,542 2,041 2,217 $1,000: 174,206 1 5,066 13,320 36,901 43,829 75,089 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $999 ......................................: 1,901 11 82 167 421 587 633 $1,000 to $4,999 ................................: 2,143 - 75 223 509 652 684 $5,000 to $24,999 ...............................: 1,742 - 93 181 403 532 533 $25,000 to $49,999 ..............................: 420 - 21 57 87 115 140 $50,000 or more .................................: 571 - 26 41 122 155 227 : Cash rent for land, buildings, : and grazing fees ..............................farms: 4,304 35 357 557 1,094 1,238 1,023 $1,000: 211,080 124 7,738 24,832 46,990 50,102 81,294 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 ....................................: 2,215 28 196 327 559 616 489 $5,000 to $9,999 ................................: 524 - 44 73 161 144 102 $10,000 to $24,999 ..............................: 772 7 53 90 184 247 191 $25,000 or more .................................: 793 - 64 67 190 231 241 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 69. Summary by Age and Primary Occupation of Principal Operator: 2012 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : : Farming : :---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : Total farming : : Age of operator (years) : and other : :----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : occupations : Total : Under 25 : 25 to 34 : 35 to 44 : 45 to 54 : 55 to 64 : 65 and over ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- FARM PRODUCTION EXPENSES - Con. : : Total farm production expenses 1/ - Con. : : Rent and lease expenses for machinery, : equipment, and farm share of vehicles .........farms: 7,895 5,548 39 282 553 1,286 1,769 1,619 $1,000: 400,054 325,722 349 6,221 27,355 79,590 101,748 110,458 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $999 ......................................: 1,914 983 9 44 91 204 302 333 $1,000 to $4,999 ................................: 2,150 1,397 9 70 121 333 439 425 $5,000 to $24,999 ...............................: 1,990 1,574 19 101 167 357 502 428 $25,000 to $49,999 ..............................: 567 474 1 26 64 99 160 124 $50,000 or more .................................: 1,274 1,120 1 41 110 293 366 309 : Interest expense ...............................farms: 26,459 16,374 40 585 1,269 3,291 5,236 5,953 $1,000: 1,217,781 935,307 1,796 21,268 98,538 221,379 289,546 302,780 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 ....................................: 8,135 4,665 8 177 278 816 1,422 1,964 $5,000 to $24,999 ...............................: 11,048 6,415 28 248 478 1,222 2,067 2,372 $25,000 to $99,999 ..............................: 5,129 3,531 1 113 329 799 1,176 1,113 $100,000 or more ................................: 2,147 1,763 3 47 184 454 571 504 : Secured by real estate .......................farms: 20,307 12,083 24 347 870 2,355 3,908 4,579 $1,000: 941,302 701,347 1,531 15,738 77,696 162,514 216,784 227,084 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $999 ....................................: 1,166 642 - 26 26 121 199 270 $1,000 to $4,999 ..............................: 4,137 2,260 3 45 122 404 687 999 $5,000 to $24,999 .............................: 9,276 5,160 18 162 348 914 1,715 2,003 $25,000 to $49,999 ............................: 2,690 1,695 - 48 137 369 532 609 $50,000 or more ...............................: 3,038 2,326 3 66 237 547 775 698 : Not secured by real estate ...................farms: 13,273 9,035 28 355 775 1,910 2,907 3,060 $1,000: 276,479 233,960 265 5,530 20,842 58,865 72,761 75,696 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $999 ....................................: 2,988 1,704 2 35 107 269 541 750 $1,000 to $4,999 ..............................: 4,701 2,933 10 126 236 551 914 1,096 $5,000 to $24,999 .............................: 3,514 2,594 15 139 246 619 837 738 $25,000 to $49,999 ............................: 835 716 - 34 73 166 257 186 $50,000 or more ...............................: 1,235 1,088 1 21 113 305 358 290 : Property taxes paid ............................farms: 71,398 38,449 101 1,136 2,504 6,797 11,326 16,585 $1,000: 827,587 599,800 (D) (D) 50,923 145,238 184,701 205,416 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 ....................................: 45,137 21,960 71 692 1,316 3,512 5,988 10,381 $5,000 to $9,999 ................................: 12,923 7,253 22 202 469 1,297 2,288 2,975 $10,000 to $24,999 ..............................: 7,776 4,987 - 136 329 1,008 1,654 1,860 $25,000 or more .................................: 5,562 4,249 8 106 390 980 1,396 1,369 : All other production : expenses (see text) ...........................farms: 43,111 26,920 88 988 1,972 5,115 8,441 10,316 $1,000: 3,066,456 2,531,623 1,561 71,222 303,565 644,408 772,700 738,168 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 ....................................: 22,864 11,854 57 411 692 1,886 3,431 5,377 $5,000 to $24,999 ...............................: 10,967 7,492 16 280 558 1,466 2,443 2,729 $25,000 to $49,999 ..............................: 2,928 2,276 7 118 198 463 751 739 $50,000 to $99,999 ..............................: 2,313 1,853 2 64 160 422 689 516 $100,000 or more ................................: 4,039 3,445 6 115 364 878 1,127 955 : Production expenses paid by : landlords 1/ ....................................farms: 1,305 1,005 3 48 117 223 348 266 $1,000: 54,690 42,990 67 932 4,741 11,145 19,101 7,005 : Depreciation expenses claimed ....................farms: 39,342 24,863 51 843 1,806 4,677 7,693 9,793 $1,000: 2,256,892 1,803,283 4,469 43,059 179,119 431,802 602,829 542,005 : NET CASH FARM INCOME (SEE TEXT) : : Net cash farm income of operations ...............farms: 77,857 42,469 151 1,663 3,117 7,658 12,433 17,447 $1,000: 8,523,285 7,241,147 25,645 185,300 614,482 1,740,362 2,323,748 2,351,610 Average per farm ...........................dollars: 109,474 170,504 169,836 111,425 197,139 227,261 186,902 134,786 : Farms with net gains 2/ .......................number: 36,283 22,666 72 936 1,720 4,235 6,884 8,819 Average net gain .........................dollars: 314,056 410,987 404,211 257,727 494,175 539,762 432,831 332,194 : Gain of- : Less than $1,000 ................................: 1,602 678 - 29 58 122 170 299 $1,000 to $4,999 ................................: 4,785 2,231 5 89 123 368 587 1,059 $5,000 to $9,999 ................................: 3,597 1,719 - 48 110 231 470 860 $10,000 to $24,999 ..............................: 5,723 3,166 23 125 191 559 876 1,392 $25,000 to $49,999 ..............................: 4,813 2,816 15 118 226 439 846 1,172 $50,000 or more .................................: 15,763 12,056 29 527 1,012 2,516 3,935 4,037 : Farms with net losses .........................number: 41,574 19,803 79 727 1,397 3,423 5,549 8,628 Average net loss .........................dollars: 69,072 104,746 43,771 76,936 168,575 159,372 118,195 66,992 : Loss of- : Less than $1,000 ................................: 1,982 850 2 36 60 107 197 448 $1,000 to $4,999 ................................: 8,924 3,678 16 116 207 480 908 1,951 $5,000 to $9,999 ................................: 7,815 3,208 13 144 160 510 837 1,544 $10,000 to $24,999 ..............................: 10,269 4,785 12 143 304 819 1,391 2,116 $25,000 to $49,999 ..............................: 5,478 2,822 19 84 188 537 849 1,145 $50,000 or more .................................: 7,106 4,460 17 204 478 970 1,367 1,424 : Net cash farm income of operators ................farms: 77,857 42,469 151 1,663 3,117 7,658 12,433 17,447 $1,000: 8,177,199 6,945,131 25,509 172,670 620,745 1,659,048 2,206,031 2,261,128 Average per farm ...........................dollars: 105,028 163,534 168,936 103,830 199,148 216,642 177,434 129,600 : Operators reporting net gains 2/ ...............farms: 36,052 22,480 75 923 1,708 4,186 6,820 8,768 Average net gain .........................dollars: 308,890 404,650 386,388 250,132 486,672 534,869 424,796 327,257 ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 69. Summary by Age and Primary Occupation of Principal Operator: 2012 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : Other occupations :-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : : Age of operator (years) : :------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Total : Under 25 : 25 to 34 : 35 to 44 : 45 to 54 : 55 to 64 : 65 and over ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- FARM PRODUCTION EXPENSES - Con. : : Total farm production expenses 1/ - Con. : : Rent and lease expenses for machinery, : equipment, and farm share of vehicles .........farms: 2,347 11 108 224 594 666 744 $1,000: 74,332 24 921 9,041 13,451 22,101 28,793 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $999 ......................................: 931 8 39 101 235 265 283 $1,000 to $4,999 ................................: 753 - 38 60 226 219 210 $5,000 to $24,999 ...............................: 416 3 22 41 85 105 160 $25,000 to $49,999 ..............................: 93 - 6 4 18 33 32 $50,000 or more .................................: 154 - 3 18 30 44 59 : Interest expense ...............................farms: 10,085 15 367 936 2,456 3,142 3,169 $1,000: 282,474 50 6,448 23,730 64,722 75,975 111,548 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 ....................................: 3,470 10 128 302 794 1,101 1,135 $5,000 to $24,999 ...............................: 4,633 5 179 450 1,155 1,445 1,399 $25,000 to $99,999 ..............................: 1,598 - 53 145 426 486 488 $100,000 or more ................................: 384 - 7 39 81 110 147 : Secured by real estate .......................farms: 8,224 6 262 800 2,010 2,601 2,545 $1,000: 239,955 23 5,437 20,486 55,522 64,961 93,526 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $999 ....................................: 524 - 18 52 126 145 183 $1,000 to $4,999 ..............................: 1,877 3 45 174 384 664 607 $5,000 to $24,999 .............................: 4,116 3 146 418 1,061 1,274 1,214 $25,000 to $49,999 ............................: 995 - 40 90 269 290 306 $50,000 or more ...............................: 712 - 13 66 170 228 235 : Not secured by real estate ...................farms: 4,238 12 181 324 1,007 1,321 1,393 $1,000: 42,519 27 1,011 3,244 9,200 11,014 18,022 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $999 ....................................: 1,284 3 56 69 347 399 410 $1,000 to $4,999 ..............................: 1,768 9 77 148 390 566 578 $5,000 to $24,999 .............................: 920 - 43 82 212 282 301 $25,000 to $49,999 ............................: 119 - - 14 27 30 48 $50,000 or more ...............................: 147 - 5 11 31 44 56 : Property taxes paid ............................farms: 32,949 67 999 2,795 7,702 10,276 11,110 $1,000: 227,787 157 5,571 17,056 50,401 65,052 89,550 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 ....................................: 23,177 56 747 1,954 5,509 7,206 7,705 $5,000 to $9,999 ................................: 5,670 11 137 514 1,344 1,867 1,797 $10,000 to $24,999 ..............................: 2,789 - 82 239 582 844 1,042 $25,000 or more .................................: 1,313 - 33 88 267 359 566 : All other production : expenses (see text) ...........................farms: 16,191 37 564 1,406 3,819 5,071 5,294 $1,000: 534,833 69 11,390 71,244 111,883 128,513 211,734 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 ....................................: 11,010 32 370 1,010 2,659 3,503 3,436 $5,000 to $24,999 ...............................: 3,475 5 115 264 822 1,070 1,199 $25,000 to $49,999 ..............................: 652 - 23 45 134 205 245 $50,000 to $99,999 ..............................: 460 - 33 35 86 128 178 $100,000 or more ................................: 594 - 23 52 118 165 236 : Production expenses paid by : landlords 1/ ....................................farms: 300 - 9 30 73 97 91 $1,000: 11,699 - 4,406 404 880 1,068 4,941 : Depreciation expenses claimed ....................farms: 14,479 23 525 1,143 3,294 4,474 5,020 $1,000: 453,608 159 12,882 28,036 86,742 115,500 210,289 : NET CASH FARM INCOME (SEE TEXT) : : Net cash farm income of operations ...............farms: 35,388 102 1,305 3,138 8,288 10,949 11,606 $1,000: 1,282,138 -513 42,019 58,658 255,580 415,232 511,162 Average per farm ...........................dollars: 36,231 -5,027 32,199 18,693 30,837 37,924 44,043 : Farms with net gains 2/ .......................number: 13,617 51 552 1,166 3,013 4,156 4,679 Average net gain .........................dollars: 152,711 14,356 116,117 127,522 144,394 151,747 171,024 : Gain of- : Less than $1,000 ................................: 924 - 24 92 182 288 338 $1,000 to $4,999 ................................: 2,554 9 115 203 540 813 874 $5,000 to $9,999 ................................: 1,878 28 49 162 456 585 598 $10,000 to $24,999 ..............................: 2,557 6 78 213 588 762 910 $25,000 to $49,999 ..............................: 1,997 6 111 182 432 615 651 $50,000 or more .................................: 3,707 2 175 314 815 1,093 1,308 : Farms with net losses .........................number: 21,771 51 753 1,972 5,275 6,793 6,927 Average net loss .........................dollars: 36,623 24,409 29,319 45,656 34,025 31,713 41,729 : Loss of- : Less than $1,000 ................................: 1,132 3 23 126 244 349 387 $1,000 to $4,999 ................................: 5,246 14 207 376 1,192 1,735 1,722 $5,000 to $9,999 ................................: 4,607 7 150 456 1,173 1,373 1,448 $10,000 to $24,999 ..............................: 5,484 12 192 563 1,378 1,723 1,616 $25,000 to $49,999 ..............................: 2,656 12 91 217 663 842 831 $50,000 or more .................................: 2,646 3 90 234 625 771 923 : Net cash farm income of operators ................farms: 35,388 102 1,305 3,138 8,288 10,949 11,606 $1,000: 1,232,068 -548 44,688 57,596 242,375 399,293 488,664 Average per farm ...........................dollars: 34,816 -5,370 34,243 18,354 29,244 36,468 42,104 : Operators reporting net gains 2/ ...............farms: 13,572 51 547 1,163 2,999 4,143 4,669 Average net gain .........................dollars: 150,277 14,356 122,735 127,057 140,917 149,243 167,701 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 69. Summary by Age and Primary Occupation of Principal Operator: 2012 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : : Farming : :---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : Total farming : : Age of operator (years) : and other : :----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : occupations : Total : Under 25 : 25 to 34 : 35 to 44 : 45 to 54 : 55 to 64 : 65 and over ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- NET CASH FARM INCOME (SEE TEXT) - Con. : : Net cash farm income of operators - Con. : Operators reporting net gains 2/ - Con. : : Gain of- : Less than $1,000 ................................: 1,605 689 3 28 66 119 175 298 $1,000 to $4,999 ................................: 4,774 2,215 5 87 115 376 576 1,056 $5,000 to $9,999 ................................: 3,610 1,732 2 49 116 224 474 867 $10,000 to $24,999 ..............................: 5,758 3,185 21 116 202 558 894 1,394 $25,000 to $49,999 ..............................: 4,811 2,808 15 120 219 437 852 1,165 $50,000 or more .................................: 15,494 11,851 29 523 990 2,472 3,849 3,988 : Operators reporting net losses .................farms: 41,805 19,989 76 740 1,409 3,472 5,613 8,679 Average net loss .........................dollars: 70,779 107,630 45,655 78,652 149,389 167,026 123,121 70,084 : Loss of- : Less than $1,000 ................................: 2,006 876 2 36 60 114 205 459 $1,000 to $4,999 ................................: 8,944 3,677 16 123 213 476 905 1,944 $5,000 to $9,999 ................................: 7,798 3,204 10 138 162 510 842 1,542 $10,000 to $24,999 ..............................: 10,315 4,817 12 144 300 834 1,405 2,122 $25,000 to $49,999 ..............................: 5,518 2,847 19 90 190 537 849 1,162 $50,000 or more .................................: 7,224 4,568 17 209 484 1,001 1,407 1,450 : COMMODITY CREDIT CORPORATION : LOANS (SEE TEXT) : : Total ............................................farms: 521 448 2 37 33 93 153 130 $1,000: 122,036 112,981 (D) (D) 7,892 25,590 43,108 31,390 : INCOME FROM FARM-RELATED SOURCES : : Total income from farm-related sources, gross : before taxes and expenses (see text) ............farms: 23,685 15,168 49 525 1,209 2,884 4,596 5,905 $1,000: 1,204,560 956,748 2,314 35,957 79,549 195,639 335,909 307,379 Customwork and other agricultural : services ......................................farms: 5,255 3,794 20 194 394 789 1,209 1,188 $1,000: 383,434 340,855 493 16,454 26,706 74,047 110,955 112,200 : Gross cash rent or share payments ..............farms: 6,000 3,689 5 105 220 571 1,076 1,712 $1,000: 256,997 193,335 8 7,345 18,104 30,407 69,005 68,466 Sales of forest products, excluding : Christmas trees, short rotation woody : crops, and maple products .....................farms: 862 464 - 15 28 61 132 228 $1,000: 27,613 23,158 - 34 101 1,192 4,671 17,159 Agri-tourism and recreational services : (see text) ....................................farms: 1,699 1,032 - 27 124 208 322 351 $1,000: 64,520 37,432 - 311 7,203 6,065 13,131 10,721 Patronage dividends and refunds : from cooperatives .............................farms: 7,469 5,286 13 165 394 1,045 1,652 2,017 $1,000: 171,066 143,604 1,456 7,509 10,909 37,318 49,422 36,989 Crop and livestock insurance : payments received .............................farms: 1,568 1,043 2 32 90 222 314 383 $1,000: 62,457 49,799 (D) (D) 3,340 9,291 18,921 17,018 Amount from state and local government : agricultural program payments .................farms: 343 245 - 20 32 34 82 77 $1,000: 4,218 3,522 - 564 243 766 1,027 922 Other farm-related income : sources (see text) ............................farms: 5,192 3,227 19 92 232 698 997 1,189 $1,000: 234,255 165,043 (D) (D) 12,943 36,553 68,776 43,904 : LAND USE : : Total cropland ...................................farms: 57,731 32,819 116 1,357 2,507 6,092 9,754 12,993 acres: 9,591,783 7,919,020 14,897 244,823 707,686 1,688,441 2,709,141 2,554,032 Harvested cropland .............................farms: 53,372 30,913 110 1,303 2,351 5,811 9,183 12,155 acres: 8,007,461 6,751,293 13,035 202,711 598,633 1,500,433 2,334,923 2,101,558 Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 49 acres ...................................: 38,391 19,010 60 751 1,300 3,263 5,211 8,425 50 to 99 acres ..................................: 4,412 3,135 24 121 232 588 1,057 1,113 100 to 199 acres ................................: 3,567 2,676 15 133 243 553 876 856 200 to 499 acres ................................: 3,538 3,012 7 196 283 696 986 844 500 to 999 acres ................................: 1,780 1,574 1 73 146 379 518 457 1,000 to 1,999 acres ............................: 950 857 1 18 88 167 318 265 2,000 acres or more .............................: 734 649 2 11 59 165 217 195 : Cropland- : Other pasture and grazing land that could : have been used for crops without additional : improvements (see text) .....................farms: 2,879 1,521 9 54 116 299 488 555 acres: 492,270 376,615 471 21,533 36,135 65,705 125,621 127,150 On which all crops failed or : were abandoned ..............................farms: 2,425 1,361 2 48 140 238 374 559 acres: 207,072 163,299 (D) (D) 21,452 25,278 37,035 74,491 Idle or used for cover crops or soil : improvement, but not harvested and not : pastured or grazed (see text) ...............farms: 6,204 3,350 9 105 250 578 1,080 1,328 acres: 674,022 461,503 (D) (D) 31,269 70,817 157,282 191,741 In cultivated summer fallow ..................farms: 1,477 1,018 - 48 96 193 294 387 acres: 210,958 166,310 - 6,533 20,197 26,208 54,280 59,092 : Total woodland ...................................farms: 7,345 3,611 9 107 208 503 1,113 1,671 acres: 1,575,520 938,505 453 25,819 48,218 148,717 249,061 466,237 Woodland pastured ..............................farms: 3,519 1,790 6 38 100 243 552 851 acres: 855,116 570,825 240 19,030 31,703 105,627 156,216 258,009 Woodland not pastured ..........................farms: 4,610 2,234 6 86 134 329 693 986 acres: 720,404 367,680 213 6,789 16,515 43,090 92,845 208,228 ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 69. Summary by Age and Primary Occupation of Principal Operator: 2012 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : Other occupations :-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : : Age of operator (years) : :------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Total : Under 25 : 25 to 34 : 35 to 44 : 45 to 54 : 55 to 64 : 65 and over ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- NET CASH FARM INCOME (SEE TEXT) - Con. : : Net cash farm income of operators - Con. : Operators reporting net gains 2/ - Con. : : Gain of- : Less than $1,000 ................................: 916 - 21 92 180 288 335 $1,000 to $4,999 ................................: 2,559 9 115 200 545 815 875 $5,000 to $9,999 ................................: 1,878 28 49 162 450 584 605 $10,000 to $24,999 ..............................: 2,573 6 80 220 585 771 911 $25,000 to $49,999 ..............................: 2,003 6 109 182 438 621 647 $50,000 or more .................................: 3,643 2 173 307 801 1,064 1,296 : Operators reporting net losses .................farms: 21,816 51 758 1,975 5,289 6,806 6,937 Average net loss .........................dollars: 37,014 25,095 29,616 45,656 34,078 32,181 42,429 : Loss of- : Less than $1,000 ................................: 1,130 3 26 121 246 347 387 $1,000 to $4,999 ................................: 5,267 14 204 379 1,201 1,740 1,729 $5,000 to $9,999 ................................: 4,594 3 149 456 1,168 1,374 1,444 $10,000 to $24,999 ..............................: 5,498 16 193 567 1,383 1,721 1,618 $25,000 to $49,999 ..............................: 2,671 12 96 217 665 849 832 $50,000 or more .................................: 2,656 3 90 235 626 775 927 : COMMODITY CREDIT CORPORATION : LOANS (SEE TEXT) : : Total ............................................farms: 73 - 8 7 23 18 17 $1,000: 9,055 - 1,032 516 2,274 2,188 3,046 : INCOME FROM FARM-RELATED SOURCES : : Total income from farm-related sources, gross : before taxes and expenses (see text) ............farms: 8,517 37 297 721 1,833 2,583 3,046 $1,000: 247,812 286 7,000 16,249 46,148 94,483 83,647 Customwork and other agricultural : services ......................................farms: 1,461 4 103 156 322 419 457 $1,000: 42,579 24 2,901 4,221 9,135 16,126 10,173 : Gross cash rent or share payments ..............farms: 2,311 5 55 161 416 696 978 $1,000: 63,662 74 2,157 4,297 9,813 15,099 32,223 Sales of forest products, excluding : Christmas trees, short rotation woody : crops, and maple products .....................farms: 398 - 10 30 79 121 158 $1,000: 4,455 - 8 68 415 2,025 1,939 Agri-tourism and recreational services : (see text) ....................................farms: 667 2 31 52 125 230 227 $1,000: 27,088 (D) 691 (D) 3,507 16,372 5,856 Patronage dividends and refunds : from cooperatives .............................farms: 2,183 17 52 154 503 660 797 $1,000: 27,462 1 412 1,180 9,997 6,784 9,087 Crop and livestock insurance : payments received .............................farms: 525 - 15 54 106 166 184 $1,000: 12,658 - 170 1,044 2,483 4,249 4,711 Amount from state and local government : agricultural program payments .................farms: 98 3 - 21 13 36 25 $1,000: 696 (D) - (D) 40 270 144 Other farm-related income : sources (see text) ............................farms: 1,965 6 73 174 471 597 644 $1,000: 69,213 183 662 4,538 10,757 33,558 19,514 : LAND USE : : Total cropland ...................................farms: 24,912 57 914 2,234 5,616 7,726 8,365 acres: 1,672,763 583 46,559 180,552 331,339 419,219 694,511 Harvested cropland .............................farms: 22,459 52 839 1,995 5,067 6,983 7,523 acres: 1,256,168 (D) (D) 117,802 266,145 290,261 543,427 Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 49 acres ...................................: 19,381 52 672 1,688 4,389 6,082 6,498 50 to 99 acres ..................................: 1,277 - 72 159 279 405 362 100 to 199 acres ................................: 891 - 52 73 211 267 288 200 to 499 acres ................................: 526 - 32 46 101 135 212 500 to 999 acres ................................: 206 - 11 13 47 56 79 1,000 to 1,999 acres ............................: 93 - - 8 19 22 44 2,000 acres or more .............................: 85 - - 8 21 16 40 : Cropland- : Other pasture and grazing land that could : have been used for crops without additional : improvements (see text) .....................farms: 1,358 2 62 181 351 413 349 acres: 115,655 (D) (D) 10,016 18,472 33,312 51,973 On which all crops failed or : were abandoned ..............................farms: 1,064 - 44 82 239 349 350 acres: 43,773 - 2,749 2,142 7,701 20,162 11,019 Idle or used for cover crops or soil : improvement, but not harvested and not : pastured or grazed (see text) ...............farms: 2,854 3 108 251 629 868 995 acres: 212,519 (D) (D) 38,459 34,582 64,102 72,998 In cultivated summer fallow ..................farms: 459 - 35 57 92 144 131 acres: 44,648 - 1,600 12,133 4,439 11,382 15,094 : Total woodland ...................................farms: 3,734 7 75 314 799 1,200 1,339 acres: 637,015 1,280 31,735 47,901 124,725 209,412 221,962 Woodland pastured ..............................farms: 1,729 7 43 160 385 518 616 acres: 284,291 1,280 18,053 16,515 69,511 72,253 106,679 Woodland not pastured ..........................farms: 2,376 - 39 198 500 784 855 acres: 352,724 - 13,682 31,386 55,214 137,159 115,283 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 69. Summary by Age and Primary Occupation of Principal Operator: 2012 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : : Farming : :---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : Total farming : : Age of operator (years) : and other : :----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : occupations : Total : Under 25 : 25 to 34 : 35 to 44 : 45 to 54 : 55 to 64 : 65 and over ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- LAND USE - Con. : : Permanent pasture and rangeland, : other than cropland and woodland : pastured (see text) .............................farms: 21,886 11,340 35 376 676 1,772 3,303 5,178 acres: 13,036,448 9,429,661 1,766 227,294 538,775 1,592,280 2,744,306 4,325,240 : Land in farmsteads, homes, buildings, : livestock facilities, ponds, roads, : wasteland, etc. .................................farms: 41,259 22,126 70 747 1,527 3,861 6,552 9,369 acres: 1,365,250 867,530 1,105 30,077 60,553 160,850 289,137 325,808 : Irrigated land ...................................farms: 53,546 30,866 112 1,303 2,312 5,757 9,203 12,179 acres: 7,861,964 6,587,185 12,786 207,890 563,106 1,464,060 2,274,387 2,064,956 Harvested cropland .............................farms: 47,972 28,199 102 1,235 2,207 5,377 8,441 10,837 acres: 7,371,411 6,236,608 12,119 191,431 545,866 1,411,415 2,143,786 1,931,991 Pastureland and other land .....................farms: 7,884 4,100 18 136 206 669 1,209 1,862 acres: 490,553 350,577 667 16,459 17,240 52,645 130,601 132,965 : CONSERVATION AND CROP INSURANCE : : Land enrolled in Conservation Reserve, : Wetlands Reserve, Farmable Wetlands, : or Conservation Reserve Enhancement : Programs ........................................farms: 470 214 - - 4 27 83 100 acres: 105,504 59,339 - - 68 8,180 19,522 31,569 : Land enrolled in crop insurance : programs (see text) .............................farms: 13,813 9,814 55 399 783 1,906 3,150 3,521 acres: 4,929,132 4,229,849 5,059 100,045 363,853 850,095 1,619,766 1,291,031 : ORGANIC AGRICULTURE : : Total organic commodity sales (see text) .........farms: 3,008 1,917 18 148 200 385 625 541 $1,000: 1,355,207 1,048,073 778 64,647 99,662 229,644 424,360 228,984 : VALUE OF LAND AND BUILDINGS : : Estimated market value of land and : buildings .......................................farms: 77,857 42,469 151 1,663 3,117 7,658 12,433 17,447 $1,000: 160,524,953 117,119,400 173,268 3,656,355 9,763,323 24,721,292 38,130,130 40,675,031 Average per farm ...........................dollars: 2,061,792 2,757,762 1,147,470 2,198,650 3,132,282 3,228,166 3,066,849 2,331,348 Average per acre ...........................dollars: 6,278 6,114 9,509 6,925 7,204 6,886 6,364 5,302 : Farms by value group: : $1 to $49,999 .....................................: 3,768 1,911 6 186 175 358 495 691 $50,000 to $99,999 ................................: 2,993 1,345 11 95 101 223 398 517 $100,000 to $199,999 ..............................: 6,849 3,277 20 164 294 546 891 1,362 $200,000 to $499,999 ..............................: 22,324 10,562 56 350 776 1,799 2,842 4,739 $500,000 to $999,999 ..............................: 17,939 9,099 30 252 477 1,540 2,596 4,204 : $1,000,000 to $1,999,999 ..........................: 9,621 5,747 14 182 421 1,013 1,793 2,324 $2,000,000 to $4,999,999 ..........................: 8,056 5,602 7 276 439 1,126 1,789 1,965 $5,000,000 to $9,999,999 ..........................: 3,283 2,475 2 91 205 494 814 869 $10,000,000 or more ...............................: 3,024 2,451 5 67 229 559 815 776 : VALUE OF MACHINERY AND EQUIPMENT : : Estimated market value of all machinery : and equipment ...................................farms: 77,851 42,465 151 1,663 3,117 7,658 12,429 17,447 $1,000: 9,709,545 7,734,900 17,344 282,971 734,778 1,797,248 2,521,024 2,381,535 : Farms by value group: : $1 to $4,999 ......................................: 10,455 4,028 5 162 259 636 1,027 1,939 $5,000 to $9,999 ..................................: 8,336 3,607 31 166 214 544 908 1,744 $10,000 to $19,999 ................................: 13,025 6,203 8 218 357 970 1,657 2,993 $20,000 to $49,999 ................................: 18,826 9,880 32 308 676 1,728 2,875 4,261 $50,000 to $99,999 ................................: 11,191 6,597 29 223 495 1,149 2,008 2,693 $100,000 to $199,999 ..............................: 6,916 4,720 29 218 412 897 1,489 1,675 $200,000 to $499,999 ..............................: 5,289 4,106 7 227 358 893 1,375 1,246 $500,000 or more ..................................: 3,813 3,324 10 141 346 841 1,090 896 : SELECTED MACHINERY AND EQUIPMENT : : Trucks, including pickups (see text) .............farms: 55,175 33,312 120 1,211 2,445 5,908 9,959 13,669 number: 132,455 95,438 274 2,985 7,819 19,706 31,409 33,245 : Tractors, all ....................................farms: 53,296 31,731 109 1,035 2,239 5,599 9,511 13,238 number: 147,163 106,679 238 3,070 8,152 21,744 34,844 38,631 Less than 40 horsepower (PTO) ..................farms: 31,264 17,945 31 436 1,065 3,070 5,326 8,017 number: 49,313 31,303 62 711 1,996 6,008 9,590 12,936 40 to 99 horsepower (PTO) ......................farms: 30,456 19,901 79 661 1,552 3,632 6,153 7,824 number: 68,295 50,900 121 1,422 4,034 10,425 16,732 18,166 100 horsepower (PTO) or more ...................farms: 10,631 8,057 39 397 752 1,749 2,541 2,579 number: 29,555 24,476 55 937 2,122 5,311 8,522 7,529 : Grain and bean combines, self-propelled ..........farms: 1,710 1,478 8 75 122 294 544 435 number: 2,497 2,182 8 96 193 440 799 646 : Cotton pickers and strippers, : self-propelled ..................................farms: 475 441 - 17 38 79 147 160 number: 870 813 - 26 65 118 308 296 Forage harvesters, self-propelled ................farms: 1,629 1,201 3 45 99 270 368 416 number: 2,188 1,666 3 66 142 369 528 558 Hay balers .......................................farms: 3,674 2,638 11 102 166 513 827 1,019 number: 4,822 3,576 24 152 207 752 1,143 1,298 ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 69. Summary by Age and Primary Occupation of Principal Operator: 2012 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : Other occupations :-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : : Age of operator (years) : :------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Total : Under 25 : 25 to 34 : 35 to 44 : 45 to 54 : 55 to 64 : 65 and over ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- LAND USE - Con. : : Permanent pasture and rangeland, : other than cropland and woodland : pastured (see text) .............................farms: 10,546 30 367 972 2,576 3,279 3,322 acres: 3,606,787 4,291 92,672 156,162 868,358 764,727 1,720,577 : Land in farmsteads, homes, buildings, : livestock facilities, ponds, roads, : wasteland, etc. .................................farms: 19,133 49 671 1,744 4,714 5,941 6,014 acres: 497,720 192 9,908 27,702 107,871 138,241 213,806 : Irrigated land ...................................farms: 22,680 62 856 2,045 5,298 7,093 7,326 acres: 1,274,779 634 36,653 137,940 266,399 285,227 547,926 Harvested cropland .............................farms: 19,773 52 767 1,780 4,538 6,157 6,479 acres: 1,134,803 (D) (D) 108,437 242,149 260,145 490,650 Pastureland and other land .....................farms: 3,784 10 100 357 996 1,233 1,088 acres: 139,976 (D) (D) 29,503 24,250 25,082 57,276 : CONSERVATION AND CROP INSURANCE : : Land enrolled in Conservation Reserve, : Wetlands Reserve, Farmable Wetlands, : or Conservation Reserve Enhancement : Programs ........................................farms: 256 - - 13 53 75 115 acres: 46,165 - - 3,322 9,167 16,256 17,420 : Land enrolled in crop insurance : programs (see text) .............................farms: 3,999 9 205 335 929 1,177 1,344 acres: 699,283 128 25,654 32,245 164,564 198,814 277,878 : ORGANIC AGRICULTURE : : Total organic commodity sales (see text) .........farms: 1,091 3 45 133 246 350 314 $1,000: 307,133 174 16,610 19,509 34,416 167,435 68,989 : VALUE OF LAND AND BUILDINGS : : Estimated market value of land and : buildings .......................................farms: 35,388 102 1,305 3,138 8,288 10,949 11,606 $1,000: 43,405,553 57,958 1,255,644 3,263,107 9,924,315 12,722,593 16,181,937 Average per farm ...........................dollars: 1,226,561 568,211 962,179 1,039,868 1,197,432 1,161,987 1,394,273 Average per acre ...........................dollars: 6,767 9,133 6,942 7,914 6,929 8,307 5,676 : Farms by value group: : $1 to $49,999 .....................................: 1,857 24 122 187 417 476 631 $50,000 to $99,999 ................................: 1,648 6 92 133 355 528 534 $100,000 to $199,999 ..............................: 3,572 11 176 333 817 1,036 1,199 $200,000 to $499,999 ..............................: 11,762 37 423 1,176 2,901 3,718 3,507 $500,000 to $999,999 ..............................: 8,840 11 224 744 2,127 2,823 2,911 : $1,000,000 to $1,999,999 ..........................: 3,874 10 134 281 908 1,208 1,333 $2,000,000 to $4,999,999 ..........................: 2,454 - 104 179 524 739 908 $5,000,000 to $9,999,999 ..........................: 808 3 17 59 126 250 353 $10,000,000 or more ...............................: 573 - 13 46 113 171 230 : VALUE OF MACHINERY AND EQUIPMENT : : Estimated market value of all machinery : and equipment ...................................farms: 35,386 102 1,305 3,138 8,288 10,949 11,604 $1,000: 1,974,645 7,858 82,316 182,744 436,430 556,936 708,360 : Farms by value group: : $1 to $4,999 ......................................: 6,427 12 208 541 1,399 1,976 2,291 $5,000 to $9,999 ..................................: 4,729 9 143 363 1,045 1,500 1,669 $10,000 to $19,999 ................................: 6,822 29 181 604 1,605 2,229 2,174 $20,000 to $49,999 ................................: 8,946 29 367 867 2,159 2,747 2,777 $50,000 to $99,999 ................................: 4,594 6 236 410 1,141 1,370 1,431 $100,000 to $199,999 ..............................: 2,196 8 73 214 560 647 694 $200,000 to $499,999 ..............................: 1,183 6 69 86 290 347 385 $500,000 or more ..................................: 489 3 28 53 89 133 183 : SELECTED MACHINERY AND EQUIPMENT : : Trucks, including pickups (see text) .............farms: 21,863 62 854 2,030 5,316 6,806 6,795 number: 37,017 69 1,412 3,377 8,867 11,257 12,035 : Tractors, all ....................................farms: 21,565 57 694 1,920 5,238 6,698 6,958 number: 40,484 65 1,289 3,426 9,922 12,088 13,694 Less than 40 horsepower (PTO) ..................farms: 13,319 30 370 1,034 3,141 4,185 4,559 number: 18,010 30 527 1,363 4,134 5,725 6,231 40 to 99 horsepower (PTO) ......................farms: 10,555 25 334 1,063 2,621 3,276 3,236 number: 17,395 29 592 1,550 4,352 5,080 5,792 100 horsepower (PTO) or more ...................farms: 2,574 6 117 275 687 698 791 number: 5,079 6 170 513 1,436 1,283 1,671 : Grain and bean combines, self-propelled ..........farms: 232 - 9 25 65 66 67 number: 315 - 12 30 81 93 99 : Cotton pickers and strippers, : self-propelled ..................................farms: 34 - - 2 6 14 12 number: 57 - - (D) (D) 19 28 Forage harvesters, self-propelled ................farms: 428 - 18 44 127 147 92 number: 522 - 26 50 150 161 135 Hay balers .......................................farms: 1,036 6 34 120 262 327 287 number: 1,246 6 43 155 310 382 350 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 69. Summary by Age and Primary Occupation of Principal Operator: 2012 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : : Farming : :---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : Total farming : : Age of operator (years) : and other : :----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : occupations : Total : Under 25 : 25 to 34 : 35 to 44 : 45 to 54 : 55 to 64 : 65 and over ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- FERTILIZERS AND CHEMICALS : : Commercial fertilizer, lime, and soil : conditioners used ...............................farms: 32,646 20,547 81 1,017 1,705 3,983 6,385 7,376 acres treated: 6,314,533 5,384,329 7,385 188,713 492,278 1,201,064 1,911,797 1,583,092 Manure used ......................................farms: 6,794 4,266 8 315 355 845 1,382 1,361 acres treated: 712,975 630,749 1,087 29,156 57,925 157,483 221,789 163,309 : Acres treated to control- : Insects ........................................farms: 25,064 16,577 78 812 1,388 3,276 5,211 5,812 acres: 5,293,093 4,443,293 9,326 134,604 397,595 1,008,002 1,586,236 1,307,530 Weeds, grass, or brush .........................farms: 32,402 20,262 77 932 1,663 3,794 6,316 7,480 acres: 6,116,162 5,221,536 7,474 204,457 500,097 1,169,995 1,849,741 1,489,772 Nematodes ......................................farms: 4,485 3,094 13 165 309 663 957 987 acres: 725,589 585,403 1,103 16,153 47,570 139,026 202,711 178,840 Diseases in crops and orchards .................farms: 14,196 9,023 35 374 797 1,782 2,830 3,205 acres: 2,038,769 1,691,809 2,282 68,867 167,125 414,177 579,310 460,048 Chemicals used to control growth, : thin fruit, ripen, or defoliate .................farms: 9,810 6,442 16 246 493 1,227 2,004 2,456 acres on which used: 1,460,135 1,205,281 1,069 27,415 111,493 245,324 405,935 414,045 : LAND USE PRACTICES : : Land drained by tile .............................farms: 1,913 1,234 3 64 97 240 411 419 acres: 476,794 418,848 90 11,348 36,121 79,770 207,818 83,701 Land artificially drained by ditches .............farms: 7,166 4,595 23 279 390 931 1,398 1,574 acres: 1,872,676 1,616,177 3,528 70,213 141,848 304,948 670,068 425,572 Land under conservation easement .................farms: 1,603 855 - 30 65 171 270 319 acres: 929,985 622,077 - 9,283 30,206 64,566 118,291 399,731 Cropland on which no-till practices were : used ............................................farms: 4,213 2,634 13 143 228 585 755 910 acres: 205,383 179,168 318 4,229 35,423 34,484 57,934 46,780 Cropland on which conservation tillage, : including no till, practices were : used ............................................farms: 1,945 1,399 12 118 148 310 448 363 acres: 566,983 486,881 (D) (D) 29,959 102,102 213,893 124,181 Cropland on which conventional tillage : practices were used .............................farms: 11,762 8,532 33 559 896 1,789 2,603 2,652 acres: 3,083,056 2,678,628 4,814 91,442 254,096 581,449 964,621 782,206 Cropland planted to a cover crop : (excluding CRP) .................................farms: 4,899 3,004 15 180 280 559 954 1,016 acres: 340,532 270,802 1,646 12,994 24,745 67,309 85,674 78,434 : ENERGY : : Renewable energy producing systems ...............farms: 5,845 2,926 2 114 182 484 913 1,231 Solar panels ...................................farms: 5,445 2,703 2 102 165 448 834 1,152 Wind turbines ..................................farms: 324 182 2 14 15 26 63 62 Methane digesters ..............................farms: 41 23 - 2 - 5 9 7 Geoexchange systems ............................farms: 104 59 - - 1 11 21 26 : Small hydro systems ............................farms: 190 110 - 4 12 16 37 41 Biodiesel ......................................farms: 165 84 - 12 4 14 31 23 Ethanol ........................................farms: 56 23 - - - 5 8 10 Other ..........................................farms: 49 22 - - 1 - 6 15 : Wind rights leased to others .....................farms: 113 70 - 6 8 7 12 37 : TENURE : : Full owners ......................................farms: 60,492 30,360 67 734 1,757 4,926 8,597 14,279 Part owners ......................................farms: 9,490 6,829 23 287 568 1,471 2,297 2,183 Tenants ..........................................farms: 7,875 5,280 61 642 792 1,261 1,539 985 : OWNED AND RENTED LAND : : Land owned .......................................farms: 70,216 37,334 90 1,032 2,339 6,437 10,932 16,504 acres: 16,064,215 11,324,347 10,274 234,233 691,863 1,914,017 3,444,813 5,029,147 Owned land in farms ............................farms: 69,982 37,189 90 1,021 2,325 6,397 10,894 16,462 acres: 14,281,177 10,190,826 10,239 209,782 598,117 1,773,781 3,175,530 4,423,377 : Land rented or leased from others ................farms: 17,477 12,180 84 931 1,361 2,751 3,851 3,202 acres: 11,608,764 9,231,573 7,982 326,386 759,955 1,915,611 2,887,301 3,334,338 Rented or leased land in farms .................farms: 17,365 12,109 84 929 1,360 2,732 3,836 3,168 acres: 11,287,824 8,963,890 7,982 318,231 757,115 1,816,507 2,816,115 3,247,940 : Land rented or leased to others ..................farms: 6,066 3,589 8 101 217 590 1,035 1,638 acres: 2,103,978 1,401,204 35 32,606 96,586 239,340 340,469 692,168 : NUMBER OF OPERATORS : : Total operators .................................number: 126,099 68,936 270 2,752 5,259 12,418 20,647 27,590 Farms by number of operators: : 1 operator ........................................: 40,197 22,518 81 834 1,528 4,145 6,347 9,583 2 operators .......................................: 30,790 15,768 42 680 1,221 2,736 4,792 6,297 3 operators .......................................: 5,058 3,051 19 104 267 570 908 1,183 4 operators .......................................: 1,137 695 7 25 53 110 235 265 5 or more operators ...............................: 675 437 2 20 48 97 151 119 : Total women operators .........................number: 41,256 20,938 75 798 1,557 3,628 6,292 8,588 Farms by number of women operators: : 1 operator ......................................: 35,652 17,977 59 674 1,290 3,025 5,381 7,548 2 operators .....................................: 2,226 1,163 8 28 115 242 365 405 3 operators .....................................: 253 139 - 2 8 32 41 56 4 operators .....................................: 44 21 - 3 2 2 7 7 5 or more operators .............................: 37 25 - 10 1 3 5 6 ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 69. Summary by Age and Primary Occupation of Principal Operator: 2012 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : Other occupations :-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : : Age of operator (years) : :------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Total : Under 25 : 25 to 34 : 35 to 44 : 45 to 54 : 55 to 64 : 65 and over ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- FERTILIZERS AND CHEMICALS : : Commercial fertilizer, lime, and soil : conditioners used ...............................farms: 12,099 28 522 1,172 2,776 3,897 3,704 acres treated: 930,204 241 29,421 92,527 209,055 214,205 384,755 Manure used ......................................farms: 2,528 - 103 310 694 837 584 acres treated: 82,226 - 2,058 7,477 15,868 22,307 34,516 : Acres treated to control- : Insects ........................................farms: 8,487 27 410 818 1,966 2,649 2,617 acres: 849,800 217 27,014 84,912 183,518 176,809 377,330 Weeds, grass, or brush .........................farms: 12,140 31 528 1,200 2,895 3,882 3,604 acres: 894,626 241 31,191 77,488 202,855 201,462 381,389 Nematodes ......................................farms: 1,391 3 71 140 306 439 432 acres: 140,186 18 3,389 9,434 65,335 28,883 33,127 Diseases in crops and orchards .................farms: 5,173 10 202 457 1,176 1,725 1,603 acres: 346,960 88 9,837 22,727 109,138 78,085 127,085 Chemicals used to control growth, : thin fruit, ripen, or defoliate .................farms: 3,368 9 124 315 683 1,008 1,229 acres on which used: 254,854 54 6,983 20,724 75,416 52,722 98,955 : LAND USE PRACTICES : : Land drained by tile .............................farms: 679 3 27 47 135 216 251 acres: 57,946 6 1,948 13,268 11,249 18,472 13,003 Land artificially drained by ditches .............farms: 2,571 13 128 236 605 780 809 acres: 256,499 114 11,195 38,947 47,541 96,356 62,346 Land under conservation easement .................farms: 748 - 45 48 175 237 243 acres: 307,908 - 5,214 11,558 46,320 85,351 159,465 Cropland on which no-till practices were : used ............................................farms: 1,579 4 105 188 316 489 477 acres: 26,215 40 727 2,707 7,641 6,103 8,997 Cropland on which conservation tillage, : including no till, practices were : used ............................................farms: 546 - 60 83 150 137 116 acres: 80,102 - 1,833 26,763 9,568 22,983 18,955 Cropland on which conventional tillage : practices were used .............................farms: 3,230 17 211 390 801 962 849 acres: 404,428 141 16,938 29,394 76,447 94,729 186,779 Cropland planted to a cover crop : (excluding CRP) .................................farms: 1,895 - 109 186 435 649 516 acres: 69,730 - 1,149 4,863 11,577 15,758 36,383 : ENERGY : : Renewable energy producing systems ...............farms: 2,919 - 57 218 760 1,008 876 Solar panels ...................................farms: 2,742 - 37 205 733 967 800 Wind turbines ..................................farms: 142 - - 6 36 39 61 Methane digesters ..............................farms: 18 - - - - 10 8 Geoexchange systems ............................farms: 45 - - 5 8 9 23 : Small hydro systems ............................farms: 80 - 6 - 6 35 33 Biodiesel ......................................farms: 81 - 10 8 13 26 24 Ethanol ........................................farms: 33 - 4 - 4 10 15 Other ..........................................farms: 27 - - 9 2 6 10 : Wind rights leased to others .....................farms: 43 - - 3 17 11 12 : TENURE : : Full owners ......................................farms: 30,132 57 780 2,441 6,931 9,438 10,485 Part owners ......................................farms: 2,661 7 167 306 705 800 676 Tenants ..........................................farms: 2,595 38 358 391 652 711 445 : OWNED AND RENTED LAND : : Land owned .......................................farms: 32,882 67 952 2,763 7,647 10,264 11,189 acres: 4,739,868 2,396 93,693 254,190 885,613 1,203,146 2,300,830 Owned land in farms ............................farms: 32,793 64 947 2,747 7,636 10,238 11,161 acres: 4,090,351 2,117 39,992 232,364 820,507 966,452 2,028,919 : Land rented or leased from others ................farms: 5,297 45 529 705 1,362 1,516 1,140 acres: 2,377,191 4,229 141,202 193,200 635,112 570,233 833,215 Rented or leased land in farms .................farms: 5,256 45 525 697 1,357 1,511 1,121 acres: 2,323,934 4,229 140,882 179,953 611,786 565,147 821,937 : Land rented or leased to others ..................farms: 2,477 8 54 168 479 735 1,033 acres: 702,774 279 54,021 35,073 88,432 241,780 283,189 : NUMBER OF OPERATORS : : Total operators .................................number: 57,163 171 2,149 5,167 13,718 17,517 18,441 Farms by number of operators: : 1 operator ........................................: 17,679 59 631 1,433 3,806 5,501 6,249 2 operators .......................................: 15,022 20 555 1,480 3,898 4,700 4,369 3 operators .......................................: 2,007 20 79 163 400 569 776 4 operators .......................................: 442 3 31 40 125 112 131 5 or more operators ...............................: 238 - 9 22 59 67 81 : Total women operators .........................number: 20,318 53 735 1,856 5,082 6,279 6,313 Farms by number of women operators: : 1 operator ......................................: 17,675 31 627 1,632 4,420 5,607 5,358 2 operators .....................................: 1,063 11 54 95 275 281 347 3 operators .....................................: 114 - - 6 36 30 42 4 operators .....................................: 23 - - 4 1 5 13 5 or more operators .............................: 12 - - - - - 12 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 69. Summary by Age and Primary Occupation of Principal Operator: 2012 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : : Farming : :---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : Total farming : : Age of operator (years) : and other : :----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : occupations : Total : Under 25 : 25 to 34 : 35 to 44 : 45 to 54 : 55 to 64 : 65 and over ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- PRINCIPAL OPERATOR CHARACTERISTICS : : Sex of operator: : Male ................................................: 63,873 35,530 112 1,373 2,590 6,332 10,403 14,720 Female ..............................................: 13,984 6,939 39 290 527 1,326 2,030 2,727 : Primary occupation: : Farming .............................................: 42,469 42,469 151 1,663 3,117 7,658 12,433 17,447 Other ...............................................: 35,388 - - - - - - - : Place of residence: : On farm operated ....................................: 54,775 29,235 79 743 1,746 4,785 8,357 13,525 Not on farm operated ................................: 23,082 13,234 72 920 1,371 2,873 4,076 3,922 : Days worked off farm: : None ................................................: 31,311 24,509 51 633 1,360 3,754 6,849 11,862 Any .................................................: 46,546 17,960 100 1,030 1,757 3,904 5,584 5,585 1 to 49 days ......................................: 7,304 3,550 27 253 356 620 1,169 1,125 50 to 99 days .....................................: 4,230 2,220 12 127 195 460 603 823 100 to 199 days ...................................: 7,065 3,043 28 166 271 662 924 992 200 days or more ..................................: 27,947 9,147 33 484 935 2,162 2,888 2,645 : Years on present farm: : 2 years or less .....................................: 3,151 1,488 51 319 241 338 368 171 3 or 4 years ........................................: 4,634 2,112 61 425 432 424 445 325 5 to 9 years ........................................: 12,863 6,209 39 622 921 1,591 1,678 1,358 10 years or more ....................................: 57,209 32,660 - 297 1,523 5,305 9,942 15,593 : Average years on present farm .......................: 20.2 22.2 3.7 6.0 10.3 15.8 21.0 29.6 : Years operating any farm (see text): : 2 years or less .....................................: 2,182 932 43 218 154 219 217 81 3 or 4 years ........................................: 3,648 1,546 57 354 286 317 310 222 5 to 9 years ........................................: 10,663 4,799 51 616 790 1,238 1,122 982 10 years or more ....................................: 61,364 35,192 - 475 1,887 5,884 10,784 16,162 : Average years operating any farm ....................: 22.7 25.2 4.0 7.1 12.3 18.4 24.4 33.0 : Age group: : Under 25 years ......................................: 253 151 151 - - - - - 25 to 34 years ......................................: 2,968 1,663 - 1,663 - - - - 35 to 44 years ......................................: 6,255 3,117 - - 3,117 - - - 45 to 49 years ......................................: 6,107 3,010 - - - 3,010 - - 50 to 54 years ......................................: 9,839 4,648 - - - 4,648 - - 55 to 59 years ......................................: 11,513 6,033 - - - - 6,033 - 60 to 64 years ......................................: 11,869 6,400 - - - - 6,400 - 65 to 69 years ......................................: 10,683 5,975 - - - - - 5,975 70 years and over ...................................: 18,370 11,472 - - - - - 11,472 : Average age .........................................: 60.1 61.0 21.3 30.5 40.2 50.2 59.6 73.7 : Spanish, Hispanic, or Latino origin (see text) ........: 9,815 5,865 43 253 736 1,353 1,755 1,725 : Race: : American Indian or Alaska Native ....................: 1,192 665 - 13 40 143 216 253 Asian ...............................................: 4,802 3,103 8 199 325 748 1,028 795 Black or African American ...........................: 345 171 - - 9 32 43 87 Native Hawaiian or Other Pacific Islander ...........: 321 175 - 2 17 33 67 56 White ...............................................: 70,537 38,035 143 1,426 2,696 6,640 10,989 16,141 More than one race reported .........................: 660 320 - 23 30 62 90 115 : Farms by number of persons living in : operator's household: : 1 person ............................................: 10,856 6,100 31 256 276 828 1,537 3,172 2 people ............................................: 39,377 22,170 43 456 511 2,398 7,132 11,630 3 people ............................................: 10,481 5,469 25 326 439 1,331 1,882 1,466 4 people ............................................: 9,895 4,924 29 337 934 1,692 1,166 766 5 or more people ....................................: 7,248 3,806 23 288 957 1,409 716 413 : Percent of operator's total : household income from farming: : Less than 25 percent ................................: 53,231 23,333 79 737 1,488 3,770 6,196 11,063 25 to 49 percent ....................................: 6,732 4,376 5 182 319 754 1,211 1,905 50 to 74 percent ....................................: 8,038 5,944 20 247 460 937 1,647 2,633 75 to 99 percent ....................................: 5,290 4,526 22 223 304 827 1,322 1,828 100 percent .........................................: 4,566 4,290 25 274 546 1,370 2,057 18 : Operator is a hired manager ......................farms: 7,130 5,417 15 324 568 1,373 1,714 1,423 acres: 5,266,987 4,472,381 7,397 147,135 432,101 1,037,274 1,508,842 1,339,632 : Farms with- : Internet access .....................................: 59,543 31,688 112 1,406 2,546 6,095 9,642 11,887 Dial-up service ...................................: 4,703 2,744 6 35 95 374 788 1,446 DSL service .......................................: 20,030 10,454 26 491 918 2,017 3,209 3,793 Cable modem service ...............................: 9,578 4,837 7 264 403 867 1,521 1,775 Fiber-optic service ...............................: 1,719 913 5 26 63 158 319 342 Mobile broadband plan for a computer : or cell phone ....................................: 12,454 7,088 31 430 681 1,479 2,185 2,282 Satellite service .................................: 15,193 8,484 35 289 615 1,554 2,496 3,495 Broadband over Power Lines (BPL) ..................: 2,135 1,326 6 76 112 298 410 424 Other Internet service ............................: 2,805 1,401 12 45 143 303 408 490 : Farms by number of households sharing : in net income of operation: : 1 household .........................................: 61,016 31,482 106 1,165 2,190 5,524 9,117 13,380 2 households ........................................: 11,316 7,268 19 301 539 1,269 2,144 2,996 3 households ........................................: 3,013 1,972 8 91 172 439 624 638 4 households ........................................: 1,351 939 - 61 105 213 306 254 5 or more households ................................: 1,161 808 18 45 111 213 242 179 ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 69. Summary by Age and Primary Occupation of Principal Operator: 2012 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : Other occupations :-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : : Age of operator (years) : :------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Total : Under 25 : 25 to 34 : 35 to 44 : 45 to 54 : 55 to 64 : 65 and over ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- PRINCIPAL OPERATOR CHARACTERISTICS : : Sex of operator: : Male ................................................: 28,343 71 1,045 2,573 6,649 8,793 9,212 Female ..............................................: 7,045 31 260 565 1,639 2,156 2,394 : Primary occupation: : Farming .............................................: - - - - - - - Other ...............................................: 35,388 102 1,305 3,138 8,288 10,949 11,606 : Place of residence: : On farm operated ....................................: 25,540 48 735 2,102 6,110 8,198 8,347 Not on farm operated ................................: 9,848 54 570 1,036 2,178 2,751 3,259 : Days worked off farm: : None ................................................: 6,802 6 110 219 656 1,585 4,226 Any .................................................: 28,586 96 1,195 2,919 7,632 9,364 7,380 1 to 49 days ......................................: 3,754 25 145 281 758 1,127 1,418 50 to 99 days .....................................: 2,010 14 83 155 431 630 697 100 to 199 days ...................................: 4,022 4 118 431 926 1,398 1,145 200 days or more ..................................: 18,800 53 849 2,052 5,517 6,209 4,120 : Years on present farm: : 2 years or less .....................................: 1,663 37 288 303 471 404 160 3 or 4 years ........................................: 2,522 19 385 489 693 620 316 5 to 9 years ........................................: 6,654 46 434 1,233 2,069 1,806 1,066 10 years or more ....................................: 24,549 - 198 1,113 5,055 8,119 10,064 : Average years on present farm .......................: 17.9 4.2 5.6 8.7 12.8 17.5 25.9 : Years operating any farm (see text): : 2 years or less .....................................: 1,250 25 227 228 367 292 111 3 or 4 years ........................................: 2,102 27 346 437 548 524 220 5 to 9 years ........................................: 5,864 50 453 1,096 1,848 1,526 891 10 years or more ....................................: 26,172 - 279 1,377 5,525 8,607 10,384 : Average years operating any farm ....................: 19.8 4.6 6.4 9.9 14.5 19.6 28.1 : Age group: : Under 25 years ......................................: 102 102 - - - - - 25 to 34 years ......................................: 1,305 - 1,305 - - - - 35 to 44 years ......................................: 3,138 - - 3,138 - - - 45 to 49 years ......................................: 3,097 - - - 3,097 - - 50 to 54 years ......................................: 5,191 - - - 5,191 - - 55 to 59 years ......................................: 5,480 - - - - 5,480 - 60 to 64 years ......................................: 5,469 - - - - 5,469 - 65 to 69 years ......................................: 4,708 - - - - - 4,708 70 years and over ...................................: 6,898 - - - - - 6,898 : Average age .........................................: 59.0 21.6 30.9 40.3 50.3 59.4 73.2 : Spanish, Hispanic, or Latino origin (see text) ........: 3,950 19 217 601 1,266 1,075 772 : Race: : American Indian or Alaska Native ....................: 527 - 18 98 150 132 129 Asian ...............................................: 1,699 23 76 253 460 502 385 Black or African American ...........................: 174 - - 22 47 44 61 Native Hawaiian or Other Pacific Islander ...........: 146 - 7 2 44 61 32 White ...............................................: 32,502 77 1,185 2,740 7,504 10,089 10,907 More than one race reported .........................: 340 2 19 23 83 121 92 : Farms by number of persons living in : operator's household: : 1 person ............................................: 4,756 12 159 209 723 1,503 2,150 2 people ............................................: 17,207 13 313 565 2,696 6,145 7,475 3 people ............................................: 5,012 30 234 457 1,532 1,687 1,072 4 people ............................................: 4,971 4 368 1,036 1,988 977 598 5 or more people ....................................: 3,442 43 231 871 1,349 637 311 : Percent of operator's total : household income from farming: : Less than 25 percent ................................: 29,898 64 1,070 2,697 7,050 9,300 9,717 25 to 49 percent ....................................: 2,356 - 92 216 522 735 791 50 to 74 percent ....................................: 2,094 31 109 163 482 598 711 75 to 99 percent ....................................: 764 4 17 38 151 171 383 100 percent .........................................: 276 3 17 24 83 145 4 : Operator is a hired manager ......................farms: 1,713 13 122 191 366 472 549 acres: 794,606 760 20,164 107,830 238,665 166,371 260,816 : Farms with- : Internet access .....................................: 27,855 85 1,036 2,664 6,922 8,918 8,230 Dial-up service ...................................: 1,959 6 44 116 365 644 784 DSL service .......................................: 9,576 23 340 954 2,237 3,096 2,926 Cable modem service ...............................: 4,741 23 171 400 1,062 1,479 1,606 Fiber-optic service ...............................: 806 - 32 68 223 230 253 Mobile broadband plan for a computer : or cell phone ....................................: 5,366 22 294 637 1,478 1,609 1,326 Satellite service .................................: 6,709 10 189 567 1,716 2,160 2,067 Broadband over Power Lines (BPL) ..................: 809 10 52 67 197 289 194 Other Internet service ............................: 1,404 - 52 158 402 480 312 : Farms by number of households sharing : in net income of operation: : 1 household .........................................: 29,534 82 1,070 2,616 6,908 9,262 9,596 2 households ........................................: 4,048 9 174 331 891 1,204 1,439 3 households ........................................: 1,041 7 31 85 258 294 366 4 households ........................................: 412 1 13 63 141 90 104 5 or more households ................................: 353 3 17 43 90 99 101 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 69. Summary by Age and Primary Occupation of Principal Operator: 2012 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : : Farming : :---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : Total farming : : Age of operator (years) : and other : :----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : occupations : Total : Under 25 : 25 to 34 : 35 to 44 : 45 to 54 : 55 to 64 : 65 and over ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- FARMS BY TYPE OF : ORGANIZATION (SEE TEXT) : : Operation with 50 percent or more ownership : interest held by operator and/or persons : related by blood, marriage, : or adoption .....................................farms: 72,641 39,091 135 1,474 2,761 6,880 11,312 16,529 acres: 20,951,605 15,517,656 15,786 433,881 1,050,046 2,879,072 4,739,030 6,399,841 Limited Liability Corporation ....................farms: 4,453 2,640 9 125 225 586 820 875 acres: 2,772,951 2,109,231 4,987 77,029 150,697 450,088 652,009 774,421 : LEGAL STATUS FOR TAX PURPOSES (SEE TEXT) : : Family or individual ............................farms: 59,732 30,947 113 1,144 2,117 5,201 8,752 13,620 acres: 12,000,544 8,787,203 10,369 252,079 517,404 1,549,277 2,708,411 3,749,663 Partnership ......................................farms: 8,984 5,902 29 276 489 1,213 1,813 2,082 acres: 6,934,159 5,472,268 3,606 138,589 383,984 955,234 1,622,720 2,368,135 Registered under state law .....................farms: 7,283 4,870 22 251 422 1,020 1,502 1,653 acres: 5,929,592 4,619,039 2,770 105,276 348,397 827,217 1,472,355 1,863,024 : Corporation ......................................farms: 6,361 4,282 2 175 417 1,048 1,439 1,201 acres: 5,359,671 4,038,294 (D) (D) 319,649 906,548 1,400,792 1,294,406 Family held ....................................farms: 5,345 3,690 2 138 349 882 1,243 1,076 acres: 4,209,678 3,333,908 (D) (D) 208,149 698,129 1,133,245 1,189,123 More than 10 stockholders ....................farms: 264 173 2 - 21 45 56 49 10 or less stockholders ......................farms: 5,081 3,517 - 138 328 837 1,187 1,027 : Other than family held .........................farms: 1,016 592 - 37 68 166 196 125 acres: 1,149,993 704,386 - 11,637 111,500 208,419 267,547 105,283 More than 10 stockholders ....................farms: 171 110 - 5 9 38 38 20 10 or less stockholders ......................farms: 845 482 - 32 59 128 158 105 : Other-cooperative, estate : or trust, institutional, etc ....................farms: 2,780 1,338 7 68 94 196 429 544 acres: 1,274,627 856,951 (D) (D) 134,195 179,229 259,722 259,113 : HIRED FARM LABOR : : Hired farm labor .................................farms: 33,955 22,027 61 869 1,785 4,493 6,684 8,135 workers: 465,422 373,572 306 11,018 32,685 86,638 126,447 116,478 Workers by days worked: : 150 days or more .............................farms: 20,018 14,455 39 613 1,292 3,190 4,636 4,685 workers: 205,851 169,535 229 4,078 13,577 44,600 55,606 51,445 Less than 150 days ...........................farms: 22,621 14,153 41 499 1,121 2,692 4,257 5,543 workers: 259,571 204,037 77 6,940 19,108 42,038 70,841 65,033 Migrant farm labor on farms with hired : labor (see text) ................................farms: 2,921 2,184 2 82 218 448 718 716 Migrant farm labor on farms reporting : only contract labor (see text) ..................farms: 755 422 3 13 34 78 129 165 : Unpaid workers (see text) ........................farms: 31,965 16,135 61 575 1,005 2,755 4,613 7,126 workers: 72,020 35,770 146 1,440 2,411 6,103 10,442 15,228 : FARMS BY SIZE : : 1 to 9 acres ..........................................: 24,637 10,658 34 440 739 1,954 2,834 4,657 10 to 49 acres ........................................: 25,811 13,323 44 418 939 2,151 3,701 6,070 50 to 69 acres ........................................: 3,700 2,212 13 85 183 376 687 868 70 to 99 acres ........................................: 3,601 2,219 10 77 165 430 695 842 100 to 139 acres ......................................: 3,222 1,996 14 97 121 353 646 765 140 to 179 acres ......................................: 2,533 1,585 14 70 125 295 487 594 180 to 219 acres ......................................: 1,477 1,064 8 43 71 240 312 390 220 to 259 acres ......................................: 1,189 790 3 50 69 137 265 266 260 to 499 acres ......................................: 3,983 2,832 5 171 239 538 908 971 500 to 999 acres ......................................: 3,230 2,334 3 101 214 503 768 745 1,000 to 1,999 acres ..................................: 2,040 1,581 1 61 118 311 532 558 2,000 acres or more ...................................: 2,434 1,875 2 50 134 370 598 721 : FARMS BY NORTH AMERICAN : INDUSTRY CLASSIFICATION : SYSTEM (NAICS) : : Oilseed and grain farming (1111) ......................: 2,296 1,693 30 134 194 323 529 483 Vegetable and melon farming (1112) ....................: 4,191 2,918 - 298 363 640 864 753 Fruit and tree nut farming (1113) .....................: 35,945 19,218 45 549 1,275 3,337 5,552 8,460 Greenhouse, nursery, and floriculture : production (1114) ....................................: 3,390 2,033 5 78 163 480 683 624 Other crop farming (1119) .............................: 5,815 3,172 22 164 212 551 958 1,265 Tobacco farming (11191) .............................: - - - - - - - - Cotton farming (11192) ..............................: 194 164 - 9 13 34 53 55 Sugarcane farming, hay farming, and all : other crop farming (11193,11194,11199) .............: 5,621 3,008 22 155 199 517 905 1,210 Beef cattle ranching and farming (112111) .............: 11,767 5,715 21 158 310 769 1,577 2,880 Cattle feedlots (112112) ..............................: 156 102 - 2 9 15 34 42 Dairy cattle and milk production (11212) ..............: 1,594 1,439 5 73 178 402 425 356 Hog and pig farming (1122) ............................: 446 185 4 18 22 39 41 61 Poultry and egg production (1123) .....................: 1,202 683 - 15 51 152 215 250 Sheep and goat farming (1124) .........................: 3,246 1,502 11 92 94 223 408 674 Animal aquaculture and other animal : production (1125, 1129) ..............................: 7,809 3,809 8 82 246 727 1,147 1,599 : LIVESTOCK : : Cattle and calves inventory ......................farms: 16,764 9,191 37 325 663 1,553 2,611 4,002 number: 5,370,531 4,781,499 (D) 138,315 (D) 1,367,101 1,373,015 1,235,180 Farms with- : 1 to 9 ............................................: 7,396 3,210 25 96 232 491 898 1,468 10 to 49 ..........................................: 4,687 2,361 7 94 126 315 623 1,196 50 to 99 ..........................................: 1,128 687 - 25 34 95 212 321 100 to 199 ........................................: 914 642 - 18 29 106 184 305 ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 69. Summary by Age and Primary Occupation of Principal Operator: 2012 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : Other occupations :-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : : Age of operator (years) : :------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Total : Under 25 : 25 to 34 : 35 to 44 : 45 to 54 : 55 to 64 : 65 and over ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- FARMS BY TYPE OF : ORGANIZATION (SEE TEXT) : : Operation with 50 percent or more ownership : interest held by operator and/or persons : related by blood, marriage, : or adoption .....................................farms: 33,550 96 1,209 2,944 7,882 10,377 11,042 acres: 5,433,949 5,700 169,225 320,689 1,104,970 1,292,320 2,541,045 Limited Liability Corporation ....................farms: 1,813 9 71 178 414 557 584 acres: 663,720 116 8,928 37,796 231,472 197,517 187,891 : LEGAL STATUS FOR TAX PURPOSES (SEE TEXT) : : Family or individual ............................farms: 28,785 90 1,054 2,553 6,858 8,933 9,297 acres: 3,213,341 5,679 108,223 196,995 689,852 822,893 1,389,699 Partnership ......................................farms: 3,082 3 120 291 670 926 1,072 acres: 1,461,891 3 50,602 85,386 461,588 392,783 471,529 Registered under state law .....................farms: 2,413 - 99 220 527 740 827 acres: 1,310,553 - 47,953 58,287 425,363 352,197 426,753 : Corporation ......................................farms: 2,079 7 98 190 468 643 673 acres: 1,321,377 (D) (D) 93,972 186,889 216,903 806,456 Family held ....................................farms: 1,655 3 69 144 373 515 551 acres: 875,770 18 11,697 41,361 127,658 167,603 527,433 More than 10 stockholders ....................farms: 91 - 2 5 24 24 36 10 or less stockholders ......................farms: 1,564 3 67 139 349 491 515 : Other than family held .........................farms: 424 4 29 46 95 128 122 acres: 445,607 (D) (D) 52,611 59,231 49,300 279,023 More than 10 stockholders ....................farms: 61 - - 9 11 22 19 10 or less stockholders ......................farms: 363 4 29 37 84 106 103 : Other-cooperative, estate : or trust, institutional, etc ....................farms: 1,442 2 33 104 292 447 564 acres: 417,676 (D) (D) 35,964 93,964 99,020 183,172 : HIRED FARM LABOR : : Hired farm labor .................................farms: 11,928 22 364 976 2,672 3,532 4,362 workers: 91,850 514 3,447 6,088 18,871 25,608 37,322 Workers by days worked: : 150 days or more .............................farms: 5,563 13 174 460 1,193 1,618 2,105 workers: 36,316 44 1,102 2,477 6,646 10,501 15,546 Less than 150 days ...........................farms: 8,468 12 278 679 1,923 2,527 3,049 workers: 55,534 470 2,345 3,611 12,225 15,107 21,776 Migrant farm labor on farms with hired : labor (see text) ................................farms: 737 - 18 52 157 206 304 Migrant farm labor on farms reporting : only contract labor (see text) ..................farms: 333 - 12 23 72 112 114 : Unpaid workers (see text) ........................farms: 15,830 54 621 1,470 3,985 4,826 4,874 workers: 36,250 108 1,516 3,828 9,892 10,464 10,442 : FARMS BY SIZE : : 1 to 9 acres ..........................................: 13,979 47 453 1,177 3,368 4,346 4,588 10 to 49 acres ........................................: 12,488 37 504 1,226 2,937 3,957 3,827 50 to 69 acres ........................................: 1,488 - 38 153 360 459 478 70 to 99 acres ........................................: 1,382 - 77 107 300 390 508 100 to 139 acres ......................................: 1,226 10 60 118 281 366 391 140 to 179 acres ......................................: 948 4 37 74 223 269 341 180 to 219 acres ......................................: 413 - 16 35 79 127 156 220 to 259 acres ......................................: 399 - 11 23 93 123 149 260 to 499 acres ......................................: 1,151 - 49 92 216 333 461 500 to 999 acres ......................................: 896 1 27 56 202 308 302 1,000 to 1,999 acres ..................................: 459 3 17 33 109 128 169 2,000 acres or more ...................................: 559 - 16 44 120 143 236 : FARMS BY NORTH AMERICAN : INDUSTRY CLASSIFICATION : SYSTEM (NAICS) : : Oilseed and grain farming (1111) ......................: 603 - 72 73 152 135 171 Vegetable and melon farming (1112) ....................: 1,273 21 100 206 295 372 279 Fruit and tree nut farming (1113) .....................: 16,727 28 478 1,337 3,754 5,210 5,920 Greenhouse, nursery, and floriculture : production (1114) ....................................: 1,357 - 45 117 286 438 471 Other crop farming (1119) .............................: 2,643 3 115 247 608 755 915 Tobacco farming (11191) .............................: - - - - - - - Cotton farming (11192) ..............................: 30 - 3 2 6 13 6 Sugarcane farming, hay farming, and all : other crop farming (11193,11194,11199) .............: 2,613 3 112 245 602 742 909 Beef cattle ranching and farming (112111) .............: 6,052 17 231 512 1,505 1,889 1,898 Cattle feedlots (112112) ..............................: 54 - - 1 7 24 22 Dairy cattle and milk production (11212) ..............: 155 - 2 13 65 27 48 Hog and pig farming (1122) ............................: 261 2 13 47 97 65 37 Poultry and egg production (1123) .....................: 519 3 23 43 133 163 154 Sheep and goat farming (1124) .........................: 1,744 18 109 197 490 512 418 Animal aquaculture and other animal : production (1125, 1129) ..............................: 4,000 10 117 345 896 1,359 1,273 : LIVESTOCK : : Cattle and calves inventory ......................farms: 7,573 30 287 746 1,964 2,359 2,187 number: 589,032 525 9,926 25,043 142,586 147,634 263,318 Farms with- : 1 to 9 ............................................: 4,186 12 152 451 1,175 1,302 1,094 10 to 49 ..........................................: 2,326 17 94 229 535 728 723 50 to 99 ..........................................: 441 - 25 38 96 146 136 100 to 199 ........................................: 272 1 7 13 61 93 97 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 69. Summary by Age and Primary Occupation of Principal Operator: 2012 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : : Farming : :---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : Total farming : : Age of operator (years) : and other : :----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : occupations : Total : Under 25 : 25 to 34 : 35 to 44 : 45 to 54 : 55 to 64 : 65 and over ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- LIVESTOCK - Con. : : Cattle and calves inventory - Con. : Farms with- - Con. : : 200 to 499 ........................................: 896 711 3 36 47 118 235 272 500 or more .......................................: 1,743 1,580 2 56 195 428 459 440 : Cows and heifers that calved ...................farms: 12,566 7,140 17 245 522 1,236 2,011 3,109 number: 2,399,249 2,161,395 (D) 59,930 (D) 624,798 629,644 552,571 : Beef cows ....................................farms: 10,925 5,719 6 164 340 818 1,617 2,774 number: 583,594 451,740 37 (D) (D) 78,644 139,142 195,941 Farms with- : 1 to 9 ........................................: 6,173 2,711 5 91 185 388 734 1,308 10 to 49 ......................................: 2,704 1,472 1 45 75 191 378 782 50 to 99 ......................................: 801 537 - 8 18 76 172 263 100 to 199 ....................................: 542 410 - 8 25 57 134 186 200 to 499 ....................................: 479 397 - 7 25 78 135 152 500 or more ...................................: 226 192 - 5 12 28 64 83 Milk cows ....................................farms: 1,931 1,615 11 89 203 456 462 394 number: 1,815,655 1,709,655 (D) (D) 260,614 546,154 490,502 356,630 Farms with- : 1 to 9 ........................................: 457 240 6 16 23 54 71 70 10 to 49 ......................................: 62 51 - - 2 18 6 25 50 to 99 ......................................: 52 43 - 7 2 11 14 9 100 to 199 ....................................: 110 105 3 8 11 23 32 28 200 to 499 ....................................: 258 240 - 28 44 56 72 40 500 or more ...................................: 992 936 2 30 121 294 267 222 : Other cattle (see text) ........................farms: 13,380 7,547 31 277 544 1,289 2,150 3,256 number: 2,971,282 2,620,104 (D) 78,385 (D) 742,303 743,371 682,609 : Cattle and calves sold ...........................farms: 12,594 7,400 31 246 524 1,274 2,072 3,253 number: 3,671,078 3,263,738 6,563 74,637 407,245 938,880 1,001,000 835,413 $1,000: 3,259,325 2,900,049 5,179 64,383 324,049 789,979 928,588 787,872 Calves weighing less than 500 pounds ...........farms: 5,347 3,359 9 108 295 608 980 1,359 number: 1,252,820 1,127,288 (D) 19,758 (D) 385,552 299,119 223,109 : Cattle, including calves weighing : 500 pounds or more ............................farms: 11,228 6,693 24 215 455 1,176 1,864 2,959 number: 2,418,258 2,136,450 (D) 54,879 (D) 553,328 701,881 612,304 Cattle on feed (see text) ....................farms: 262 185 - 2 16 27 66 74 number: 712,651 646,224 - (D) (D) 114,464 327,259 196,798 : Hogs and pigs inventory ..........................farms: 1,437 697 7 67 90 156 170 207 number: 111,893 102,217 115 2,202 (D) (D) (D) 12,282 Farms with- : 1 to 24 ...........................................: 1,228 571 3 55 78 138 125 172 25 to 49 ..........................................: 95 54 4 3 4 6 26 11 50 to 99 ..........................................: 52 26 - 5 5 - 8 8 100 to 199 ........................................: 39 25 - 2 1 8 6 8 200 to 499 ........................................: 11 10 - - 1 1 2 6 500 or more .......................................: 12 11 - 2 1 3 3 2 : Used or to be used for breeding ................farms: 732 380 7 40 49 77 80 127 number: 8,322 5,812 29 324 473 818 1,610 2,558 Other hogs and pigs ............................farms: 1,179 561 7 62 73 126 140 153 number: 103,571 96,405 86 1,878 (D) (D) (D) 9,724 : Hogs and pigs sold ...............................farms: 1,163 541 7 62 70 97 138 167 number: 290,488 272,373 95 1,652 (D) (D) (D) 19,342 $1,000: 51,526 49,411 21 492 (D) (D) (D) 2,531 : Sheep and lambs inventory (see text) .............farms: 4,224 2,098 17 102 131 329 525 994 number: 668,517 589,159 143 14,091 51,903 38,432 104,117 380,473 Ewes 1 year old or older .......................farms: 3,222 1,623 15 81 91 253 397 786 number: 306,987 272,204 45 6,384 23,656 22,773 50,739 168,607 Sheep and lambs sold .............................farms: 2,593 1,357 2 87 70 211 340 647 number: 440,092 389,663 (D) (D) 31,802 19,560 68,951 259,279 : Total horses and ponies inventory ................farms: 14,932 7,322 27 206 528 1,349 2,207 3,005 number: 142,555 81,366 260 2,019 6,114 15,663 26,485 30,825 Owned horses and ponies : inventory .....................................farms: 14,353 7,029 27 189 526 1,326 2,113 2,848 number: 107,774 58,560 140 1,672 4,413 10,872 17,533 23,930 Owned horses and ponies sold .....................farms: 2,959 1,553 14 32 142 318 481 566 number: 10,452 5,930 50 168 364 1,133 1,901 2,314 : Goats, all inventory .............................farms: 4,474 2,054 9 135 214 405 580 711 number: 140,042 86,133 72 11,333 11,509 15,661 20,419 27,139 Goats, all sold ..................................farms: 2,133 1,049 12 81 100 221 304 331 number: 62,844 35,437 138 3,971 6,016 7,136 8,013 10,163 : POULTRY : : Layers inventory (see text) ......................farms: 6,744 3,147 7 134 279 625 991 1,111 number: 19,000,779 15,272,469 421 (D) (D) 5,540,348 5,640,490 2,725,574 Farms with- : 1 to 399 ..........................................: 6,653 3,070 7 127 270 602 971 1,093 400 to 3,199 ......................................: 39 31 - 4 5 10 6 6 3,200 to 9,999 ....................................: 4 4 - - 2 - 1 1 10,000 to 19,999 ..................................: 4 3 - - - - 1 2 20,000 to 49,999 ..................................: 5 5 - 1 - 2 2 - 50,000 to 99,999 ..................................: 8 8 - - - 2 5 1 100,000 or more ...................................: 31 26 - 2 2 9 5 8 : Pullets for laying flock replacement : inventory .......................................farms: 873 497 4 28 43 119 142 161 number: 4,633,558 3,736,086 100 426,680 3,373 1,640,747 1,038,696 626,490 ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 69. Summary by Age and Primary Occupation of Principal Operator: 2012 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : Other occupations :-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : : Age of operator (years) : :------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Total : Under 25 : 25 to 34 : 35 to 44 : 45 to 54 : 55 to 64 : 65 and over ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- LIVESTOCK - Con. : : Cattle and calves inventory - Con. : Farms with- - Con. : : 200 to 499 ........................................: 185 - 7 5 61 53 59 500 or more .......................................: 163 - 2 10 36 37 78 : Cows and heifers that calved ...................farms: 5,426 28 202 527 1,435 1,677 1,557 number: 237,854 317 4,576 13,128 69,950 47,154 102,729 : Beef cows ....................................farms: 5,206 22 192 495 1,363 1,624 1,510 number: 131,854 311 (D) (D) 26,893 32,838 58,952 Farms with- : 1 to 9 ........................................: 3,462 11 127 369 938 1,083 934 10 to 49 ......................................: 1,232 10 49 91 303 392 387 50 to 99 ......................................: 264 - 8 21 64 87 84 100 to 199 ....................................: 132 1 6 7 37 35 46 200 to 499 ....................................: 82 - 2 3 16 23 38 500 or more ...................................: 34 - - 4 5 4 21 Milk cows ....................................farms: 316 6 16 41 105 77 71 number: 106,000 6 (D) (D) 43,057 14,316 43,777 Farms with- : 1 to 9 ........................................: 217 6 14 37 70 56 34 10 to 49 ......................................: 11 - - - 6 4 1 50 to 99 ......................................: 9 - - - 4 3 2 100 to 199 ....................................: 5 - - - - 2 3 200 to 499 ....................................: 18 - 1 2 4 4 7 500 or more ...................................: 56 - 1 2 21 8 24 : Other cattle (see text) ........................farms: 5,833 26 228 553 1,530 1,819 1,677 number: 351,178 208 5,350 11,915 72,636 100,480 160,589 : Cattle and calves sold ...........................farms: 5,194 24 201 513 1,322 1,589 1,545 number: 407,340 320 64,699 23,827 69,145 103,499 145,850 $1,000: 359,276 304 5,219 25,294 64,149 122,921 141,388 Calves weighing less than 500 pounds ...........farms: 1,988 7 102 179 477 614 609 number: 125,532 62 61,316 1,701 20,174 13,480 28,799 : Cattle, including calves weighing : 500 pounds or more ............................farms: 4,535 24 149 452 1,173 1,368 1,369 number: 281,808 258 3,383 22,126 48,971 90,019 117,051 Cattle on feed (see text) ....................farms: 77 - 5 1 17 27 27 number: 66,427 - 93 (D) (D) 31,127 (D) : Hogs and pigs inventory ..........................farms: 740 10 42 134 267 185 102 number: 9,676 284 220 1,743 2,509 2,588 2,332 Farms with- : 1 to 24 ...........................................: 657 8 42 127 240 159 81 25 to 49 ..........................................: 41 - - 2 16 9 14 50 to 99 ..........................................: 26 - - - 8 15 3 100 to 199 ........................................: 14 2 - 4 3 2 3 200 to 499 ........................................: 1 - - 1 - - - 500 or more .......................................: 1 - - - - - 1 : Used or to be used for breeding ................farms: 352 4 27 68 111 84 58 number: 2,510 92 121 513 621 677 486 Other hogs and pigs ............................farms: 618 10 28 106 230 164 80 number: 7,166 192 99 1,230 1,888 1,911 1,846 : Hogs and pigs sold ...............................farms: 622 4 33 126 251 135 73 number: 18,115 720 447 1,513 4,645 4,346 6,444 $1,000: 2,114 60 39 186 710 667 452 : Sheep and lambs inventory (see text) .............farms: 2,126 22 99 257 572 675 501 number: 79,358 529 4,727 12,086 13,785 31,078 17,153 Ewes 1 year old or older .......................farms: 1,599 18 79 193 408 507 394 number: 34,783 309 2,324 5,726 6,855 11,067 8,502 Sheep and lambs sold .............................farms: 1,236 15 61 157 342 382 279 number: 50,429 360 1,104 5,434 6,571 21,697 15,263 : Total horses and ponies inventory ................farms: 7,610 21 234 694 2,040 2,434 2,187 number: 61,189 70 1,308 4,341 15,969 18,315 21,186 Owned horses and ponies : inventory .....................................farms: 7,324 21 224 685 1,982 2,357 2,055 number: 49,214 70 1,037 3,600 13,378 14,252 16,877 Owned horses and ponies sold .....................farms: 1,406 4 36 139 390 462 375 number: 4,522 4 58 369 1,293 1,310 1,488 : Goats, all inventory .............................farms: 2,420 9 135 345 812 644 475 number: 53,909 117 3,675 5,618 14,850 19,102 10,547 Goats, all sold ..................................farms: 1,084 3 84 152 371 269 205 number: 27,407 24 1,930 2,777 4,863 11,133 6,680 : POULTRY : : Layers inventory (see text) ......................farms: 3,597 6 165 485 1,167 1,048 726 number: 3,728,310 (D) 4,904 9,085 (D) (D) (D) Farms with- : 1 to 399 ..........................................: 3,583 6 164 485 1,161 1,043 724 400 to 3,199 ......................................: 8 - 1 - 4 2 1 3,200 to 9,999 ....................................: - - - - - - - 10,000 to 19,999 ..................................: 1 - - - 1 - - 20,000 to 49,999 ..................................: - - - - - - - 50,000 to 99,999 ..................................: - - - - - - - 100,000 or more ...................................: 5 - - - 1 3 1 : Pullets for laying flock replacement : inventory .......................................farms: 376 4 16 39 116 114 87 number: 897,472 (D) 356 605 (D) (D) (D) ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 69. Summary by Age and Primary Occupation of Principal Operator: 2012 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : : Farming : :---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : Total farming : : Age of operator (years) : and other : :----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : occupations : Total : Under 25 : 25 to 34 : 35 to 44 : 45 to 54 : 55 to 64 : 65 and over ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- POULTRY - Con. : : Layers sold (see text) ...........................farms: 831 422 - 27 42 95 130 128 number: 8,195,242 6,377,972 - (D) (D) 3,140,899 1,032,012 1,684,141 : Pullets for laying flock replacement : sold ............................................farms: 86 49 - 3 10 7 19 10 number: 3,508,788 1,580,196 - (D) 661 (D) (D) 132,312 : Broilers and other meat-type chickens : sold ............................................farms: 421 239 - 31 22 53 76 57 number: 273,277,272 248,651,833 - (D) (D) (D) 15,180,342 (D) Farms with- : 1 to 1,999 ........................................: 336 167 - 27 19 33 55 33 2,000 to 59,999 ...................................: 26 23 - 3 1 6 8 5 60,000 to 99,999 ..................................: - - - - - - - - 100,000 or more ...................................: 59 49 - 1 2 14 13 19 : Turkeys inventory (see text) .....................farms: 682 357 - 27 47 84 93 106 number: 4,532,307 4,137,203 - (D) 331 (D) 884,291 2,824,304 Turkeys sold (see text) ..........................farms: 302 154 - 19 12 35 54 34 number: 15,384,675 14,106,767 - (D) 111 (D) 2,965,139 9,389,960 : CROPS HARVESTED : : Barley for grain .................................farms: 264 209 - 5 16 39 77 72 acres: 81,954 61,922 - 223 4,596 10,787 22,126 24,190 bushels: 5,312,595 3,421,788 - 11,180 301,898 566,679 1,357,807 1,184,224 Irrigated ......................................farms: 144 116 - 2 8 20 42 44 acres: 44,819 27,750 - (D) (D) 3,108 11,087 11,787 Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres .....................................: 60 32 - 2 1 6 10 13 25 to 99 acres ....................................: 59 53 - 2 7 10 17 17 100 to 249 acres ..................................: 68 58 - 1 3 11 27 16 250 to 499 acres ..................................: 30 28 - - 2 6 10 10 500 acres or more .................................: 47 38 - - 3 6 13 16 : Corn for grain ...................................farms: 733 636 1 40 51 137 221 186 acres: 180,672 169,924 (D) (D) 10,470 38,827 63,345 54,893 bushels: 31,922,610 30,320,189 (D) (D) 2,161,944 6,992,536 11,313,561 9,408,399 Irrigated ......................................farms: 733 636 1 40 51 137 221 186 acres: 175,863 165,115 (D) (D) 10,451 38,713 62,253 51,309 Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres .....................................: 163 107 - 11 8 21 32 35 25 to 99 acres ....................................: 211 182 1 20 17 40 59 45 100 to 249 acres ..................................: 152 148 - 8 11 35 56 38 250 to 499 acres ..................................: 103 100 - 1 10 21 33 35 500 acres or more .................................: 104 99 - - 5 20 41 33 : Corn for silage or greenchop .....................farms: 1,895 1,595 6 67 177 404 498 443 acres: 487,570 452,619 1,430 15,010 55,820 119,903 141,826 118,630 tons: 12,575,973 11,660,244 30,510 376,832 1,430,464 3,100,282 3,653,490 3,068,666 Irrigated ......................................farms: 1,802 1,522 6 66 169 384 477 420 acres: 461,898 429,250 (D) (D) 52,498 113,525 135,311 111,626 Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres .....................................: 249 123 - 12 11 32 23 45 25 to 99 acres ....................................: 538 432 5 15 55 104 136 117 100 to 249 acres ..................................: 512 481 - 24 46 112 168 131 250 to 499 acres ..................................: 329 306 - 10 27 86 88 95 500 acres or more .................................: 267 253 1 6 38 70 83 55 : Cotton, all ......................................farms: 630 575 - 26 57 110 192 190 acres: 367,766 339,095 - 7,172 25,723 50,903 156,972 98,325 bales: 1,201,860 1,108,487 - 23,860 86,577 175,798 498,719 323,533 Irrigated ......................................farms: 630 575 - 26 57 110 192 190 acres: 367,766 339,095 - 7,172 25,723 50,903 156,972 98,325 Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres .....................................: 31 20 - 4 3 3 2 8 25 to 99 acres ....................................: 102 81 - 5 14 16 24 22 100 to 249 acres ..................................: 180 171 - 9 15 29 60 58 250 to 499 acres ..................................: 153 144 - 3 11 34 45 51 500 acres or more .................................: 164 159 - 5 14 28 61 51 : Dry edible beans, excluding limas ................farms: 308 257 - 25 12 49 103 68 acres: 39,511 (D) - 1,024 (D) 9,988 14,048 11,828 cwt: 955,995 914,470 - 29,635 18,087 236,873 336,773 293,102 Irrigated ......................................farms: 269 236 - 25 10 45 96 60 acres: 36,866 35,389 - 1,024 (D) (D) 13,519 10,619 Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres .....................................: 95 66 - 11 7 7 26 15 25 to 99 acres ....................................: 93 77 - 12 2 16 26 21 100 to 249 acres ..................................: 69 64 - 2 2 9 38 13 250 to 499 acres ..................................: 38 37 - - 1 15 8 13 500 acres or more .................................: 13 13 - - - 2 5 6 : Oats for grain ...................................farms: 240 178 1 7 21 29 61 59 acres: 25,065 20,589 (D) (D) 1,951 3,199 8,940 6,180 bushels: 2,246,420 1,858,316 (D) (D) 169,283 275,185 819,969 561,151 Irrigated ......................................farms: 145 109 1 4 15 22 35 32 acres: 15,901 13,516 (D) (D) 1,345 2,264 4,773 4,977 Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres .....................................: 86 47 - 3 6 7 10 21 25 to 99 acres ....................................: 75 60 1 4 8 12 15 20 100 to 249 acres ..................................: 54 49 - - 5 7 27 10 250 to 499 acres ..................................: 16 15 - - 2 2 6 5 500 acres or more .................................: 9 7 - - - 1 3 3 : Peanuts for nuts .................................farms: 15 12 - - - - 10 2 acres: 27 24 - - - - (D) (D) pounds: 84,093 74,748 - - - - (D) (D) ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 69. Summary by Age and Primary Occupation of Principal Operator: 2012 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : Other occupations :-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : : Age of operator (years) : :------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Total : Under 25 : 25 to 34 : 35 to 44 : 45 to 54 : 55 to 64 : 65 and over ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- POULTRY - Con. : : Layers sold (see text) ...........................farms: 409 - 21 45 134 110 99 number: 1,817,270 - 1,439 901 (D) (D) 2,494 : Pullets for laying flock replacement : sold ............................................farms: 37 - - 3 10 8 16 number: 1,928,592 - - 100 735 (D) (D) : Broilers and other meat-type chickens : sold ............................................farms: 182 - 14 16 56 53 43 number: 24,625,439 - 1,315 (D) 5,853 (D) (D) Farms with- : 1 to 1,999 ........................................: 169 - 14 12 56 48 39 2,000 to 59,999 ...................................: 3 - - 3 - - - 60,000 to 99,999 ..................................: - - - - - - - 100,000 or more ...................................: 10 - - 1 - 5 4 : Turkeys inventory (see text) .....................farms: 325 2 12 57 92 106 56 number: 395,104 (D) 42 845 (D) (D) (D) Turkeys sold (see text) ..........................farms: 148 2 6 18 61 44 17 number: 1,277,908 (D) 1,842 (D) (D) (D) (D) : CROPS HARVESTED : : Barley for grain .................................farms: 55 - 6 7 11 18 13 acres: 20,032 - 6 14,650 276 2,001 3,099 bushels: 1,890,807 - 252 1,596,743 19,120 107,346 167,346 Irrigated ......................................farms: 28 - 6 5 6 8 3 acres: 17,069 - 6 (D) (D) 1,598 (D) Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres .....................................: 28 - 6 - 9 8 5 25 to 99 acres ....................................: 6 - - - 1 4 1 100 to 249 acres ..................................: 10 - - 2 1 4 3 250 to 499 acres ..................................: 2 - - 1 - - 1 500 acres or more .................................: 9 - - 4 - 2 3 : Corn for grain ...................................farms: 97 - 13 1 24 22 37 acres: 10,748 - (D) (D) 2,118 (D) 3,858 bushels: 1,602,421 - (D) (D) 313,271 654,377 618,870 Irrigated ......................................farms: 97 - 13 1 24 22 37 acres: 10,748 - (D) (D) 2,118 (D) 3,858 Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres .....................................: 56 - 11 - 13 15 17 25 to 99 acres ....................................: 29 - 2 1 8 4 14 100 to 249 acres ..................................: 4 - - - - 2 2 250 to 499 acres ..................................: 3 - - - 1 - 2 500 acres or more .................................: 5 - - - 2 1 2 : Corn for silage or greenchop .....................farms: 300 - 27 37 76 76 84 acres: 34,951 - 921 1,125 9,872 7,402 15,631 tons: 915,729 - 24,057 25,898 271,042 191,581 403,151 Irrigated ......................................farms: 280 - 24 34 72 76 74 acres: 32,648 - 852 1,080 9,008 6,810 14,898 Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres .....................................: 126 - 15 23 29 36 23 25 to 99 acres ....................................: 106 - 10 13 32 25 26 100 to 249 acres ..................................: 31 - 2 1 5 7 16 250 to 499 acres ..................................: 23 - - - 5 6 12 500 acres or more .................................: 14 - - - 5 2 7 : Cotton, all ......................................farms: 55 - 3 4 10 19 19 acres: 28,671 - 12 146 3,640 1,994 22,879 bales: 93,373 - 48 450 12,299 5,979 74,597 Irrigated ......................................farms: 55 - 3 4 10 19 19 acres: 28,671 - 12 146 3,640 1,994 22,879 Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres .....................................: 11 - 3 - 2 5 1 25 to 99 acres ....................................: 21 - - 4 5 9 3 100 to 249 acres ..................................: 9 - - - 1 2 6 250 to 499 acres ..................................: 9 - - - 1 3 5 500 acres or more .................................: 5 - - - 1 - 4 : Dry edible beans, excluding limas ................farms: 51 - 8 - 14 21 8 acres: (D) - (D) - (D) 664 499 cwt: 41,525 - 1,864 - 14,912 13,987 10,762 Irrigated ......................................farms: 33 - 4 - 10 14 5 acres: 1,477 - 136 - 257 633 451 Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres .....................................: 29 - 4 - 8 13 4 25 to 99 acres ....................................: 16 - 4 - 3 6 3 100 to 249 acres ..................................: 5 - - - 3 2 - 250 to 499 acres ..................................: 1 - - - - - 1 500 acres or more .................................: - - - - - - - : Oats for grain ...................................farms: 62 6 1 1 14 15 25 acres: 4,476 18 (D) (D) 1,570 (D) 2,208 bushels: 388,104 (D) (D) (D) 143,885 39,252 183,021 Irrigated ......................................farms: 36 6 1 1 11 6 11 acres: 2,385 18 (D) (D) 1,519 (D) 337 Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres .....................................: 39 6 - - 7 10 16 25 to 99 acres ....................................: 15 - 1 - 6 4 4 100 to 249 acres ..................................: 5 - - - - 1 4 250 to 499 acres ..................................: 1 - - 1 - - - 500 acres or more .................................: 2 - - - 1 - 1 : Peanuts for nuts .................................farms: 3 - - - 3 - - acres: 3 - - - 3 - - pounds: 9,345 - - - 9,345 - - ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 69. Summary by Age and Primary Occupation of Principal Operator: 2012 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : : Farming : :---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : Total farming : : Age of operator (years) : and other : :----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : occupations : Total : Under 25 : 25 to 34 : 35 to 44 : 45 to 54 : 55 to 64 : 65 and over ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- CROPS HARVESTED - Con. : : Peanuts for nuts - Con. : : Irrigated ......................................farms: 15 12 - - - - 10 2 acres: 27 24 - - - - (D) (D) Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres .....................................: 15 12 - - - - 10 2 25 to 99 acres ....................................: - - - - - - - - 100 to 249 acres ..................................: - - - - - - - - 250 to 499 acres ..................................: - - - - - - - - 500 acres or more .................................: - - - - - - - - : Rice .............................................farms: 1,392 1,107 21 105 125 230 348 278 acres: 561,968 490,877 1,819 28,382 59,599 113,980 159,115 127,982 cwt: 46,692,580 40,806,821 144,534 2,406,415 5,072,420 9,419,398 13,085,312 10,678,742 Irrigated ......................................farms: 1,392 1,107 21 105 125 230 348 278 acres: 561,968 490,877 1,819 28,382 59,599 113,980 159,115 127,982 Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres .....................................: 49 29 - 5 5 7 7 5 25 to 99 acres ....................................: 232 151 17 19 13 20 51 31 100 to 249 acres ..................................: 385 294 2 33 40 59 81 79 250 to 499 acres ..................................: 366 308 2 32 26 71 95 82 500 acres or more .................................: 360 325 - 16 41 73 114 81 : Sorghum for grain ................................farms: 74 68 - 2 8 21 22 15 acres: 13,908 (D) - (D) 283 3,841 4,444 2,538 bushels: 1,263,924 (D) - (D) 25,961 309,967 405,630 227,511 Irrigated ......................................farms: 62 57 - 2 7 15 20 13 acres: 10,997 (D) - (D) (D) 2,356 (D) (D) Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres .....................................: 17 13 - - 5 1 6 1 25 to 99 acres ....................................: 18 18 - - 2 5 7 4 100 to 249 acres ..................................: 19 19 - - 1 8 4 6 250 to 499 acres ..................................: 13 12 - - - 7 1 4 500 acres or more .................................: 7 6 - 2 - - 4 - : Soybeans for beans ...............................farms: 2 2 - - 1 1 - - acres: (D) (D) - - (D) (D) - - bushels: (D) (D) - - (D) (D) - - Irrigated ......................................farms: 1 1 - - 1 - - - acres: (D) (D) - - (D) - - - Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres .....................................: 1 1 - - 1 - - - 25 to 99 acres ....................................: - - - - - - - - 100 to 249 acres ..................................: 1 1 - - - 1 - - 250 to 499 acres ..................................: - - - - - - - - 500 acres or more .................................: - - - - - - - - : Sugarbeets for sugar .............................farms: 58 47 - 2 5 11 19 10 acres: 27,193 23,635 - (D) 1,540 7,638 9,708 (D) tons: 1,179,753 1,035,488 - (D) 62,502 338,835 422,731 (D) Irrigated ......................................farms: 58 47 - 2 5 11 19 10 acres: 26,567 23,009 - (D) 1,540 7,012 9,708 (D) : Sunflower seed, all ..............................farms: 197 170 3 11 37 36 56 27 acres: 49,749 48,524 (D) (D) 5,021 12,788 20,610 8,841 pounds: 68,792,639 67,382,173 (D) (D) 6,402,936 18,687,617 28,789,377 12,062,816 Irrigated ......................................farms: 152 132 1 11 24 27 46 23 acres: 34,815 33,927 (D) (D) (D) 6,705 16,586 7,044 Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres .....................................: 42 33 2 - 15 6 6 4 25 to 99 acres ....................................: 52 40 - 8 15 6 8 3 100 to 249 acres ..................................: 43 37 1 3 1 11 15 6 250 to 499 acres ..................................: 31 31 - - 4 4 15 8 500 acres or more .................................: 29 29 - - 2 9 12 6 : Wheat for grain, all .............................farms: 1,503 1,306 9 75 110 280 451 381 acres: 491,846 454,344 942 9,449 44,314 87,257 187,984 124,398 bushels: 42,955,324 40,072,999 67,192 837,618 4,182,298 8,157,534 16,266,902 10,561,455 Irrigated ......................................farms: 1,123 988 3 68 76 223 333 285 acres: 382,958 357,036 549 8,160 29,893 73,291 149,645 95,498 Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres .....................................: 164 106 3 8 9 17 36 33 25 to 99 acres ....................................: 427 351 2 35 29 74 119 92 100 to 249 acres ..................................: 430 394 3 25 29 88 140 109 250 to 499 acres ..................................: 220 210 1 6 24 40 56 83 500 acres or more .................................: 262 245 - 1 19 61 100 64 : Forage-land used for all hay and all : haylage, grass silage, and : greenchop (see text) ............................farms: 7,903 5,498 40 252 423 1,092 1,698 1,993 acres: 1,670,027 1,444,436 2,094 46,613 119,719 351,689 494,017 430,304 tons, dry: 9,363,421 8,321,289 13,346 258,542 702,963 2,152,474 2,959,477 2,234,487 Irrigated ......................................farms: 5,498 4,090 37 210 327 857 1,288 1,371 acres: 1,346,666 1,192,312 1,682 37,875 96,099 305,495 402,960 348,201 Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres .....................................: 2,621 1,322 14 42 70 195 370 631 25 to 99 acres ....................................: 2,274 1,534 22 88 115 273 485 551 100 to 249 acres ..................................: 1,435 1,196 3 67 111 277 378 360 250 to 499 acres ..................................: 728 675 1 36 58 159 204 217 500 acres or more .................................: 845 771 - 19 69 188 261 234 : Alfalfa hay ....................................farms: 3,243 2,632 25 130 198 577 842 860 acres: 874,137 775,953 1,436 21,020 51,602 197,846 281,795 222,254 tons, dry: 5,607,210 5,070,971 10,533 143,326 342,998 1,338,176 1,861,347 1,374,591 Irrigated ....................................farms: 3,035 2,482 25 126 184 550 794 803 acres: 831,858 739,170 1,436 20,777 48,682 191,545 265,005 211,725 ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 69. Summary by Age and Primary Occupation of Principal Operator: 2012 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : Other occupations :-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : : Age of operator (years) : :------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Total : Under 25 : 25 to 34 : 35 to 44 : 45 to 54 : 55 to 64 : 65 and over ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- CROPS HARVESTED - Con. : : Peanuts for nuts - Con. : : Irrigated ......................................farms: 3 - - - 3 - - acres: 3 - - - 3 - - Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres .....................................: 3 - - - 3 - - 25 to 99 acres ....................................: - - - - - - - 100 to 249 acres ..................................: - - - - - - - 250 to 499 acres ..................................: - - - - - - - 500 acres or more .................................: - - - - - - - : Rice .............................................farms: 285 6 33 28 69 61 88 acres: 71,091 6 6,837 5,931 18,762 18,282 21,273 cwt: 5,885,759 690 568,607 449,924 1,536,425 1,555,298 1,774,815 Irrigated ......................................farms: 285 6 33 28 69 61 88 acres: 71,091 6 6,837 5,931 18,762 18,282 21,273 Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres .....................................: 20 6 - - 4 2 8 25 to 99 acres ....................................: 81 - 14 14 14 20 19 100 to 249 acres ..................................: 91 - 8 3 24 16 40 250 to 499 acres ..................................: 58 - 9 9 16 12 12 500 acres or more .................................: 35 - 2 2 11 11 9 : Sorghum for grain ................................farms: 6 - - - 3 1 2 acres: (D) - - - 12 (D) (D) bushels: (D) - - - 1,200 (D) (D) Irrigated ......................................farms: 5 - - - 3 1 1 acres: (D) - - - 12 (D) (D) Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres .....................................: 4 - - - 3 1 - 25 to 99 acres ....................................: - - - - - - - 100 to 249 acres ..................................: - - - - - - - 250 to 499 acres ..................................: 1 - - - - - 1 500 acres or more .................................: 1 - - - - - 1 : 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: 11 - - 2 2 1 6 acres: 3,558 - - (D) (D) (D) 2,875 tons: 144,265 - - (D) (D) (D) 115,585 Irrigated ......................................farms: 11 - - 2 2 1 6 acres: 3,558 - - (D) (D) (D) 2,875 : Sunflower seed, all ..............................farms: 27 - 1 4 14 6 2 acres: 1,225 - (D) 390 229 498 (D) pounds: 1,410,466 - (D) 501,380 230,194 514,492 (D) Irrigated ......................................farms: 20 - 1 2 11 4 2 acres: 888 - (D) (D) 226 (D) (D) Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres .....................................: 9 - 1 - 8 - - 25 to 99 acres ....................................: 12 - - 2 6 2 2 100 to 249 acres ..................................: 6 - - 2 - 4 - 250 to 499 acres ..................................: - - - - - - - 500 acres or more .................................: - - - - - - - : Wheat for grain, all .............................farms: 197 - 18 14 47 49 69 acres: 37,502 - 949 1,250 8,537 6,375 20,391 bushels: 2,882,325 - 69,440 109,755 731,728 377,574 1,593,828 Irrigated ......................................farms: 135 - 8 14 35 31 47 acres: 25,922 - 469 1,250 7,674 2,166 14,363 Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres .....................................: 58 - 6 7 9 24 12 25 to 99 acres ....................................: 76 - 7 6 25 13 25 100 to 249 acres ..................................: 36 - 5 - 7 8 16 250 to 499 acres ..................................: 10 - - - 3 2 5 500 acres or more .................................: 17 - - 1 3 2 11 : Forage-land used for all hay and all : haylage, grass silage, and : greenchop (see text) ............................farms: 2,405 - 137 270 539 779 680 acres: 225,591 - 6,687 33,800 42,930 51,811 90,363 tons, dry: 1,042,132 - 19,375 219,436 190,006 243,371 369,944 Irrigated ......................................farms: 1,408 - 71 155 322 452 408 acres: 154,354 - 2,226 28,276 26,664 35,106 62,082 Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres .....................................: 1,299 - 72 143 292 457 335 25 to 99 acres ....................................: 740 - 51 89 158 231 211 100 to 249 acres ..................................: 239 - 11 27 60 67 74 250 to 499 acres ..................................: 53 - - 5 9 8 31 500 acres or more .................................: 74 - 3 6 20 16 29 : Alfalfa hay ....................................farms: 611 - 35 55 158 183 180 acres: 98,184 - 1,170 14,783 16,530 15,940 49,761 tons, dry: 536,239 - 5,761 101,173 99,270 92,863 237,172 Irrigated ....................................farms: 553 - 29 54 143 164 163 acres: 92,688 - (D) (D) 15,863 15,384 46,085 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 69. Summary by Age and Primary Occupation of Principal Operator: 2012 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : : Farming : :---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : Total farming : : Age of operator (years) : and other : :----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : occupations : Total : Under 25 : 25 to 34 : 35 to 44 : 45 to 54 : 55 to 64 : 65 and over ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- CROPS HARVESTED - Con. : : Forage-land used for all hay and all : haylage, grass silage, and : greenchop (see text) - Con. : : Other tame hay .................................farms: 1,699 1,104 6 33 56 208 376 425 acres: 212,238 176,233 240 1,952 12,076 52,735 57,338 51,892 tons, dry: 821,999 652,961 387 6,289 38,428 206,324 237,953 163,580 Irrigated ....................................farms: 1,217 809 3 29 42 151 273 311 acres: 155,054 132,099 180 1,268 8,332 43,138 41,347 37,834 : Field and grass seed crops, all ..................farms: 209 174 - 9 11 40 65 49 acres: 71,921 58,296 - 1,344 6,509 17,675 19,898 12,870 Irrigated ......................................farms: 202 167 - 9 11 40 60 47 acres: 71,053 57,428 - 1,344 6,509 17,675 (D) (D) : Land in vegetables (see text) ....................farms: 6,055 4,232 6 370 456 926 1,328 1,146 acres: 985,735 836,746 113 17,270 67,550 206,386 304,729 240,697 Irrigated ......................................farms: 6,055 4,232 6 370 456 926 1,328 1,146 acres: 985,731 836,746 113 17,270 67,550 206,386 304,729 240,697 Farms by acres harvested: : 0.1 to 4.9 acres ..................................: 3,667 2,225 5 258 209 445 638 670 5.0 to 24.9 acres .................................: 948 709 - 65 125 161 212 146 25.0 to 99.9 acres ................................: 394 347 - 14 36 100 134 63 100.0 to 249.9 acres ..............................: 312 282 1 17 26 58 94 86 250.0 acres or more ...............................: 734 669 - 16 60 162 250 181 : Beans, snap ....................................farms: 652 444 - 52 60 82 144 106 acres: 9,419 9,113 - 30 870 1,547 3,608 3,058 Harvested for processing .....................farms: 56 47 - 3 13 6 12 13 acres: 3,645 3,623 - 1 (D) (D) 378 2,752 : Peas, green ....................................farms: 138 103 - 17 22 9 30 25 acres: 821 620 - 8 156 9 115 332 Harvested for processing .....................farms: - - - - - - - - acres: - - - - - - - - Potatoes .......................................farms: 441 325 - 34 36 68 106 81 acres: 42,660 42,237 - 31 870 10,020 15,690 15,624 Harvested for processing .....................farms: 36 30 - 2 4 4 13 7 acres: 14,436 (D) - (D) (D) 6,836 6,841 738 Farms by acres harvested: : 0.1 to 4.9 acres ................................: 345 235 - 32 29 53 72 49 5.0 to 24.9 acres ...............................: 17 15 - 2 4 3 3 3 25.0 to 99.9 acres ..............................: 20 17 - - - 3 7 7 100.0 to 249.9 acres ............................: 16 15 - - 1 - 10 4 250.0 acres or more .............................: 43 43 - - 2 9 14 18 : Sweet corn .....................................farms: 441 321 1 26 23 64 113 94 acres: 32,667 29,663 (D) 13 (D) 4,943 8,844 14,126 Harvested for processing .....................farms: 12 7 - - - 1 2 4 acres: 561 557 - - - (D) (D) 430 Sweet potatoes .................................farms: 188 160 - 19 23 33 43 42 acres: 18,189 13,659 - 1,464 2,383 1,796 5,538 2,479 Harvested for processing .....................farms: 27 22 - 3 8 3 6 2 acres: 2,571 1,956 - 342 856 (D) 528 (D) : Tomatoes in the open ...........................farms: 3,176 2,133 5 186 228 477 679 558 acres: 295,247 251,640 6 5,444 9,866 57,677 111,075 67,573 Harvested for processing .....................farms: 631 500 - 34 50 119 184 113 acres: 256,051 218,215 - 4,839 7,253 50,391 99,901 55,831 : Land in orchards .................................farms: 38,098 20,677 40 583 1,366 3,656 6,034 8,998 acres: 3,138,943 2,506,070 6,311 71,587 224,334 525,965 776,943 900,930 Irrigated ......................................farms: 34,580 18,960 40 538 1,286 3,368 5,543 8,185 acres: 3,072,245 2,461,921 6,311 70,334 221,823 515,860 762,186 885,406 Farms by bearing and nonbearing acres: : 0.1 to 4.9 acres ..................................: 13,263 5,173 5 84 262 844 1,315 2,663 5.0 to 24.9 acres .................................: 12,094 6,093 17 171 351 925 1,686 2,943 25.0 to 99.9 acres ................................: 7,356 5,052 11 165 367 951 1,532 2,026 100.0 to 249.9 acres ..............................: 2,969 2,327 3 106 176 493 806 743 250.0 acres or more ...............................: 2,416 2,032 4 57 210 443 695 623 : Apples .........................................farms: 2,527 1,351 3 45 79 261 403 560 bearing and nonbearing acres: 18,205 14,883 15 134 898 3,569 4,596 5,670 : Grapes .........................................farms: 11,462 6,315 17 182 457 1,202 1,882 2,575 bearing and nonbearing acres: 940,177 744,212 4,390 22,820 73,792 159,908 239,274 244,029 : Peaches, all ...................................farms: 2,201 1,289 5 29 128 271 404 452 bearing and nonbearing acres: 51,948 44,011 225 686 3,648 12,154 10,906 16,392 : Citrus fruit, all ..............................farms: 7,283 3,768 3 84 221 662 1,099 1,699 bearing and nonbearing acres: 293,387 201,799 (D) (D) 9,593 56,485 57,064 75,177 : Almonds ........................................farms: 6,841 4,579 16 153 387 880 1,434 1,709 bearing and nonbearing acres: 935,804 800,802 1,328 23,946 76,795 159,432 254,560 284,741 : Pecans ........................................farms: 222 115 - 3 - 18 43 51 bearing and nonbearing acres: 3,309 2,471 - 35 - 232 1,730 474 : Walnuts, English ...............................farms: 5,712 3,422 6 114 221 596 954 1,531 bearing and nonbearing acres: 329,112 264,333 316 9,378 24,957 62,348 78,159 89,176 : Land in berries (see text) .......................farms: 1,985 1,326 5 88 164 336 399 334 acres: 52,626 44,859 2 1,008 5,146 15,934 12,552 10,217 ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 69. Summary by Age and Primary Occupation of Principal Operator: 2012 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : Other occupations :-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : : Age of operator (years) : :------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Total : Under 25 : 25 to 34 : 35 to 44 : 45 to 54 : 55 to 64 : 65 and over ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- CROPS HARVESTED - Con. : : Forage-land used for all hay and all : haylage, grass silage, and : greenchop (see text) - Con. : : Other tame hay .................................farms: 595 - 31 74 114 207 169 acres: 36,005 - 1,154 11,880 4,960 8,560 9,451 tons, dry: 169,038 - 3,011 100,596 12,247 25,243 27,941 Irrigated ....................................farms: 408 - 14 56 86 144 108 acres: 22,955 - 452 11,050 2,267 5,676 3,510 : Field and grass seed crops, all ..................farms: 35 - 3 1 9 12 10 acres: 13,625 - (D) (D) 619 11,523 601 Irrigated ......................................farms: 35 - 3 1 9 12 10 acres: 13,625 - (D) (D) 619 11,523 601 : Land in vegetables (see text) ....................farms: 1,823 20 143 266 446 554 394 acres: 148,989 129 3,201 14,944 26,296 28,056 76,364 Irrigated ......................................farms: 1,823 20 143 266 446 554 394 acres: 148,985 129 3,201 14,944 26,296 28,052 76,364 Farms by acres harvested: : 0.1 to 4.9 acres ..................................: 1,442 9 102 217 367 454 293 5.0 to 24.9 acres .................................: 239 11 31 28 51 64 54 25.0 to 99.9 acres ................................: 47 - 4 13 7 9 14 100.0 to 249.9 acres ..............................: 30 - 3 - 9 9 9 250.0 acres or more ...............................: 65 - 3 8 12 18 24 : Beans, snap ....................................farms: 208 - 12 32 60 65 39 acres: 306 - 24 40 15 36 192 Harvested for processing .....................farms: 9 - 2 - - 6 1 acres: 22 - (D) - - (D) (D) : Peas, green ....................................farms: 35 - 6 3 9 8 9 acres: 201 - 1 12 8 170 11 Harvested for processing .....................farms: - - - - - - - acres: - - - - - - - Potatoes .......................................farms: 116 - 9 20 41 31 15 acres: 423 - 7 17 15 380 4 Harvested for processing .....................farms: 6 - - 5 - 1 - acres: (D) - - (D) - (D) - Farms by acres harvested: : 0.1 to 4.9 acres ................................: 110 - 8 19 41 27 15 5.0 to 24.9 acres ...............................: 2 - 1 1 - - - 25.0 to 99.9 acres ..............................: 3 - - - - 3 - 100.0 to 249.9 acres ............................: 1 - - - - 1 - 250.0 acres or more .............................: - - - - - - - : Sweet corn .....................................farms: 120 - 8 16 22 46 28 acres: 3,004 - 1 4 (D) 207 (D) Harvested for processing .....................farms: 5 - - - 3 2 - acres: 3 - - - (D) (D) - Sweet potatoes .................................farms: 28 - 2 3 4 16 3 acres: 4,530 - (D) (D) (D) 2 3,547 Harvested for processing .....................farms: 5 - - 3 - - 2 acres: 615 - - (D) - - (D) : Tomatoes in the open ...........................farms: 1,043 12 38 156 272 352 213 acres: 43,607 4 (D) (D) 9,747 3,444 28,676 Harvested for processing .....................farms: 131 6 7 18 27 46 27 acres: 37,836 1 (D) (D) (D) (D) (D) : Land in orchards .................................farms: 17,421 37 502 1,409 3,923 5,406 6,144 acres: 632,874 264 19,216 40,663 152,636 150,219 269,876 Irrigated ......................................farms: 15,620 37 479 1,297 3,572 4,863 5,372 acres: 610,325 262 19,064 39,820 148,604 142,857 259,717 Farms by bearing and nonbearing acres: : 0.1 to 4.9 acres ..................................: 8,090 17 185 577 1,786 2,505 3,020 5.0 to 24.9 acres .................................: 6,001 20 183 527 1,408 1,872 1,991 25.0 to 99.9 acres ................................: 2,304 - 87 234 525 728 730 100.0 to 249.9 acres ..............................: 642 - 29 48 131 200 234 250.0 acres or more ...............................: 384 - 18 23 73 101 169 : Apples .........................................farms: 1,176 - 39 102 281 367 387 bearing and nonbearing acres: 3,322 - 98 102 852 1,091 1,179 : Grapes .........................................farms: 5,147 9 135 406 1,143 1,652 1,802 bearing and nonbearing acres: 195,965 7 5,698 10,375 45,117 47,397 87,370 : Peaches, all ...................................farms: 912 4 38 92 240 302 236 bearing and nonbearing acres: 7,937 20 256 984 2,269 1,979 2,429 : Citrus fruit, all ..............................farms: 3,515 10 89 265 765 1,070 1,316 bearing and nonbearing acres: 91,589 2 1,295 3,567 33,554 15,962 37,209 : Almonds ........................................farms: 2,262 3 102 238 575 683 661 bearing and nonbearing acres: 135,002 30 4,765 10,717 35,690 31,259 52,541 : Pecans ........................................farms: 107 - - 9 24 38 36 bearing and nonbearing acres: 838 - - 210 199 247 182 : Walnuts, English ...............................farms: 2,290 6 65 196 590 664 769 bearing and nonbearing acres: 64,778 102 4,181 5,163 12,736 21,901 20,697 : Land in berries (see text) .......................farms: 659 - 34 72 180 217 156 acres: 7,768 - 109 1,035 427 3,387 2,810 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 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. Table 70. Summary by Tenure of Principal Operator and by Operators on Farm: 2012 [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ : : Tenure of principal operator : Operators on farm : :--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : : : : : : More than one Item : Total : Full owners : Part owners : Tenants : One operator : operator ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ FARMS AND LAND IN FARMS : : Farms ................................................number: 77,857 60,492 9,490 7,875 40,197 37,660 percent: 100.0 77.7 12.2 10.1 51.6 48.4 Land in farms .........................................acres: 25,569,001 10,081,540 11,310,115 4,177,346 10,606,381 14,962,620 Average size of farm ..............................acres: 328 167 1,192 530 264 397 : MARKET VALUE OF AGRICULTURAL : PRODUCTS SOLD AND GOVERNMENT : PAYMENTS : : Total .................................................farms: 77,857 60,492 9,490 7,875 40,197 37,660 $1,000: 42,774,392 18,370,874 16,166,250 8,237,268 16,929,224 25,845,167 Average per farm ................................dollars: 549,397 303,691 1,703,504 1,046,002 421,156 686,276 Farms by economic class: : Less than $1,000 (see text) ............................: 14,629 13,144 695 790 7,132 7,497 $1,000 to $2,499 .......................................: 4,718 4,129 233 356 2,397 2,321 $2,500 to $4,999 .......................................: 5,904 5,119 348 437 3,057 2,847 $5,000 to $9,999 .......................................: 7,846 6,812 405 629 4,131 3,715 $10,000 to $24,999 .....................................: 10,265 8,445 895 925 5,564 4,701 : $25,000 to $49,999 .....................................: 7,150 5,746 739 665 3,941 3,209 $50,000 to $99,999 .....................................: 6,698 5,234 753 711 3,747 2,951 $100,000 to $249,999 ...................................: 6,951 4,936 1,138 877 3,856 3,095 $250,000 to $499,999 ...................................: 4,132 2,553 906 673 2,219 1,913 : $500,000 to $999,999 ...................................: 3,197 1,704 972 521 1,579 1,618 $1,000,000 or more .....................................: 6,367 2,670 2,406 1,291 2,574 3,793 $1,000,000 to $2,499,999 .............................: 3,015 1,320 1,081 614 1,269 1,746 $2,500,000 to $4,999,999 .............................: 1,480 605 583 292 598 882 $5,000,000 or more ...................................: 1,872 745 742 385 707 1,165 : Total sales .........................................farms: 77,857 60,492 9,490 7,875 40,197 37,660 $1,000: 42,627,472 18,322,380 16,106,411 8,198,681 16,874,135 25,753,338 Grains, oilseeds, dry beans, and : dry peas .........................................farms: 4,757 1,737 1,787 1,233 2,300 2,457 $1,000: 1,727,708 419,644 786,932 521,132 594,131 1,133,577 Sales of $50,000 or more ........................farms: 3,235 914 1,377 944 1,461 1,774 $1,000: 1,701,529 406,322 778,505 516,702 579,408 1,122,122 Corn ............................................farms: 1,796 727 759 310 862 934 $1,000: 419,544 114,298 214,443 90,803 158,106 261,437 Sales of $50,000 or more ......................farms: 1,130 353 563 214 511 619 $1,000: 407,430 108,113 210,023 89,294 151,143 256,287 Wheat ...........................................farms: 1,499 503 675 321 718 781 $1,000: 341,702 85,007 187,786 68,909 133,194 208,509 Sales of $50,000 or more ......................farms: 914 234 461 219 390 524 $1,000: 329,286 80,302 182,551 66,433 126,735 202,551 Soybeans ........................................farms: 2 1 1 - 2 - $1,000: (D) (D) (D) - (D) - Sales of $50,000 or more ......................farms: 1 1 - - 1 - $1,000: (D) (D) - - (D) - Sorghum .........................................farms: 200 82 92 26 79 121 $1,000: (D) (D) (D) 2,360 (D) 10,363 Sales of $50,000 or more ......................farms: 76 30 38 8 25 51 $1,000: 13,369 5,512 5,921 1,935 4,226 9,142 Barley ..........................................farms: 261 85 117 59 134 127 $1,000: 29,212 2,851 11,426 14,935 7,434 21,778 Sales of $50,000 or more ......................farms: 105 9 64 32 53 52 $1,000: 27,084 2,028 10,526 14,530 6,492 20,592 Rice ............................................farms: 1,391 397 433 561 595 796 $1,000: 782,644 175,968 306,359 300,317 239,112 543,532 Sales of $50,000 or more ......................farms: 1,306 348 417 541 554 752 $1,000: 780,488 174,687 306,048 299,753 237,995 542,493 Other grains, oilseeds, : dry beans, and dry peas ........................farms: 953 305 373 275 467 486 $1,000: 138,816 35,321 59,686 43,809 50,858 87,958 Sales of $50,000 or more ......................farms: 438 86 213 139 196 242 $1,000: 132,134 32,728 56,987 42,419 47,184 84,950 : Tobacco .......................................... farms: - - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - - Sales of $50,000 or more ........................farms: - - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - - Cotton and cottonseed .............................farms: 630 170 333 127 281 349 $1,000: 655,094 238,396 327,137 89,561 147,240 507,853 Sales of $50,000 or more ........................farms: 584 151 320 113 250 334 $1,000: 653,962 237,947 326,790 89,226 146,470 507,492 Vegetables, melons, potatoes, : and sweet potatoes ...............................farms: 6,155 3,389 1,049 1,717 2,717 3,438 $1,000: 6,327,838 984,420 3,203,920 2,139,499 1,941,416 4,386,422 Sales of $50,000 or more ........................farms: 1,961 442 768 751 844 1,117 $1,000: 6,293,658 964,968 3,199,886 2,128,804 1,925,485 4,368,172 : Fruits, tree nuts, and berries ....................farms: 36,574 30,856 3,705 2,013 20,254 16,320 $1,000: 17,638,972 9,155,744 5,700,255 2,782,973 7,937,005 9,701,967 Sales of $50,000 or more ........................farms: 17,379 12,914 3,113 1,352 9,357 8,022 $1,000: 17,344,347 8,884,869 5,687,959 2,771,519 7,767,651 9,576,695 Fruits and tree nuts ............................farms: 35,526 30,378 3,601 1,547 19,767 15,759 $1,000: 15,655,703 8,932,608 5,259,643 1,463,452 6,965,507 8,690,196 Sales of $50,000 or more ......................farms: 16,846 12,777 3,009 1,060 9,090 7,756 $1,000: 15,369,315 8,667,134 5,247,306 1,454,875 6,800,372 8,568,943 Berries .........................................farms: 1,701 968 191 542 777 924 $1,000: 1,983,269 223,136 440,612 1,319,521 971,497 1,011,771 Sales of $50,000 or more ......................farms: 610 154 130 326 305 305 $1,000: 1,972,002 216,038 439,743 1,316,221 966,262 1,005,740 Nursery, greenhouse, floriculture, : and sod (see text) ...............................farms: 3,890 2,621 399 870 1,979 1,911 $1,000: 2,547,307 989,917 956,023 601,367 789,275 1,758,032 Sales of $50,000 or more ........................farms: 1,465 745 278 442 674 791 $1,000: 2,520,294 969,582 954,300 596,412 774,381 1,745,913 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 70. Summary by Tenure of Principal Operator and by Operators on Farm: 2012 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ : : Tenure of principal operator : Operators on farm : :--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : : : : : : More than one Item : Total : Full owners : Part owners : Tenants : One operator : operator ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ MARKET VALUE OF AGRICULTURAL : PRODUCTS SOLD AND GOVERNMENT : PAYMENTS - Con. : : Total - Con. : Total sales - Con. : : Cut Christmas trees and : short-rotation woody crops .......................farms: 328 290 14 24 160 168 $1,000: 2,706 1,867 123 716 1,093 1,612 Sales of $50,000 or more ........................farms: 9 5 - 4 3 6 $1,000: 904 354 - 550 269 635 Cut Christmas trees .............................farms: 301 271 12 18 150 151 $1,000: 2,499 1,699 (D) (D) 968 1,531 Sales of $50,000 or more ......................farms: 8 4 - 4 2 6 $1,000: 846 296 - 550 (D) (D) Short-rotation woody crops ......................farms: 38 30 2 6 19 19 $1,000: 206 168 (D) (D) 125 82 Sales of $50,000 or more ......................farms: 1 1 - - 1 - $1,000: (D) (D) - - (D) - Other crops and hay (see text) ....................farms: 5,744 3,010 1,927 807 2,987 2,757 $1,000: 1,467,274 329,123 787,007 351,145 623,217 844,058 Sales of $50,000 or more ........................farms: 2,246 737 1,063 446 1,069 1,177 $1,000: 1,425,574 306,650 773,205 345,719 601,176 824,398 Maple syrup (see text) ..........................farms: - - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - - Sales of $50,000 or more ......................farms: - - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - - : Cattle and calves .................................farms: 12,594 7,939 3,204 1,451 5,639 6,955 $1,000: 3,259,325 1,324,925 1,468,257 466,142 1,482,072 1,777,253 Sales of $50,000 or more ........................farms: 3,515 1,548 1,386 581 1,475 2,040 $1,000: 3,170,394 1,272,887 1,442,565 454,942 1,438,951 1,731,443 Milk from cows (see text) .........................farms: 1,554 723 522 309 636 918 $1,000: 6,945,102 3,539,942 2,458,170 946,991 2,872,363 4,072,739 Sales of $50,000 or more ........................farms: 1,520 698 518 304 620 900 $1,000: 6,944,530 3,539,424 2,458,142 946,963 2,872,036 4,072,494 Hogs and pigs .....................................farms: 1,163 902 148 113 400 763 $1,000: 51,526 37,807 12,798 920 5,478 46,048 Sales of $50,000 or more ........................farms: 43 31 10 2 22 21 $1,000: 48,608 35,955 (D) (D) 4,342 44,266 Sheep, goats, wool, mohair, and : milk (see text) ..................................farms: 4,376 3,392 579 405 1,749 2,627 $1,000: 108,136 38,382 47,924 21,830 42,673 65,463 Sales of $50,000 or more ........................farms: 196 90 72 34 82 114 $1,000: 91,373 27,403 44,205 19,765 35,281 56,093 Horses, ponies, mules, burros, and : donkeys ..........................................farms: 3,050 2,265 479 306 1,281 1,769 $1,000: 62,241 48,316 8,713 5,212 25,745 36,496 Sales of $50,000 or more ........................farms: 212 183 23 6 89 123 $1,000: 35,731 28,257 4,690 2,784 14,387 21,345 Poultry and eggs ..................................farms: 3,758 3,138 359 261 1,258 2,500 $1,000: 1,663,919 1,141,085 312,536 210,298 360,605 1,303,314 Sales of $50,000 or more ........................farms: 248 184 33 31 96 152 $1,000: 1,658,976 1,137,412 311,999 209,565 358,977 1,299,999 Aquaculture .......................................farms: 229 136 22 71 97 132 $1,000: 103,016 41,180 27,261 34,574 31,330 71,686 Sales of $50,000 or more ........................farms: 119 59 13 47 54 65 $1,000: 101,782 40,396 27,082 34,304 30,748 71,034 Other animals and other animal : products (see text) ..............................farms: 1,766 1,373 198 195 700 1,066 $1,000: 67,309 31,632 9,356 26,322 20,492 46,817 Sales of $50,000 or more ........................farms: 150 110 12 28 62 88 $1,000: 58,094 24,810 8,102 25,182 16,618 41,476 : Value of- : Government payments .................................farms: 7,593 3,926 2,271 1,396 3,692 3,901 $1,000: 146,919 48,494 59,839 38,587 55,090 91,830 : Landlord's share of total : sales (see text) ...................................farms: 2,147 1 1,305 841 1,134 1,013 $1,000: 266,275 (D) 169,444 (D) 104,503 161,771 : Agricultural products sold directly to : individuals for human : consumption (see text) .............................farms: 8,588 6,600 820 1,168 3,580 5,008 $1,000: 169,915 74,293 56,767 38,855 65,315 104,601 : FARM PRODUCTION EXPENSES : : Total farm production expenses 1/ .....................farms: 77,857 60,492 9,490 7,875 40,197 37,660 $1,000: 35,455,667 14,937,622 13,577,068 6,940,977 13,781,889 21,673,778 Average per farm ................................dollars: 455,395 246,936 1,430,671 881,394 342,859 575,512 : Fertilizer, lime, and soil : conditioners purchased .............................farms: 38,958 28,542 5,742 4,674 20,024 18,934 $1,000: 1,806,062 595,580 781,664 428,818 683,440 1,122,622 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 .........................................: 24,634 20,735 1,714 2,185 13,045 11,589 $5,000 to $24,999 ....................................: 7,312 4,946 1,371 995 3,858 3,454 $25,000 to $49,999 ...................................: 2,319 1,210 705 404 1,214 1,105 $50,000 or more ......................................: 4,693 1,651 1,952 1,090 1,907 2,786 : Chemicals purchased .................................farms: 44,536 33,149 6,458 4,929 22,825 21,711 $1,000: 2,190,674 861,695 888,079 440,900 863,711 1,326,963 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 .........................................: 28,059 23,409 2,216 2,434 14,513 13,546 $5,000 to $24,999 ....................................: 8,444 5,993 1,464 987 4,600 3,844 $25,000 to $49,999 ...................................: 2,676 1,551 679 446 1,409 1,267 $50,000 or more ......................................: 5,357 2,196 2,099 1,062 2,303 3,054 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 70. Summary by Tenure of Principal Operator and by Operators on Farm: 2012 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ : : Tenure of principal operator : Operators on farm : :--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : : : : : : More than one Item : Total : Full owners : Part owners : Tenants : One operator : operator ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ FARM PRODUCTION EXPENSES - Con. : : Total farm production expenses 1/ - Con. : : Seeds, plants, vines, and : trees purchased ....................................farms: 27,527 18,286 5,068 4,173 13,381 14,146 $1,000: 1,317,934 369,654 582,666 365,614 476,624 841,310 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $999 ...........................................: 11,381 9,621 836 924 5,602 5,779 $1,000 to $4,999 .....................................: 6,676 4,515 1,112 1,049 3,429 3,247 $5,000 to $24,999 ....................................: 5,157 2,620 1,432 1,105 2,599 2,558 $25,000 to $49,999 ...................................: 1,473 626 524 323 657 816 $50,000 or more ......................................: 2,840 904 1,164 772 1,094 1,746 : Livestock and poultry purchased or : leased .............................................farms: 12,585 8,718 2,490 1,377 5,294 7,291 $1,000: 1,254,286 515,570 538,549 200,166 533,334 720,952 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 .........................................: 7,903 6,204 1,063 636 3,269 4,634 $5,000 to $24,999 ....................................: 2,950 1,761 788 401 1,277 1,673 $25,000 to $99,999 ...................................: 995 429 361 205 458 537 $100,000 to $249,999 .................................: 335 151 117 67 126 209 $250,000 or more .....................................: 402 173 161 68 164 238 : Breeding livestock purchased or : leased ...........................................farms: 6,850 4,301 1,694 855 2,898 3,952 $1,000: 255,730 116,099 119,380 20,252 129,248 126,482 Other livestock and poultry : purchased or leased (see text) ...................farms: 7,673 5,650 1,238 785 3,130 4,543 $1,000: 998,556 399,472 419,170 179,914 404,086 594,470 : Feed purchased ......................................farms: 30,014 22,876 4,435 2,703 13,174 16,840 $1,000: 6,069,374 3,147,012 2,102,181 820,181 2,374,420 3,694,955 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 .........................................: 16,191 13,368 1,698 1,125 7,137 9,054 $5,000 to $24,999 ....................................: 9,417 7,106 1,456 855 4,145 5,272 $25,000 to $99,999 ...................................: 2,042 1,276 513 253 891 1,151 $100,000 to $249,999 .................................: 596 296 182 118 291 305 $250,000 or more .....................................: 1,768 830 586 352 710 1,058 : Gasoline, fuels, and oils purchased .................farms: 70,844 54,171 9,333 7,340 35,944 34,900 $1,000: 1,552,328 621,785 638,765 291,778 588,902 963,426 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 .........................................: 51,974 44,052 3,836 4,086 27,019 24,955 $5,000 to $24,999 ....................................: 11,182 6,964 2,466 1,752 5,683 5,499 $25,000 to $49,999 ...................................: 2,745 1,321 929 495 1,263 1,482 $50,000 or more ......................................: 4,943 1,834 2,102 1,007 1,979 2,964 : Utilities ...........................................farms: 60,680 46,338 8,232 6,110 30,862 29,818 $1,000: 1,684,343 821,072 603,184 260,087 695,531 988,811 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $999 ...........................................: 16,704 14,440 1,075 1,189 8,598 8,106 $1,000 to $4,999 .....................................: 23,136 19,026 2,140 1,970 12,083 11,053 $5,000 to $24,999 ....................................: 12,275 8,528 2,252 1,495 6,496 5,779 $25,000 to $49,999 ...................................: 3,178 1,844 833 501 1,538 1,640 $50,000 or more ......................................: 5,387 2,500 1,932 955 2,147 3,240 : Supplies, repairs, and maintenance costs ............farms: 63,106 47,733 8,765 6,608 31,756 31,350 $1,000: 2,042,434 881,886 794,012 366,537 798,202 1,244,232 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 .........................................: 41,934 35,294 3,190 3,450 21,682 20,252 $5,000 to $24,999 ....................................: 12,194 8,284 2,340 1,570 6,143 6,051 $25,000 to $49,999 ...................................: 3,091 1,671 924 496 1,478 1,613 $50,000 or more ......................................: 5,887 2,484 2,311 1,092 2,453 3,434 : Hired farm labor ....................................farms: 33,955 23,857 5,811 4,287 17,353 16,602 $1,000: 5,877,973 2,275,168 2,231,288 1,371,517 2,239,516 3,638,457 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 .........................................: 9,680 8,323 684 673 5,457 4,223 $5,000 to $24,999 ....................................: 8,646 6,730 891 1,025 4,652 3,994 $25,000 to $99,999 ...................................: 8,011 5,294 1,577 1,140 4,133 3,878 $100,000 to $249,999 .................................: 3,496 1,819 1,073 604 1,571 1,925 $250,000 or more .....................................: 4,122 1,691 1,586 845 1,540 2,582 : Contract labor ......................................farms: 25,067 19,255 3,620 2,192 13,105 11,962 $1,000: 3,378,012 1,504,101 1,175,489 698,422 1,301,012 2,077,000 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $999 ...........................................: 2,190 1,935 152 103 1,202 988 $1,000 to $4,999 .....................................: 5,812 4,959 483 370 3,097 2,715 $5,000 to $24,999 ....................................: 7,825 6,372 802 651 4,243 3,582 $25,000 to $49,999 ...................................: 2,941 2,163 486 292 1,591 1,350 $50,000 or more ......................................: 6,299 3,826 1,697 776 2,972 3,327 : Customwork and custom hauling .......................farms: 19,644 13,317 3,975 2,352 10,068 9,576 $1,000: 1,258,384 547,073 507,611 203,700 511,644 746,740 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $999 ...........................................: 3,589 3,015 352 222 1,810 1,779 $1,000 to $4,999 .....................................: 4,990 3,899 652 439 2,755 2,235 $5,000 to $24,999 ....................................: 5,384 3,649 1,106 629 2,926 2,458 $25,000 to $49,999 ...................................: 1,859 1,010 496 353 944 915 $50,000 or more ......................................: 3,822 1,744 1,369 709 1,633 2,189 : Cash rent for land, buildings, : and grazing fees ...................................farms: 15,007 2,028 7,078 5,901 7,269 7,738 $1,000: 1,511,985 31,975 787,522 692,488 530,181 981,804 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 .........................................: 5,241 886 2,174 2,181 2,737 2,504 $5,000 to $9,999 .....................................: 1,649 193 790 666 860 789 $10,000 to $24,999 ...................................: 2,878 834 1,176 868 1,366 1,512 $25,000 or more ......................................: 5,239 115 2,938 2,186 2,306 2,933 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 70. Summary by Tenure of Principal Operator and by Operators on Farm: 2012 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ : : Tenure of principal operator : Operators on farm : :--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : : : : : : More than one Item : Total : Full owners : Part owners : Tenants : One operator : operator ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ FARM PRODUCTION EXPENSES - Con. : : Total farm production expenses 1/ - Con. : : Rent and lease expenses for machinery, : equipment, and farm share of vehicles ..............farms: 7,895 4,182 2,050 1,663 3,578 4,317 $1,000: 400,054 141,179 165,172 93,702 137,092 262,962 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $999 ...........................................: 1,914 1,393 268 253 928 986 $1,000 to $4,999 .....................................: 2,150 1,316 398 436 1,074 1,076 $5,000 to $24,999 ....................................: 1,990 880 649 461 843 1,147 $25,000 to $49,999 ...................................: 567 198 207 162 250 317 $50,000 or more ......................................: 1,274 395 528 351 483 791 : Interest expense ....................................farms: 26,459 19,318 4,914 2,227 12,597 13,862 $1,000: 1,217,781 727,680 430,948 59,153 506,577 711,204 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 .........................................: 8,135 6,106 1,073 956 4,164 3,971 $5,000 to $24,999 ....................................: 11,048 8,616 1,667 765 5,256 5,792 $25,000 to $99,999 ...................................: 5,129 3,430 1,318 381 2,309 2,820 $100,000 or more .....................................: 2,147 1,166 856 125 868 1,279 : Secured by real estate ............................farms: 20,307 16,361 3,946 - 9,455 10,852 $1,000: 941,302 614,559 326,743 - 388,250 553,052 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $999 .........................................: 1,166 990 176 - 567 599 $1,000 to $4,999 ...................................: 4,137 3,493 644 - 1,966 2,171 $5,000 to $24,999 ..................................: 9,276 7,850 1,426 - 4,384 4,892 $25,000 to $49,999 .................................: 2,690 2,067 623 - 1,264 1,426 $50,000 or more ....................................: 3,038 1,961 1,077 - 1,274 1,764 : Not secured by real estate ........................farms: 13,273 8,221 2,825 2,227 6,350 6,923 $1,000: 276,479 113,121 104,205 59,153 118,327 158,152 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $999 .........................................: 2,988 2,325 382 281 1,546 1,442 $1,000 to $4,999 ...................................: 4,701 3,280 746 675 2,383 2,318 $5,000 to $24,999 ..................................: 3,514 1,806 943 765 1,588 1,926 $25,000 to $49,999 .................................: 835 360 268 207 350 485 $50,000 or more ....................................: 1,235 450 486 299 483 752 : Property taxes paid .................................farms: 71,398 59,940 9,429 2,029 36,602 34,796 $1,000: 827,587 547,596 248,513 31,478 359,623 467,964 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 .........................................: 45,137 39,602 4,312 1,223 23,864 21,273 $5,000 to $9,999 .....................................: 12,923 10,947 1,690 286 6,546 6,377 $10,000 to $24,999 ...................................: 7,776 5,925 1,577 274 3,791 3,985 $25,000 or more ......................................: 5,562 3,466 1,850 246 2,401 3,161 : All other production : expenses (see text) ................................farms: 43,111 30,385 7,691 5,035 20,618 22,493 $1,000: 3,066,456 1,348,597 1,101,422 616,436 1,182,081 1,884,375 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 .........................................: 22,864 18,408 2,454 2,002 11,091 11,773 $5,000 to $24,999 ....................................: 10,967 7,446 2,157 1,364 5,480 5,487 $25,000 to $49,999 ...................................: 2,928 1,562 894 472 1,376 1,552 $50,000 to $99,999 ...................................: 2,313 1,175 732 406 1,063 1,250 $100,000 or more .....................................: 4,039 1,794 1,454 791 1,608 2,431 : Production expenses paid by : landlords 1/ .........................................farms: 1,305 185 761 359 620 685 $1,000: 54,690 916 36,359 17,416 14,601 40,089 : Depreciation expenses claimed .........................farms: 39,342 28,214 6,928 4,200 19,280 20,062 $1,000: 2,256,892 1,126,031 805,358 325,503 888,502 1,368,390 : NET CASH FARM INCOME (SEE TEXT) : : Net cash farm income of operations ....................farms: 77,857 60,492 9,490 7,875 40,197 37,660 $1,000: 8,523,285 4,033,447 2,984,684 1,505,153 3,645,163 4,878,122 Average per farm ................................dollars: 109,474 66,677 314,508 191,131 90,682 129,531 : Farms with net gains 2/ ............................number: 36,283 26,417 5,302 4,564 19,809 16,474 Average net gain ..............................dollars: 314,056 206,804 737,135 443,354 245,187 396,867 : Gain of- : Less than $1,000 .....................................: 1,602 1,338 88 176 1,015 587 $1,000 to $4,999 .....................................: 4,785 4,100 240 445 2,659 2,126 $5,000 to $9,999 .....................................: 3,597 3,007 214 376 2,055 1,542 $10,000 to $24,999 ...................................: 5,723 4,656 469 598 3,284 2,439 $25,000 to $49,999 ...................................: 4,813 3,732 517 564 2,790 2,023 $50,000 or more ......................................: 15,763 9,584 3,774 2,405 8,006 7,757 : Farms with net losses ..............................number: 41,574 34,075 4,188 3,311 20,388 21,186 Average net loss ..............................dollars: 69,072 41,957 220,536 156,543 59,434 78,347 : Loss of- : Less than $1,000 .....................................: 1,982 1,711 108 163 1,125 857 $1,000 to $4,999 .....................................: 8,924 7,902 479 543 4,727 4,197 $5,000 to $9,999 .....................................: 7,815 6,710 588 517 3,719 4,096 $10,000 to $24,999 ...................................: 10,269 8,597 963 709 4,991 5,278 $25,000 to $49,999 ...................................: 5,478 4,513 535 430 2,538 2,940 $50,000 or more ......................................: 7,106 4,642 1,515 949 3,288 3,818 : Net cash farm income of operators .....................farms: 77,857 60,492 9,490 7,875 40,197 37,660 $1,000: 8,177,199 3,973,744 2,817,426 1,386,029 3,506,319 4,670,881 Average per farm ................................dollars: 105,028 65,690 296,884 176,004 87,228 124,028 : Operators reporting net gains 2/ ....................farms: 36,052 26,412 5,182 4,458 19,685 16,367 Average net gain ..............................dollars: 308,890 205,362 730,656 431,992 240,956 390,595 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 70. Summary by Tenure of Principal Operator and by Operators on Farm: 2012 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ : : Tenure of principal operator : Operators on farm : :--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : : : : : : More than one Item : Total : Full owners : Part owners : Tenants : One operator : operator ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ NET CASH FARM INCOME (SEE TEXT) - Con. : : Net cash farm income of operators - Con. : Operators reporting net gains 2/ - Con. : : Gain of- : Less than $1,000 .....................................: 1,605 1,340 87 178 1,023 582 $1,000 to $4,999 .....................................: 4,774 4,093 236 445 2,652 2,122 $5,000 to $9,999 .....................................: 3,610 3,019 209 382 2,051 1,559 $10,000 to $24,999 ...................................: 5,758 4,663 487 608 3,315 2,443 $25,000 to $49,999 ...................................: 4,811 3,749 512 550 2,776 2,035 $50,000 or more ......................................: 15,494 9,548 3,651 2,295 7,868 7,626 : Operators reporting net losses ......................farms: 41,805 34,080 4,308 3,417 20,512 21,293 Average net loss ..............................dollars: 70,779 42,555 224,892 157,972 60,301 80,871 : Loss of- : Less than $1,000 .....................................: 2,006 1,735 107 164 1,138 868 $1,000 to $4,999 .....................................: 8,944 7,871 502 571 4,738 4,206 $5,000 to $9,999 .....................................: 7,798 6,712 577 509 3,706 4,092 $10,000 to $24,999 ...................................: 10,315 8,594 998 723 5,017 5,298 $25,000 to $49,999 ...................................: 5,518 4,525 540 453 2,565 2,953 $50,000 or more ......................................: 7,224 4,643 1,584 997 3,348 3,876 : COMMODITY CREDIT CORPORATION : LOANS (SEE TEXT) : : Total .................................................farms: 521 128 193 200 219 302 $1,000: 122,036 23,164 53,316 45,557 33,379 88,657 : INCOME FROM FARM-RELATED SOURCES : : Total income from farm-related sources, gross : before taxes and expenses (see text) .................farms: 23,685 16,909 4,133 2,643 12,409 11,276 $1,000: 1,204,560 600,195 395,502 208,862 497,827 706,732 Customwork and other agricultural : services ...........................................farms: 5,255 2,946 1,414 895 2,818 2,437 $1,000: 383,434 119,363 178,115 85,957 157,400 226,034 : Gross cash rent or share payments ...................farms: 6,000 4,545 994 461 2,917 3,083 $1,000: 256,997 143,582 81,389 32,025 106,959 150,037 Sales of forest products, excluding : Christmas trees, short rotation woody : crops, and maple products ..........................farms: 862 715 110 37 402 460 $1,000: 27,613 25,356 1,628 628 8,492 19,121 Agri-tourism and recreational services : (see text) .........................................farms: 1,699 1,219 254 226 798 901 $1,000: 64,520 44,921 9,252 10,348 22,023 42,497 Patronage dividends and refunds : from cooperatives ..................................farms: 7,469 4,919 1,672 878 3,983 3,486 $1,000: 171,066 89,000 62,177 19,888 75,530 95,535 Crop and livestock insurance : payments received ..................................farms: 1,568 1,081 330 157 840 728 $1,000: 62,457 32,340 19,468 10,649 25,577 36,880 Amount from state and local government : agricultural program payments ......................farms: 343 224 71 48 155 188 $1,000: 4,218 1,691 1,969 558 2,138 2,079 Other farm-related income : sources (see text) .................................farms: 5,192 3,882 714 596 2,584 2,608 $1,000: 234,255 143,942 41,504 48,810 99,706 134,549 : LAND USE : : Total cropland ........................................farms: 57,731 44,758 7,138 5,835 30,992 26,739 acres: 9,591,783 3,908,377 3,959,479 1,723,927 3,825,190 5,766,593 Harvested cropland ..................................farms: 53,372 41,179 6,716 5,477 28,792 24,580 acres: 8,007,461 3,191,573 3,405,764 1,410,124 3,173,992 4,833,469 Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 49 acres ........................................: 38,391 33,346 1,946 3,099 21,382 17,009 50 to 99 acres .......................................: 4,412 3,016 874 522 2,464 1,948 100 to 199 acres .....................................: 3,567 2,082 991 494 1,924 1,643 200 to 499 acres .....................................: 3,538 1,601 1,267 670 1,726 1,812 500 to 999 acres .....................................: 1,780 662 771 347 702 1,078 1,000 to 1,999 acres .................................: 950 278 476 196 347 603 2,000 acres or more ..................................: 734 194 391 149 247 487 : Cropland- : Other pasture and grazing land that could : have been used for crops without additional : improvements (see text) ..........................farms: 2,879 2,134 488 257 1,252 1,627 acres: 492,270 202,276 209,901 80,093 219,004 273,266 On which all crops failed or : were abandoned ...................................farms: 2,425 1,834 339 252 1,205 1,220 acres: 207,072 72,899 64,915 69,258 79,872 127,200 Idle or used for cover crops or soil : improvement, but not harvested and not : pastured or grazed (see text) ....................farms: 6,204 4,962 782 460 3,067 3,137 acres: 674,022 359,068 194,283 120,671 272,247 401,775 In cultivated summer fallow .......................farms: 1,477 877 391 209 728 749 acres: 210,958 82,561 84,616 43,781 80,075 130,883 : Total woodland ........................................farms: 7,345 6,151 919 275 3,102 4,243 acres: 1,575,520 958,402 475,215 141,903 709,836 865,684 Woodland pastured ...................................farms: 3,519 2,691 644 184 1,488 2,031 acres: 855,116 385,167 381,425 88,524 393,985 461,131 Woodland not pastured ...............................farms: 4,610 4,103 377 130 1,935 2,675 acres: 720,404 573,235 93,790 53,379 315,851 404,553 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 70. Summary by Tenure of Principal Operator and by Operators on Farm: 2012 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ : : Tenure of principal operator : Operators on farm : :--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : : : : : : More than one Item : Total : Full owners : Part owners : Tenants : One operator : operator ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ LAND USE - Con. : : Permanent pasture and rangeland, : other than cropland and woodland : pastured (see text) ..................................farms: 21,886 16,241 3,789 1,856 9,848 12,038 acres: 13,036,448 4,311,003 6,541,575 2,183,870 5,515,665 7,520,783 : Land in farmsteads, homes, buildings, : livestock facilities, ponds, roads, : wasteland, etc. ......................................farms: 41,259 33,895 4,908 2,456 19,639 21,620 acres: 1,365,250 903,758 333,846 127,646 555,690 809,560 : Irrigated land ........................................farms: 53,546 41,110 6,947 5,489 27,975 25,571 acres: 7,861,964 3,140,946 3,330,060 1,390,958 3,025,160 4,836,804 Harvested cropland ..................................farms: 47,972 36,764 6,115 5,093 25,635 22,337 acres: 7,371,411 2,953,638 3,107,331 1,310,442 2,863,059 4,508,352 Pastureland and other land ..........................farms: 7,884 6,056 1,302 526 3,225 4,659 acres: 490,553 187,308 222,729 80,516 162,101 328,452 : CONSERVATION AND CROP INSURANCE : : Land enrolled in Conservation Reserve, : Wetlands Reserve, Farmable Wetlands, : or Conservation Reserve Enhancement : Programs .............................................farms: 470 406 52 12 257 213 acres: 105,504 76,432 20,561 8,511 52,389 53,115 : Land enrolled in crop insurance : programs (see text) ..................................farms: 13,813 9,092 2,940 1,781 7,060 6,753 acres: 4,929,132 1,648,589 2,256,249 1,024,294 1,689,372 3,239,760 : ORGANIC AGRICULTURE : : Total organic commodity sales (see text) ..............farms: 3,008 1,993 551 464 1,380 1,628 $1,000: 1,355,207 329,284 536,127 489,795 428,995 926,212 : VALUE OF LAND AND BUILDINGS : : Estimated market value of land and : buildings ............................................farms: 77,857 60,492 9,490 7,875 40,197 37,660 $1,000: 160,524,953 82,181,165 57,429,069 20,914,719 70,572,965 89,951,988 Average per farm ................................dollars: 2,061,792 1,358,546 6,051,535 2,655,837 1,755,677 2,388,529 Average per acre ................................dollars: 6,278 8,152 5,078 5,007 6,654 6,012 : Farms by value group: : $1 to $49,999 ..........................................: 3,768 2,433 30 1,305 2,092 1,676 $50,000 to $99,999 .....................................: 2,993 2,397 58 538 1,743 1,250 $100,000 to $199,999 ...................................: 6,849 5,902 233 714 3,786 3,063 $200,000 to $499,999 ...................................: 22,324 19,962 1,036 1,326 11,673 10,651 $500,000 to $999,999 ...................................: 17,939 15,230 1,542 1,167 9,256 8,683 : $1,000,000 to $1,999,999 ...............................: 9,621 6,926 1,825 870 5,045 4,576 $2,000,000 to $4,999,999 ...............................: 8,056 4,879 2,161 1,016 3,965 4,091 $5,000,000 to $9,999,999 ...............................: 3,283 1,563 1,245 475 1,429 1,854 $10,000,000 or more ....................................: 3,024 1,200 1,360 464 1,208 1,816 : VALUE OF MACHINERY AND EQUIPMENT : : Estimated market value of all machinery : and equipment ........................................farms: 77,851 60,487 9,490 7,874 40,196 37,655 $1,000: 9,709,545 4,698,013 3,345,493 1,666,040 3,972,742 5,736,804 : Farms by value group: : $1 to $4,999 ...........................................: 10,455 9,252 381 822 6,085 4,370 $5,000 to $9,999 .......................................: 8,336 7,301 376 659 4,597 3,739 $10,000 to $19,999 .....................................: 13,025 11,151 844 1,030 6,949 6,076 $20,000 to $49,999 .....................................: 18,826 15,595 1,608 1,623 9,534 9,292 $50,000 to $99,999 .....................................: 11,191 8,511 1,579 1,101 5,592 5,599 $100,000 to $199,999 ...................................: 6,916 4,515 1,471 930 3,537 3,379 $200,000 to $499,999 ...................................: 5,289 2,784 1,594 911 2,424 2,865 $500,000 or more .......................................: 3,813 1,378 1,637 798 1,478 2,335 : SELECTED MACHINERY AND EQUIPMENT : : Trucks, including pickups (see text) ..................farms: 55,175 40,644 8,538 5,993 26,905 28,270 number: 132,455 76,294 36,067 20,094 57,525 74,930 : Tractors, all .........................................farms: 53,296 39,993 8,094 5,209 26,482 26,814 number: 147,163 83,615 42,488 21,060 66,257 80,906 Less than 40 horsepower (PTO) .......................farms: 31,264 24,513 4,194 2,557 15,083 16,181 number: 49,313 34,154 9,798 5,361 22,941 26,372 40 to 99 horsepower (PTO) ...........................farms: 30,456 21,273 5,895 3,288 15,313 15,143 number: 68,295 38,946 19,994 9,355 31,676 36,619 100 horsepower (PTO) or more ........................farms: 10,631 5,403 3,289 1,939 5,002 5,629 number: 29,555 10,515 12,696 6,344 11,640 17,915 : Grain and bean combines, self-propelled ...............farms: 1,710 548 696 466 764 946 number: 2,497 695 1,083 719 1,060 1,437 : Cotton pickers and strippers, : self-propelled .......................................farms: 475 139 260 76 206 269 number: 870 264 477 129 308 562 Forage harvesters, self-propelled .....................farms: 1,629 829 572 228 709 920 number: 2,188 1,022 836 330 868 1,320 Hay balers ............................................farms: 3,674 1,963 1,268 443 1,839 1,835 number: 4,822 2,375 1,811 636 2,349 2,473 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 70. Summary by Tenure of Principal Operator and by Operators on Farm: 2012 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ : : Tenure of principal operator : Operators on farm : :--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : : : : : : More than one Item : Total : Full owners : Part owners : Tenants : One operator : operator ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ FERTILIZERS AND CHEMICALS : : Commercial fertilizer, lime, and soil : conditioners used ....................................farms: 32,646 23,010 5,417 4,219 16,793 15,853 acres treated: 6,314,533 2,280,640 2,764,895 1,268,998 2,344,778 3,969,755 Manure used ...........................................farms: 6,794 4,768 1,371 655 2,844 3,950 acres treated: 712,975 223,719 390,189 99,067 241,226 471,749 : Acres treated to control- : Insects .............................................farms: 25,064 16,888 4,419 3,757 12,772 12,292 acres: 5,293,093 1,962,632 2,268,371 1,062,090 1,929,601 3,363,492 Weeds, grass, or brush ..............................farms: 32,402 22,931 5,380 4,091 16,439 15,963 acres: 6,116,162 2,227,700 2,687,538 1,200,924 2,268,348 3,847,814 Nematodes ...........................................farms: 4,485 2,675 913 897 2,184 2,301 acres: 725,589 271,827 304,079 149,683 244,579 481,010 Diseases in crops and orchards ......................farms: 14,196 10,108 2,322 1,766 7,051 7,145 acres: 2,038,769 818,370 833,631 386,768 758,943 1,279,826 Chemicals used to control growth, : thin fruit, ripen, or defoliate ......................farms: 9,810 7,391 1,540 879 5,307 4,503 acres on which used: 1,460,135 774,685 525,049 160,401 607,731 852,404 : LAND USE PRACTICES : : Land drained by tile ..................................farms: 1,913 1,191 433 289 925 988 acres: 476,794 99,569 250,664 126,561 198,699 278,095 Land artificially drained by ditches ..................farms: 7,166 4,430 1,431 1,305 3,293 3,873 acres: 1,872,676 496,414 830,513 545,749 586,997 1,285,679 Land under conservation easement ......................farms: 1,603 1,173 294 136 600 1,003 acres: 929,985 381,644 478,872 69,469 223,932 706,053 Cropland on which no-till practices were : used .................................................farms: 4,213 2,904 627 682 2,111 2,102 acres: 205,383 57,583 114,072 33,728 77,287 128,096 Cropland on which conservation tillage, : including no till, practices were : used .................................................farms: 1,945 903 579 463 815 1,130 acres: 566,983 140,441 278,240 148,302 152,413 414,570 Cropland on which conventional tillage : practices were used ..................................farms: 11,762 5,766 3,149 2,847 5,738 6,024 acres: 3,083,056 793,544 1,454,021 835,491 1,057,322 2,025,734 Cropland planted to a cover crop : (excluding CRP) ......................................farms: 4,899 3,533 799 567 2,137 2,762 acres: 340,532 134,548 157,998 47,986 135,067 205,465 : ENERGY : : Renewable energy producing systems ....................farms: 5,845 4,933 645 267 2,438 3,407 Solar panels ........................................farms: 5,445 4,624 598 223 2,244 3,201 Wind turbines .......................................farms: 324 259 41 24 151 173 Methane digesters ...................................farms: 41 33 5 3 13 28 Geoexchange systems .................................farms: 104 93 3 8 53 51 : Small hydro systems .................................farms: 190 164 17 9 90 100 Biodiesel ...........................................farms: 165 115 30 20 74 91 Ethanol .............................................farms: 56 46 1 9 20 36 Other ...............................................farms: 49 45 4 - 14 35 : Wind rights leased to others ..........................farms: 113 76 24 13 61 52 : TENURE : : Full owners ...........................................farms: 60,492 60,492 - - 31,634 28,858 Part owners ...........................................farms: 9,490 - 9,490 - 4,367 5,123 Tenants ...............................................farms: 7,875 - - 7,875 4,196 3,679 : OWNED AND RENTED LAND : : Land owned ............................................farms: 70,216 60,492 9,490 234 36,130 34,086 acres: 16,064,215 11,482,917 4,526,292 55,006 6,950,985 9,113,230 Owned land in farms .................................farms: 69,982 60,492 9,490 - 36,001 33,981 acres: 14,281,177 10,081,540 4,199,637 - 6,081,743 8,199,434 : Land rented or leased from others .....................farms: 17,477 112 9,490 7,875 8,633 8,844 acres: 11,608,764 87,225 7,216,367 4,305,172 4,666,342 6,942,422 Rented or leased land in farms ......................farms: 17,365 - 9,490 7,875 8,563 8,802 acres: 11,287,824 - 7,110,478 4,177,346 4,524,638 6,763,186 : Land rented or leased to others .......................farms: 6,066 4,645 960 461 2,984 3,082 acres: 2,103,978 1,488,602 432,544 182,832 1,010,946 1,093,032 : NUMBER OF OPERATORS : : Total operators ......................................number: 126,099 96,037 16,874 13,188 40,197 85,902 Farms by number of operators: : 1 operator .............................................: 40,197 31,634 4,367 4,196 40,197 - 2 operators ............................................: 30,790 24,254 3,781 2,755 - 30,790 3 operators ............................................: 5,058 3,516 914 628 - 5,058 4 operators ............................................: 1,137 700 274 163 - 1,137 5 or more operators ....................................: 675 388 154 133 - 675 : Total women operators ..............................number: 41,256 33,154 4,511 3,591 7,190 34,066 Farms by number of women operators: : 1 operator ...........................................: 35,652 29,055 3,730 2,867 7,190 28,462 2 operators ..........................................: 2,226 1,668 304 254 - 2,226 3 operators ..........................................: 253 175 38 40 - 253 4 operators ..........................................: 44 34 6 4 - 44 5 or more operators ..................................: 37 17 5 15 - 37 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 70. Summary by Tenure of Principal Operator and by Operators on Farm: 2012 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ : : Tenure of principal operator : Operators on farm : :--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : : : : : : More than one Item : Total : Full owners : Part owners : Tenants : One operator : operator ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ PRINCIPAL OPERATOR CHARACTERISTICS : : Sex of operator: : Male .....................................................: 63,873 48,572 8,531 6,770 33,007 30,866 Female ...................................................: 13,984 11,920 959 1,105 7,190 6,794 : Primary occupation: : Farming ..................................................: 42,469 30,360 6,829 5,280 22,518 19,951 Other ....................................................: 35,388 30,132 2,661 2,595 17,679 17,709 : Place of residence: : On farm operated .........................................: 54,775 45,137 6,723 2,915 27,099 27,676 Not on farm operated .....................................: 23,082 15,355 2,767 4,960 13,098 9,984 : Days worked off farm: : None .....................................................: 31,311 23,566 4,623 3,122 16,690 14,621 Any ......................................................: 46,546 36,926 4,867 4,753 23,507 23,039 1 to 49 days ...........................................: 7,304 5,890 715 699 3,834 3,470 50 to 99 days ..........................................: 4,230 3,403 449 378 2,232 1,998 100 to 199 days ........................................: 7,065 5,616 703 746 3,498 3,567 200 days or more .......................................: 27,947 22,017 3,000 2,930 13,943 14,004 : Years on present farm: : 2 years or less ..........................................: 3,151 2,248 226 677 1,642 1,509 3 or 4 years .............................................: 4,634 3,400 316 918 2,173 2,461 5 to 9 years .............................................: 12,863 10,052 1,131 1,680 6,373 6,490 10 years or more .........................................: 57,209 44,792 7,817 4,600 30,009 27,200 : Average years on present farm ............................: 20.2 20.1 24.5 16.0 20.8 19.6 : Years operating any farm (see text): : 2 years or less ..........................................: 2,182 1,641 130 411 1,158 1,024 3 or 4 years .............................................: 3,648 2,769 212 667 1,741 1,907 5 to 9 years .............................................: 10,663 8,375 865 1,423 5,132 5,531 10 years or more .........................................: 61,364 47,707 8,283 5,374 32,166 29,198 : Average years operating any farm .........................: 22.7 22.5 27.4 19.3 23.3 22.2 : Age group: : Under 25 years ...........................................: 253 124 30 99 140 113 25 to 34 years ...........................................: 2,968 1,514 454 1,000 1,465 1,503 35 to 44 years ...........................................: 6,255 4,198 874 1,183 2,961 3,294 45 to 49 years ...........................................: 6,107 4,543 831 733 3,040 3,067 50 to 54 years ...........................................: 9,839 7,314 1,345 1,180 4,911 4,928 55 to 59 years ...........................................: 11,513 8,732 1,559 1,222 5,890 5,623 60 to 64 years ...........................................: 11,869 9,303 1,538 1,028 5,958 5,911 65 to 69 years ...........................................: 10,683 8,893 1,125 665 5,564 5,119 70 years and over ........................................: 18,370 15,871 1,734 765 10,268 8,102 : Average age ..............................................: 60.1 61.4 58.1 52.3 60.7 59.4 : Spanish, Hispanic, or Latino origin (see text) .............: 9,815 7,274 1,080 1,461 5,771 4,044 : Race: : American Indian or Alaska Native .........................: 1,192 967 115 110 627 565 Asian ....................................................: 4,802 3,495 457 850 2,602 2,200 Black or African American ................................: 345 303 17 25 172 173 Native Hawaiian or Other Pacific Islander ................: 321 268 32 21 189 132 White ....................................................: 70,537 54,960 8,802 6,775 36,297 34,240 More than one race reported ..............................: 660 499 67 94 310 350 : Farms by number of persons living in : operator's household: : 1 person .................................................: 10,856 8,889 924 1,043 8,835 2,021 2 people .................................................: 39,377 31,457 4,841 3,079 18,174 21,203 3 people .................................................: 10,481 7,923 1,262 1,296 4,915 5,566 4 people .................................................: 9,895 7,112 1,424 1,359 4,764 5,131 5 or more people .........................................: 7,248 5,111 1,039 1,098 3,509 3,739 : Percent of operator's total : household income from farming: : Less than 25 percent .....................................: 53,231 45,078 4,146 4,007 27,457 25,774 25 to 49 percent .........................................: 6,732 4,797 1,057 878 3,595 3,137 50 to 74 percent .........................................: 8,038 5,271 1,576 1,191 4,090 3,948 75 to 99 percent .........................................: 5,290 3,128 1,358 804 2,623 2,667 100 percent ..............................................: 4,566 2,218 1,353 995 2,432 2,134 : Operator is a hired manager ...........................farms: 7,130 5,030 1,062 1,038 4,180 2,950 acres: 5,266,987 2,600,302 1,877,348 789,337 2,181,419 3,085,568 : Farms with- : Internet access ..........................................: 59,543 45,528 7,879 6,136 28,371 31,172 Dial-up service ........................................: 4,703 3,804 613 286 2,383 2,320 DSL service ............................................: 20,030 14,939 2,699 2,392 9,411 10,619 Cable modem service ....................................: 9,578 7,352 1,003 1,223 4,911 4,667 Fiber-optic service ....................................: 1,719 1,279 230 210 838 881 Mobile broadband plan for a computer : or cell phone .........................................: 12,454 8,986 2,022 1,446 5,496 6,958 Satellite service ......................................: 15,193 11,720 2,253 1,220 6,713 8,480 Broadband over Power Lines (BPL) .......................: 2,135 1,544 354 237 997 1,138 Other Internet service .................................: 2,805 2,245 336 224 1,120 1,685 : Farms by number of households sharing : in net income of operation: : 1 household ..............................................: 61,016 48,951 6,527 5,538 33,611 27,405 2 households .............................................: 11,316 8,000 1,830 1,486 4,333 6,983 3 households .............................................: 3,013 1,953 625 435 1,150 1,863 4 households .............................................: 1,351 884 270 197 602 749 5 or more households .....................................: 1,161 704 238 219 501 660 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 70. Summary by Tenure of Principal Operator and by Operators on Farm: 2012 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ : : Tenure of principal operator : Operators on farm : :--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : : : : : : More than one Item : Total : Full owners : Part owners : Tenants : One operator : operator ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ FARMS BY TYPE OF : ORGANIZATION (SEE TEXT) : : Operation with 50 percent or more ownership : interest held by operator and/or persons : related by blood, marriage, : or adoption ..........................................farms: 72,641 56,986 8,648 7,007 37,954 34,687 acres: 20,951,605 7,873,947 9,586,737 3,490,921 9,075,896 11,875,709 Limited Liability Corporation .........................farms: 4,453 3,332 570 551 2,155 2,298 acres: 2,772,951 1,318,519 1,031,291 423,141 1,172,819 1,600,132 : LEGAL STATUS FOR TAX PURPOSES (SEE TEXT) : : Family or individual .................................farms: 59,732 48,165 6,371 5,196 32,711 27,021 acres: 12,000,544 4,643,972 5,666,883 1,689,689 6,300,892 5,699,652 Partnership ...........................................farms: 8,984 6,074 1,610 1,300 3,296 5,688 acres: 6,934,159 2,366,822 3,170,172 1,397,165 1,849,384 5,084,775 Registered under state law ..........................farms: 7,283 4,850 1,338 1,095 2,665 4,618 acres: 5,929,592 2,139,777 2,541,908 1,247,907 1,605,501 4,324,091 : Corporation ...........................................farms: 6,361 3,843 1,306 1,212 2,770 3,591 acres: 5,359,671 2,297,850 2,123,302 938,519 1,995,717 3,363,954 Family held .........................................farms: 5,345 3,240 1,136 969 2,294 3,051 acres: 4,209,678 1,735,869 1,783,725 690,084 1,556,754 2,652,924 More than 10 stockholders .........................farms: 264 179 48 37 98 166 10 or less stockholders ...........................farms: 5,081 3,061 1,088 932 2,196 2,885 : Other than family held ..............................farms: 1,016 603 170 243 476 540 acres: 1,149,993 561,981 339,577 248,435 438,963 711,030 More than 10 stockholders .........................farms: 171 93 55 23 85 86 10 or less stockholders ...........................farms: 845 510 115 220 391 454 : Other-cooperative, estate : or trust, institutional, etc .........................farms: 2,780 2,410 203 167 1,420 1,360 acres: 1,274,627 772,896 349,758 151,973 460,388 814,239 : HIRED FARM LABOR : : Hired farm labor ......................................farms: 33,955 23,857 5,811 4,287 17,353 16,602 workers: 465,422 179,329 173,755 112,338 189,807 275,615 Workers by days worked: : 150 days or more ..................................farms: 20,018 12,499 4,449 3,070 9,591 10,427 workers: 205,851 71,143 81,067 53,641 74,591 131,260 Less than 150 days ................................farms: 22,621 16,120 3,757 2,744 11,649 10,972 workers: 259,571 108,186 92,688 58,697 115,216 144,355 Migrant farm labor on farms with hired : labor (see text) .....................................farms: 2,921 1,887 667 367 1,503 1,418 Migrant farm labor on farms reporting : only contract labor (see text) .......................farms: 755 620 75 60 440 315 : Unpaid workers (see text) .............................farms: 31,965 26,100 3,346 2,519 14,069 17,896 workers: 72,020 58,212 7,832 5,976 27,800 44,220 : FARMS BY SIZE : : 1 to 9 acres ...............................................: 24,637 21,972 460 2,205 13,229 11,408 10 to 49 acres .............................................: 25,811 22,207 1,668 1,936 13,549 12,262 50 to 69 acres .............................................: 3,700 2,811 526 363 1,955 1,745 70 to 99 acres .............................................: 3,601 2,641 601 359 1,947 1,654 100 to 139 acres ...........................................: 3,222 2,250 597 375 1,739 1,483 140 to 179 acres ...........................................: 2,533 1,779 490 264 1,221 1,312 180 to 219 acres ...........................................: 1,477 882 412 183 773 704 220 to 259 acres ...........................................: 1,189 714 310 165 604 585 260 to 499 acres ...........................................: 3,983 2,151 1,174 658 1,956 2,027 500 to 999 acres ...........................................: 3,230 1,526 1,169 535 1,412 1,818 1,000 to 1,999 acres .......................................: 2,040 761 901 378 840 1,200 2,000 acres or more ........................................: 2,434 798 1,182 454 972 1,462 : FARMS BY NORTH AMERICAN : INDUSTRY CLASSIFICATION : SYSTEM (NAICS) : : Oilseed and grain farming (1111) ...........................: 2,296 889 646 761 1,198 1,098 Vegetable and melon farming (1112) .........................: 4,191 2,236 617 1,338 1,897 2,294 Fruit and tree nut farming (1113) ..........................: 35,945 31,200 2,990 1,755 20,249 15,696 Greenhouse, nursery, and floriculture : production (1114) .........................................: 3,390 2,306 313 771 1,815 1,575 Other crop farming (1119) ..................................: 5,815 4,052 1,089 674 3,234 2,581 Tobacco farming (11191) ..................................: - - - - - - Cotton farming (11192) ...................................: 194 54 93 47 104 90 Sugarcane farming, hay farming, and all : other crop farming (11193,11194,11199) ..................: 5,621 3,998 996 627 3,130 2,491 Beef cattle ranching and farming (112111) ..................: 11,767 8,318 2,274 1,175 5,584 6,183 Cattle feedlots (112112) ...................................: 156 106 38 12 97 59 Dairy cattle and milk production (11212) ...................: 1,594 787 507 300 671 923 Hog and pig farming (1122) .................................: 446 377 37 32 172 274 Poultry and egg production (1123) ..........................: 1,202 1,059 68 75 453 749 Sheep and goat farming (1124) ..............................: 3,246 2,650 296 300 1,374 1,872 Animal aquaculture and other animal : production (1125, 1129) ...................................: 7,809 6,512 615 682 3,453 4,356 : LIVESTOCK : : Cattle and calves inventory ...........................farms: 16,764 11,454 3,591 1,719 7,503 9,261 number: 5,370,531 2,409,484 2,235,922 725,125 2,158,456 3,212,075 Farms with- : 1 to 9 .................................................: 7,396 6,239 695 462 3,251 4,145 10 to 49 ...............................................: 4,687 3,246 998 443 2,209 2,478 50 to 99 ...............................................: 1,128 566 391 171 540 588 100 to 199 .............................................: 914 392 385 137 423 491 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 70. Summary by Tenure of Principal Operator and by Operators on Farm: 2012 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ : : Tenure of principal operator : Operators on farm : :--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : : : : : : More than one Item : Total : Full owners : Part owners : Tenants : One operator : operator ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ LIVESTOCK - Con. : : Cattle and calves inventory - Con. : Farms with- - Con. : : 200 to 499 .............................................: 896 298 380 218 382 514 500 or more ............................................: 1,743 713 742 288 698 1,045 : Cows and heifers that calved ........................farms: 12,566 8,265 2,952 1,349 5,615 6,951 number: 2,399,249 1,139,806 937,898 321,545 972,951 1,426,298 : Beef cows .........................................farms: 10,925 7,411 2,473 1,041 4,905 6,020 number: 583,594 214,322 290,893 78,379 244,191 339,403 Farms with- : 1 to 9 .............................................: 6,173 5,020 732 421 2,713 3,460 10 to 49 ...........................................: 2,704 1,631 766 307 1,307 1,397 50 to 99 ...........................................: 801 341 333 127 383 418 100 to 199 .........................................: 542 194 263 85 225 317 200 to 499 .........................................: 479 154 253 72 194 285 500 or more ........................................: 226 71 126 29 83 143 Milk cows .........................................farms: 1,931 1,037 563 331 834 1,097 number: 1,815,655 925,484 647,005 243,166 728,760 1,086,895 Farms with- : 1 to 9 .............................................: 457 362 56 39 221 236 10 to 49 ...........................................: 62 48 12 2 26 36 50 to 99 ...........................................: 52 26 7 19 30 22 100 to 199 .........................................: 110 40 37 33 54 56 200 to 499 .........................................: 258 83 85 90 111 147 500 or more ........................................: 992 478 366 148 392 600 : Other cattle (see text) .............................farms: 13,380 8,699 3,213 1,468 5,801 7,579 number: 2,971,282 1,269,678 1,298,024 403,580 1,185,505 1,785,777 : Cattle and calves sold ................................farms: 12,594 7,939 3,204 1,451 5,639 6,955 number: 3,671,078 1,659,008 1,518,242 493,828 1,659,324 2,011,754 $1,000: 3,259,325 1,324,925 1,468,257 466,142 1,482,072 1,777,253 Calves weighing less than 500 pounds ................farms: 5,347 3,268 1,421 658 2,308 3,039 number: 1,252,820 718,214 384,659 149,947 576,320 676,500 : Cattle, including calves weighing : 500 pounds or more .................................farms: 11,228 6,950 2,965 1,313 5,019 6,209 number: 2,418,258 940,794 1,133,583 343,881 1,083,004 1,335,254 Cattle on feed (see text) .........................farms: 262 148 94 20 123 139 number: 712,651 (D) 404,052 (D) 381,341 331,310 : Hogs and pigs inventory ...............................farms: 1,437 1,164 157 116 507 930 number: 111,893 101,481 7,501 2,911 20,226 91,667 Farms with- : 1 to 24 ................................................: 1,228 1,021 124 83 410 818 25 to 49 ...............................................: 95 68 11 16 40 55 50 to 99 ...............................................: 52 37 9 6 36 16 100 to 199 .............................................: 39 23 6 10 10 29 200 to 499 .............................................: 11 6 4 1 6 5 500 or more ............................................: 12 9 3 - 5 7 : Used or to be used for breeding .....................farms: 732 583 70 79 264 468 number: 8,322 5,825 (D) (D) 3,961 4,361 Other hogs and pigs .................................farms: 1,179 947 140 92 401 778 number: 103,571 95,656 (D) (D) 16,265 87,306 : Hogs and pigs sold ....................................farms: 1,163 902 148 113 400 763 number: 290,488 216,104 67,924 6,460 32,446 258,042 $1,000: 51,526 37,807 12,798 920 5,478 46,048 : Sheep and lambs inventory (see text) ..................farms: 4,224 3,351 525 348 1,747 2,477 number: 668,517 233,883 300,751 133,883 297,717 370,800 Ewes 1 year old or older ............................farms: 3,222 2,523 432 267 1,340 1,882 number: 306,987 114,628 122,617 69,742 149,108 157,879 Sheep and lambs sold ..................................farms: 2,593 1,917 422 254 1,083 1,510 number: 440,092 130,779 216,918 92,395 182,582 257,510 : Total horses and ponies inventory .....................farms: 14,932 11,657 2,130 1,145 6,212 8,720 number: 142,555 105,570 21,755 15,230 56,385 86,170 Owned horses and ponies : inventory ..........................................farms: 14,353 11,153 2,093 1,107 5,955 8,398 number: 107,774 79,518 19,025 9,231 42,085 65,689 Owned horses and ponies sold ..........................farms: 2,959 2,191 473 295 1,245 1,714 number: 10,452 7,312 2,095 1,045 4,540 5,912 : Goats, all inventory ..................................farms: 4,474 3,712 388 374 1,691 2,783 number: 140,042 83,750 35,760 20,532 63,892 76,150 Goats, all sold .......................................farms: 2,133 1,719 219 195 785 1,348 number: 62,844 34,447 21,102 7,295 29,942 32,902 : POULTRY : : Layers inventory (see text) ...........................farms: 6,744 5,768 606 370 2,347 4,397 number: 19,000,779 11,994,215 5,207,758 1,798,806 7,610,436 11,390,343 Farms with- : 1 to 399 ...............................................: 6,653 5,709 594 350 2,321 4,332 400 to 3,199 ...........................................: 39 24 5 10 11 28 3,200 to 9,999 .........................................: 4 2 - 2 2 2 10,000 to 19,999 .......................................: 4 4 - - 1 3 20,000 to 49,999 .......................................: 5 3 - 2 1 4 50,000 to 99,999 .......................................: 8 5 2 1 2 6 100,000 or more ........................................: 31 21 5 5 9 22 : Pullets for laying flock replacement : inventory ............................................farms: 873 707 97 69 285 588 number: 4,633,558 3,223,692 1,017,826 392,040 1,903,390 2,730,168 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 70. Summary by Tenure of Principal Operator and by Operators on Farm: 2012 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ : : Tenure of principal operator : Operators on farm : :--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : : : : : : More than one Item : Total : Full owners : Part owners : Tenants : One operator : operator ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ POULTRY - Con. : : Layers sold (see text) ................................farms: 831 671 85 75 296 535 number: 8,195,242 5,953,941 1,304,671 936,630 2,599,468 5,595,774 : Pullets for laying flock replacement : sold .................................................farms: 86 66 9 11 27 59 number: 3,508,788 3,391,020 85,486 32,282 (D) (D) : Broilers and other meat-type chickens : sold .................................................farms: 421 323 43 55 142 279 number: 273,277,272 226,967,249 21,096,855 25,213,168 17,030,259 256,247,013 Farms with- : 1 to 1,999 .............................................: 336 261 34 41 106 230 2,000 to 59,999 ........................................: 26 21 1 4 11 15 60,000 to 99,999 .......................................: - - - - - - 100,000 or more ........................................: 59 41 8 10 25 34 : Turkeys inventory (see text) ..........................farms: 682 579 58 45 246 436 number: 4,532,307 2,519,604 2,012,168 535 1,691,327 2,840,980 Turkeys sold (see text) ...............................farms: 302 233 33 36 106 196 number: 15,384,675 7,654,428 7,602,387 127,860 6,311,467 9,073,208 : CROPS HARVESTED : : Barley for grain ......................................farms: 264 88 117 59 136 128 acres: 81,954 10,739 33,787 37,428 24,063 57,891 bushels: 5,312,595 575,204 2,063,646 2,673,745 1,320,470 3,992,125 Irrigated ...........................................farms: 144 38 66 40 67 77 acres: 44,819 3,012 10,916 30,891 12,643 32,176 Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..........................................: 60 38 12 10 35 25 25 to 99 acres .........................................: 59 24 25 10 30 29 100 to 249 acres .......................................: 68 17 39 12 43 25 250 to 499 acres .......................................: 30 4 20 6 12 18 500 acres or more ......................................: 47 5 21 21 16 31 : Corn for grain ........................................farms: 733 266 306 161 332 401 acres: 180,672 51,756 81,116 47,800 70,930 109,742 bushels: 31,922,610 8,559,203 15,345,661 8,017,746 12,144,329 19,778,281 Irrigated ...........................................farms: 733 266 306 161 332 401 acres: 175,863 49,237 79,769 46,857 69,376 106,487 Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..........................................: 163 101 32 30 64 99 25 to 99 acres .........................................: 211 76 94 41 104 107 100 to 249 acres .......................................: 152 44 75 33 73 79 250 to 499 acres .......................................: 103 21 55 27 51 52 500 acres or more ......................................: 104 24 50 30 40 64 : Corn for silage or greenchop ..........................farms: 1,895 838 812 245 862 1,033 acres: 487,570 192,065 244,509 50,996 173,510 314,060 tons: 12,575,973 4,868,942 6,342,359 1,364,672 4,435,212 8,140,761 Irrigated ...........................................farms: 1,802 792 779 231 814 988 acres: 461,898 177,475 235,149 49,274 163,838 298,060 Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..........................................: 249 151 60 38 143 106 25 to 99 acres .........................................: 538 221 235 82 273 265 100 to 249 acres .......................................: 512 222 222 68 238 274 250 to 499 acres .......................................: 329 134 160 35 120 209 500 acres or more ......................................: 267 110 135 22 88 179 : Cotton, all ...........................................farms: 630 170 333 127 281 349 acres: 367,766 130,134 187,994 49,638 85,960 281,806 bales: 1,201,860 393,080 641,600 167,180 286,354 915,506 Irrigated ...........................................farms: 630 170 333 127 281 349 acres: 367,766 130,134 187,994 49,638 85,960 281,806 Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..........................................: 31 14 6 11 21 10 25 to 99 acres .........................................: 102 29 49 24 63 39 100 to 249 acres .......................................: 180 61 89 30 86 94 250 to 499 acres .......................................: 153 34 86 33 63 90 500 acres or more ......................................: 164 32 103 29 48 116 : Dry edible beans, excluding limas .....................farms: 308 83 111 114 137 171 acres: 39,511 7,585 15,968 15,958 12,937 26,574 cwt: 955,995 166,760 393,954 395,281 309,947 646,048 Irrigated ...........................................farms: 269 73 96 100 112 157 acres: 36,866 6,927 14,182 15,757 11,636 25,230 Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..........................................: 95 34 21 40 37 58 25 to 99 acres .........................................: 93 25 42 26 51 42 100 to 249 acres .......................................: 69 17 29 23 35 34 250 to 499 acres .......................................: 38 5 13 20 14 24 500 acres or more ......................................: 13 2 6 5 - 13 : Oats for grain ........................................farms: 240 113 86 41 133 107 acres: 25,065 7,146 15,433 2,486 11,664 13,401 bushels: 2,246,420 707,085 1,346,975 192,360 1,054,828 1,191,592 Irrigated ...........................................farms: 145 66 51 28 71 74 acres: 15,901 5,421 9,196 1,284 7,321 8,580 Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..........................................: 86 60 7 19 48 38 25 to 99 acres .........................................: 75 31 32 12 40 35 100 to 249 acres .......................................: 54 15 31 8 35 19 250 to 499 acres .......................................: 16 5 9 2 9 7 500 acres or more ......................................: 9 2 7 - 1 8 : Peanuts for nuts ......................................farms: 15 5 - 10 - 15 acres: 27 7 - 20 - 27 pounds: 84,093 21,803 - 62,290 - 84,093 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 70. Summary by Tenure of Principal Operator and by Operators on Farm: 2012 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ : : Tenure of principal operator : Operators on farm : :--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : : : : : : More than one Item : Total : Full owners : Part owners : Tenants : One operator : operator ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ CROPS HARVESTED - Con. : : Peanuts for nuts - Con. : : Irrigated ...........................................farms: 15 5 - 10 - 15 acres: 27 7 - 20 - 27 Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..........................................: 15 5 - 10 - 15 25 to 99 acres .........................................: - - - - - - 100 to 249 acres .......................................: - - - - - - 250 to 499 acres .......................................: - - - - - - 500 acres or more ......................................: - - - - - - : Rice ..................................................farms: 1,392 398 433 561 596 796 acres: 561,968 122,619 224,509 214,840 169,737 392,231 cwt: 46,692,580 10,242,206 18,574,300 17,876,074 14,072,223 32,620,357 Irrigated ...........................................farms: 1,392 398 433 561 596 796 acres: 561,968 122,619 224,509 214,840 169,737 392,231 Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..........................................: 49 27 14 8 25 24 25 to 99 acres .........................................: 232 108 35 89 124 108 100 to 249 acres .......................................: 385 116 82 187 213 172 250 to 499 acres .......................................: 366 95 144 127 150 216 500 acres or more ......................................: 360 52 158 150 84 276 : Sorghum for grain .....................................farms: 74 34 31 9 24 50 acres: 13,908 7,586 5,610 712 3,263 10,645 bushels: 1,263,924 725,921 486,463 51,540 293,045 970,879 Irrigated ...........................................farms: 62 27 28 7 20 42 acres: 10,997 5,309 (D) (D) 1,786 9,211 Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..........................................: 17 13 2 2 8 9 25 to 99 acres .........................................: 18 3 11 4 7 11 100 to 249 acres .......................................: 19 6 10 3 5 14 250 to 499 acres .......................................: 13 7 6 - 2 11 500 acres or more ......................................: 7 5 2 - 2 5 : Soybeans for beans ....................................farms: 2 1 1 - 2 - acres: (D) (D) (D) - (D) - bushels: (D) (D) (D) - (D) - Irrigated ...........................................farms: 1 - 1 - 1 - acres: (D) - (D) - (D) - Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..........................................: 1 - 1 - 1 - 25 to 99 acres .........................................: - - - - - - 100 to 249 acres .......................................: 1 1 - - 1 - 250 to 499 acres .......................................: - - - - - - 500 acres or more ......................................: - - - - - - : Sugarbeets for sugar ..................................farms: 58 11 30 17 37 21 acres: 27,193 4,702 (D) (D) (D) (D) tons: 1,179,753 215,153 715,617 248,983 836,105 343,648 Irrigated ...........................................farms: 58 11 30 17 37 21 acres: 26,567 4,702 15,879 5,986 18,473 8,094 : Sunflower seed, all ...................................farms: 197 40 82 75 87 110 acres: 49,749 6,262 27,895 15,592 17,153 32,596 pounds: 68,792,639 10,402,989 35,720,914 22,668,736 23,833,731 44,958,908 Irrigated ...........................................farms: 152 28 59 65 70 82 acres: 34,815 5,750 16,878 12,187 9,920 24,895 Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..........................................: 42 15 8 19 19 23 25 to 99 acres .........................................: 52 12 26 14 33 19 100 to 249 acres .......................................: 43 6 11 26 15 28 250 to 499 acres .......................................: 31 3 21 7 12 19 500 acres or more ......................................: 29 4 16 9 8 21 : Wheat for grain, all ..................................farms: 1,503 506 676 321 719 784 acres: 491,846 123,036 269,136 99,674 194,349 297,497 bushels: 42,955,324 10,864,955 23,440,912 8,649,457 16,153,834 26,801,490 Irrigated ...........................................farms: 1,123 348 527 248 505 618 acres: 382,958 93,189 210,202 79,567 136,453 246,505 Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..........................................: 164 114 37 13 107 57 25 to 99 acres .........................................: 427 153 186 88 216 211 100 to 249 acres .......................................: 430 122 194 114 198 232 250 to 499 acres .......................................: 220 56 109 55 86 134 500 acres or more ......................................: 262 61 150 51 112 150 : Forage-land used for all hay and all : haylage, grass silage, and : greenchop (see text) .................................farms: 7,903 4,397 2,550 956 3,883 4,020 acres: 1,670,027 549,912 836,066 284,049 691,192 978,835 tons, dry: 9,363,421 2,882,455 4,792,767 1,688,199 3,636,116 5,727,305 Irrigated ...........................................farms: 5,498 2,832 1,953 713 2,615 2,883 acres: 1,346,666 426,698 688,597 231,371 529,977 816,689 Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..........................................: 2,621 2,099 367 155 1,362 1,259 25 to 99 acres .........................................: 2,274 1,221 746 307 1,198 1,076 100 to 249 acres .......................................: 1,435 575 636 224 692 743 250 to 499 acres .......................................: 728 265 349 114 294 434 500 acres or more ......................................: 845 237 452 156 337 508 : Alfalfa hay .........................................farms: 3,243 1,489 1,310 444 1,503 1,740 acres: 874,137 283,380 449,993 140,764 347,018 527,119 tons, dry: 5,607,210 1,691,184 2,944,807 971,219 2,212,867 3,394,343 Irrigated .........................................farms: 3,035 1,353 1,260 422 1,397 1,638 acres: 831,858 263,348 433,232 135,278 327,401 504,457 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 70. Summary by Tenure of Principal Operator and by Operators on Farm: 2012 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ : : Tenure of principal operator : Operators on farm : :--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : : : : : : More than one Item : Total : Full owners : Part owners : Tenants : One operator : operator ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ CROPS HARVESTED - Con. : : Forage-land used for all hay and all : haylage, grass silage, and : greenchop (see text) - Con. : : Other tame hay ......................................farms: 1,699 987 519 193 816 883 acres: 212,238 51,296 117,797 43,145 107,273 104,965 tons, dry: 821,999 139,738 490,002 192,259 353,990 468,009 Irrigated .........................................farms: 1,217 694 376 147 562 655 acres: 155,054 31,265 89,830 33,959 72,411 82,643 : Field and grass seed crops, all .......................farms: 209 68 88 53 108 101 acres: 71,921 17,079 39,953 14,889 40,513 31,408 Irrigated ...........................................farms: 202 66 85 51 103 99 acres: 71,053 (D) 39,233 (D) (D) (D) : Land in vegetables (see text) .........................farms: 6,055 3,385 1,012 1,658 2,666 3,389 acres: 985,735 169,203 515,234 301,298 271,572 714,163 Irrigated ...........................................farms: 6,055 3,385 1,012 1,658 2,666 3,389 acres: 985,731 169,199 515,234 301,298 271,568 714,163 Farms by acres harvested: : 0.1 to 4.9 acres .......................................: 3,667 2,698 200 769 1,644 2,023 5.0 to 24.9 acres ......................................: 948 416 155 377 440 508 25.0 to 99.9 acres .....................................: 394 81 155 158 210 184 100.0 to 249.9 acres ...................................: 312 81 132 99 127 185 250.0 acres or more ....................................: 734 109 370 255 245 489 : Beans, snap .........................................farms: 652 366 109 177 250 402 acres: 9,419 448 5,756 3,215 1,653 7,766 Harvested for processing ..........................farms: 56 14 24 18 17 39 acres: 3,645 2 3,200 442 469 3,175 : Peas, green .........................................farms: 138 62 16 60 80 58 acres: 821 205 335 282 373 448 Harvested for processing ..........................farms: - - - - - - acres: - - - - - - Potatoes ............................................farms: 441 242 92 107 170 271 acres: 42,660 4,597 28,831 9,232 7,742 34,917 Harvested for processing ..........................farms: 36 8 15 13 11 25 acres: 14,436 316 9,787 4,333 2,088 12,348 Farms by acres harvested: : 0.1 to 4.9 acres .....................................: 345 218 44 83 138 207 5.0 to 24.9 acres ....................................: 17 8 4 5 4 13 25.0 to 99.9 acres ...................................: 20 4 11 5 10 10 100.0 to 249.9 acres .................................: 16 5 7 4 7 9 250.0 acres or more ..................................: 43 7 26 10 11 32 : Sweet corn ..........................................farms: 441 262 90 89 175 266 acres: 32,667 3,322 24,599 4,746 5,481 27,186 Harvested for processing ..........................farms: 12 4 5 3 - 12 acres: 561 (D) (D) 2 - 561 Sweet potatoes ......................................farms: 188 61 56 71 112 76 acres: 18,189 538 14,610 3,041 6,120 12,069 Harvested for processing ..........................farms: 27 2 18 7 11 16 acres: 2,571 (D) 1,856 (D) 835 1,736 : Tomatoes in the open ................................farms: 3,176 1,941 500 735 1,323 1,853 acres: 295,247 73,236 162,236 59,775 66,607 228,640 Harvested for processing ..........................farms: 631 250 220 161 198 433 acres: 256,051 65,646 140,797 49,608 51,820 204,231 : Land in orchards ......................................farms: 38,098 32,745 3,721 1,632 21,099 16,999 acres: 3,138,943 1,861,778 1,009,041 268,124 1,462,727 1,676,216 Irrigated ...........................................farms: 34,580 29,573 3,520 1,487 19,011 15,569 acres: 3,072,245 1,812,562 995,380 264,303 1,426,731 1,645,514 Farms by bearing and nonbearing acres: : 0.1 to 4.9 acres .......................................: 13,263 12,712 276 275 7,342 5,921 5.0 to 24.9 acres ......................................: 12,094 11,060 615 419 7,077 5,017 25.0 to 99.9 acres .....................................: 7,356 5,803 1,049 504 4,093 3,263 100.0 to 249.9 acres ...................................: 2,969 1,871 879 219 1,549 1,420 250.0 acres or more ....................................: 2,416 1,299 902 215 1,038 1,378 : Apples ..............................................farms: 2,527 2,208 205 114 1,152 1,375 bearing and nonbearing acres: 18,205 10,359 6,515 1,332 8,049 10,156 : Grapes ..............................................farms: 11,462 9,542 1,354 566 6,076 5,386 bearing and nonbearing acres: 940,177 517,423 349,671 73,083 422,564 517,614 : Peaches, all ........................................farms: 2,201 1,712 369 120 999 1,202 bearing and nonbearing acres: 51,948 20,607 27,556 3,785 21,805 30,143 : Citrus fruit, all ...................................farms: 7,283 6,698 374 211 4,072 3,211 bearing and nonbearing acres: 293,387 233,882 44,221 15,285 148,470 144,917 : Almonds .............................................farms: 6,841 5,162 1,263 416 3,772 3,069 bearing and nonbearing acres: 935,804 521,803 (D) (D) 428,948 506,856 : Pecans .............................................farms: 222 189 21 12 119 103 bearing and nonbearing acres: 3,309 1,463 1,186 660 1,133 2,176 : Walnuts, English ....................................farms: 5,712 4,490 903 319 3,077 2,635 bearing and nonbearing acres: 329,112 178,928 113,645 36,539 157,055 172,056 : Land in berries (see text) ............................farms: 1,985 1,205 206 574 877 1,108 acres: 52,626 7,595 12,793 32,238 26,541 26,085 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 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. Table 1. County Summary Highlights: 2012 [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : California : Alameda : Alpine : Amador : Butte : Calaveras : Colusa ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Farms ....................................................number: 77,857 452 3 461 2,056 663 782 Land in farms .............................................acres: 25,569,001 177,798 (D) 155,187 381,019 212,140 453,061 Average size of farm ..................................acres: 328 393 (D) 337 185 320 579 Median size of farm ...................................acres: 20 20 120 50 20 26 160 : Estimated market value of land and buildings: : Average per farm ....................................dollars: 2,061,792 2,170,266 1,800,000 1,324,402 1,408,200 1,043,832 3,146,342 Average per acre ....................................dollars: 6,278 5,517 4,289 3,934 7,599 3,262 5,431 : Estimated market value of all machinery and : equipment ...............................................$1,000: 9,709,545 21,376 61 23,659 278,776 27,008 234,816 Average per farm ....................................dollars: 124,720 47,291 20,333 51,320 135,591 40,737 300,276 : Farms by size: : 1 to 9 acres .................................................: 24,637 168 - 68 635 145 63 10 to 49 acres ...............................................: 25,811 104 - 152 738 253 152 50 to 179 acres ..............................................: 13,056 86 2 143 322 143 188 180 to 499 acres .............................................: 6,649 39 - 46 217 56 199 500 to 999 acres .............................................: 3,230 18 - 27 84 25 93 1,000 acres or more ..........................................: 4,474 37 1 25 60 41 87 : Total cropland ............................................farms: 57,731 228 3 236 1,606 280 711 acres: 9,591,783 20,347 563 16,022 227,279 6,059 285,689 Harvested cropland ......................................farms: 53,372 194 3 217 1,510 235 654 acres: 8,007,461 9,901 (D) 8,521 203,573 4,165 263,675 : Irrigated land ............................................farms: 53,546 159 3 236 1,547 224 665 acres: 7,861,964 8,893 239 11,321 199,662 4,523 260,859 : Market value of agricultural products sold (see text) ....$1,000: 42,627,472 57,522 265 31,968 541,274 26,004 577,313 Average per farm ....................................dollars: 547,510 127,261 88,444 69,345 263,265 39,222 738,251 : Crops, including nursery and greenhouse crops ..........$1,000: 30,366,898 47,557 (D) 21,767 526,847 11,835 569,922 Livestock, poultry, and their products .................$1,000: 12,260,574 9,965 (D) 10,201 14,426 14,169 7,390 : Farms by value of sales: : Less than $2,500 .............................................: 19,986 189 - 140 564 291 102 $2,500 to $4,999 .............................................: 5,736 31 - 47 98 47 18 $5,000 to $9,999 .............................................: 7,718 39 - 45 167 85 31 $10,000 to $24,999 ...........................................: 10,137 79 - 64 312 109 50 $25,000 to $49,999 ...........................................: 7,043 32 2 46 205 63 58 $50,000 to $99,999 ...........................................: 6,679 38 - 48 172 17 61 $100,000 or more .............................................: 20,558 44 1 71 538 51 462 : Government payments .......................................farms: 7,593 16 - 13 281 4 379 $1,000: 146,919 49 - 37 9,386 8 13,629 Total income from farm-related sources, : gross before taxes and expenses (see text) ...............farms: 23,685 115 2 96 719 140 333 $1,000: 1,204,560 4,031 (D) 2,539 28,296 3,191 21,293 : Total farm production expenses ...........................$1,000: 35,455,667 43,044 257 27,281 365,905 26,174 505,021 Average per farm ....................................dollars: 455,395 95,229 85,533 59,179 177,969 39,478 645,807 : Net cash farm income of operation (see text) ..............farms: 77,857 452 3 461 2,056 663 782 $1,000: 8,523,285 18,557 (D) 7,262 213,050 3,029 107,214 Average per farm ....................................dollars: 109,474 41,056 (D) 15,753 103,624 4,568 137,103 : Principal operator by primary occupation: : Farming ................................................number: 42,469 220 - 227 1,222 309 482 Other ..................................................number: 35,388 232 3 234 834 354 300 : Principal operator by days worked off farm: : Any ....................................................number: 46,546 266 3 279 1,203 420 455 200 days or more .....................................number: 27,947 180 3 155 639 246 278 : Livestock and poultry: : Cattle and calves inventory .............................farms: 16,764 157 1 183 377 304 84 number: 5,370,531 16,613 (D) 14,736 14,282 14,170 14,757 Beef cows .............................................farms: 10,925 148 1 146 262 214 66 number: 583,594 (D) (D) (D) 7,346 7,569 8,358 Milk cows .............................................farms: 1,931 2 - 2 21 3 8 number: 1,815,655 (D) - (D) 427 3 102 Cattle and calves sold ..................................farms: 12,594 128 1 148 215 233 63 number: 3,671,078 9,421 (D) 8,243 6,943 8,458 6,542 Hogs and pigs inventory .................................farms: 1,437 8 - 9 45 19 13 number: 111,893 25 - 15 3,202 104 586 Hogs and pigs sold ......................................farms: 1,163 6 - 5 35 22 8 number: 290,488 43 - 7 3,768 165 894 Sheep and lambs inventory ...............................farms: 4,224 50 - 34 135 65 29 number: 668,517 1,199 - 656 3,923 1,572 1,890 Layers inventory (see text) .............................farms: 6,744 55 1 57 166 105 23 number: 19,000,779 798 (D) 3,806 4,963 2,504 250 Broilers and other meat-type chickens sold ..............farms: 421 4 - 6 18 6 - number: 273,277,272 60 - 620 6,428 (D) - : Selected crops harvested: : Corn for grain ..........................................farms: 733 - - 1 4 - 27 acres: 180,672 - - (D) 499 - 5,799 bushels: 31,922,610 - - (D) 107,291 - 1,173,253 Corn for silage or greenchop ............................farms: 1,895 - - 1 5 - - acres: 487,570 - - (D) 300 - - tons: 12,575,973 - - (D) 5,635 - - Wheat for grain, all ....................................farms: 1,503 1 - - 17 - 57 acres: 491,846 (D) - - 1,782 - 16,555 bushels: 42,955,324 (D) - - 136,176 - 1,080,820 Winter wheat for grain ................................farms: 1,020 1 - - 16 - 53 acres: 316,109 (D) - - (D) - 16,094 bushels: 26,032,499 (D) - - (D) - 1,053,551 Spring wheat for grain ................................farms: 179 - - - 1 - 4 acres: 40,197 - - - (D) - 461 bushels: 3,393,174 - - - (D) - 27,269 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 1. County Summary Highlights: 2012 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Contra Costa : Del Norte : El Dorado : Fresno : Glenn : Humboldt : Imperial ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Farms ....................................................number: 602 121 1,358 5,683 1,311 930 421 Land in farms .............................................acres: 127,670 (D) 128,365 1,721,202 668,784 593,597 515,783 Average size of farm ..................................acres: 212 (D) 95 303 510 638 1,225 Median size of farm ...................................acres: 10 20 12 37 45 40 255 : Estimated market value of land and buildings: : Average per farm ....................................dollars: 1,786,848 1,481,355 777,782 2,509,484 2,342,959 1,649,521 8,577,864 Average per acre ....................................dollars: 8,425 8,716 8,228 8,286 4,593 2,584 7,002 : Estimated market value of all machinery and : equipment ...............................................$1,000: 48,533 13,995 41,469 917,856 252,007 53,647 313,773 Average per farm ....................................dollars: 80,619 118,602 30,537 161,509 192,225 57,685 745,303 : Farms by size: : 1 to 9 acres .................................................: 285 33 435 969 225 253 53 10 to 49 acres ...............................................: 156 39 630 2,425 447 249 72 50 to 179 acres ..............................................: 80 28 204 1,204 273 165 63 180 to 499 acres .............................................: 33 13 48 447 165 119 62 500 to 999 acres .............................................: 14 4 21 296 101 37 37 1,000 acres or more ..........................................: 34 4 20 342 100 107 134 : Total cropland ............................................farms: 365 63 828 4,816 1,058 575 361 acres: 46,531 8,609 11,130 1,153,351 274,310 20,936 487,892 Harvested cropland ......................................farms: 330 53 769 4,480 999 547 337 acres: 33,420 6,321 5,898 992,479 244,761 12,253 466,877 : Irrigated land ............................................farms: 289 53 779 4,521 1,095 431 348 acres: 27,272 9,229 6,811 968,727 242,932 17,051 455,033 : Market value of agricultural products sold (see text) ....$1,000: 89,358 35,651 30,507 4,973,041 637,363 203,260 1,888,639 Average per farm ....................................dollars: 148,436 294,639 22,465 875,073 486,165 218,559 4,486,079 : Crops, including nursery and greenhouse crops ..........$1,000: 75,703 16,561 24,340 3,700,093 509,107 (D) 1,310,273 Livestock, poultry, and their products .................$1,000: 13,655 19,091 6,167 1,272,948 128,256 (D) 578,366 : Farms by value of sales: : Less than $2,500 .............................................: 236 58 623 1,058 241 295 53 $2,500 to $4,999 .............................................: 46 10 160 228 86 100 4 $5,000 to $9,999 .............................................: 60 11 137 311 85 113 9 $10,000 to $24,999 ...........................................: 83 20 179 493 152 132 26 $25,000 to $49,999 ...........................................: 60 1 110 496 125 81 32 $50,000 to $99,999 ...........................................: 38 7 72 715 124 53 16 $100,000 or more .............................................: 79 14 77 2,382 498 156 281 : Government payments .......................................farms: 34 15 41 510 465 82 124 $1,000: 232 96 237 10,149 13,136 1,242 2,788 Total income from farm-related sources, : gross before taxes and expenses (see text) ...............farms: 162 49 262 1,850 506 287 187 $1,000: 5,088 454 2,669 99,266 21,411 17,061 20,810 : Total farm production expenses ...........................$1,000: 80,019 31,190 38,139 4,003,281 493,164 181,245 1,650,321 Average per farm ....................................dollars: 132,922 257,771 28,084 704,431 376,174 194,887 3,920,003 : Net cash farm income of operation (see text) ..............farms: 602 121 1,358 5,683 1,311 930 421 $1,000: 14,659 5,011 -4,724 1,079,176 178,745 40,319 261,916 Average per farm ....................................dollars: 24,351 41,409 -3,479 189,896 136,343 43,353 622,127 : Principal operator by primary occupation: : Farming ................................................number: 313 70 707 3,389 824 522 292 Other ..................................................number: 289 51 651 2,294 487 408 129 : Principal operator by days worked off farm: : Any ....................................................number: 386 62 857 3,425 704 559 229 200 days or more .....................................number: 221 45 408 2,116 404 268 134 : Livestock and poultry: : Cattle and calves inventory .............................farms: 123 70 328 751 294 449 60 number: 22,673 14,654 8,134 397,919 62,329 56,524 376,513 Beef cows .............................................farms: 81 50 226 453 189 294 19 number: 9,519 748 3,369 15,097 12,464 14,071 (D) Milk cows .............................................farms: 3 15 19 91 34 77 1 number: 12 6,931 27 112,207 20,463 16,431 (D) Cattle and calves sold ..................................farms: 82 52 189 510 249 341 48 number: 10,680 4,581 4,314 388,889 41,139 26,192 356,176 Hogs and pigs inventory .................................farms: 17 17 55 49 15 25 10 number: 56 85 300 2,910 308 440 (D) Hogs and pigs sold ......................................farms: 17 5 44 43 15 20 2 number: 92 46 253 18,791 555 115 (D) Sheep and lambs inventory ...............................farms: 48 15 143 186 60 92 8 number: 571 223 1,257 67,212 3,219 4,281 56,723 Layers inventory (see text) .............................farms: 53 54 261 199 73 151 12 number: 3,256 1,141 5,506 6,261 1,531 3,069 196 Broilers and other meat-type chickens sold ..............farms: 1 1 12 19 4 11 - number: (D) (D) 380 92,538,427 300 3,450 - : Selected crops harvested: : Corn for grain ..........................................farms: 4 - 10 29 43 9 4 acres: 1,851 - 18 4,183 7,264 9 580 bushels: 271,181 - 648 816,638 1,570,387 296 95,496 Corn for silage or greenchop ............................farms: 5 - 2 130 42 7 2 acres: 1,342 - (D) 32,438 7,152 227 (D) tons: 28,481 - (D) 795,828 193,219 4,546 (D) Wheat for grain, all ....................................farms: 6 - - 166 42 3 160 acres: 4,439 - - 63,910 6,615 (D) 86,635 bushels: 664,281 - - 5,833,793 382,004 (D) 8,880,319 Winter wheat for grain ................................farms: 4 - - 94 36 2 10 acres: (D) - - 36,912 (D) (D) (D) bushels: (D) - - 3,145,778 (D) (D) (D) Spring wheat for grain ................................farms: 2 - - 7 6 1 2 acres: (D) - - 1,630 (D) (D) (D) bushels: (D) - - 129,447 (D) (D) (D) ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 1. County Summary Highlights: 2012 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Inyo : Kern : Kings : Lake : Lassen : Los Angeles : Madera ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Farms ....................................................number: 125 1,938 1,056 838 448 1,294 1,507 Land in farms .............................................acres: 330,840 2,330,233 673,634 150,721 482,680 91,689 653,584 Average size of farm ..................................acres: 2,647 1,202 638 180 1,077 71 434 Median size of farm ...................................acres: 43 115 44 20 80 4 60 : Estimated market value of land and buildings: : Average per farm ....................................dollars: 2,062,977 5,332,548 3,847,243 1,095,200 2,075,936 882,832 3,302,033 Average per acre ....................................dollars: 779 4,435 6,031 6,089 1,927 12,459 7,614 : Estimated market value of all machinery and : equipment ...............................................$1,000: 10,836 645,276 359,519 46,522 50,662 59,401 274,307 Average per farm ....................................dollars: 86,689 333,132 340,453 55,515 113,085 45,905 182,022 : Farms by size: : 1 to 9 acres .................................................: 43 375 240 220 59 886 165 10 to 49 acres ...............................................: 20 411 301 356 123 264 510 50 to 179 acres ..............................................: 16 373 195 159 88 83 420 180 to 499 acres .............................................: 7 264 124 60 65 23 196 500 to 999 acres .............................................: 11 186 83 22 40 15 98 1,000 acres or more ..........................................: 28 329 113 21 73 23 118 : Total cropland ............................................farms: 44 1,263 841 712 252 814 1,145 acres: 18,670 899,395 501,500 29,106 70,870 59,556 304,248 Harvested cropland ......................................farms: 37 1,115 767 641 199 718 1,066 acres: (D) 740,061 415,706 24,175 40,182 40,796 289,693 : Irrigated land ............................................farms: 60 1,140 845 393 220 656 1,038 acres: 23,832 729,956 407,417 13,499 65,960 39,653 292,274 : Market value of agricultural products sold (see text) ....$1,000: 19,613 3,998,990 1,829,236 99,463 72,671 193,097 1,602,766 Average per farm ....................................dollars: 156,903 2,063,462 1,732,232 118,691 162,212 149,225 1,063,548 : Crops, including nursery and greenhouse crops ..........$1,000: 6,791 3,231,921 854,628 97,477 (D) 174,019 1,239,924 Livestock, poultry, and their products .................$1,000: 12,822 767,070 974,608 1,985 (D) 19,078 362,842 : Farms by value of sales: : Less than $2,500 .............................................: 43 522 194 250 163 563 328 $2,500 to $4,999 .............................................: 19 91 57 68 43 138 63 $5,000 to $9,999 .............................................: 12 123 84 79 54 151 58 $10,000 to $24,999 ...........................................: 17 131 95 139 52 154 109 $25,000 to $49,999 ...........................................: 9 107 61 97 40 82 85 $50,000 to $99,999 ...........................................: 5 115 89 91 23 56 159 $100,000 or more .............................................: 20 849 476 114 73 150 705 : Government payments .......................................farms: 2 300 384 40 43 40 172 $1,000: (D) 5,306 7,901 100 186 247 2,400 Total income from farm-related sources, : gross before taxes and expenses (see text) ...............farms: 32 680 456 222 138 353 526 $1,000: 3,035 103,853 26,678 2,397 2,635 10,907 29,399 : Total farm production expenses ...........................$1,000: 16,828 3,394,697 1,591,497 74,236 73,976 208,532 1,144,550 Average per farm ....................................dollars: 134,622 1,751,650 1,507,099 88,587 165,125 161,153 759,489 : Net cash farm income of operation (see text) ..............farms: 125 1,938 1,056 838 448 1,294 1,507 $1,000: 5,920 713,452 272,319 27,724 1,517 -4,281 490,016 Average per farm ....................................dollars: 47,361 368,138 257,878 33,083 3,385 -3,308 325,160 : Principal operator by primary occupation: : Farming ................................................number: 79 1,225 697 368 232 784 872 Other ..................................................number: 46 713 359 470 216 510 635 : Principal operator by days worked off farm: : Any ....................................................number: 78 1,038 603 499 288 713 794 200 days or more .....................................number: 69 576 445 270 173 437 503 : Livestock and poultry: : Cattle and calves inventory .............................farms: 56 516 294 150 202 104 320 number: 14,080 342,383 419,318 3,294 40,820 6,315 178,590 Beef cows .............................................farms: 39 318 102 112 159 61 197 number: 9,165 30,427 5,274 2,145 22,899 (D) 12,865 Milk cows .............................................farms: 3 63 111 3 11 9 37 number: 13 130,828 168,494 3 48 (D) 67,769 Cattle and calves sold ..................................farms: 52 393 250 92 176 45 227 number: 9,753 230,893 348,481 1,345 24,082 1,834 110,012 Hogs and pigs inventory .................................farms: 5 52 17 23 22 36 14 number: 19 1,181 114 212 104 239 402 Hogs and pigs sold ......................................farms: 1 35 17 9 33 23 9 number: (D) 1,235 252 166 107 216 266 Sheep and lambs inventory ...............................farms: 18 94 31 57 52 87 55 number: 220 114,571 17,501 1,278 7,992 999 1,539 Layers inventory (see text) .............................farms: 15 149 44 125 71 163 70 number: 292 (D) (D) 4,229 1,191 3,579 1,277 Broilers and other meat-type chickens sold ..............farms: - 8 5 6 4 10 15 number: - 2,454 (D) (D) 116 498 2,270,099 : Selected crops harvested: : Corn for grain ..........................................farms: - 16 56 - - 2 11 acres: - 4,598 8,486 - - (D) 2,104 bushels: - 675,548 1,454,127 - - (D) 424,109 Corn for silage or greenchop ............................farms: - 87 197 5 1 1 46 acres: - 27,855 60,904 10 (D) (D) 22,266 tons: - 657,491 1,547,443 5 (D) (D) 566,363 Wheat for grain, all ....................................farms: - 127 116 7 14 - 23 acres: - 42,149 52,138 12 901 - 3,609 bushels: - 3,452,162 4,950,017 231 62,109 - 313,134 Winter wheat for grain ................................farms: - 100 77 2 8 - 17 acres: - 34,087 42,012 (D) 777 - 2,818 bushels: - 2,800,888 4,020,781 (D) 48,059 - 238,995 Spring wheat for grain ................................farms: - 15 10 5 7 - 3 acres: - 5,177 2,147 (D) 124 - 590 bushels: - 357,511 208,062 (D) 14,050 - 57,478 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 1. County Summary Highlights: 2012 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Marin : Mariposa : Mendocino : Merced : Modoc : Mono : Monterey ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Farms ....................................................number: 323 364 1,220 2,486 437 72 1,179 Land in farms .............................................acres: 170,876 283,611 770,257 978,667 523,522 56,386 1,268,144 Average size of farm ..................................acres: 529 779 631 394 1,198 783 1,076 Median size of farm ...................................acres: 100 113 50 38 277 166 80 : Estimated market value of land and buildings: : Average per farm ....................................dollars: 3,295,414 1,638,972 2,533,399 3,045,778 2,061,595 2,205,825 5,263,068 Average per acre ....................................dollars: 6,229 2,104 4,013 7,737 1,721 2,817 4,893 : Estimated market value of all machinery and : equipment ...............................................$1,000: 22,360 16,286 63,290 587,824 54,649 10,420 467,834 Average per farm ....................................dollars: 69,225 44,742 51,877 236,644 125,055 144,720 396,806 : Farms by size: : 1 to 9 acres .................................................: 61 39 251 374 35 7 234 10 to 49 acres ...............................................: 68 99 344 1,035 63 16 261 50 to 179 acres ..............................................: 50 75 310 490 93 14 233 180 to 499 acres .............................................: 34 65 141 269 81 15 140 500 to 999 acres .............................................: 46 26 66 140 57 5 98 1,000 acres or more ..........................................: 64 60 108 178 108 15 213 : Total cropland ............................................farms: 162 99 832 1,998 327 33 814 acres: 14,409 12,575 49,298 522,593 154,728 11,378 358,294 Harvested cropland ......................................farms: 135 66 758 1,903 257 30 694 acres: 7,868 835 31,411 480,103 123,008 10,591 282,694 : Irrigated land ............................................farms: 99 87 648 1,987 282 44 608 acres: 3,732 1,806 25,693 468,226 128,360 21,506 263,835 : Market value of agricultural products sold (see text) ....$1,000: 91,809 22,321 148,897 2,967,523 106,606 17,976 2,979,735 Average per farm ....................................dollars: 284,237 61,322 122,047 1,193,694 243,950 249,664 2,527,341 : Crops, including nursery and greenhouse crops ..........$1,000: 8,581 2,608 137,167 1,272,622 70,327 8,810 2,935,327 Livestock, poultry, and their products .................$1,000: 83,227 19,713 11,730 1,694,900 36,280 9,166 44,408 : Farms by value of sales: : Less than $2,500 .............................................: 82 157 354 362 115 19 320 $2,500 to $4,999 .............................................: 9 29 105 115 36 10 59 $5,000 to $9,999 .............................................: 25 43 148 119 22 8 97 $10,000 to $24,999 ...........................................: 37 61 178 219 25 1 123 $25,000 to $49,999 ...........................................: 20 18 138 252 33 4 78 $50,000 to $99,999 ...........................................: 40 24 91 283 44 1 85 $100,000 or more .............................................: 110 32 206 1,136 162 29 417 : Government payments .......................................farms: 53 27 28 502 108 1 82 $1,000: 1,283 515 426 9,528 701 (D) 635 Total income from farm-related sources, : gross before taxes and expenses (see text) ...............farms: 121 111 351 1,117 160 24 399 $1,000: 2,882 1,056 10,033 82,552 6,047 3,154 42,444 : Total farm production expenses ...........................$1,000: 87,044 21,977 136,299 2,452,624 97,747 10,510 2,194,732 Average per farm ....................................dollars: 269,487 60,377 111,721 986,575 223,678 145,975 1,861,520 : Net cash farm income of operation (see text) ..............farms: 323 364 1,220 2,486 437 72 1,179 $1,000: 8,929 1,915 23,058 606,978 15,607 10,629 828,082 Average per farm ....................................dollars: 27,645 5,262 18,900 244,159 35,714 147,626 702,360 : Principal operator by primary occupation: : Farming ................................................number: 189 189 608 1,603 264 42 728 Other ..................................................number: 134 175 612 883 173 30 451 : Principal operator by days worked off farm: : Any ....................................................number: 175 217 685 1,444 249 41 733 200 days or more .....................................number: 99 135 346 964 134 28 423 : Livestock and poultry: : Cattle and calves inventory .............................farms: 155 209 354 619 198 17 349 number: 40,592 24,325 17,435 558,734 51,705 4,781 58,616 Beef cows .............................................farms: 100 140 268 326 166 17 249 number: 9,314 (D) (D) 25,021 (D) (D) (D) Milk cows .............................................farms: 48 1 12 229 2 - 6 number: 11,137 (D) (D) 285,235 (D) - (D) Cattle and calves sold ..................................farms: 134 184 250 526 195 28 266 number: 15,790 17,566 8,549 302,103 36,697 13,427 31,606 Hogs and pigs inventory .................................farms: 5 10 30 28 - 1 12 number: 155 46 762 586 - (D) 68 Hogs and pigs sold ......................................farms: 5 6 13 19 2 1 5 number: 403 39 732 659 (D) (D) 128 Sheep and lambs inventory ...............................farms: 40 33 175 72 37 6 79 number: 5,338 1,098 10,742 23,246 13,462 378 3,122 Layers inventory (see text) .............................farms: 46 35 159 72 42 4 96 number: 11,467 1,032 4,149 3,411,016 923 72 3,303 Broilers and other meat-type chickens sold ..............farms: 5 4 4 8 2 - 4 number: 508 1,020 120 (D) (D) - 175 : Selected crops harvested: : Corn for grain ..........................................farms: - - 1 74 2 - 3 acres: - - (D) 19,555 (D) - (D) bushels: - - (D) 3,793,985 (D) - (D) Corn for silage or greenchop ............................farms: - - 1 321 - - 8 acres: - - (D) 91,880 - - 706 tons: - - (D) 2,392,000 - - 19,900 Wheat for grain, all ....................................farms: 3 - 2 63 20 - 6 acres: 3 - (D) 23,888 12,102 - 1,004 bushels: 99 - (D) 2,453,710 981,004 - 69,696 Winter wheat for grain ................................farms: - - 2 41 13 - 6 acres: - - (D) 19,239 8,314 - 1,004 bushels: - - (D) 2,020,190 715,576 - 69,696 Spring wheat for grain ................................farms: 3 - - 5 11 - - acres: 3 - - 549 3,788 - - bushels: 99 - - 64,614 265,428 - - ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 1. County Summary Highlights: 2012 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Napa : Nevada : Orange : Placer : Plumas : Riverside : Sacramento ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Farms ....................................................number: 1,685 742 312 1,355 141 2,949 1,352 Land in farms .............................................acres: 253,370 42,114 60,497 91,403 174,210 344,044 246,840 Average size of farm ..................................acres: 150 57 194 67 1,236 117 183 Median size of farm ...................................acres: 15 12 4 10 153 7 12 : Estimated market value of land and buildings: : Average per farm ....................................dollars: 3,278,130 614,921 4,237,538 719,330 2,194,519 1,191,416 1,302,636 Average per acre ....................................dollars: 21,801 10,834 21,854 10,664 1,776 10,212 7,135 : Estimated market value of all machinery and : equipment ...............................................$1,000: 143,450 23,133 22,142 48,640 13,487 224,152 115,803 Average per farm ....................................dollars: 85,134 31,177 70,967 35,896 95,651 76,009 85,653 : Farms by size: : 1 to 9 acres .................................................: 670 255 210 540 17 1,581 561 10 to 49 acres ...............................................: 542 331 56 574 36 955 417 50 to 179 acres ..............................................: 276 95 21 151 23 218 172 180 to 499 acres .............................................: 107 46 10 57 17 93 99 500 to 999 acres .............................................: 40 11 9 21 10 47 42 1,000 acres or more ..........................................: 50 4 6 12 38 55 61 : Total cropland ............................................farms: 1,561 354 226 600 68 2,127 750 acres: 63,049 3,349 15,183 33,607 25,970 227,246 105,721 Harvested cropland ......................................farms: 1,521 312 217 508 62 1,962 660 acres: 52,180 1,555 10,058 19,535 11,767 156,469 92,090 : Irrigated land ............................................farms: 1,353 475 207 875 68 1,926 788 acres: 54,580 5,314 8,054 20,674 19,142 145,961 85,979 : Market value of agricultural products sold (see text) ....$1,000: 536,147 9,094 158,513 43,437 22,617 1,038,949 326,588 Average per farm ....................................dollars: 318,188 12,256 508,056 32,057 160,404 352,305 241,559 : Crops, including nursery and greenhouse crops ..........$1,000: 524,203 5,807 156,926 (D) 4,459 744,651 208,842 Livestock, poultry, and their products .................$1,000: 11,944 3,286 1,588 (D) 18,158 294,298 117,746 : Farms by value of sales: : Less than $2,500 .............................................: 181 310 94 626 41 897 521 $2,500 to $4,999 .............................................: 101 101 36 163 17 251 94 $5,000 to $9,999 .............................................: 148 124 53 197 10 320 153 $10,000 to $24,999 ...........................................: 260 124 36 166 28 505 146 $25,000 to $49,999 ...........................................: 212 56 22 89 10 320 109 $50,000 to $99,999 ...........................................: 208 9 14 46 4 247 78 $100,000 or more .............................................: 575 18 57 68 31 409 251 : Government payments .......................................farms: 19 16 15 38 - 138 139 $1,000: 85 126 43 1,305 - 2,189 2,474 Total income from farm-related sources, : gross before taxes and expenses (see text) ...............farms: 389 178 80 248 43 778 379 $1,000: 40,157 2,750 6,761 6,132 275 29,583 11,034 : Total farm production expenses ...........................$1,000: 502,222 18,056 187,048 55,458 22,774 939,539 302,141 Average per farm ....................................dollars: 298,054 24,334 599,513 40,928 161,519 318,596 223,477 : Net cash farm income of operation (see text) ..............farms: 1,685 742 312 1,355 141 2,949 1,352 $1,000: 74,167 -6,087 -21,731 -4,584 117 131,182 37,955 Average per farm ....................................dollars: 44,016 -8,203 -69,652 -3,383 833 44,483 28,073 : Principal operator by primary occupation: : Farming ................................................number: 588 346 183 617 62 1,448 652 Other ..................................................number: 1,097 396 129 738 79 1,501 700 : Principal operator by days worked off farm: : Any ....................................................number: 1,054 512 159 787 99 1,839 871 200 days or more .....................................number: 536 309 92 437 66 1,169 547 : Livestock and poultry: : Cattle and calves inventory .............................farms: 119 213 18 492 73 309 432 number: 9,727 4,778 311 12,873 17,022 76,871 56,213 Beef cows .............................................farms: 91 155 11 403 51 164 290 number: (D) 2,605 105 (D) (D) 1,846 12,725 Milk cows .............................................farms: 1 17 - 9 1 42 44 number: (D) 58 - (D) (D) 42,954 15,691 Cattle and calves sold ..................................farms: 81 145 3 383 66 201 289 number: 11,470 1,692 (D) 8,972 16,790 35,910 28,637 Hogs and pigs inventory .................................farms: 9 23 3 52 4 76 45 number: 34 180 31 602 14 1,147 407 Hogs and pigs sold ......................................farms: 6 24 5 38 2 61 30 number: 26 367 138 814 (D) 45,755 5,405 Sheep and lambs inventory ...............................farms: 38 116 4 149 17 141 113 number: 903 2,363 (D) 5,361 239 36,846 4,706 Layers inventory (see text) .............................farms: 96 186 19 243 26 256 199 number: 2,123 5,156 440 4,925 733 4,127,452 3,484 Broilers and other meat-type chickens sold ..............farms: 4 11 - 10 6 23 14 number: 62 (D) - (D) 98 743 (D) : Selected crops harvested: : Corn for grain ..........................................farms: 4 4 8 5 - 10 52 acres: 4 4 370 (D) - (D) 16,082 bushels: 363 272 10,126 (D) - 910 2,416,394 Corn for silage or greenchop ............................farms: - - - 1 - 6 32 acres: - - - (D) - (D) 5,726 tons: - - - (D) - (D) 126,045 Wheat for grain, all ....................................farms: - - 1 3 - 31 26 acres: - - (D) 290 - 4,425 2,864 bushels: - - (D) 21,850 - 288,435 246,193 Winter wheat for grain ................................farms: - - - 1 - 17 25 acres: - - - (D) - (D) (D) bushels: - - - (D) - (D) (D) Spring wheat for grain ................................farms: - - - 2 - 2 1 acres: - - - (D) - (D) (D) bushels: - - - (D) - (D) (D) ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 1. County Summary Highlights: 2012 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : San Benito :San Bernardino : San Diego : San Francisco : San Joaquin :San Luis Obispo: San Mateo :Santa Barbara ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Farms ....................................................number: 628 1,249 5,732 6 3,580 2,666 334 1,597 Land in farms .............................................acres: 604,319 77,199 221,538 12 787,015 1,338,874 48,160 701,039 Average size of farm ..................................acres: 962 62 39 2 220 502 144 439 Median size of farm ...................................acres: 43 5 4 2 22 40 20 20 : Estimated market value of land and buildings: : Average per farm ....................................dollars: 2,737,112 831,613 694,313 252,222 2,218,140 2,115,410 1,629,243 3,233,061 Average per acre ....................................dollars: 2,844 13,455 17,964 126,111 10,090 4,212 11,299 7,365 : Estimated market value of all machinery and : equipment ...............................................$1,000: 58,677 103,856 198,741 312 520,181 245,865 23,212 200,684 Average per farm ....................................dollars: 93,435 83,151 34,672 51,942 145,302 92,222 69,498 125,663 : Farms by size: : 1 to 9 acres .................................................: 205 710 3,932 6 849 555 126 519 10 to 49 acres ...............................................: 119 363 1,321 - 1,426 933 80 501 50 to 179 acres ..............................................: 107 117 317 - 664 615 68 242 180 to 499 acres .............................................: 51 33 109 - 344 239 39 154 500 to 999 acres .............................................: 62 9 25 - 151 136 11 50 1,000 acres or more ..........................................: 84 17 28 - 146 188 10 131 : Total cropland ............................................farms: 407 773 5,100 3 3,025 1,955 228 1,281 acres: 38,532 29,827 68,219 9 517,918 255,378 8,477 132,323 Harvested cropland ......................................farms: 355 691 4,933 3 2,875 1,664 202 1,165 acres: 24,016 22,699 51,097 (D) 484,804 113,141 4,033 98,772 : Irrigated land ............................................farms: 274 689 4,644 - 2,969 1,365 179 1,151 acres: 19,202 21,788 45,164 - 485,402 81,636 2,822 96,695 : Market value of agricultural products sold (see text) ....$1,000: 164,032 582,229 725,996 (D) 2,250,158 664,984 75,889 1,177,916 Average per farm ....................................dollars: 261,197 466,157 126,657 (D) 628,536 249,431 227,212 737,580 : Crops, including nursery and greenhouse crops ..........$1,000: 126,077 66,845 648,221 (D) 1,658,533 618,023 73,137 1,129,013 Livestock, poultry, and their products .................$1,000: 37,955 515,385 77,775 (D) 591,625 46,961 2,751 48,903 : Farms by value of sales: : Less than $2,500 .............................................: 190 449 1,250 5 571 838 117 337 $2,500 to $4,999 .............................................: 65 122 811 1 158 199 17 100 $5,000 to $9,999 .............................................: 58 148 1,211 - 220 238 36 221 $10,000 to $24,999 ...........................................: 93 183 1,105 - 421 366 67 181 $25,000 to $49,999 ...........................................: 50 79 488 - 356 267 30 151 $50,000 to $99,999 ...........................................: 53 60 346 - 446 248 18 137 $100,000 or more .............................................: 119 208 521 - 1,408 510 49 470 : Government payments .......................................farms: 47 51 100 - 338 241 14 24 $1,000: 174 849 451 - 5,508 3,488 182 554 Total income from farm-related sources, : gross before taxes and expenses (see text) ...............farms: 178 374 1,226 - 1,131 934 87 487 $1,000: 3,523 10,535 27,285 - 58,963 42,592 4,206 37,694 : Total farm production expenses ...........................$1,000: 131,936 526,895 671,976 96 1,733,302 597,782 89,821 999,903 Average per farm ....................................dollars: 210,089 421,854 117,232 15,984 484,163 224,224 268,926 626,113 : Net cash farm income of operation (see text) ..............farms: 628 1,249 5,732 6 3,580 2,666 334 1,597 $1,000: 35,792 66,719 81,755 (D) 581,327 113,282 -9,544 216,262 Average per farm ....................................dollars: 56,994 53,418 14,263 (D) 162,382 42,491 -28,574 135,417 : Principal operator by primary occupation: : Farming ................................................number: 366 712 2,730 5 2,112 1,254 187 826 Other ..................................................number: 262 537 3,002 1 1,468 1,412 147 771 : Principal operator by days worked off farm: : Any ....................................................number: 393 753 3,887 1 1,869 1,733 203 880 200 days or more .....................................number: 254 400 2,468 1 1,073 1,098 127 521 : Livestock and poultry: : Cattle and calves inventory .............................farms: 218 251 315 - 583 714 63 301 number: 37,933 150,894 15,441 - 242,619 58,095 (D) 43,767 Beef cows .............................................farms: 148 117 191 - 330 533 53 205 number: (D) 3,661 3,580 - 17,520 29,616 1,243 (D) Milk cows .............................................farms: 3 73 13 - 111 28 4 17 number: (D) 86,141 6,700 - 109,683 259 10 (D) Cattle and calves sold ..................................farms: 174 184 168 - 446 538 50 231 number: 23,381 103,342 7,278 - 118,225 32,942 1,646 37,001 Hogs and pigs inventory .................................farms: 2 69 50 - 22 55 6 27 number: (D) 1,030 1,705 - (D) 426 17 672 Hogs and pigs sold ......................................farms: 6 62 39 - 27 48 - 25 number: 147 1,682 4,264 - 10,230 1,012 - 1,434 Sheep and lambs inventory ...............................farms: 37 55 116 - 92 114 18 30 number: 1,347 673 2,857 - 21,256 13,276 185 543 Layers inventory (see text) .............................farms: 54 172 331 - 160 323 38 81 number: 1,502 1,454,595 2,268,366 - 1,851,643 6,848 1,907 3,289 Broilers and other meat-type chickens sold ..............farms: 5 5 13 - 18 15 - 5 number: (D) 328 314,300 - 1,878,384 581 - (D) : Selected crops harvested: : Corn for grain ..........................................farms: 6 5 8 - 87 9 1 1 acres: 12 16 492 - 49,930 264 (D) (D) bushels: 216 (D) 58,536 - 7,996,212 34,431 (D) (D) Corn for silage or greenchop ............................farms: - 13 - - 186 1 6 2 acres: - 2,017 - - 47,640 (D) 6 (D) tons: - 51,717 - - 1,274,778 (D) 90 (D) Wheat for grain, all ....................................farms: 8 3 - - 121 4 - 6 acres: 432 180 - - 27,752 (D) - 175 bushels: 27,744 4,668 - - 2,182,113 (D) - (D) Winter wheat for grain ................................farms: 7 3 - - 110 2 - 3 acres: (D) 180 - - 24,904 (D) - (D) bushels: (D) 4,668 - - 1,948,091 (D) - (D) Spring wheat for grain ................................farms: 1 - - - 7 2 - - acres: (D) - - - (D) (D) - - bushels: (D) - - - 73,697 (D) - - ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 1. County Summary Highlights: 2012 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Santa Clara : Santa Cruz : Shasta : Sierra : Siskiyou : Solano : Sonoma : Stanislaus ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Farms ....................................................number: 1,003 667 1,544 48 929 860 3,579 4,143 Land in farms .............................................acres: 229,927 99,983 376,306 39,141 722,855 407,101 589,771 768,046 Average size of farm ..................................acres: 229 150 244 815 778 473 165 185 Median size of farm ...................................acres: 10 11 15 184 107 27 15 20 : Estimated market value of land and buildings: : Average per farm ....................................dollars: 1,538,866 1,857,240 682,566 1,226,339 1,586,711 2,631,011 2,409,158 1,786,289 Average per acre ....................................dollars: 6,713 12,390 2,801 1,504 2,039 5,558 14,620 9,636 : Estimated market value of all machinery and : equipment ...............................................$1,000: 69,454 76,000 56,433 4,459 113,320 126,222 282,615 488,088 Average per farm ....................................dollars: 69,247 113,943 36,550 92,903 121,981 146,770 78,965 117,810 : Farms by size: : 1 to 9 acres .................................................: 483 273 597 1 93 207 1,453 1,124 10 to 49 acres ...............................................: 283 219 528 6 237 334 1,099 1,725 50 to 179 acres ..............................................: 127 103 202 17 238 136 546 684 180 to 499 acres .............................................: 54 41 123 11 152 82 266 366 500 to 999 acres .............................................: 21 7 42 5 81 32 78 113 1,000 acres or more ..........................................: 35 24 52 8 128 69 137 131 : Total cropland ............................................farms: 761 544 755 28 556 571 2,645 3,022 acres: 38,350 41,094 36,855 4,019 194,828 169,637 130,632 340,890 Harvested cropland ......................................farms: 691 522 626 21 435 499 2,507 2,921 acres: 23,128 29,900 24,254 (D) 128,647 133,171 91,307 319,190 : Irrigated land ............................................farms: 575 440 906 25 518 505 2,146 3,450 acres: 17,756 28,897 38,234 9,687 160,033 130,909 74,969 320,784 : Market value of agricultural products sold (see text) ....$1,000: 243,829 565,835 65,622 (D) 223,096 307,418 974,393 2,228,135 Average per farm ....................................dollars: 243,100 848,328 42,501 (D) 240,146 357,463 272,253 537,807 : Crops, including nursery and greenhouse crops ..........$1,000: 233,397 548,415 24,014 (D) 190,530 242,743 606,237 1,062,853 Livestock, poultry, and their products .................$1,000: 10,433 17,420 41,608 5,305 32,565 64,675 368,156 1,165,282 : Farms by value of sales: : Less than $2,500 .............................................: 279 158 786 10 375 271 793 860 $2,500 to $4,999 .............................................: 114 44 155 4 69 72 249 204 $5,000 to $9,999 .............................................: 156 70 199 4 93 60 379 324 $10,000 to $24,999 ...........................................: 174 88 170 7 119 124 547 443 $25,000 to $49,999 ...........................................: 66 71 115 3 53 74 388 430 $50,000 to $99,999 ...........................................: 86 49 45 9 53 64 355 478 $100,000 or more .............................................: 128 187 74 11 167 195 868 1,404 : Government payments .......................................farms: 12 1 71 1 183 135 148 443 $1,000: 20 (D) 420 (D) 2,029 1,911 2,615 7,049 Total income from farm-related sources, : gross before taxes and expenses (see text) ...............farms: 208 218 365 11 363 298 810 1,436 $1,000: 3,792 7,636 12,127 (D) 4,264 13,315 32,445 56,087 : Total farm production expenses ...........................$1,000: 210,201 456,027 71,609 4,186 219,792 269,439 810,713 1,864,904 Average per farm ....................................dollars: 209,573 683,698 46,379 87,199 236,590 313,302 226,519 450,134 : Net cash farm income of operation (see text) ..............farms: 1,003 667 1,544 48 929 860 3,579 4,143 $1,000: 37,439 117,449 6,560 1,932 9,597 53,204 198,741 426,367 Average per farm ....................................dollars: 37,327 176,085 4,249 40,240 10,331 61,866 55,530 102,913 : Principal operator by primary occupation: : Farming ................................................number: 562 414 693 27 541 462 1,836 2,450 Other ..................................................number: 441 253 851 21 388 398 1,743 1,693 : Principal operator by days worked off farm: : Any ....................................................number: 555 364 1,074 27 522 429 2,143 2,070 200 days or more .....................................number: 369 202 641 19 282 239 1,161 1,292 : Livestock and poultry: : Cattle and calves inventory .............................farms: 227 54 688 29 418 213 689 1,101 number: 15,118 4,153 35,122 9,383 53,944 53,793 95,642 399,659 Beef cows .............................................farms: 184 28 519 25 326 140 392 554 number: 7,291 409 13,664 (D) 27,990 17,421 11,150 25,638 Milk cows .............................................farms: 6 8 22 1 18 3 120 238 number: 10 252 192 (D) 970 4,300 35,209 179,617 Cattle and calves sold ..................................farms: 149 37 538 30 339 151 513 912 number: 10,091 856 23,904 5,453 28,525 35,998 34,753 208,058 Hogs and pigs inventory .................................farms: 15 1 40 1 45 15 96 27 number: 60 (D) 231 (D) 918 179 1,001 (D) Hogs and pigs sold ......................................farms: 19 1 27 1 30 16 73 28 number: 76 (D) 374 (D) 490 152 1,745 (D) Sheep and lambs inventory ...............................farms: 65 27 128 2 94 94 372 125 number: 1,234 3,208 1,689 (D) 3,494 58,338 28,224 3,825 Layers inventory (see text) .............................farms: 98 65 260 4 153 110 473 218 number: 2,378 (D) 6,453 166 3,672 (D) (D) 2,549,818 Broilers and other meat-type chickens sold ..............farms: 1 2 10 1 9 6 22 16 number: (D) (D) 678 (D) 1,064 40,040 (D) 62,715,078 : Selected crops harvested: : Corn for grain ..........................................farms: 3 - 6 - - 28 12 27 acres: 3 - 60 - - 9,289 12 4,911 bushels: 150 - 858 - - 1,734,533 432 907,307 Corn for silage or greenchop ............................farms: 3 - 1 - - 3 11 401 acres: 17 - (D) - - 1,196 789 61,794 tons: 290 - (D) - - 33,032 22,098 1,618,793 Wheat for grain, all ....................................farms: 1 2 8 - 40 47 7 35 acres: (D) (D) 557 - 22,209 23,066 (D) 4,516 bushels: (D) (D) 21,851 - 2,143,408 1,390,326 (D) 345,745 Winter wheat for grain ................................farms: 1 - 8 - 21 38 4 23 acres: (D) - (D) - (D) 20,263 14 3,741 bushels: (D) - (D) - (D) 1,177,293 268 285,709 Spring wheat for grain ................................farms: - - 1 - 24 7 5 3 acres: - - (D) - 15,964 (D) (D) 270 bushels: - - (D) - 1,500,697 119,872 (D) (D) ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 1. County Summary Highlights: 2012 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Sutter : Tehama : Trinity : Tulare : Tuolumne : Ventura : Yolo : Yuba ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Farms ....................................................number: 1,358 1,743 247 4,931 391 2,150 1,011 795 Land in farms .............................................acres: 375,174 616,521 175,948 1,239,000 87,813 281,046 460,824 187,638 Average size of farm ..................................acres: 276 354 712 251 225 131 456 236 Median size of farm ...................................acres: 42 27 40 28 40 12 54 24 : Estimated market value of land and buildings: : Average per farm ....................................dollars: 1,828,515 1,053,199 811,869 1,893,271 1,039,975 2,041,990 2,571,454 1,367,039 Average per acre ....................................dollars: 6,619 2,978 1,140 7,535 4,631 15,621 5,642 5,792 : Estimated market value of all machinery and : equipment ...............................................$1,000: 243,276 125,430 7,370 713,346 23,285 202,392 220,763 118,594 Average per farm ....................................dollars: 179,143 71,962 29,838 144,666 59,553 94,136 218,361 149,175 : Farms by size: : 1 to 9 acres .................................................: 242 350 47 1,285 69 943 165 248 10 to 49 acres ...............................................: 462 723 90 1,735 140 733 315 240 50 to 179 acres ..............................................: 297 308 69 1,037 104 246 231 125 180 to 499 acres .............................................: 166 176 21 459 40 116 151 99 500 to 999 acres .............................................: 110 85 4 200 18 54 58 48 1,000 acres or more ..........................................: 81 101 16 215 20 58 91 35 : Total cropland ............................................farms: 1,201 1,004 127 4,216 123 1,941 849 464 acres: 275,849 89,348 2,084 677,506 2,785 101,084 306,915 89,761 Harvested cropland ......................................farms: 1,165 877 113 4,013 99 1,880 731 428 acres: 262,556 72,847 862 609,270 921 89,321 263,697 68,297 : Irrigated land ............................................farms: 1,185 1,039 140 4,004 125 1,791 685 592 acres: 244,305 84,912 1,614 557,361 2,265 87,148 229,901 82,475 : Market value of agricultural products sold (see text) ....$1,000: 508,175 240,818 5,161 4,017,073 27,652 1,440,132 561,241 193,449 Average per farm ....................................dollars: 374,209 138,163 20,894 814,657 70,720 669,829 555,134 243,332 : Crops, including nursery and greenhouse crops ..........$1,000: 501,917 170,088 (D) 1,671,142 2,588 1,430,264 525,503 154,440 Livestock, poultry, and their products .................$1,000: 6,259 70,730 (D) 2,345,931 25,064 9,869 35,738 39,009 : Farms by value of sales: : Less than $2,500 .............................................: 170 609 120 798 189 302 255 262 $2,500 to $4,999 .............................................: 60 148 38 256 49 184 48 89 $5,000 to $9,999 .............................................: 81 181 32 414 53 265 84 70 $10,000 to $24,999 ...........................................: 142 263 35 633 58 386 115 112 $25,000 to $49,999 ...........................................: 164 151 7 546 19 274 79 29 $50,000 to $99,999 ...........................................: 187 150 10 477 11 209 84 31 $100,000 or more .............................................: 554 241 5 1,807 12 530 346 202 : Government payments .......................................farms: 368 157 30 667 2 43 284 122 $1,000: 11,326 1,627 247 12,174 (D) 154 6,240 3,341 Total income from farm-related sources, : gross before taxes and expenses (see text) ...............farms: 502 473 56 1,636 83 690 387 239 $1,000: 26,797 13,802 469 109,460 1,273 51,953 26,098 10,269 : Total farm production expenses ...........................$1,000: 401,603 213,326 10,271 3,419,642 33,076 1,162,843 417,052 161,744 Average per farm ....................................dollars: 295,731 122,390 41,585 693,499 84,594 540,857 412,514 203,452 : Net cash farm income of operation (see text) ..............farms: 1,358 1,743 247 4,931 391 2,150 1,011 795 $1,000: 144,695 42,921 (D) 719,065 -4,145 329,396 176,527 45,315 Average per farm ....................................dollars: 106,550 24,625 (D) 145,825 -10,602 153,208 174,606 57,000 : Principal operator by primary occupation: : Farming ................................................number: 874 912 120 2,877 159 1,048 598 351 Other ..................................................number: 484 831 127 2,054 232 1,102 413 444 : Principal operator by days worked off farm: : Any ....................................................number: 839 999 155 3,264 234 1,326 577 523 200 days or more .....................................number: 426 618 69 2,224 120 790 376 322 : Livestock and poultry: : Cattle and calves inventory .............................farms: 141 733 106 862 182 125 109 262 number: 6,616 61,785 4,526 1,086,130 8,459 5,536 14,756 12,647 Beef cows .............................................farms: 116 506 74 399 148 89 78 202 number: 3,513 23,445 2,848 24,382 4,659 3,277 (D) 4,987 Milk cows .............................................farms: 6 39 9 256 5 6 10 10 number: 6 5,741 13 489,436 15 20 (D) 2,719 Cattle and calves sold ..................................farms: 120 532 72 676 159 101 68 161 number: 4,525 47,768 2,241 779,050 4,399 3,798 16,481 13,799 Hogs and pigs inventory .................................farms: 23 43 33 39 26 13 16 24 number: 585 1,028 744 (D) 90 183 711 230 Hogs and pigs sold ......................................farms: 21 47 30 32 22 9 17 17 number: 1,792 3,661 527 (D) 93 201 (D) (D) Sheep and lambs inventory ...............................farms: 38 156 34 106 43 45 79 75 number: 9,555 6,238 404 93,479 979 1,068 15,113 6,766 Layers inventory (see text) .............................farms: 51 203 77 160 47 118 95 127 number: 968 5,131 1,466 19,044 976 4,720 9,162 2,879 Broilers and other meat-type chickens sold ..............farms: 5 18 8 11 7 4 10 5 number: 640 (D) 3,400 (D) (D) 2,450 5,562 410 : Selected crops harvested: : Corn for grain ..........................................farms: 32 6 - 69 5 - 48 1 acres: 11,478 719 - 15,873 5 - 15,084 (D) bushels: 2,254,762 (D) - 3,105,707 535 - 2,688,902 (D) Corn for silage or greenchop ............................farms: 2 15 - 331 3 1 4 12 acres: (D) 1,760 - 113,645 3 (D) 1,601 954 tons: (D) 45,689 - 2,953,108 15 (D) 41,000 26,368 Wheat for grain, all ....................................farms: 68 10 - 107 5 - 123 14 acres: 10,230 1,567 - 40,460 5 - 35,091 1,395 bushels: 733,262 136,840 - 3,246,350 165 - 2,715,803 94,603 Winter wheat for grain ................................farms: 61 10 - 89 - - 105 10 acres: 8,522 (D) - 37,699 - - 31,346 1,242 bushels: 602,420 (D) - 3,000,727 - - 2,450,301 (D) Spring wheat for grain ................................farms: 5 1 - 12 5 - 17 2 acres: (D) (D) - (D) 5 - 2,456 (D) bushels: 83,112 (D) - 145,627 165 - 153,180 (D) ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 1. County Summary Highlights: 2012 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : California : Alameda : Alpine : Amador : Butte : Calaveras : Colusa ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Selected crops harvested: - Con. : Wheat for grain, all - Con. : : Durum wheat for grain .................................farms: 375 - - - - - - acres: 135,540 - - - - - - bushels: 13,529,651 - - - - - - Oats for grain ..........................................farms: 240 - - - 1 - 1 acres: 25,065 - - - (D) - (D) bushels: 2,246,420 - - - (D) - (D) Barley for grain ........................................farms: 264 1 - - 1 - 1 acres: 81,954 (D) - - (D) - (D) bushels: 5,312,595 (D) - - (D) - (D) Sorghum for grain .......................................farms: 74 - - - - - - acres: 13,908 - - - - - - bushels: 1,263,924 - - - - - - Sorghum for silage or greenchop .........................farms: 239 - - - - - - acres: 41,953 - - - - - - tons: 634,648 - - - - - - Soybeans for beans ......................................farms: 2 - - - - - - acres: (D) - - - - - - bushels: (D) - - - - - - Dry edible beans, excluding limas .......................farms: 308 - - - 8 - 10 acres: 39,511 - - - 745 - 3,148 cwt: 955,995 - - - 15,085 - 47,898 Cotton, all .............................................farms: 630 - - - - - 3 acres: 367,766 - - - - - (D) bales: 1,201,860 - - - - - (D) Upland cotton .........................................farms: 404 - - - - - 3 acres: 142,094 - - - - - (D) bales: 499,302 - - - - - (D) Pima cotton ...........................................farms: 341 - - - - - - acres: 225,672 - - - - - - bales: 702,558 - - - - - - Tobacco .................................................farms: - - - - - - - acres: - - - - - - - pounds: - - - - - - - Forage - land used for all hay and all haylage, : grass silage, and greenchop (see text) .................farms: 7,903 40 3 25 138 30 68 acres: 1,670,027 3,296 240 4,248 5,931 787 11,724 tons, dry: 9,363,421 5,738 540 11,474 19,704 2,043 67,380 Rice ....................................................farms: 1,392 - - - 199 - 365 acres: 561,968 - - - 94,546 - 153,224 cwt: 46,692,580 - - - 8,282,242 - 12,787,320 Sunflower seed, all .....................................farms: 197 - - - 7 - 19 acres: 49,749 - - - (D) - 6,267 pounds: 68,792,639 - - - (D) - 8,292,300 Sugarbeets for sugar ....................................farms: 58 - - - - - - acres: 27,193 - - - - - - tons: 1,179,753 - - - - - - Sugarcane for sugar .....................................farms: - - - - - - - acres: - - - - - - - tons: - - - - - - - Peanuts for nuts ........................................farms: 15 - - - - - - acres: 27 - - - - - - pounds: 84,093 - - - - - - Vegetables harvested for sale (see text) ................farms: 6,055 38 - 34 99 35 19 acres: 1,175,249 116 - 33 566 57 14,773 Potatoes ..............................................farms: 441 2 - 11 11 2 - acres: 42,660 (D) - 1 3 (D) - Sweet potatoes ........................................farms: 188 - - - - - - acres: 18,189 - - - - - - Land in orchards ........................................farms: 38,098 113 1 161 1,162 153 306 acres: 3,138,943 6,228 (D) 3,849 93,629 3,068 59,424 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 1. County Summary Highlights: 2012 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Contra Costa : Del Norte : El Dorado : Fresno : Glenn : Humboldt : Imperial ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Selected crops harvested: - Con. : Wheat for grain, all - Con. : : Durum wheat for grain .................................farms: - - - 83 - - 150 acres: - - - 25,368 - - 84,625 bushels: - - - 2,558,568 - - 8,738,126 Oats for grain ..........................................farms: - - - 13 10 2 1 acres: - - - 1,624 1,200 (D) (D) bushels: - - - 197,099 78,084 (D) (D) Barley for grain ........................................farms: 2 - - 25 7 2 4 acres: (D) - - 7,319 762 (D) (D) bushels: (D) - - 478,338 51,457 (D) (D) Sorghum for grain .......................................farms: - - - 3 2 - - acres: - - - (D) (D) - - bushels: - - - (D) (D) - - Sorghum for silage or greenchop .........................farms: - - - 21 4 - 5 acres: - - - 4,967 521 - 322 tons: - - - 79,742 9,720 - 3,330 Soybeans for beans ......................................farms: - - - - - - - acres: - - - - - - - bushels: - - - - - - - Dry edible beans, excluding limas .......................farms: - - 4 29 7 13 2 acres: - - 4 5,657 1,455 29 (D) cwt: - - 64 153,176 47,319 485 (D) Cotton, all .............................................farms: - - - 226 9 - 5 acres: - - - 106,400 1,610 - 3,073 bales: - - - 372,116 5,230 - 10,239 Upland cotton .........................................farms: - - - 96 9 - 5 acres: - - - 32,645 1,610 - 3,073 bales: - - - 113,489 5,230 - 10,239 Pima cotton ...........................................farms: - - - 165 - - - acres: - - - 73,755 - - - bales: - - - 258,627 - - - Tobacco .................................................farms: - - - - - - - acres: - - - - - - - pounds: - - - - - - - Forage - land used for all hay and all haylage, : grass silage, and greenchop (see text) .................farms: 63 25 14 400 208 228 251 acres: 8,879 5,915 327 90,491 27,086 10,455 246,400 tons, dry: 33,416 32,279 572 610,191 133,383 37,706 1,689,634 Rice ....................................................farms: 1 - - 8 275 - - acres: (D) - - 4,430 94,330 - - cwt: (D) - - 314,492 8,155,826 - - Sunflower seed, all .....................................farms: - - - - 38 6 1 acres: - - - - 3,797 6 (D) pounds: - - - - 4,847,154 3,708 (D) Sugarbeets for sugar ....................................farms: - - - 1 - - 55 acres: - - - (D) - - (D) tons: - - - (D) - - 1,169,409 Sugarcane for sugar .....................................farms: - - - - - - - acres: - - - - - - - tons: - - - - - - - Peanuts for nuts ........................................farms: - - - 10 - - - acres: - - - 20 - - - pounds: - - - 62,290 - - - Vegetables harvested for sale (see text) ................farms: 66 25 147 564 31 177 105 acres: 5,254 54 229 176,589 3,403 598 126,153 Potatoes ..............................................farms: - - 13 8 - 33 7 acres: - - 3 12 - 82 1,840 Sweet potatoes ........................................farms: - - - - - - 2 acres: - - - - - - (D) Land in orchards ........................................farms: 211 1 580 3,753 622 148 41 acres: 6,771 (D) 3,926 529,516 94,701 428 6,354 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 1. County Summary Highlights: 2012 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Inyo : Kern : Kings : Lake : Lassen : Los Angeles : Madera ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Selected crops harvested: - Con. : Wheat for grain, all - Con. : : Durum wheat for grain .................................farms: - 19 39 - - - 4 acres: - 2,885 7,979 - - - 201 bushels: - 293,763 721,174 - - - 16,661 Oats for grain ..........................................farms: - 5 4 1 2 1 11 acres: - 1,837 404 (D) (D) (D) 993 bushels: - 116,876 50,217 (D) (D) (D) 105,126 Barley for grain ........................................farms: - 11 8 - 2 5 5 acres: - 3,851 7,484 - (D) 7,416 614 bushels: - 211,070 413,044 - (D) 800,647 66,216 Sorghum for grain .......................................farms: - 5 13 - - - - acres: - 1,447 5,107 - - - - bushels: - 94,448 485,718 - - - - Sorghum for silage or greenchop .........................farms: - 19 59 - - - 2 acres: - 7,365 11,272 - - - (D) tons: - 108,418 153,815 - - - (D) Soybeans for beans ......................................farms: - - - - - - - acres: - - - - - - - bushels: - - - - - - - Dry edible beans, excluding limas .......................farms: - 18 9 - - - 5 acres: - 2,096 3,765 - - - 330 cwt: - 69,919 111,740 - - - 10,030 Cotton, all .............................................farms: - 121 87 - - - 10 acres: - 55,547 109,923 - - - 2,091 bales: - 181,331 317,609 - - - 7,170 Upland cotton .........................................farms: - 79 47 - - - 10 acres: - 19,725 12,741 - - - 2,091 bales: - 68,808 44,069 - - - 7,170 Pima cotton ...........................................farms: - 75 62 - - - - acres: - 35,822 97,182 - - - - bales: - 112,523 273,540 - - - - Tobacco .................................................farms: - - - - - - - acres: - - - - - - - pounds: - - - - - - - Forage - land used for all hay and all haylage, : grass silage, and greenchop (see text) .................farms: 13 267 315 81 173 37 130 acres: 5,667 76,305 81,345 2,810 35,117 12,193 35,554 tons, dry: 31,306 535,236 574,460 6,021 107,464 75,218 227,821 Rice ....................................................farms: - - - - 2 - 2 acres: - - - - (D) - (D) cwt: - - - - (D) - (D) Sunflower seed, all .....................................farms: - - - - - - - acres: - - - - - - - pounds: - - - - - - - Sugarbeets for sugar ....................................farms: - - - - - - - acres: - - - - - - - tons: - - - - - - - Sugarcane for sugar .....................................farms: - - - - - - - acres: - - - - - - - tons: - - - - - - - Peanuts for nuts ........................................farms: - 3 2 - - - - acres: - (D) (D) - - - - pounds: - (D) (D) - - - - Vegetables harvested for sale (see text) ................farms: 15 167 44 71 4 171 43 acres: (D) 88,634 27,267 108 630 17,447 6,913 Potatoes ..............................................farms: 1 44 - 15 - 4 2 acres: (D) 22,768 - 5 - (D) (D) Sweet potatoes ........................................farms: - 5 - 10 - - - acres: - 335 - 1 - - - Land in orchards ........................................farms: 6 823 413 533 18 298 928 acres: (D) 450,716 77,038 15,410 87 1,826 222,444 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 1. County Summary Highlights: 2012 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Marin : Mariposa : Mendocino : Merced : Modoc : Mono : Monterey ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Selected crops harvested: - Con. : Wheat for grain, all - Con. : : Durum wheat for grain .................................farms: - - - 21 - - - acres: - - - 4,100 - - - bushels: - - - 368,906 - - - Oats for grain ..........................................farms: 1 - - 39 2 - - acres: (D) - - 6,511 (D) - - bushels: (D) - - 592,383 (D) - - Barley for grain ........................................farms: - - 1 6 17 - 18 acres: - - (D) 3,561 3,791 - 4,147 bushels: - - (D) 162,512 311,147 - 207,525 Sorghum for grain .......................................farms: - - - - - - - acres: - - - - - - - bushels: - - - - - - - Sorghum for silage or greenchop .........................farms: - - - 30 - - - acres: - - - 4,136 - - - tons: - - - 60,672 - - - Soybeans for beans ......................................farms: - - - - - - - acres: - - - - - - - bushels: - - - - - - - Dry edible beans, excluding limas .......................farms: - - - 6 - - 12 acres: - - - 892 - - 1,183 cwt: - - - 27,671 - - 27,021 Cotton, all .............................................farms: - - - 93 - - - acres: - - - 48,522 - - - bales: - - - 165,680 - - - Upland cotton .........................................farms: - - - 83 - - - acres: - - - 37,866 - - - bales: - - - 131,988 - - - Pima cotton ...........................................farms: - - - 30 - - - acres: - - - 10,656 - - - bales: - - - 33,692 - - - Tobacco .................................................farms: - - - - - - - acres: - - - - - - - pounds: - - - - - - - Forage - land used for all hay and all haylage, : grass silage, and greenchop (see text) .................farms: 35 10 156 568 238 25 82 acres: 6,758 296 9,249 129,575 96,740 10,516 11,060 tons, dry: 15,976 679 18,675 837,830 275,875 53,599 17,044 Rice ....................................................farms: - - 2 8 3 - 1 acres: - - (D) 3,462 (D) - (D) cwt: - - (D) 248,198 (D) - (D) Sunflower seed, all .....................................farms: - - - - - - - acres: - - - - - - - pounds: - - - - - - - Sugarbeets for sugar ....................................farms: - - - - - - - acres: - - - - - - - tons: - - - - - - - Sugarcane for sugar .....................................farms: - - - - - - - acres: - - - - - - - tons: - - - - - - - Peanuts for nuts ........................................farms: - - - - - - - acres: - - - - - - - pounds: - - - - - - - Vegetables harvested for sale (see text) ................farms: 39 3 141 223 18 1 210 acres: 230 1 369 59,815 4,386 (D) 261,546 Potatoes ..............................................farms: 4 - 29 9 10 - 5 acres: 115 - 16 2 (D) - (D) Sweet potatoes ........................................farms: - - 4 96 - - - acres: - - (Z) 15,959 - - - Land in orchards ........................................farms: 65 46 510 1,197 3 2 273 acres: 794 518 20,853 160,612 (D) (D) 60,056 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 1. County Summary Highlights: 2012 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Napa : Nevada : Orange : Placer : Plumas : Riverside : Sacramento ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Selected crops harvested: - Con. : Wheat for grain, all - Con. : : Durum wheat for grain .................................farms: - - 1 - - 12 - acres: - - (D) - - (D) - bushels: - - (D) - - 192,171 - Oats for grain ..........................................farms: - - - - - 2 1 acres: - - - - - (D) (D) bushels: - - - - - (D) (D) Barley for grain ........................................farms: - - 2 1 - 3 6 acres: - - (D) (D) - 1,602 700 bushels: - - (D) (D) - 67,279 29,167 Sorghum for grain .......................................farms: - - - - - 7 1 acres: - - - - - 13 (D) bushels: - - - - - 1,431 (D) Sorghum for silage or greenchop .........................farms: - - - - - 6 - acres: - - - - - 935 - tons: - - - - - 15,950 - Soybeans for beans ......................................farms: - - - 1 - - - acres: - - - (D) - - - bushels: - - - (D) - - - Dry edible beans, excluding limas .......................farms: - 3 2 1 - - 6 acres: - 3 (D) (D) - - (D) cwt: - 43 (D) (D) - - (D) Cotton, all .............................................farms: - - - - - 15 - acres: - - - - - 13,073 - bales: - - - - - 54,128 - Upland cotton .........................................farms: - - - - - 15 - acres: - - - - - 13,073 - bales: - - - - - 54,128 - Pima cotton ...........................................farms: - - - - - - - acres: - - - - - - - bales: - - - - - - - Tobacco .................................................farms: - - - - - - - acres: - - - - - - - pounds: - - - - - - - Forage - land used for all hay and all haylage, : grass silage, and greenchop (see text) .................farms: 21 26 4 46 40 139 220 acres: 945 476 (D) 6,070 11,684 54,969 27,107 tons, dry: 2,170 676 (D) 14,612 27,787 399,687 99,345 Rice ....................................................farms: 1 - - 30 - - 10 acres: (D) - - 9,373 - - 2,040 cwt: (D) - - 722,254 - - 168,609 Sunflower seed, all .....................................farms: - - - - - - 5 acres: - - - - - - 1,350 pounds: - - - - - - 1,392,000 Sugarbeets for sugar ....................................farms: - - - - - 2 - acres: - - - - - (D) - tons: - - - - - (D) - Sugarcane for sugar .....................................farms: - - - - - - - acres: - - - - - - - tons: - - - - - - - Peanuts for nuts ........................................farms: - - - - - - - acres: - - - - - - - pounds: - - - - - - - Vegetables harvested for sale (see text) ................farms: 57 133 45 119 15 155 174 acres: 72 212 1,548 185 (D) 36,314 3,720 Potatoes ..............................................farms: 8 23 - 6 3 5 17 acres: 4 15 - 3 1 2,830 5 Sweet potatoes ........................................farms: 6 - 15 - - 3 - acres: 1 - 2 - - 9 - Land in orchards ........................................farms: 1,454 158 102 329 - 1,540 232 acres: 50,527 559 2,846 1,752 - 44,894 28,362 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 1. County Summary Highlights: 2012 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : San Benito :San Bernardino : San Diego : San Francisco : San Joaquin :San Luis Obispo: San Mateo :Santa Barbara ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Selected crops harvested: - Con. : Wheat for grain, all - Con. : : Durum wheat for grain .................................farms: - - - - 10 - - 3 acres: - - - - (D) - - (D) bushels: - - - - 160,325 - - 567 Oats for grain ..........................................farms: 1 - 1 - 20 10 3 3 acres: (D) - (D) - 1,890 355 90 166 bushels: (D) - (D) - 133,637 29,928 11,070 18,580 Barley for grain ........................................farms: 4 3 - - 8 49 - 7 acres: 145 (D) - - 716 15,782 - (D) bushels: 7,162 (D) - - 57,500 705,362 - (D) Sorghum for grain .......................................farms: - - - - 3 - - - acres: - - - - 242 - - - bushels: - - - - 17,406 - - - Sorghum for silage or greenchop .........................farms: - 9 - - 10 - - - acres: - 753 - - 958 - - - tons: - 8,995 - - 13,757 - - - Soybeans for beans ......................................farms: - - - - - - - - acres: - - - - - - - - bushels: - - - - - - - - Dry edible beans, excluding limas .......................farms: 1 4 - - 40 6 2 8 acres: (D) (D) - - 3,742 196 (D) 949 cwt: (D) (D) - - 85,903 3,699 (D) 19,931 Cotton, all .............................................farms: - - - - - - - - acres: - - - - - - - - bales: - - - - - - - - Upland cotton .........................................farms: - - - - - - - - acres: - - - - - - - - bales: - - - - - - - - Pima cotton ...........................................farms: - - - - - - - - acres: - - - - - - - - bales: - - - - - - - - Tobacco .................................................farms: - - - - - - - - acres: - - - - - - - - pounds: - - - - - - - - Forage - land used for all hay and all haylage, : grass silage, and greenchop (see text) .................farms: 104 56 40 1 474 256 30 95 acres: 6,207 10,961 5,006 (D) 83,664 24,178 1,380 5,780 tons, dry: 8,781 79,069 19,664 (D) 504,092 66,129 2,509 16,156 Rice ....................................................farms: - - - - 16 - - - acres: - - - - 4,211 - - - cwt: - - - - 354,712 - - - Sunflower seed, all .....................................farms: - - 9 - 2 - - - acres: - - 96 - (D) - - - pounds: - - 114,000 - (D) - - - Sugarbeets for sugar ....................................farms: - - - - - - - - acres: - - - - - - - - tons: - - - - - - - - Sugarcane for sugar .....................................farms: - - - - - - - - acres: - - - - - - - - tons: - - - - - - - - Peanuts for nuts ........................................farms: - - - - - - - - acres: - - - - - - - - pounds: - - - - - - - - Vegetables harvested for sale (see text) ................farms: 64 112 335 - 193 298 61 222 acres: 10,461 1,032 1,968 - 57,903 25,441 1,312 64,393 Potatoes ..............................................farms: 5 - 19 - 6 8 8 5 acres: 48 - 9 - 2,952 (D) 4 (D) Sweet potatoes ........................................farms: - 8 2 - 1 - - - acres: - 3 (D) - (D) - - - Land in orchards ........................................farms: 192 460 4,124 2 2,327 1,108 56 735 acres: 7,215 5,855 32,887 (D) 238,036 52,739 217 33,541 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 1. County Summary Highlights: 2012 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Santa Clara : Santa Cruz : Shasta : Sierra : Siskiyou : Solano : Sonoma : Stanislaus ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Selected crops harvested: - Con. : Wheat for grain, all - Con. : : Durum wheat for grain .................................farms: - 2 - - 2 3 - 9 acres: - (D) - - (D) (D) - 505 bushels: - (D) - - (D) 93,161 - (D) Oats for grain ..........................................farms: - - - - 2 2 6 44 acres: - - - - (D) (D) 574 4,385 bushels: - - - - (D) (D) 25,376 457,806 Barley for grain ........................................farms: - - 4 - 24 6 1 7 acres: - - (D) - 4,167 2,984 (D) 415 bushels: - - (D) - 320,417 166,556 (D) 18,234 Sorghum for grain .......................................farms: - - 1 - - 3 - 4 acres: - - (D) - - 356 - 930 bushels: - - (D) - - 29,355 - 80,764 Sorghum for silage or greenchop .........................farms: - - - - - - 3 21 acres: - - - - - - 250 3,180 tons: - - - - - - 4,032 49,735 Soybeans for beans ......................................farms: - - - - - - - - acres: - - - - - - - - bushels: - - - - - - - - Dry edible beans, excluding limas .......................farms: 4 1 - - - 6 8 28 acres: (D) (D) - - - 700 11 1,647 cwt: (D) (D) - - - 14,050 274 32,801 Cotton, all .............................................farms: - - - - - - - - acres: - - - - - - - - bales: - - - - - - - - Upland cotton .........................................farms: - - - - - - - - acres: - - - - - - - - bales: - - - - - - - - Pima cotton ...........................................farms: - - - - - - - - acres: - - - - - - - - bales: - - - - - - - - Tobacco .................................................farms: - - - - - - - - acres: - - - - - - - - pounds: - - - - - - - - Forage - land used for all hay and all haylage, : grass silage, and greenchop (see text) .................farms: 69 5 223 20 343 156 140 622 acres: 6,084 (D) 13,696 2,676 90,042 53,277 21,100 69,986 tons, dry: 18,008 (D) 47,230 6,538 327,922 253,829 82,518 419,431 Rice ....................................................farms: - - - - 1 1 - 4 acres: - - - - (D) (D) - 219 cwt: - - - - (D) (D) - 19,466 Sunflower seed, all .....................................farms: - - 3 - - 18 - - acres: - - 3 - - 8,378 - - pounds: - - 5,100 - - 11,753,130 - - Sugarbeets for sugar ....................................farms: - - - - - - - - acres: - - - - - - - - tons: - - - - - - - - Sugarcane for sugar .....................................farms: - - - - - - - - acres: - - - - - - - - tons: - - - - - - - - Peanuts for nuts ........................................farms: - - - - - - - - acres: - - - - - - - - pounds: - - - - - - - - Vegetables harvested for sale (see text) ................farms: 200 91 97 - 58 67 330 124 acres: 11,234 17,898 134 - 9,129 13,277 1,121 19,050 Potatoes ..............................................farms: 5 9 5 - 17 5 26 15 acres: 4 18 1 - 6,217 11 24 22 Sweet potatoes ........................................farms: 2 - - - - 2 - 12 acres: (D) - - - - (D) - 1,207 Land in orchards ........................................farms: 366 271 298 1 23 318 2,029 2,293 acres: 3,598 4,274 1,911 (D) 166 19,869 66,107 186,029 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 1. County Summary Highlights: 2012 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Sutter : Tehama : Trinity : Tulare : Tuolumne : Ventura : Yolo : Yuba ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Selected crops harvested: - Con. : Wheat for grain, all - Con. : : Durum wheat for grain .................................farms: 3 - - 6 - - 6 2 acres: (D) - - (D) - - 1,289 (D) bushels: 47,730 - - 99,996 - - 112,322 (D) Oats for grain ..........................................farms: 3 8 - 25 - 2 8 5 acres: 284 259 - 1,116 - (D) 527 21 bushels: (D) 21,791 - 93,128 - (D) 72,334 1,125 Barley for grain ........................................farms: - 2 - 11 - 2 8 - acres: - (D) - 1,030 - (D) 2,948 - bushels: - (D) - 47,407 - (D) 160,560 - Sorghum for grain .......................................farms: 6 - - 12 - - 14 - acres: 996 - - 2,395 - - 1,041 - bushels: 112,390 - - 237,558 - - 86,769 - Sorghum for silage or greenchop .........................farms: - - - 49 - - 1 - acres: - - - 6,853 - - (D) - tons: - - - 120,719 - - (D) - Soybeans for beans ......................................farms: - - - - - - 1 - acres: - - - - - - (D) - bushels: - - - - - - (D) - Dry edible beans, excluding limas .......................farms: 27 1 - 20 5 2 8 2 acres: 7,073 (D) - 2,262 5 (D) 2,203 (D) cwt: 138,493 (D) - 75,727 110 (D) 41,841 (D) Cotton, all .............................................farms: 2 - - 59 - - - - acres: (D) - - 26,672 - - - - bales: (D) - - 85,744 - - - - Upland cotton .........................................farms: 2 - - 55 - - - - acres: (D) - - 18,415 - - - - bales: (D) - - 61,568 - - - - Pima cotton ...........................................farms: - - - 9 - - - - acres: - - - 8,257 - - - - bales: - - - 24,176 - - - - Tobacco .................................................farms: - - - - - - - - acres: - - - - - - - - pounds: - - - - - - - - Forage - land used for all hay and all haylage, : grass silage, and greenchop (see text) .................farms: 72 234 17 539 13 34 206 35 acres: 9,831 17,640 464 163,358 410 2,062 48,452 3,162 tons, dry: 51,543 52,208 601 1,165,959 1,317 4,920 254,732 13,680 Rice ....................................................farms: 269 8 - - - - 69 117 acres: 121,035 1,551 - - - - 36,341 34,303 cwt: 9,666,540 120,079 - - - - 2,963,648 2,670,523 Sunflower seed, all .....................................farms: 33 - - - - 3 53 - acres: 9,047 - - - - 6 18,075 - pounds: 12,222,577 - - - - 9,000 25,593,055 - Sugarbeets for sugar ....................................farms: - - - - - - - - acres: - - - - - - - - tons: - - - - - - - - Sugarcane for sugar .....................................farms: - - - - - - - - acres: - - - - - - - - tons: - - - - - - - - Peanuts for nuts ........................................farms: - - - - - - - - acres: - - - - - - - - pounds: - - - - - - - - Vegetables harvested for sale (see text) ................farms: 56 75 66 134 17 106 114 47 acres: 18,934 83 67 3,611 (D) 35,714 45,059 86 Potatoes ..............................................farms: 3 - 10 4 5 3 9 2 acres: 1 - 2 (D) 1 2 23 (D) Sweet potatoes ........................................farms: - - 2 8 - - 3 7 acres: - - (D) 3 - - 1 1 Land in orchards ........................................farms: 839 614 62 3,448 65 1,622 401 262 acres: 75,020 47,806 271 294,735 404 42,998 49,418 28,572 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Table 2. Market Value of Agricultural Products Sold Including Direct Sales: 2012 and 2007 [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : California : Alameda : Alpine : Amador : Butte : Calaveras : Colusa ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Total sales (see text) ..............................farms, 2012: 77,857 452 3 461 2,056 663 782 2007: 81,033 525 7 479 2,048 631 814 $1,000, 2012: 42,627,472 57,522 265 31,968 541,274 26,004 577,313 2007: 33,885,064 50,358 (D) 20,701 342,766 16,498 386,300 Average per farm ..............................dollars, 2012: 547,510 127,261 88,444 69,345 263,265 39,222 738,251 2007: 418,164 95,919 (D) 43,217 167,366 26,146 474,570 2012 value of sales: : Less than $1,000 (see text) ...........................farms: 15,396 145 - 95 452 219 94 $1,000: 1,673 15 - 11 52 33 6 $1,000 to $2,499 ......................................farms: 4,590 44 - 45 112 72 8 $1,000: 7,596 74 - 77 185 119 14 $2,500 to $4,999 ......................................farms: 5,736 31 - 47 98 47 18 $1,000: 20,356 110 - 180 353 162 71 $5,000 to $9,999 ......................................farms: 7,718 39 - 45 167 85 31 $1,000: 53,701 279 - 305 1,210 592 213 : $10,000 to $19,999 ....................................farms: 7,455 54 - 49 234 84 32 $1,000: 103,217 691 - 640 3,301 1,185 466 $20,000 to $24,999 ....................................farms: 2,682 25 - 15 78 25 18 $1,000: 58,665 520 - 323 1,742 549 382 $25,000 to $39,999 ....................................farms: 4,780 27 2 24 112 49 46 $1,000: 148,840 807 (D) 725 3,477 1,492 1,427 $40,000 to $49,999 ....................................farms: 2,263 5 - 22 93 14 12 $1,000: 99,296 231 - 984 4,037 597 552 : $50,000 to $99,999 ....................................farms: 6,679 38 - 48 172 17 61 $1,000: 469,861 2,539 - 3,406 11,969 1,267 4,290 $100,000 to $249,999 ..................................farms: 6,922 18 1 36 167 33 113 $1,000: 1,103,202 2,901 (D) 5,276 27,717 4,495 19,905 $250,000 to $499,999 ..................................farms: 4,117 12 - 21 146 9 135 $1,000: 1,444,378 4,149 - 7,205 51,897 3,151 49,990 $500,000 or more ......................................farms: 9,519 14 - 14 225 9 214 $1,000: 39,116,688 45,204 - 12,835 435,334 12,363 499,998 2007 value of sales: : Less than $1,000 (see text) ...........................farms: 18,111 147 1 120 458 201 124 $1,000: 2,219 19 - 16 59 23 13 $1,000 to $2,499 ......................................farms: 5,854 54 2 63 150 111 34 $1,000: 9,652 89 (D) 105 255 179 56 $2,500 to $4,999 ......................................farms: 6,548 58 1 45 146 58 26 $1,000: 23,510 210 (D) 161 518 206 90 $5,000 to $9,999 ......................................farms: 7,208 54 - 70 196 72 21 $1,000: 51,093 407 - 498 1,403 502 143 : $10,000 to $19,999 ....................................farms: 7,761 52 1 48 191 69 46 $1,000: 108,885 696 (D) 696 2,704 926 639 $20,000 to $24,999 ....................................farms: 2,720 22 - 22 42 20 14 $1,000: 59,120 493 - 490 919 420 308 $25,000 to $39,999 ....................................farms: 5,081 32 - 44 133 27 46 $1,000: 158,823 1,017 - 1,353 4,113 829 1,485 $40,000 to $49,999 ....................................farms: 2,497 21 - 4 61 15 30 $1,000: 108,929 907 - 184 2,675 652 1,312 $50,000 to $99,999 ....................................farms: 6,212 36 1 17 149 28 57 $1,000: 435,855 2,434 (D) 1,243 10,408 1,964 4,132 $100,000 to $249,999 ..................................farms: 6,544 19 1 27 184 20 131 $1,000: 1,026,860 3,012 (D) 3,753 30,627 2,738 22,455 : $250,000 to $499,999 ..................................farms: 3,917 16 - 11 165 7 111 $1,000: 1,361,005 5,406 - 3,744 56,779 2,164 37,553 $500,000 or more ......................................farms: 8,580 14 - 8 173 3 174 $1,000: 30,539,114 35,667 - 8,457 232,308 5,897 318,113 : Value of sales by commodity or commodity group: : Crops, including nursery and : greenhouse crops ...............................farms, 2012: 49,253 172 3 204 1,389 205 629 2007: 48,901 206 1 175 1,346 164 641 $1,000, 2012: 30,366,898 47,557 (D) 21,767 526,847 11,835 569,922 2007: 22,903,021 34,171 (D) 13,095 330,807 4,385 378,327 Grains, oilseeds, dry beans, and : dry peas .....................................farms, 2012: 4,757 2 - 4 234 - 391 2007: 4,261 1 - 1 239 4 402 $1,000, 2012: 1,727,708 (D) - 165 142,161 - 233,108 2007: 1,105,369 (D) - (D) 102,452 11 161,289 Corn ........................................farms, 2012: 1,796 - - 2 8 - 27 2007: 1,811 1 - 1 8 4 23 $1,000, 2012: 419,544 - - (D) (D) - 7,529 2007: 309,402 (D) - (D) 565 11 4,871 Wheat .......................................farms, 2012: 1,499 1 - - 17 - 57 2007: 1,188 - - 1 14 - 69 $1,000, 2012: 341,702 (D) - - 1,017 - 7,012 2007: 155,566 - - (D) 793 - 7,769 Soybeans ....................................farms, 2012: 2 - - - - - - 2007: 15 - - - 2 - 1 $1,000, 2012: (D) - - - - - - 2007: 326 - - - (D) - (D) Sorghum .....................................farms, 2012: 200 - - - - - - 2007: 150 - - - 1 - 7 $1,000, 2012: (D) - - - - - - 2007: 7,909 - - - (D) - (D) Barley ......................................farms, 2012: 261 1 - - 1 - 1 2007: 160 - - - - - - $1,000, 2012: 29,212 (D) - - (D) - (D) 2007: 11,146 - - - - - - Rice ........................................farms, 2012: 1,391 - - - 199 - 365 2007: 1,305 - - - 217 - 366 $1,000, 2012: 782,644 - - - 139,269 - 211,831 2007: 501,046 - - - 98,819 - 137,832 Other grains, oilseeds, dry beans, : and dry peas ...............................farms, 2012: 953 - - 2 22 - 26 2007: 967 - - - 22 - 50 $1,000, 2012: 138,816 - - (D) 1,058 - (D) 2007: 119,976 - - - 2,262 - 10,519 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 2. Market Value of Agricultural Products Sold Including Direct Sales: 2012 and 2007 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Contra Costa : Del Norte : El Dorado : Fresno : Glenn : Humboldt : Imperial ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Total sales (see text) ..............................farms, 2012: 602 121 1,358 5,683 1,311 930 421 2007: 634 85 1,268 6,081 1,242 852 452 $1,000, 2012: 89,358 35,651 30,507 4,973,041 637,363 203,260 1,888,639 2007: 70,810 32,508 19,948 3,730,546 405,439 149,844 1,290,253 Average per farm ..............................dollars, 2012: 148,436 294,639 22,465 875,073 486,165 218,559 4,486,079 2007: 111,687 382,445 15,732 613,476 326,441 175,873 2,854,543 2012 value of sales: : Less than $1,000 (see text) ...........................farms: 179 45 472 888 186 202 49 $1,000: 25 6 71 78 11 25 7 $1,000 to $2,499 ......................................farms: 57 13 151 170 55 93 4 $1,000: 90 (D) 261 278 80 160 7 $2,500 to $4,999 ......................................farms: 46 10 160 228 86 100 4 $1,000: 152 34 556 827 289 353 13 $5,000 to $9,999 ......................................farms: 60 11 137 311 85 113 9 $1,000: 394 79 918 2,236 617 749 70 : $10,000 to $19,999 ....................................farms: 61 19 141 336 119 105 16 $1,000: 842 (D) 1,947 4,727 1,629 1,467 237 $20,000 to $24,999 ....................................farms: 22 1 38 157 33 27 10 $1,000: 496 (D) 846 3,423 723 587 212 $25,000 to $39,999 ....................................farms: 38 1 84 316 89 54 22 $1,000: 1,162 (D) 2,663 9,823 2,802 1,670 630 $40,000 to $49,999 ....................................farms: 22 - 26 180 36 27 10 $1,000: 950 - 1,115 7,877 1,601 1,199 452 : $50,000 to $99,999 ....................................farms: 38 7 72 715 124 53 16 $1,000: 2,564 627 4,798 50,633 9,142 3,767 952 $100,000 to $249,999 ..................................farms: 32 1 55 828 156 68 29 $1,000: 4,968 (D) 7,773 131,885 25,311 10,918 4,664 $250,000 to $499,999 ..................................farms: 14 5 15 458 121 37 45 $1,000: 4,971 1,813 4,522 158,289 44,577 12,773 15,742 $500,000 or more ......................................farms: 33 8 7 1,096 221 51 207 $1,000: 72,744 32,558 5,039 4,602,966 550,580 169,593 1,865,653 2007 value of sales: : Less than $1,000 (see text) ...........................farms: 230 26 486 904 181 198 42 $1,000: 17 5 57 72 20 32 3 $1,000 to $2,499 ......................................farms: 66 20 131 255 59 96 8 $1,000: 105 30 (D) 406 100 152 10 $2,500 to $4,999 ......................................farms: 64 5 147 209 51 100 14 $1,000: 224 (D) (D) 745 181 337 55 $5,000 to $9,999 ......................................farms: 61 2 170 359 94 87 12 $1,000: 406 (D) (D) 2,619 645 638 80 : $10,000 to $19,999 ....................................farms: 54 9 135 501 118 80 26 $1,000: 796 127 (D) 7,165 1,629 1,124 365 $20,000 to $24,999 ....................................farms: 8 2 28 202 36 33 11 $1,000: 168 (D) (D) 4,382 787 711 229 $25,000 to $39,999 ....................................farms: 25 2 61 521 73 44 19 $1,000: 789 (D) 1,862 16,287 2,395 1,356 659 $40,000 to $49,999 ....................................farms: 13 2 37 283 41 18 11 $1,000: 566 (D) 1,617 12,110 1,785 803 450 $50,000 to $99,999 ....................................farms: 32 3 35 806 98 68 29 $1,000: 2,317 223 2,453 56,206 7,095 4,787 2,229 $100,000 to $249,999 ..................................farms: 38 2 24 698 150 58 45 $1,000: 6,383 (D) 3,343 107,450 24,143 9,125 6,936 : $250,000 to $499,999 ..................................farms: 18 4 12 372 141 28 32 $1,000: 5,668 1,478 4,434 130,554 47,195 10,727 11,416 $500,000 or more ......................................farms: 25 8 2 971 200 42 203 $1,000: 53,371 30,051 (D) 3,392,550 319,464 120,053 1,267,821 : Value of sales by commodity or commodity group: : Crops, including nursery and : greenhouse crops ...............................farms, 2012: 297 43 680 4,278 908 423 327 2007: 254 21 580 4,523 831 275 352 $1,000, 2012: 75,703 16,561 24,340 3,700,093 509,107 (D) 1,310,273 2007: 59,654 13,178 16,734 2,499,623 308,121 (D) 703,123 Grains, oilseeds, dry beans, and : dry peas .....................................farms, 2012: 13 - 16 291 340 31 168 2007: 10 - 2 305 295 16 128 $1,000, 2012: (D) - 35 85,348 155,021 124 86,658 2007: 1,259 - (D) 48,205 116,370 504 26,173 Corn ........................................farms, 2012: 7 - 12 110 65 13 6 2007: 7 - 2 158 65 15 8 $1,000, 2012: 2,798 - 31 18,475 13,423 86 2,917 2007: 1,065 - (D) 21,810 15,780 (D) 1,313 Wheat .......................................farms, 2012: 6 - - 166 42 3 160 2007: 5 - 2 112 38 - 114 $1,000, 2012: 4,870 - - 47,226 2,974 (D) 83,053 2007: 194 - (D) 15,137 2,588 - 24,286 Soybeans ....................................farms, 2012: - - - - - - - 2007: - - - - - - - $1,000, 2012: - - - - - - - 2007: - - - - - - - Sorghum .....................................farms, 2012: - - - 12 4 - 5 2007: - - - 15 5 - 3 $1,000, 2012: - - - 1,837 144 - 134 2007: - - - 608 167 - (D) Barley ......................................farms, 2012: 2 - - 25 7 2 4 2007: - - - 18 6 - 1 $1,000, 2012: (D) - - 3,013 297 (D) (D) 2007: - - - 1,506 213 - (D) Rice ........................................farms, 2012: 1 - - 8 275 - - 2007: - - - 7 249 - - $1,000, 2012: (D) - - 5,448 133,974 - - 2007: - - - 3,638 92,450 - - Other grains, oilseeds, dry beans, : and dry peas ...............................farms, 2012: 5 - 4 54 53 22 5 2007: - - - 74 44 1 13 $1,000, 2012: 418 - 4 9,350 4,209 35 (D) 2007: - - - 5,505 5,173 (D) (D) ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 2. Market Value of Agricultural Products Sold Including Direct Sales: 2012 and 2007 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Inyo : Kern : Kings : Lake : Lassen : Los Angeles : Madera ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Total sales (see text) ..............................farms, 2012: 125 1,938 1,056 838 448 1,294 1,507 2007: 94 2,117 1,129 845 459 1,734 1,708 $1,000, 2012: 19,613 3,998,990 1,829,236 99,463 72,671 193,097 1,602,766 2007: 14,452 3,204,147 1,358,410 61,102 55,504 325,880 990,121 Average per farm ..............................dollars, 2012: 156,903 2,063,462 1,732,232 118,691 162,212 149,225 1,063,548 2007: 153,740 1,513,532 1,203,198 72,310 120,923 187,935 579,696 2012 value of sales: : Less than $1,000 (see text) ...........................farms: 31 435 159 196 130 438 262 $1,000: 2 37 5 35 12 46 18 $1,000 to $2,499 ......................................farms: 12 87 35 54 33 125 66 $1,000: 17 139 67 79 55 208 105 $2,500 to $4,999 ......................................farms: 19 91 57 68 43 138 63 $1,000: 65 321 215 239 175 482 217 $5,000 to $9,999 ......................................farms: 12 123 84 79 54 151 58 $1,000: 79 829 582 557 391 1,024 409 : $10,000 to $19,999 ....................................farms: 11 99 73 93 33 106 71 $1,000: 121 1,467 1,020 1,321 443 1,440 989 $20,000 to $24,999 ....................................farms: 6 32 22 46 19 48 38 $1,000: 140 685 480 1,029 422 1,023 830 $25,000 to $39,999 ....................................farms: 6 77 37 67 34 63 42 $1,000: 182 2,470 1,203 2,111 1,016 1,975 1,361 $40,000 to $49,999 ....................................farms: 3 30 24 30 6 19 43 $1,000: 125 1,348 1,073 1,314 258 809 1,800 : $50,000 to $99,999 ....................................farms: 5 115 89 91 23 56 159 $1,000: 360 8,177 6,407 6,255 1,434 3,686 11,298 $100,000 to $249,999 ..................................farms: 3 120 103 55 35 63 201 $1,000: 407 18,467 17,110 8,440 6,116 9,375 32,786 $250,000 to $499,999 ..................................farms: 5 139 45 22 20 35 135 $1,000: 1,839 50,516 15,594 7,801 7,006 11,808 46,925 $500,000 or more ......................................farms: 12 590 328 37 18 52 369 $1,000: 16,275 3,914,534 1,785,482 70,281 55,343 161,221 1,506,028 2007 value of sales: : Less than $1,000 (see text) ...........................farms: 31 538 244 233 125 811 361 $1,000: (D) 45 43 63 13 51 41 $1,000 to $2,499 ......................................farms: 7 125 43 111 45 163 74 $1,000: 11 206 72 184 75 264 128 $2,500 to $4,999 ......................................farms: 5 90 53 126 47 144 83 $1,000: 18 312 179 447 164 516 291 $5,000 to $9,999 ......................................farms: 2 103 70 91 65 134 83 $1,000: (D) 718 534 651 460 892 571 : $10,000 to $19,999 ....................................farms: 11 132 67 79 42 72 85 $1,000: 139 1,924 878 1,104 566 948 1,242 $20,000 to $24,999 ....................................farms: 6 33 40 32 17 58 29 $1,000: 140 730 892 708 381 1,230 630 $25,000 to $39,999 ....................................farms: 6 78 36 42 14 58 102 $1,000: 158 2,458 1,111 1,272 426 1,739 3,248 $40,000 to $49,999 ....................................farms: 2 45 30 14 12 33 62 $1,000: (D) 2,003 1,303 622 555 1,438 2,742 $50,000 to $99,999 ....................................farms: 2 119 73 47 33 67 166 $1,000: (D) 8,477 5,431 3,373 2,314 4,672 11,971 $100,000 to $249,999 ..................................farms: 5 164 97 31 32 59 249 $1,000: 775 27,159 15,779 4,749 5,443 8,804 38,572 : $250,000 to $499,999 ..................................farms: 10 161 61 14 14 44 125 $1,000: 3,572 58,582 23,239 4,911 4,612 15,254 44,234 $500,000 or more ......................................farms: 7 529 315 25 13 91 289 $1,000: 9,433 3,101,533 1,308,948 43,019 40,495 290,071 886,450 : Value of sales by commodity or commodity group: : Crops, including nursery and : greenhouse crops ...............................farms, 2012: 37 1,046 671 589 169 686 1,013 2007: 22 1,091 703 581 151 589 1,035 $1,000, 2012: 6,791 3,231,921 854,628 97,477 (D) 174,019 1,239,924 2007: 5,597 2,551,435 651,456 59,713 36,523 302,174 625,520 Grains, oilseeds, dry beans, and : dry peas .....................................farms, 2012: - 196 255 15 27 8 61 2007: - 181 269 6 22 6 64 $1,000, 2012: - 51,641 104,350 36 1,417 4,708 (D) 2007: - 48,017 (D) 6 509 127 (D) Corn ........................................farms, 2012: - 79 167 5 1 3 32 2007: - 86 213 1 1 4 44 $1,000, 2012: - 18,245 44,414 (Z) (D) (D) 9,652 2007: - 20,988 36,688 (D) (D) (D) 5,961 Wheat .......................................farms, 2012: - 126 115 7 14 - 23 2007: - 117 85 - 11 2 22 $1,000, 2012: - 24,857 39,737 (D) 407 - (D) 2007: - 19,702 19,462 - 182 (D) 1,998 Soybeans ....................................farms, 2012: - - - - - - - 2007: - 1 - - - - - $1,000, 2012: - - - - - - - 2007: - (D) - - - - - Sorghum .....................................farms, 2012: - 12 49 - - - - 2007: - 18 22 - - - 3 $1,000, 2012: - 2,150 4,749 - - - - 2007: - 2,539 946 - - - 35 Barley ......................................farms, 2012: - 11 8 - 2 5 5 2007: - 10 4 - 7 - 3 $1,000, 2012: - 1,245 2,169 - (D) (D) 146 2007: - (D) (D) - 184 - 32 Rice ........................................farms, 2012: - - - - 2 - 2 2007: - - - - - - 1 $1,000, 2012: - - - - (D) - (D) 2007: - - - - - - (D) Other grains, oilseeds, dry beans, : and dry peas ...............................farms, 2012: - 26 21 3 12 1 17 2007: - 27 42 5 6 - 18 $1,000, 2012: - 5,143 13,281 (D) 808 (D) 864 2007: - 3,921 3,532 (D) (D) - (D) ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 2. Market Value of Agricultural Products Sold Including Direct Sales: 2012 and 2007 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Marin : Mariposa : Mendocino : Merced : Modoc : Mono : Monterey ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Total sales (see text) ..............................farms, 2012: 323 364 1,220 2,486 437 72 1,179 2007: 255 302 1,136 2,607 448 84 1,199 $1,000, 2012: 91,809 22,321 148,897 2,967,523 106,606 17,976 2,979,735 2007: 57,871 11,464 122,408 2,330,408 70,811 9,770 2,178,470 Average per farm ..............................dollars, 2012: 284,237 61,322 122,047 1,193,694 243,950 249,664 2,527,341 2007: 226,944 37,960 107,754 893,904 158,059 116,313 1,816,906 2012 value of sales: : Less than $1,000 (see text) ...........................farms: 61 123 287 295 96 15 258 $1,000: 6 23 44 31 4 2 19 $1,000 to $2,499 ......................................farms: 21 34 67 67 19 4 62 $1,000: 33 59 105 104 32 6 104 $2,500 to $4,999 ......................................farms: 9 29 105 115 36 10 59 $1,000: 30 97 356 401 128 (D) 214 $5,000 to $9,999 ......................................farms: 25 43 148 119 22 8 97 $1,000: 185 328 1,068 823 149 60 651 : $10,000 to $19,999 ....................................farms: 33 44 127 168 17 1 105 $1,000: 419 636 1,754 2,455 229 (D) 1,328 $20,000 to $24,999 ....................................farms: 4 17 51 51 8 - 18 $1,000: 84 356 1,136 1,131 166 - 382 $25,000 to $39,999 ....................................farms: 15 11 94 149 22 3 51 $1,000: 460 350 2,851 4,759 666 (D) 1,613 $40,000 to $49,999 ....................................farms: 5 7 44 103 11 1 27 $1,000: 212 327 1,960 4,566 482 (D) 1,179 : $50,000 to $99,999 ....................................farms: 40 24 91 283 44 1 85 $1,000: 2,964 1,639 5,904 20,169 3,243 (D) 6,605 $100,000 to $249,999 ..................................farms: 44 18 99 342 82 11 86 $1,000: 7,049 2,966 15,312 55,590 12,329 1,916 14,861 $250,000 to $499,999 ..................................farms: 17 4 31 204 32 7 52 $1,000: 5,697 1,198 10,742 72,197 11,817 2,166 18,993 $500,000 or more ......................................farms: 49 10 76 590 48 11 279 $1,000: 74,671 14,342 107,667 2,805,299 77,362 13,576 2,933,785 2007 value of sales: : Less than $1,000 (see text) ...........................farms: 53 121 266 421 112 26 253 $1,000: 10 14 45 40 11 3 34 $1,000 to $2,499 ......................................farms: 14 24 81 88 23 9 65 $1,000: 22 39 139 138 39 16 99 $2,500 to $4,999 ......................................farms: 22 32 97 93 35 5 92 $1,000: 84 119 332 336 139 21 317 $5,000 to $9,999 ......................................farms: 25 29 151 110 28 6 72 $1,000: 184 196 1,090 798 203 42 514 : $10,000 to $19,999 ....................................farms: 23 31 149 206 31 6 83 $1,000: 327 416 2,144 3,003 447 (D) 1,193 $20,000 to $24,999 ....................................farms: 6 5 47 73 12 2 30 $1,000: 123 103 1,028 1,576 262 (D) 641 $25,000 to $39,999 ....................................farms: 13 18 60 185 26 2 52 $1,000: 367 536 1,889 5,812 824 (D) 1,630 $40,000 to $49,999 ....................................farms: 9 9 34 101 17 - 29 $1,000: 392 397 1,490 4,435 769 - 1,268 $50,000 to $99,999 ....................................farms: 26 15 78 297 44 4 69 $1,000: 1,723 971 5,382 20,650 3,058 259 4,736 $100,000 to $249,999 ..................................farms: 25 10 85 298 55 15 89 $1,000: 4,043 1,300 13,370 48,007 8,164 2,180 14,204 : $250,000 to $499,999 ..................................farms: 9 3 41 150 30 5 67 $1,000: 3,203 886 15,049 53,820 10,340 1,719 23,158 $500,000 or more ......................................farms: 30 5 47 585 35 4 298 $1,000: 47,394 6,488 80,450 2,191,793 46,555 5,340 2,130,677 : Value of sales by commodity or commodity group: : Crops, including nursery and : greenhouse crops ...............................farms, 2012: 105 52 699 1,714 204 27 672 2007: 70 30 650 1,684 203 21 647 $1,000, 2012: 8,581 2,608 137,167 1,272,622 70,327 8,810 2,935,327 2007: 6,075 485 106,614 879,332 43,609 3,976 2,139,349 Grains, oilseeds, dry beans, and : dry peas .....................................farms, 2012: 4 - 6 307 35 - 38 2007: 2 - 2 300 42 1 23 $1,000, 2012: (D) - 883 87,492 (D) - 4,969 2007: (D) - (D) 46,752 7,640 (D) 2,042 Corn ........................................farms, 2012: - - 2 224 2 - 11 2007: - - 1 246 - - 4 $1,000, 2012: - - (D) 58,762 (D) - (D) 2007: - - (D) 36,283 - - 1 Wheat .......................................farms, 2012: 3 - 2 63 20 - 6 2007: - - 1 36 25 - 2 $1,000, 2012: (Z) - (D) 19,471 8,253 - 517 2007: - - (D) 3,629 2,559 - (D) Soybeans ....................................farms, 2012: - - - - - - - 2007: - - - - - - - $1,000, 2012: - - - - - - - 2007: - - - - - - - Sorghum .....................................farms, 2012: - - - 16 - - - 2007: - - - 14 - - - $1,000, 2012: - - - 450 - - - 2007: - - - 165 - - - Barley ......................................farms, 2012: - - 1 6 17 - 17 2007: 1 - 1 6 15 1 7 $1,000, 2012: - - (D) 959 (D) - 963 2007: (D) - (D) 441 943 (D) (D) Rice ........................................farms, 2012: - - 2 8 3 - 1 2007: - - - 5 - - - $1,000, 2012: - - (D) 4,317 (D) - (D) 2007: - - - 2,816 - - - Other grains, oilseeds, dry beans, : and dry peas ...............................farms, 2012: 1 - - 59 9 - 13 2007: 1 - - 63 11 - 13 $1,000, 2012: (D) - - 3,534 5,047 - 2,015 2007: (D) - - 3,417 4,137 - 1,086 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 2. Market Value of Agricultural Products Sold Including Direct Sales: 2012 and 2007 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Napa : Nevada : Orange : Placer : Plumas : Riverside : Sacramento ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Total sales (see text) ..............................farms, 2012: 1,685 742 312 1,355 141 2,949 1,352 2007: 1,638 690 325 1,488 142 3,463 1,393 $1,000, 2012: 536,147 9,094 158,513 43,437 22,617 1,038,949 326,588 2007: 376,868 9,468 336,390 44,968 (D) 1,012,041 346,139 Average per farm ..............................dollars, 2012: 318,188 12,256 508,056 32,057 160,404 352,305 241,559 2007: 230,078 13,722 1,035,046 30,220 (D) 292,244 248,485 2012 value of sales: : Less than $1,000 (see text) ...........................farms: 117 254 67 428 32 755 376 $1,000: 9 32 3 49 4 73 32 $1,000 to $2,499 ......................................farms: 64 56 27 198 9 142 145 $1,000: 100 98 43 326 (D) 225 241 $2,500 to $4,999 ......................................farms: 101 101 36 163 17 251 94 $1,000: 345 372 135 585 60 894 327 $5,000 to $9,999 ......................................farms: 148 124 53 197 10 320 153 $1,000: 990 902 372 1,417 77 2,210 1,090 : $10,000 to $19,999 ....................................farms: 195 95 26 130 22 362 109 $1,000: 2,523 1,281 349 1,740 331 5,043 1,554 $20,000 to $24,999 ....................................farms: 65 29 10 36 6 143 37 $1,000: 1,403 621 214 780 (D) 3,121 806 $25,000 to $39,999 ....................................farms: 144 35 5 63 8 228 70 $1,000: 4,460 1,040 160 1,920 263 7,043 2,215 $40,000 to $49,999 ....................................farms: 68 21 17 26 2 92 39 $1,000: 3,007 930 735 1,118 (D) 4,017 1,669 : $50,000 to $99,999 ....................................farms: 208 9 14 46 4 247 78 $1,000: 14,422 651 1,065 3,289 319 17,338 5,309 $100,000 to $249,999 ..................................farms: 251 13 12 28 16 139 83 $1,000: 40,550 1,673 2,122 4,475 2,320 21,787 13,449 $250,000 to $499,999 ..................................farms: 141 5 12 19 8 68 44 $1,000: 48,935 1,494 4,057 6,863 2,721 23,904 14,883 $500,000 or more ......................................farms: 183 - 33 21 7 202 124 $1,000: 419,404 - 149,258 20,877 16,293 953,293 285,014 2007 value of sales: : Less than $1,000 (see text) ...........................farms: 107 276 82 603 64 963 436 $1,000: 18 38 (D) 92 7 91 68 $1,000 to $2,499 ......................................farms: 69 84 14 197 16 199 177 $1,000: 118 (D) (D) 321 26 342 286 $2,500 to $4,999 ......................................farms: 132 75 40 169 7 307 105 $1,000: 484 257 140 611 22 1,085 368 $5,000 to $9,999 ......................................farms: 141 94 28 160 9 341 139 $1,000: 1,041 686 201 1,114 63 2,428 994 : $10,000 to $19,999 ....................................farms: 192 69 26 131 5 414 108 $1,000: 2,592 966 346 1,814 70 5,881 1,463 $20,000 to $24,999 ....................................farms: 96 11 13 38 3 195 35 $1,000: 2,091 248 281 839 67 4,230 750 $25,000 to $39,999 ....................................farms: 128 32 15 55 15 236 57 $1,000: 4,106 969 448 1,590 464 7,340 1,802 $40,000 to $49,999 ....................................farms: 81 13 2 18 1 94 24 $1,000: 3,560 577 (D) 791 (D) 4,095 1,017 $50,000 to $99,999 ....................................farms: 181 13 18 53 8 240 57 $1,000: 12,265 871 1,427 3,712 546 16,378 4,134 $100,000 to $249,999 ..................................farms: 226 17 22 26 11 176 72 $1,000: 34,656 2,850 3,791 3,730 1,466 25,640 11,640 : $250,000 to $499,999 ..................................farms: 133 5 20 20 1 59 40 $1,000: 44,614 1,375 6,576 6,513 (D) 19,950 14,432 $500,000 or more ......................................farms: 152 1 45 18 2 239 143 $1,000: 271,324 (D) 323,069 23,839 (D) 924,580 309,184 : Value of sales by commodity or commodity group: : Crops, including nursery and : greenhouse crops ...............................farms, 2012: 1,485 286 209 441 43 1,823 578 2007: 1,471 181 196 424 25 2,003 496 $1,000, 2012: 524,203 5,807 156,926 (D) 4,459 744,651 208,842 2007: 371,961 5,215 333,563 30,639 (D) 721,808 206,974 Grains, oilseeds, dry beans, and : dry peas .....................................farms, 2012: 5 5 10 37 - 49 102 2007: 6 - 1 28 - 29 114 $1,000, 2012: (D) (D) (D) (D) - (D) 22,415 2007: 176 - (D) 8,918 - (D) 27,024 Corn ........................................farms, 2012: 4 4 8 5 - 16 66 2007: 5 - - 1 - 8 81 $1,000, 2012: 2 (D) 50 (D) - (D) 15,127 2007: (D) - - (D) - 705 16,632 Wheat .......................................farms, 2012: - - 1 3 - 31 26 2007: - - - 2 - 17 38 $1,000, 2012: - - (D) 175 - 2,599 1,727 2007: - - - (D) - 1,720 3,076 Soybeans ....................................farms, 2012: - - - 1 - - - 2007: - - - - - 1 2 $1,000, 2012: - - - (D) - - - 2007: - - - - - (D) (D) Sorghum .....................................farms, 2012: - - - - - 11 1 2007: - - - - - 2 9 $1,000, 2012: - - - - - 407 (D) 2007: - - - - - (D) (D) Barley ......................................farms, 2012: - - 2 1 - 3 6 2007: - - - - - 1 3 $1,000, 2012: - - (D) (D) - 351 (D) 2007: - - - - - (D) 140 Rice ........................................farms, 2012: 1 - - 30 - - 10 2007: 1 - - 26 - - 15 $1,000, 2012: (D) - - (D) - - 2,911 2007: (D) - - 8,720 - - 4,611 Other grains, oilseeds, dry beans, : and dry peas ...............................farms, 2012: 1 3 2 1 - 2 21 2007: 4 - 1 1 - 1 38 $1,000, 2012: (D) 5 (D) (D) - (D) 2,484 2007: (D) - (D) (D) - (D) 2,354 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 2. Market Value of Agricultural Products Sold Including Direct Sales: 2012 and 2007 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : San Benito :San Bernardino : San Diego : San Francisco : San Joaquin :San Luis Obispo: San Mateo :Santa Barbara ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Total sales (see text) ..............................farms, 2012: 628 1,249 5,732 6 3,580 2,666 334 1,597 2007: 625 1,405 6,687 6 3,624 2,784 329 1,597 $1,000, 2012: 164,032 582,229 725,996 (D) 2,250,158 664,984 75,889 1,177,916 2007: 222,861 743,661 1,054,182 644 1,564,354 560,607 135,550 951,326 Average per farm ..............................dollars, 2012: 261,197 466,157 126,657 (D) 628,536 249,431 227,212 737,580 2007: 356,577 529,296 157,646 107,333 431,665 201,368 412,008 595,696 2012 value of sales: : Less than $1,000 (see text) ...........................farms: 151 328 807 4 462 696 96 255 $1,000: 15 40 106 - 40 64 16 24 $1,000 to $2,499 ......................................farms: 39 121 443 1 109 142 21 82 $1,000: 58 217 748 (D) 189 229 41 125 $2,500 to $4,999 ......................................farms: 65 122 811 1 158 199 17 100 $1,000: 212 454 2,833 (D) 532 684 68 369 $5,000 to $9,999 ......................................farms: 58 148 1,211 - 220 238 36 221 $1,000: 419 1,069 8,163 - 1,528 1,626 243 1,470 : $10,000 to $19,999 ....................................farms: 66 139 868 - 295 274 45 121 $1,000: 918 1,916 11,782 - 4,063 3,762 641 1,627 $20,000 to $24,999 ....................................farms: 27 44 237 - 126 92 22 60 $1,000: 606 966 5,171 - 2,751 2,027 480 1,315 $25,000 to $39,999 ....................................farms: 42 53 337 - 229 174 25 97 $1,000: 1,304 1,678 10,386 - 7,328 5,405 755 2,902 $40,000 to $49,999 ....................................farms: 8 26 151 - 127 93 5 54 $1,000: 357 1,145 6,626 - 5,559 4,090 234 2,363 : $50,000 to $99,999 ....................................farms: 53 60 346 - 446 248 18 137 $1,000: 3,721 4,094 23,941 - 32,230 16,918 1,210 9,622 $100,000 to $249,999 ..................................farms: 42 71 216 - 425 238 15 146 $1,000: 6,416 10,309 33,569 - 68,145 36,597 2,226 23,706 $250,000 to $499,999 ..................................farms: 16 22 120 - 296 104 16 84 $1,000: 5,776 7,539 42,199 - 104,779 35,692 5,793 29,581 $500,000 or more ......................................farms: 61 115 185 - 687 168 18 240 $1,000: 144,230 552,803 580,471 - 2,023,013 557,891 64,183 1,104,812 2007 value of sales: : Less than $1,000 (see text) ...........................farms: 170 393 1,143 - 532 843 95 277 $1,000: 18 54 211 - 60 63 2 29 $1,000 to $2,499 ......................................farms: 43 122 689 2 194 184 29 110 $1,000: 77 205 1,151 (D) 311 304 45 182 $2,500 to $4,999 ......................................farms: 55 142 1,043 - 224 251 16 158 $1,000: 196 504 3,763 - 809 928 57 583 $5,000 to $9,999 ......................................farms: 50 160 1,006 - 300 218 41 139 $1,000: 365 1,112 6,993 - 2,142 1,534 300 1,002 : $10,000 to $19,999 ....................................farms: 71 117 948 - 340 264 39 156 $1,000: 990 1,717 13,011 - 4,708 3,649 517 2,167 $20,000 to $24,999 ....................................farms: 23 30 267 - 120 93 10 56 $1,000: 502 650 5,751 - 2,599 2,025 213 1,228 $25,000 to $39,999 ....................................farms: 49 71 395 3 218 180 14 114 $1,000: 1,524 2,207 12,320 (D) 6,971 5,582 429 3,501 $40,000 to $49,999 ....................................farms: 14 31 128 - 139 87 8 50 $1,000: 623 1,421 5,541 - 6,090 3,873 331 2,177 $50,000 to $99,999 ....................................farms: 40 68 345 - 330 221 15 123 $1,000: 2,897 4,875 23,782 - 23,425 15,326 1,112 8,881 $100,000 to $249,999 ..................................farms: 41 88 326 - 421 203 13 124 $1,000: 6,113 13,157 50,920 - 66,799 30,542 2,054 18,654 : $250,000 to $499,999 ..................................farms: 18 35 135 - 274 109 18 76 $1,000: 5,759 11,552 46,056 - 97,570 36,308 6,051 25,736 $500,000 or more ......................................farms: 51 148 262 1 532 131 31 214 $1,000: 203,796 706,207 884,683 (D) 1,352,869 460,474 124,437 887,186 : Value of sales by commodity or commodity group: : Crops, including nursery and : greenhouse crops ...............................farms, 2012: 310 645 4,704 1 2,705 1,501 185 1,114 2007: 283 664 5,284 6 2,629 1,400 146 1,072 $1,000, 2012: 126,077 66,845 648,221 (D) 1,658,533 618,023 73,137 1,129,013 2007: 185,666 148,180 961,306 644 991,671 522,274 132,274 913,487 Grains, oilseeds, dry beans, and : dry peas .....................................farms, 2012: 18 24 18 - 324 70 12 27 2007: 7 16 7 - 268 48 5 30 $1,000, 2012: 597 1,524 284 - 112,744 4,869 63 5,706 2007: 133 1,787 (D) - 67,326 (D) 109 4,436 Corn ........................................farms, 2012: 6 13 8 - 194 9 7 2 2007: 2 12 1 - 184 4 1 3 $1,000, 2012: 1 1,265 244 - 75,406 (D) 3 (D) 2007: (D) 1,638 (D) - 46,030 (D) (D) (D) Wheat .......................................farms, 2012: 8 3 - - 121 4 - 6 2007: 1 2 1 - 77 8 - 6 $1,000, 2012: 190 23 - - 16,379 (D) - (D) 2007: (D) (D) (D) - 6,244 367 - 1,818 Soybeans ....................................farms, 2012: - - - - - - - - 2007: - - - - 4 - - - $1,000, 2012: - - - - - - - - 2007: - - - - 84 - - - Sorghum .....................................farms, 2012: - 7 - - 10 - - - 2007: - 1 - - 7 - - 1 $1,000, 2012: - 108 - - 261 - - - 2007: - (D) - - 193 - - (D) Barley ......................................farms, 2012: 4 3 - - 8 49 - 7 2007: 2 3 2 - 6 16 - 2 $1,000, 2012: 27 (D) - - 319 3,900 - (D) 2007: (D) (D) (D) - 86 901 - (D) Rice ........................................farms, 2012: - - - - 16 - - - 2007: - - - - 12 - - - $1,000, 2012: - - - - 5,722 - - - 2007: - - - - 3,648 - - - Other grains, oilseeds, dry beans, : and dry peas ...............................farms, 2012: 4 4 10 - 95 19 5 14 2007: 5 4 3 - 92 27 5 21 $1,000, 2012: 379 (D) 40 - 14,656 566 60 (D) 2007: 61 42 1 - 11,042 (D) (D) 1,249 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 2. Market Value of Agricultural Products Sold Including Direct Sales: 2012 and 2007 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Santa Clara : Santa Cruz : Shasta : Sierra : Siskiyou : Solano : Sonoma : Stanislaus ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Total sales (see text) ..............................farms, 2012: 1,003 667 1,544 48 929 860 3,579 4,143 2007: 1,068 682 1,473 50 846 890 3,429 4,114 $1,000, 2012: 243,829 565,835 65,622 (D) 223,096 307,418 974,393 2,228,135 2007: 235,927 447,417 44,675 2,003 136,392 244,295 647,579 1,820,564 Average per farm ..............................dollars, 2012: 243,100 848,328 42,501 (D) 240,146 357,463 272,253 537,807 2007: 220,906 656,037 30,329 40,062 161,220 274,489 188,854 442,529 2012 value of sales: : Less than $1,000 (see text) ...........................farms: 202 129 553 9 306 214 607 677 $1,000: 27 15 88 - 30 14 91 60 $1,000 to $2,499 ......................................farms: 77 29 233 1 69 57 186 183 $1,000: 120 46 379 (D) 107 98 293 325 $2,500 to $4,999 ......................................farms: 114 44 155 4 69 72 249 204 $1,000: 403 162 543 (D) 259 280 892 735 $5,000 to $9,999 ......................................farms: 156 70 199 4 93 60 379 324 $1,000: 1,105 517 1,411 30 647 416 2,627 2,297 : $10,000 to $19,999 ....................................farms: 123 66 133 6 80 90 432 299 $1,000: 1,656 886 1,749 (D) 1,096 1,181 5,950 4,373 $20,000 to $24,999 ....................................farms: 51 22 37 1 39 34 115 144 $1,000: 1,083 471 831 (D) 854 743 2,441 3,168 $25,000 to $39,999 ....................................farms: 46 57 81 3 36 47 272 307 $1,000: 1,482 1,710 2,607 102 1,134 1,502 8,295 9,777 $40,000 to $49,999 ....................................farms: 20 14 34 - 17 27 116 123 $1,000: 885 576 1,536 - 758 1,148 5,013 5,442 : $50,000 to $99,999 ....................................farms: 86 49 45 9 53 64 355 478 $1,000: 5,870 3,140 3,242 (D) 3,813 4,481 24,560 33,722 $100,000 to $249,999 ..................................farms: 45 62 42 5 78 62 397 488 $1,000: 6,953 10,313 6,469 (D) 12,241 10,095 61,985 75,964 $250,000 to $499,999 ..................................farms: 25 24 16 4 41 40 177 270 $1,000: 8,233 8,695 5,499 1,434 14,577 13,325 60,219 95,105 $500,000 or more ......................................farms: 58 101 16 2 48 93 294 646 $1,000: 216,012 539,305 41,268 (D) 187,578 274,136 802,028 1,997,166 2007 value of sales: : Less than $1,000 (see text) ...........................farms: 305 135 548 9 289 277 630 786 $1,000: 34 16 101 (D) 26 40 99 75 $1,000 to $2,499 ......................................farms: 125 46 259 3 70 65 215 234 $1,000: 204 75 407 5 111 110 357 394 $2,500 to $4,999 ......................................farms: 121 45 172 3 82 86 298 244 $1,000: 431 174 614 8 293 314 1,088 874 $5,000 to $9,999 ......................................farms: 127 51 161 7 69 97 336 324 $1,000: 904 354 1,108 43 484 702 2,437 2,315 : $10,000 to $19,999 ....................................farms: 107 72 101 10 76 64 404 354 $1,000: 1,539 1,107 1,386 140 1,090 862 5,753 5,075 $20,000 to $24,999 ....................................farms: 27 38 21 3 19 15 154 146 $1,000: 590 838 465 70 419 329 3,313 3,163 $25,000 to $39,999 ....................................farms: 68 36 74 4 30 43 227 339 $1,000: 2,161 1,173 2,293 135 939 1,368 6,939 10,857 $40,000 to $49,999 ....................................farms: 23 12 14 1 30 22 125 135 $1,000: 997 508 604 (D) 1,290 944 5,381 5,864 $50,000 to $99,999 ....................................farms: 42 40 63 3 44 49 334 373 $1,000: 2,748 2,712 4,337 280 2,944 3,374 23,859 26,475 $100,000 to $249,999 ..................................farms: 47 42 30 5 66 53 318 400 $1,000: 6,852 6,120 4,237 714 10,925 8,613 47,917 62,576 : $250,000 to $499,999 ..................................farms: 25 42 15 2 35 38 155 221 $1,000: 7,924 15,243 4,809 (D) 12,054 13,195 52,098 75,522 $500,000 or more ......................................farms: 51 123 15 - 36 81 233 558 $1,000: 211,543 419,097 24,315 - 105,819 214,444 498,339 1,627,375 : Value of sales by commodity or commodity group: : Crops, including nursery and : greenhouse crops ...............................farms, 2012: 633 494 482 15 345 452 2,386 2,548 2007: 573 502 423 15 287 451 2,280 2,480 $1,000, 2012: 233,397 548,415 24,014 (D) 190,530 242,743 606,237 1,062,853 2007: 223,235 433,545 (D) 586 107,659 203,098 422,538 736,045 Grains, oilseeds, dry beans, and : dry peas .....................................farms, 2012: 10 3 40 - 55 67 39 370 2007: 12 1 21 - 51 72 22 303 $1,000, 2012: 989 13 5,351 - 18,654 28,976 (D) (D) 2007: 1,236 (D) 4,989 - 9,825 23,499 874 31,542 Corn ........................................farms, 2012: 6 - 7 - - 28 15 291 2007: 1 - 2 - 2 29 10 248 $1,000, 2012: (D) - 6 - - 10,629 (D) 34,076 2007: (D) - (D) - (D) (D) (D) 18,536 Wheat .......................................farms, 2012: 1 2 8 - 39 47 7 35 2007: 4 - 2 - 39 48 2 11 $1,000, 2012: (D) (D) 143 - 16,713 9,195 (D) 2,689 2007: (D) - (D) - 7,756 7,097 (D) 441 Soybeans ....................................farms, 2012: - - - - - - - - 2007: - - - - - 2 - - $1,000, 2012: - - - - - - - - 2007: - - - - - (D) - - Sorghum .....................................farms, 2012: - - 1 - - 3 - 12 2007: - - - - - - - 7 $1,000, 2012: - - (D) - - (D) - 1,178 2007: - - - - - - - 135 Barley ......................................farms, 2012: - - 4 - 24 6 1 7 2007: - - 2 - 16 3 1 6 $1,000, 2012: - - (D) - 1,751 (D) (D) 68 2007: - - (D) - 1,924 106 (D) 99 Rice ........................................farms, 2012: - - - - 1 1 - 4 2007: - - - - - 1 - 6 $1,000, 2012: - - - - (D) (D) - (D) 2007: - - - - - (D) - 286 Other grains, oilseeds, dry beans, : and dry peas ...............................farms, 2012: 6 1 22 - 5 38 24 93 2007: 9 1 16 - 7 42 12 78 $1,000, 2012: 907 (D) 5,141 - (D) 7,975 92 10,938 2007: 988 (D) 4,940 - (D) 8,383 215 12,045 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 2. Market Value of Agricultural Products Sold Including Direct Sales: 2012 and 2007 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Sutter : Tehama : Trinity : Tulare : Tuolumne : Ventura : Yolo : Yuba ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Total sales (see text) ..............................farms, 2012: 1,358 1,743 247 4,931 391 2,150 1,011 795 2007: 1,263 1,752 181 5,240 366 2,437 983 828 $1,000, 2012: 508,175 240,818 5,161 4,017,073 27,652 1,440,132 561,241 193,449 2007: 317,607 142,958 3,167 3,335,014 18,653 1,316,315 384,219 112,909 Average per farm ..............................dollars, 2012: 374,209 138,163 20,894 814,657 70,720 669,829 555,134 243,332 2007: 251,471 81,597 17,496 636,453 50,965 540,137 390,864 136,363 2012 value of sales: : Less than $1,000 (see text) ...........................farms: 122 473 88 638 138 200 213 187 $1,000: 1 80 12 41 18 19 20 22 $1,000 to $2,499 ......................................farms: 48 136 32 160 51 102 42 75 $1,000: 75 236 61 270 (D) 180 66 123 $2,500 to $4,999 ......................................farms: 60 148 38 256 49 184 48 89 $1,000: 213 537 126 965 168 636 166 312 $5,000 to $9,999 ......................................farms: 81 181 32 414 53 265 84 70 $1,000: 548 1,259 201 3,017 371 1,803 600 486 : $10,000 to $19,999 ....................................farms: 83 201 23 440 49 297 69 86 $1,000: 1,170 2,809 353 6,396 659 4,099 1,020 1,189 $20,000 to $24,999 ....................................farms: 59 62 12 193 9 89 46 26 $1,000: 1,306 1,371 255 4,238 198 1,991 1,023 583 $25,000 to $39,999 ....................................farms: 108 113 3 381 17 187 53 24 $1,000: 3,310 3,501 96 11,833 543 5,798 1,632 771 $40,000 to $49,999 ....................................farms: 56 38 4 165 2 87 26 5 $1,000: 2,520 1,679 184 7,210 (D) 3,875 1,161 207 : $50,000 to $99,999 ....................................farms: 187 150 10 477 11 209 84 31 $1,000: 13,631 10,118 707 33,867 860 14,898 5,847 2,273 $100,000 to $249,999 ..................................farms: 209 94 2 585 5 191 105 58 $1,000: 34,933 15,518 (D) 95,152 959 30,011 15,441 9,795 $250,000 to $499,999 ..................................farms: 122 67 1 381 2 93 71 62 $1,000: 43,043 24,450 (D) 131,009 (D) 33,220 24,295 22,660 $500,000 or more ......................................farms: 223 80 2 841 5 246 170 82 $1,000: 407,425 179,259 (D) 3,723,077 22,993 1,343,602 509,971 155,028 2007 value of sales: : Less than $1,000 (see text) ...........................farms: 185 482 52 749 149 338 230 250 $1,000: 28 76 13 72 19 57 19 41 $1,000 to $2,499 ......................................farms: 66 130 22 224 45 162 46 92 $1,000: 107 226 37 383 70 287 78 152 $2,500 to $4,999 ......................................farms: 79 176 35 241 48 205 70 71 $1,000: 289 619 133 865 166 752 264 260 $5,000 to $9,999 ......................................farms: 81 194 24 364 27 215 74 64 $1,000: 589 1,331 172 2,579 198 1,508 517 441 : $10,000 to $19,999 ....................................farms: 115 204 24 530 37 274 94 68 $1,000: 1,640 2,848 341 7,389 516 3,849 1,342 951 $20,000 to $24,999 ....................................farms: 43 65 4 200 9 113 25 18 $1,000: 926 1,445 95 4,394 189 2,433 545 392 $25,000 to $39,999 ....................................farms: 111 122 11 441 21 148 62 43 $1,000: 3,524 3,809 347 13,749 638 4,456 1,970 1,383 $40,000 to $49,999 ....................................farms: 44 57 1 215 5 136 40 14 $1,000: 1,898 2,470 (D) 9,443 215 5,981 1,762 617 $50,000 to $99,999 ....................................farms: 132 117 2 556 8 231 68 39 $1,000: 9,195 8,077 (D) 38,998 495 16,515 4,739 2,639 $100,000 to $249,999 ..................................farms: 155 100 2 575 9 212 83 70 $1,000: 26,117 15,085 (D) 91,424 (D) 34,344 13,139 11,921 : $250,000 to $499,999 ..................................farms: 109 47 4 376 5 146 51 52 $1,000: 39,215 16,523 1,467 131,161 (D) 49,685 18,936 18,381 $500,000 or more ......................................farms: 143 58 - 769 3 257 140 47 $1,000: 234,080 90,452 - 3,034,556 (D) 1,196,448 340,909 75,730 : Value of sales by commodity or commodity group: : Crops, including nursery and : greenhouse crops ...............................farms, 2012: 1,084 772 100 3,698 79 1,811 685 397 2007: 999 755 68 3,897 61 1,995 636 353 $1,000, 2012: 501,917 170,088 (D) 1,671,142 2,588 1,430,264 525,503 154,440 2007: 311,165 104,379 1,038 1,207,333 1,557 1,303,195 357,107 95,288 Grains, oilseeds, dry beans, and : dry peas .....................................farms, 2012: 324 35 - 320 8 11 197 135 2007: 261 29 - 305 - 7 189 108 $1,000, 2012: 195,495 5,479 - 97,740 12 (D) 109,334 49,027 2007: 117,905 2,714 - 64,326 - 190 67,982 32,870 Corn ........................................farms, 2012: 32 14 - 217 8 1 49 10 2007: 21 13 - 245 - - 41 5 $1,000, 2012: 14,461 1,441 - 65,713 4 (D) 20,284 (D) 2007: 8,917 640 - 51,184 - - 9,918 829 Wheat .......................................farms, 2012: 68 10 - 107 5 - 122 14 2007: 72 6 - 79 - - 114 3 $1,000, 2012: 5,653 805 - 23,600 1 - 18,734 647 2007: 5,789 359 - 9,370 - - 12,098 (D) Soybeans ....................................farms, 2012: - - - - - - 1 - 2007: - - - - - - 2 - $1,000, 2012: - - - - - - (D) - 2007: - - - - - - (D) - Sorghum .....................................farms, 2012: 6 - - 36 - - 15 - 2007: 6 - - 24 - - 5 - $1,000, 2012: 706 - - 2,415 - - (D) - 2007: 359 - - 1,576 - - (D) - Barley ......................................farms, 2012: - 2 - 11 - 2 6 - 2007: - 4 - 3 - 2 8 - $1,000, 2012: - (D) - 198 - (D) 919 - 2007: - (D) - 98 - (D) 474 - Rice ........................................farms, 2012: 269 8 - - - - 68 117 2007: 222 6 - - - - 69 102 $1,000, 2012: 160,094 2,249 - - - - 51,148 47,692 2007: 89,694 (D) - - - - 26,697 29,918 Other grains, oilseeds, dry beans, : and dry peas ...............................farms, 2012: 62 11 - 50 5 8 86 6 2007: 62 9 - 39 - 5 90 5 $1,000, 2012: 14,580 (D) - 5,814 6 (D) 17,322 (D) 2007: 13,146 502 - 2,098 - (D) 18,576 (D) ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 2. Market Value of Agricultural Products Sold Including Direct Sales: 2012 and 2007 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : California : Alameda : Alpine : Amador : Butte : Calaveras : Colusa ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Total sales (see text) - Con. : Value of sales by commodity or commodity group - Con. : Crops, including nursery and : greenhouse crops - Con. : : Tobacco .......................................farms, 2012: - - - - - - - 2007: - - - - - - - $1,000, 2012: - - - - - - - 2007: - - - - - - - Cotton and cottonseed .........................farms, 2012: 630 - - - - - 3 2007: 854 - - - - - 6 $1,000, 2012: 655,094 - - - - - (D) 2007: 586,267 - - - - - (D) Vegetables, melons, potatoes, and sweet : potatoes .....................................farms, 2012: 6,155 38 - 34 95 35 23 2007: 3,958 8 - 6 57 22 28 $1,000, 2012: 6,327,838 (D) - (D) 2,563 156 68,879 2007: 5,435,521 (D) - 48 1,808 202 68,300 Fruits, tree nuts, and : berries ......................................farms, 2012: 36,574 105 1 157 1,079 142 284 2007: 38,034 154 - 161 1,053 129 294 $1,000, 2012: 17,638,972 36,212 (D) 18,470 372,567 11,145 239,151 2007: 11,054,581 14,355 - 11,294 215,143 3,754 128,237 Fruits and tree nut..........................farms, 2012: 35,526 97 1 146 1,063 133 284 2007: (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) $1,000, 2012: 15,655,703 36,163 (D) 18,461 371,870 10,917 239,109 2007: (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) Berries .....................................farms, 2012: 1,701 8 - 11 32 11 3 2007: (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) $1,000, 2012: 1,983,269 49 - 9 698 229 43 2007: (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) Nursery, greenhouse, floriculture, and : sod (see text) ...............................farms, 2012: 3,890 24 - 14 62 17 2 2007: 3,634 32 - 10 44 7 3 $1,000, 2012: 2,547,307 9,101 - (D) 6,811 257 (D) 2007: 3,647,057 18,395 - (D) 9,666 360 (D) Cut Christmas trees and short-rotation : woody crops ..................................farms, 2012: 328 2 - 3 10 13 - 2007: 322 - - - 11 7 - $1,000, 2012: 2,706 (D) - (D) 24 75 - 2007: 5,704 - - - 41 30 - Cut Christmas trees..........................farms, 2012: 301 2 - 3 10 13 - 2007: (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) $1,000, 2012: 2,499 (D) - (D) 24 75 - 2007: (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) Short rotation woody crops...................farms, 2012: 38 - - - - - - 2007: (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) $1,000, 2012: 206 - - - - - - 2007: (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) Other crops and hay (see text) ................farms, 2012: 5,744 29 2 17 102 20 62 2007: 5,265 21 1 5 68 7 56 $1,000, 2012: 1,467,274 (D) (D) 1,512 2,720 201 (D) 2007: 1,068,522 (D) (D) 922 1,697 27 13,138 Maple syrup (see text).......................farms, 2012: - - - - - - - 2007: (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) $1,000, 2012: - - - - - - - 2007: (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) Livestock, poultry, and their products ..........farms, 2012: 21,531 202 1 234 438 348 111 2007: 23,192 241 6 244 477 361 119 $1,000, 2012: 12,260,574 9,965 (D) 10,201 14,426 14,169 7,390 2007: 10,982,043 16,187 (D) 7,606 11,959 12,113 7,973 Poultry and eggs ..............................farms, 2012: 3,758 27 1 39 98 56 8 2007: 4,114 34 - 30 108 49 21 $1,000, 2012: 1,663,919 15 (D) (D) 2,215 4,810 405 2007: 1,536,763 117 - 336 1,478 (D) (D) Cattle and calves .............................farms, 2012: 12,594 128 1 148 215 233 63 2007: 12,681 148 6 149 229 237 65 $1,000, 2012: 3,259,325 (D) (D) 8,030 6,745 7,823 5,850 2007: 2,536,571 7,437 (D) 6,493 (D) 9,083 5,755 Milk from cows (see text) .....................farms, 2012: 1,554 - - - 5 - 2 2007: (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) $1,000, 2012: 6,945,102 - - - 987 - (D) 2007: (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) Hogs and pigs .................................farms, 2012: 1,163 6 - 5 35 22 8 2007: 1,267 10 - 16 47 14 4 $1,000, 2012: 51,526 6 - (D) 212 21 376 2007: 34,188 6 - 11 70 21 32 Sheep, goats, wool, mohair, and : milk (see text) ..............................farms, 2012: 4,376 42 - 51 107 101 32 2007: (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) $1,000, 2012: 108,136 125 - 788 547 483 212 2007: (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) Horses, ponies, mules, burros, and : donkeys ......................................farms, 2012: 3,050 10 - 21 48 31 25 2007: 3,937 42 - 29 72 60 15 $1,000, 2012: 62,241 53 - 350 144 659 226 2007: 72,433 (D) - (D) 572 (D) (D) Aquaculture (see text) ....................... farms, 2012: 229 3 - 2 4 - - 2007: 217 4 - 2 2 - - $1,000, 2012: 103,016 (D) - (D) 2,550 - - 2007: 102,228 (D) - (D) (D) - - Other animals and other animal : products (see text) ..........................farms, 2012: 1,766 21 1 16 47 18 5 2007: 1,583 6 - 14 30 12 7 $1,000, 2012: 67,309 146 (D) 12 1,026 374 (D) 2007: 58,798 17 - 9 672 130 666 Value of agricultural products sold directly to : individuals for human : consumption (see text) ...........................farms, 2012: 8,588 45 - 52 213 112 30 2007: 7,068 29 1 40 202 75 23 $1,000, 2012: 169,915 387 - 218 2,285 574 115 2007: 162,896 322 (D) 154 3,878 316 373 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 2. Market Value of Agricultural Products Sold Including Direct Sales: 2012 and 2007 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Contra Costa : Del Norte : El Dorado : Fresno : Glenn : Humboldt : Imperial ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Total sales (see text) - Con. : Value of sales by commodity or commodity group - Con. : Crops, including nursery and : greenhouse crops - Con. : : Tobacco .......................................farms, 2012: - - - - - - - 2007: - - - - - - - $1,000, 2012: - - - - - - - 2007: - - - - - - - Cotton and cottonseed .........................farms, 2012: - - - 226 9 - 5 2007: - - - 326 12 - 10 $1,000, 2012: - - - 191,624 2,170 - 4,212 2007: - - - 173,082 (D) - 5,559 Vegetables, melons, potatoes, and sweet : potatoes .....................................farms, 2012: 69 25 150 586 37 175 106 2007: 26 5 70 564 19 64 87 $1,000, 2012: 22,445 (D) 765 726,887 22,457 3,917 702,358 2007: 22,268 (D) 435 687,549 9,584 1,246 337,833 Fruits, tree nuts, and : berries ......................................farms, 2012: 196 11 505 3,614 575 162 33 2007: 191 8 458 3,834 531 122 56 $1,000, 2012: 26,575 117 21,760 2,548,464 312,323 1,882 26,915 2007: 16,278 217 13,886 1,451,716 165,635 1,604 55,276 Fruits and tree nut..........................farms, 2012: 192 - 482 3,592 569 127 32 2007: (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) $1,000, 2012: 26,224 - 20,264 2,537,430 310,762 1,368 (D) 2007: (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) Berries .....................................farms, 2012: 12 11 70 43 8 58 1 2007: (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) $1,000, 2012: 351 117 1,496 11,034 1,561 514 (D) 2007: (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) Nursery, greenhouse, floriculture, and : sod (see text) ...............................farms, 2012: 35 22 68 104 18 106 14 2007: 26 11 50 106 7 81 17 $1,000, 2012: (D) 14,592 1,256 42,141 1,077 (D) 5,458 2007: 12,519 12,924 1,699 60,736 (D) (D) 9,649 Cut Christmas trees and short-rotation : woody crops ..................................farms, 2012: 2 4 69 5 - 4 - 2007: 2 - 65 4 - 6 - $1,000, 2012: (D) (Z) 408 9 - 20 - 2007: (D) - 624 27 - 21 - Cut Christmas trees..........................farms, 2012: 2 4 68 2 - 3 - 2007: (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) $1,000, 2012: (D) (Z) (D) (D) - (D) - 2007: (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) Short rotation woody crops...................farms, 2012: - - 1 5 - 1 - 2007: (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) $1,000, 2012: - - (D) (D) - (D) - 2007: (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) Other crops and hay (see text) ................farms, 2012: 43 9 11 348 129 101 249 2007: 30 2 16 330 130 67 259 $1,000, 2012: 16,459 (D) 116 105,621 16,060 976 484,672 2007: (D) (D) (D) 78,308 10,016 1,004 268,633 Maple syrup (see text).......................farms, 2012: - - - - - - - 2007: (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) $1,000, 2012: - - - - - - - 2007: (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) Livestock, poultry, and their products ..........farms, 2012: 203 75 477 837 332 480 78 2007: 206 60 430 1,004 368 509 81 $1,000, 2012: 13,655 19,091 6,167 1,272,948 128,256 (D) 578,366 2007: 11,156 19,330 3,213 1,230,923 97,318 (D) 587,130 Poultry and eggs ..............................farms, 2012: 24 26 146 110 32 79 8 2007: 38 14 123 150 38 65 2 $1,000, 2012: 48 17 95 374,462 (D) 60 4 2007: (D) 6 (D) 359,886 (D) 40 (D) Cattle and calves .............................farms, 2012: 82 52 189 510 249 341 48 2007: 98 44 117 597 271 379 51 $1,000, 2012: 12,059 1,818 4,483 456,372 37,579 (D) 534,225 2007: 9,534 3,164 1,689 419,506 19,468 (D) 530,557 Milk from cows (see text) .....................farms, 2012: - 11 3 70 34 69 1 2007: (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) $1,000, 2012: - 17,214 (D) 422,335 73,317 73,264 (D) 2007: (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) Hogs and pigs .................................farms, 2012: 17 5 44 43 15 20 2 2007: 8 6 34 33 17 17 - $1,000, 2012: 10 3 29 3,370 (D) 24 (D) 2007: 5 3 16 3,399 32 29 - Sheep, goats, wool, mohair, and : milk (see text) ..............................farms, 2012: 38 18 146 175 61 95 16 2007: (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) $1,000, 2012: 72 18 256 8,171 212 1,742 18,898 2007: (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) Horses, ponies, mules, burros, and : donkeys ......................................farms, 2012: 56 3 61 115 29 39 3 2007: 45 5 110 106 40 45 5 $1,000, 2012: 1,355 15 1,056 2,981 248 289 1 2007: 1,263 8 827 1,193 676 208 (D) Aquaculture (see text) ....................... farms, 2012: 3 - 2 5 2 11 8 2007: - - 4 7 2 9 6 $1,000, 2012: (Z) - (D) (D) (D) (D) 14,237 2007: - - (D) 3,527 (D) (D) 7,913 Other animals and other animal : products (see text) ..........................farms, 2012: 24 6 40 54 12 20 15 2007: 20 6 56 57 9 14 16 $1,000, 2012: 111 7 158 (D) 16,477 74 (D) 2007: 89 4 332 2,185 (D) 63 1,426 Value of agricultural products sold directly to : individuals for human : consumption (see text) ...........................farms, 2012: 82 30 299 383 89 203 21 2007: 76 9 246 378 60 155 18 $1,000, 2012: 1,675 93 1,937 18,037 990 1,759 212 2007: 1,776 51 2,762 17,170 3,083 1,192 613 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 2. Market Value of Agricultural Products Sold Including Direct Sales: 2012 and 2007 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Inyo : Kern : Kings : Lake : Lassen : Los Angeles : Madera ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Total sales (see text) - Con. : Value of sales by commodity or commodity group - Con. : Crops, including nursery and : greenhouse crops - Con. : : Tobacco .......................................farms, 2012: - - - - - - - 2007: - - - - - - - $1,000, 2012: - - - - - - - 2007: - - - - - - - Cotton and cottonseed .........................farms, 2012: - 121 87 - - - 10 2007: - 148 119 - - - 23 $1,000, 2012: - 99,789 211,244 - - - 3,248 2007: - 111,112 180,569 - - - (D) Vegetables, melons, potatoes, and sweet : potatoes .....................................farms, 2012: 15 169 48 71 4 172 43 2007: 5 139 55 20 9 68 30 $1,000, 2012: (D) 415,435 113,256 376 2,165 53,339 27,627 2007: 18 404,609 93,102 112 2,507 72,231 20,355 Fruits, tree nuts, and : berries ......................................farms, 2012: 6 763 406 494 17 293 896 2007: 7 792 389 521 10 303 960 $1,000, 2012: (D) 2,536,945 353,091 91,649 (D) 10,605 1,169,947 2007: 173 1,764,557 239,159 53,707 654 11,298 543,802 Fruits and tree nut..........................farms, 2012: 6 753 388 482 16 271 895 2007: (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) $1,000, 2012: (D) 2,492,683 352,253 91,558 (D) 7,762 (D) 2007: (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) Berries .....................................farms, 2012: 2 27 18 15 3 28 7 2007: (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) $1,000, 2012: (D) 44,262 838 91 8 2,843 (D) 2007: (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) Nursery, greenhouse, floriculture, and : sod (see text) ...............................farms, 2012: 1 55 9 19 6 288 23 2007: 4 57 9 17 7 250 21 $1,000, 2012: (D) 56,680 994 (D) (D) 95,082 (D) 2007: (D) 122,905 (D) 5,560 (D) 210,466 23,258 Cut Christmas trees and short-rotation : woody crops ..................................farms, 2012: - 3 - 11 - 9 1 2007: - 3 1 9 - 5 1 $1,000, 2012: - 17 - 8 - 153 (D) 2007: - 90 (D) 28 - 179 (D) Cut Christmas trees..........................farms, 2012: - 2 - 11 - 9 1 2007: (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) $1,000, 2012: - (D) - 8 - (D) (D) 2007: (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) Short rotation woody crops...................farms, 2012: - 3 - - - 2 - 2007: (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) $1,000, 2012: - (D) - - - (D) - 2007: (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) Other crops and hay (see text) ................farms, 2012: 15 228 217 65 143 30 94 2007: 11 281 265 44 132 28 90 $1,000, 2012: (D) 71,412 71,693 (D) (D) 10,131 19,386 2007: (D) 100,144 74,014 300 (D) 7,873 22,028 Maple syrup (see text).......................farms, 2012: - - - - - - - 2007: (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) $1,000, 2012: - - - - - - - 2007: (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) Livestock, poultry, and their products ..........farms, 2012: 78 629 353 208 250 303 341 2007: 50 669 360 208 300 505 461 $1,000, 2012: 12,822 767,070 974,608 1,985 (D) 19,078 362,842 2007: 8,855 652,712 706,954 1,389 18,981 23,706 364,600 Poultry and eggs ..............................farms, 2012: 6 102 27 66 36 104 47 2007: 3 104 30 83 52 145 52 $1,000, 2012: 4 (D) 31,060 117 110 (D) 26,899 2007: 1 (D) 26,536 102 35 (D) 35,377 Cattle and calves .............................farms, 2012: 52 393 250 92 176 45 227 2007: 39 358 261 81 170 83 301 $1,000, 2012: (D) 230,379 313,731 1,032 22,691 (D) 91,010 2007: (D) 132,073 124,776 804 17,487 1,700 69,203 Milk from cows (see text) .....................farms, 2012: - 54 122 - 1 1 29 2007: (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) $1,000, 2012: - 495,420 624,834 - (D) (D) 243,236 2007: (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) Hogs and pigs .................................farms, 2012: 1 35 17 9 33 23 9 2007: 1 35 25 18 18 50 24 $1,000, 2012: (D) 149 19 10 13 17 (D) 2007: (D) 156 99 60 19 28 47 Sheep, goats, wool, mohair, and : milk (see text) ..............................farms, 2012: 6 120 56 60 51 62 68 2007: (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) $1,000, 2012: 12 (D) 3,419 669 1,027 153 272 2007: (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) Horses, ponies, mules, burros, and : donkeys ......................................farms, 2012: 17 109 34 26 41 97 43 2007: 10 134 45 28 68 194 65 $1,000, 2012: 117 800 1,209 132 441 1,041 277 2007: 47 1,916 863 169 (D) 3,176 (D) Aquaculture (see text) ....................... farms, 2012: 5 7 - 5 2 5 8 2007: 1 6 - - 1 4 2 $1,000, 2012: (D) 1,671 - (Z) (D) 105 (D) 2007: (D) 2,060 - - (D) (D) (D) Other animals and other animal : products (see text) ..........................farms, 2012: 3 39 13 18 5 66 28 2007: 2 46 17 10 12 64 20 $1,000, 2012: 10 2,389 337 25 (D) 1,705 714 2007: (D) 1,593 813 14 62 876 1,281 Value of agricultural products sold directly to : individuals for human : consumption (see text) ...........................farms, 2012: 23 134 62 133 76 210 62 2007: 3 105 50 93 55 168 80 $1,000, 2012: 197 5,940 934 1,005 257 2,369 1,287 2007: (D) 5,815 473 575 171 3,541 1,734 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 2. Market Value of Agricultural Products Sold Including Direct Sales: 2012 and 2007 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Marin : Mariposa : Mendocino : Merced : Modoc : Mono : Monterey ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Total sales (see text) - Con. : Value of sales by commodity or commodity group - Con. : Crops, including nursery and : greenhouse crops - Con. : : Tobacco .......................................farms, 2012: - - - - - - - 2007: - - - - - - - $1,000, 2012: - - - - - - - 2007: - - - - - - - Cotton and cottonseed .........................farms, 2012: - - - 93 - - - 2007: - - - 102 - - - $1,000, 2012: - - - 78,463 - - - 2007: - - - 63,172 - - - Vegetables, melons, potatoes, and sweet : potatoes .....................................farms, 2012: 39 3 146 224 18 1 218 2007: 22 4 59 176 19 1 209 $1,000, 2012: 1,431 11 1,497 296,160 17,577 (D) 1,677,054 2007: 2,388 7 1,057 244,593 10,455 (D) 1,298,956 Fruits, tree nuts, and : berries ......................................farms, 2012: 54 44 512 1,177 3 2 360 2007: 46 25 499 1,202 5 1 368 $1,000, 2012: 4,686 2,494 130,774 710,594 51 (D) 1,075,938 2007: 1,049 366 98,030 425,450 (D) (D) 593,137 Fruits and tree nut..........................farms, 2012: 51 40 491 1,154 3 2 263 2007: (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) $1,000, 2012: 4,537 2,462 130,222 707,577 51 (D) 425,313 2007: (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) Berries .....................................farms, 2012: 12 5 53 24 - - 114 2007: (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) $1,000, 2012: 149 32 553 3,018 - - 650,625 2007: (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) Nursery, greenhouse, floriculture, and : sod (see text) ...............................farms, 2012: 26 4 73 17 10 2 120 2007: 17 5 78 10 2 2 127 $1,000, 2012: 1,559 78 2,203 9,448 (D) (D) 175,232 2007: 2,320 112 5,896 21,836 (D) (D) 244,690 Cut Christmas trees and short-rotation : woody crops ..................................farms, 2012: - - 7 3 - - 6 2007: - - 7 5 - - 4 $1,000, 2012: - - 10 32 - - 28 2007: - - (D) 74 - - 24 Cut Christmas trees..........................farms, 2012: - - 6 3 - - 6 2007: (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) $1,000, 2012: - - (D) 32 - - 28 2007: (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) Short rotation woody crops...................farms, 2012: - - 1 - - - - 2007: (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) $1,000, 2012: - - (D) - - - - 2007: (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) Other crops and hay (see text) ................farms, 2012: 17 6 104 392 188 22 68 2007: 7 - 73 398 174 17 43 $1,000, 2012: (D) 25 1,799 90,431 36,201 (D) 2,104 2007: (D) - 1,578 77,456 25,394 (D) 500 Maple syrup (see text).......................farms, 2012: - - - - - - - 2007: (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) $1,000, 2012: - - - - - - - 2007: (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) Livestock, poultry, and their products ..........farms, 2012: 203 238 454 717 242 43 372 2007: 165 197 419 783 251 56 448 $1,000, 2012: 83,227 19,713 11,730 1,694,900 36,280 9,166 44,408 2007: 51,795 10,978 15,795 1,451,075 27,201 5,795 39,121 Poultry and eggs ..............................farms, 2012: 24 23 87 52 25 2 39 2007: 18 20 106 68 34 2 84 $1,000, 2012: 451 31 167 400,450 13 (D) 4,034 2007: (D) (D) 202 333,626 (D) (D) (D) Cattle and calves .............................farms, 2012: 134 184 250 526 195 28 266 2007: 118 146 202 574 198 35 287 $1,000, 2012: 14,693 19,369 (D) 170,910 30,891 (D) 34,200 2007: 10,742 8,057 (D) 137,186 26,106 3,346 27,784 Milk from cows (see text) .....................farms, 2012: 44 - 1 230 1 - 1 2007: (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) $1,000, 2012: 61,264 - (D) 1,113,424 (D) - (D) 2007: (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) Hogs and pigs .................................farms, 2012: 5 6 13 19 2 1 5 2007: 1 6 24 17 10 2 12 $1,000, 2012: 101 11 280 77 (D) (D) 16 2007: (D) 9 83 (D) 21 (D) 86 Sheep, goats, wool, mohair, and : milk (see text) ..............................farms, 2012: 48 28 163 86 56 9 58 2007: (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) $1,000, 2012: 1,519 77 1,006 3,610 (D) 16 (D) 2007: (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) Horses, ponies, mules, burros, and : donkeys ......................................farms, 2012: 10 30 43 56 28 9 34 2007: 9 31 51 47 36 5 47 $1,000, 2012: 36 200 422 547 258 56 1,687 2007: 101 (D) 256 (D) 125 (D) 509 Aquaculture (see text) ....................... farms, 2012: 7 - 1 6 2 3 3 2007: 4 - 6 5 3 6 4 $1,000, 2012: 5,148 - (D) 3,400 (D) (D) (D) 2007: 2,366 - (D) 5,323 (D) 1,964 487 Other animals and other animal : products (see text) ..........................farms, 2012: 30 11 25 58 11 2 32 2007: 11 13 33 45 8 1 41 $1,000, 2012: 15 25 276 2,481 26 (D) 151 2007: 34 55 95 1,758 35 (D) (D) Value of agricultural products sold directly to : individuals for human : consumption (see text) ...........................farms, 2012: 66 37 219 110 34 2 85 2007: 41 26 138 109 25 9 92 $1,000, 2012: 1,834 71 1,561 11,543 152 (D) 2,449 2007: 1,654 33 1,210 14,245 51 6 2,744 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 2. Market Value of Agricultural Products Sold Including Direct Sales: 2012 and 2007 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Napa : Nevada : Orange : Placer : Plumas : Riverside : Sacramento ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Total sales (see text) - Con. : Value of sales by commodity or commodity group - Con. : Crops, including nursery and : greenhouse crops - Con. : : Tobacco .......................................farms, 2012: - - - - - - - 2007: - - - - - - - $1,000, 2012: - - - - - - - 2007: - - - - - - - Cotton and cottonseed .........................farms, 2012: - - - - - 15 - 2007: - - - - - 25 - $1,000, 2012: - - - - - (D) - 2007: - - - - - 13,205 - Vegetables, melons, potatoes, and sweet : potatoes .....................................farms, 2012: 57 126 42 121 15 155 174 2007: 22 43 20 65 5 122 63 $1,000, 2012: 518 1,772 15,442 966 113 264,478 11,317 2007: 272 480 (D) 713 61 193,466 15,838 Fruits, tree nuts, and : berries ......................................farms, 2012: 1,425 150 103 290 - 1,442 220 2007: 1,439 113 94 282 2 1,623 244 $1,000, 2012: 521,705 3,147 61,010 7,099 - 264,690 145,213 2007: 365,342 2,491 55,128 5,727 (D) 262,693 96,094 Fruits and tree nut..........................farms, 2012: 1,425 133 90 278 - 1,423 185 2007: (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) $1,000, 2012: 521,314 2,743 18,829 6,493 - 258,469 143,009 2007: (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) Berries .....................................farms, 2012: 8 41 14 49 - 28 46 2007: (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) $1,000, 2012: 392 404 42,181 607 - 6,222 2,204 2007: (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) Nursery, greenhouse, floriculture, and : sod (see text) ...............................farms, 2012: 21 56 82 48 6 246 58 2007: 21 36 103 49 5 254 42 $1,000, 2012: 1,364 784 77,806 6,616 164 104,036 17,114 2007: 6,088 1,905 265,709 14,138 15 188,195 57,813 Cut Christmas trees and short-rotation : woody crops ..................................farms, 2012: 5 18 1 12 - 2 3 2007: 2 14 2 36 1 11 2 $1,000, 2012: 38 69 (D) 102 - (D) 195 2007: (D) (D) (D) 322 (D) (D) (D) Cut Christmas trees..........................farms, 2012: 5 15 1 12 - 1 3 2007: (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) $1,000, 2012: 38 62 (D) 102 - (D) 195 2007: (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) Short rotation woody crops...................farms, 2012: - 4 - - - 1 - 2007: (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) $1,000, 2012: - 7 - - - (D) - 2007: (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) Other crops and hay (see text) ................farms, 2012: 16 15 2 36 27 121 162 2007: 14 11 1 34 17 112 144 $1,000, 2012: (D) (D) (D) 2,136 4,182 83,941 12,589 2007: (D) (D) (D) 822 1,270 60,067 (D) Maple syrup (see text).......................farms, 2012: - - - - - - - 2007: (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) $1,000, 2012: - - - - - - - 2007: (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) Livestock, poultry, and their products ..........farms, 2012: 169 331 60 689 92 626 594 2007: 159 386 67 772 85 798 708 $1,000, 2012: 11,944 3,286 1,588 (D) 18,158 294,298 117,746 2007: 4,906 4,253 2,827 14,329 (D) 290,233 139,165 Poultry and eggs ..............................farms, 2012: 54 111 18 137 19 129 124 2007: 52 121 11 138 17 191 141 $1,000, 2012: 53 125 16 422 41 72,404 16,506 2007: (D) 592 250 387 17 44,646 19,764 Cattle and calves .............................farms, 2012: 81 145 3 383 66 201 289 2007: 73 150 9 360 49 185 327 $1,000, 2012: 10,621 1,760 (D) (D) 17,902 23,662 25,001 2007: 2,302 1,905 244 7,680 7,508 33,193 18,353 Milk from cows (see text) .....................farms, 2012: 1 2 - 1 1 35 32 2007: (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) $1,000, 2012: (D) (D) - (D) (D) 160,497 53,417 2007: (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) Hogs and pigs .................................farms, 2012: 6 24 5 38 2 61 30 2007: 10 37 3 38 5 61 41 $1,000, 2012: 16 (D) 25 64 (D) 9,236 1,070 2007: 18 32 8 31 2 529 (D) Sheep, goats, wool, mohair, and : milk (see text) ..............................farms, 2012: 39 97 2 174 19 137 138 2007: (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) $1,000, 2012: 154 449 (D) 527 23 10,061 786 2007: (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) Horses, ponies, mules, burros, and : donkeys ......................................farms, 2012: 11 58 24 106 14 211 131 2007: 12 80 38 147 21 282 123 $1,000, 2012: 72 484 1,179 1,149 83 6,422 3,590 2007: 95 1,271 2,245 2,323 144 7,526 2,239 Aquaculture (see text) ....................... farms, 2012: 1 - 2 - 4 28 11 2007: 1 2 1 3 2 22 7 $1,000, 2012: (D) - (D) - 89 5,982 15,491 2007: (D) (D) (D) 1 (D) 7,061 23,529 Other animals and other animal : products (see text) ..........................farms, 2012: 22 39 10 65 9 93 63 2007: 14 49 8 43 10 94 42 $1,000, 2012: (D) 329 119 199 12 6,036 1,885 2007: 1,486 176 51 209 3 1,913 (D) Value of agricultural products sold directly to : individuals for human : consumption (see text) ...........................farms, 2012: 97 189 65 306 25 338 238 2007: 102 113 32 249 20 298 143 $1,000, 2012: 1,379 933 716 1,651 100 4,143 3,911 2007: 1,148 399 2,694 1,724 40 5,006 3,497 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 2. Market Value of Agricultural Products Sold Including Direct Sales: 2012 and 2007 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : San Benito :San Bernardino : San Diego : San Francisco : San Joaquin :San Luis Obispo: San Mateo :Santa Barbara ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Total sales (see text) - Con. : Value of sales by commodity or commodity group - Con. : Crops, including nursery and : greenhouse crops - Con. : : Tobacco .......................................farms, 2012: - - - - - - - - 2007: - - - - - - - - $1,000, 2012: - - - - - - - - 2007: - - - - - - - - Cotton and cottonseed .........................farms, 2012: - - - - - - - - 2007: - - - - - - - - $1,000, 2012: - - - - - - - - 2007: - - - - - - - - Vegetables, melons, potatoes, and sweet : potatoes .....................................farms, 2012: 65 114 335 - 195 305 57 231 2007: 58 77 177 - 183 180 32 149 $1,000, 2012: 77,548 4,158 21,867 - 214,376 160,773 7,354 455,938 2007: 147,302 28,244 88,896 - 241,581 189,713 11,262 372,768 Fruits, tree nuts, and : berries ......................................farms, 2012: 179 452 3,924 - 2,245 1,031 64 802 2007: 216 455 4,481 - 2,233 1,095 38 833 $1,000, 2012: 42,754 18,805 161,016 - 1,168,062 356,975 2,030 486,613 2007: 26,253 19,790 195,520 - 537,452 204,011 3,532 318,907 Fruits and tree nut..........................farms, 2012: 179 425 3,883 - 2,224 993 49 703 2007: (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) $1,000, 2012: 42,496 11,094 150,612 - 1,157,617 309,192 1,379 222,363 2007: (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) Berries .....................................farms, 2012: 5 41 89 - 34 70 21 120 2007: (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) $1,000, 2012: 257 7,711 10,404 - 10,444 47,783 651 264,250 2007: (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) Nursery, greenhouse, floriculture, and : sod (see text) ...............................farms, 2012: 24 74 798 - 59 155 76 139 2007: 19 114 842 6 41 111 72 129 $1,000, 2012: 3,802 32,169 461,932 - (D) 85,129 63,371 179,011 2007: (D) 90,140 675,631 644 92,053 121,550 117,118 215,847 Cut Christmas trees and short-rotation : woody crops ..................................farms, 2012: - 7 13 - 2 9 9 - 2007: - 6 16 - 5 6 4 1 $1,000, 2012: - 25 116 - (D) 55 90 - 2007: - 14 (D) - 40 (D) 94 (D) Cut Christmas trees..........................farms, 2012: - 7 10 - 1 6 9 - 2007: (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) $1,000, 2012: - 25 50 - (D) 53 90 - 2007: (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) Short rotation woody crops...................farms, 2012: - - 5 - 1 3 - - 2007: (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) $1,000, 2012: - - 66 - (D) 2 - - 2007: (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) Other crops and hay (see text) ................farms, 2012: 65 51 31 1 365 184 23 66 2007: 14 58 55 - 338 111 17 38 $1,000, 2012: 1,375 10,164 3,006 (D) (D) 10,222 230 1,745 2007: (D) 8,204 (D) - 53,219 (D) 159 (D) Maple syrup (see text).......................farms, 2012: - - - - - - - - 2007: (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) $1,000, 2012: - - - - - - - - 2007: (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) Livestock, poultry, and their products ..........farms, 2012: 249 432 580 2 682 852 112 371 2007: 248 536 834 - 752 929 129 388 $1,000, 2012: 37,955 515,385 77,775 (D) 591,625 46,961 2,751 48,903 2007: 37,195 595,482 92,876 - 572,683 38,334 3,276 37,839 Poultry and eggs ..............................farms, 2012: 24 105 174 - 81 185 22 31 2007: 26 135 221 - 92 167 21 63 $1,000, 2012: (D) 38,074 32,637 - 66,811 (D) 48 545 2007: (D) 112,330 45,504 - 88,497 157 (D) (D) Cattle and calves .............................farms, 2012: 174 184 168 - 446 538 50 231 2007: 161 194 216 - 491 584 43 211 $1,000, 2012: 24,355 81,516 5,152 - 99,176 31,779 1,064 34,317 2007: 17,454 69,369 (D) - 66,794 28,693 1,404 20,023 Milk from cows (see text) .....................farms, 2012: 1 79 7 - 105 1 - 3 2007: (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) $1,000, 2012: (D) 389,392 29,782 - 417,094 (D) - (D) 2007: (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) Hogs and pigs .................................farms, 2012: 6 62 39 - 27 48 - 25 2007: 6 44 79 - 31 40 8 17 $1,000, 2012: 17 186 (D) - (D) 119 - 177 2007: 1 (D) (D) - (D) 125 19 82 Sheep, goats, wool, mohair, and : milk (see text) ..............................farms, 2012: 45 72 120 - 116 115 17 35 2007: (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) $1,000, 2012: 251 191 485 - (D) 1,893 16 173 2007: (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) Horses, ponies, mules, burros, and : donkeys ......................................farms, 2012: 37 77 148 - 83 118 20 91 2007: 39 152 258 - 97 134 40 110 $1,000, 2012: 719 3,469 4,587 - 1,262 4,516 1,558 3,538 2007: (D) 1,516 9,609 - (D) 2,933 586 4,203 Aquaculture (see text) ....................... farms, 2012: - 3 7 - 4 9 - 3 2007: - 5 16 - 1 3 3 2 $1,000, 2012: - 988 1,449 - 1,166 6,931 - (D) 2007: - 2,712 4,028 - (D) (D) 22 (D) Other animals and other animal : products (see text) ..........................farms, 2012: 13 60 95 2 55 46 14 36 2007: 9 50 95 - 58 49 10 23 $1,000, 2012: (D) 1,568 (D) (D) 742 845 65 1,065 2007: (D) 999 9,882 - 3,110 103 126 551 Value of agricultural products sold directly to : individuals for human : consumption (see text) ...........................farms, 2012: 60 225 717 1 248 327 66 179 2007: 37 169 695 - 232 242 37 136 $1,000, 2012: 1,827 3,256 11,379 (D) 8,919 5,884 1,098 6,285 2007: 666 3,162 11,629 - 11,837 4,279 988 4,602 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 2. Market Value of Agricultural Products Sold Including Direct Sales: 2012 and 2007 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Santa Clara : Santa Cruz : Shasta : Sierra : Siskiyou : Solano : Sonoma : Stanislaus ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Total sales (see text) - Con. : Value of sales by commodity or commodity group - Con. : Crops, including nursery and : greenhouse crops - Con. : : Tobacco .......................................farms, 2012: - - - - - - - - 2007: - - - - - - - - $1,000, 2012: - - - - - - - - 2007: - - - - - - - - Cotton and cottonseed .........................farms, 2012: - - - - - - - - 2007: 1 - - - - - - 1 $1,000, 2012: - - - - - - - - 2007: (D) - - - - - - (D) Vegetables, melons, potatoes, and sweet : potatoes .....................................farms, 2012: 203 91 98 - 58 72 330 125 2007: 93 67 39 - 39 50 172 87 $1,000, 2012: 98,004 128,477 629 - 26,549 54,278 9,807 71,910 2007: 94,194 74,288 796 - 18,692 33,885 6,436 84,470 Fruits, tree nuts, and : berries ......................................farms, 2012: 356 334 260 1 20 296 1,998 2,111 2007: 352 364 263 2 38 281 2,017 2,052 $1,000, 2012: 23,845 306,475 6,559 (D) 947 87,714 561,450 830,445 2007: 16,091 259,273 3,382 (D) 2,617 45,746 359,858 490,903 Fruits and tree nut..........................farms, 2012: 335 242 227 1 15 294 1,952 2,097 2007: (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) $1,000, 2012: 23,121 21,084 5,892 (D) 689 86,914 559,444 827,588 2007: (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) Berries .....................................farms, 2012: 30 116 43 1 8 6 87 20 2007: (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) $1,000, 2012: 724 285,392 667 (D) 258 800 2,006 2,857 2007: (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) Nursery, greenhouse, floriculture, and : sod (see text) ...............................farms, 2012: 94 117 27 1 32 20 225 42 2007: 89 113 30 - 22 35 160 55 $1,000, 2012: 107,701 113,196 5,243 (D) 90,562 31,135 29,580 76,962 2007: 109,880 99,569 (D) - 49,208 71,568 52,194 98,565 Cut Christmas trees and short-rotation : woody crops ..................................farms, 2012: 14 27 6 1 7 3 17 2 2007: 19 17 5 - - 1 19 2 $1,000, 2012: 210 244 23 (D) 24 101 (D) (D) 2007: (D) (D) 11 - - (D) 569 (D) Cut Christmas trees..........................farms, 2012: 14 27 6 1 7 2 17 - 2007: (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) $1,000, 2012: 210 (D) 23 (D) 24 (D) (D) - 2007: (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) Short rotation woody crops...................farms, 2012: - 1 - - - 1 - 2 2007: (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) $1,000, 2012: - (D) - - - (D) - (D) 2007: (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) Other crops and hay (see text) ................farms, 2012: 44 3 132 13 257 131 82 396 2007: 70 5 121 13 206 129 71 407 $1,000, 2012: 2,648 8 6,209 648 53,795 40,539 4,868 (D) 2007: 1,413 (D) (D) (D) 27,317 (D) 2,606 (D) Maple syrup (see text).......................farms, 2012: - - - - - - - - 2007: (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) $1,000, 2012: - - - - - - - - 2007: (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) Livestock, poultry, and their products ..........farms, 2012: 268 113 783 32 466 286 1,072 1,291 2007: 301 110 818 31 446 303 932 1,308 $1,000, 2012: 10,433 17,420 41,608 5,305 32,565 64,675 368,156 1,165,282 2007: 12,692 13,872 (D) 1,418 28,733 41,197 225,041 1,084,519 Poultry and eggs ..............................farms, 2012: 49 35 137 1 70 49 266 154 2007: 40 30 172 1 47 60 179 210 $1,000, 2012: 29 (D) 105 (D) 71 1,438 174,302 291,127 2007: 737 (D) 167 (D) 41 945 84,591 245,277 Cattle and calves .............................farms, 2012: 149 37 538 30 339 151 513 912 2007: 157 22 502 30 312 132 435 901 $1,000, 2012: (D) (D) 25,751 5,250 28,184 38,873 29,082 157,779 2007: 7,969 620 15,541 1,416 23,160 22,041 21,167 141,809 Milk from cows (see text) .....................farms, 2012: - 6 2 - 3 3 99 222 2007: (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) $1,000, 2012: - 934 (D) - 2,663 16,731 155,584 705,968 2007: (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) Hogs and pigs .................................farms, 2012: 19 1 27 1 30 16 73 28 2007: 14 2 71 - 17 17 48 54 $1,000, 2012: 16 (D) 28 (D) 57 27 (D) 1,336 2007: 62 (D) 51 - 13 16 81 1,792 Sheep, goats, wool, mohair, and : milk (see text) ..............................farms, 2012: 58 30 158 2 71 80 313 173 2007: (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) $1,000, 2012: 256 569 324 (D) 238 6,555 5,254 (D) 2007: (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) Horses, ponies, mules, burros, and : donkeys ......................................farms, 2012: 40 12 94 5 50 50 79 135 2007: 76 15 147 - 53 46 124 125 $1,000, 2012: 738 162 832 39 238 832 2,748 1,597 2007: 902 787 (D) - 148 404 7,327 1,416 Aquaculture (see text) ....................... farms, 2012: 1 5 9 - 5 - 4 16 2007: 3 5 7 - 3 - 4 15 $1,000, 2012: (D) 6,200 6,311 - 536 - (D) (D) 2007: (D) (D) 1,308 - (D) - (D) 2,275 Other animals and other animal : products (see text) ..........................farms, 2012: 24 24 36 1 30 33 104 58 2007: 31 23 62 - 27 24 65 41 $1,000, 2012: 73 96 (D) (D) 578 218 368 984 2007: (D) 184 6,763 - (D) 42 (D) 566 Value of agricultural products sold directly to : individuals for human : consumption (see text) ...........................farms, 2012: 184 112 263 2 90 110 499 220 2007: 112 99 237 4 83 70 362 242 $1,000, 2012: 3,598 7,786 777 (D) 449 2,701 8,153 4,584 2007: 1,943 8,333 616 (D) 312 1,337 4,803 4,230 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 2. Market Value of Agricultural Products Sold Including Direct Sales: 2012 and 2007 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Sutter : Tehama : Trinity : Tulare : Tuolumne : Ventura : Yolo : Yuba ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Total sales (see text) - Con. : Value of sales by commodity or commodity group - Con. : Crops, including nursery and : greenhouse crops - Con. : : Tobacco .......................................farms, 2012: - - - - - - - - 2007: - - - - - - - - $1,000, 2012: - - - - - - - - 2007: - - - - - - - - Cotton and cottonseed .........................farms, 2012: 2 - - 59 - - - - 2007: 3 - - 78 - - - - $1,000, 2012: (D) - - 40,626 - - - - 2007: (D) - - 26,693 - - - - Vegetables, melons, potatoes, and sweet : potatoes .....................................farms, 2012: 65 75 60 135 17 114 129 47 2007: 38 29 22 88 11 125 105 25 $1,000, 2012: 62,622 330 (D) 17,807 31 322,509 139,191 (D) 2007: 54,252 (D) (D) 26,449 69 322,374 135,692 408 Fruits, tree nuts, and : berries ......................................farms, 2012: 771 568 65 3,289 45 1,608 380 254 2007: 735 639 47 3,535 42 1,787 372 241 $1,000, 2012: 218,552 158,116 868 1,375,067 (D) 816,684 205,573 103,062 2007: 118,444 96,038 846 944,585 1,114 667,428 86,577 59,772 Fruits and tree nut..........................farms, 2012: 762 559 57 3,254 43 1,554 370 241 2007: (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) $1,000, 2012: 218,236 157,798 734 1,368,020 (D) 248,577 204,874 102,630 2007: (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) Berries .....................................farms, 2012: 19 11 24 58 2 97 18 19 2007: (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) $1,000, 2012: 316 318 134 7,047 (D) 568,107 699 432 2007: (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) Nursery, greenhouse, floriculture, and : sod (see text) ...............................farms, 2012: 10 27 23 65 15 164 32 15 2007: 9 11 3 56 13 161 26 7 $1,000, 2012: (D) (D) 156 50,081 (D) 290,098 (D) 1,301 2007: (D) 66 4 93,041 337 312,234 5,767 1,834 Cut Christmas trees and short-rotation : woody crops ..................................farms, 2012: 1 3 - - 7 4 2 1 2007: - 3 2 6 5 3 3 1 $1,000, 2012: (D) (D) - - 23 (D) (D) (D) 2007: - (D) (D) 211 (D) 131 4 (D) Cut Christmas trees..........................farms, 2012: - 3 - - 5 1 2 1 2007: (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) $1,000, 2012: - (D) - - (D) (D) (D) (D) 2007: (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) Short rotation woody crops...................farms, 2012: 1 1 - - 2 3 - - 2007: (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) $1,000, 2012: (D) (D) - - (D) 26 - - 2007: (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) Other crops and hay (see text) ................farms, 2012: 62 173 10 342 10 21 177 15 2007: 68 101 12 329 1 24 167 22 $1,000, 2012: (D) (D) (D) 89,821 137 696 (D) 691 2007: (D) 4,944 (D) 52,029 (D) 838 61,085 (D) Maple syrup (see text).......................farms, 2012: - - - - - - - - 2007: (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) $1,000, 2012: - - - - - - - - 2007: (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) Livestock, poultry, and their products ..........farms, 2012: 211 798 146 934 236 247 236 324 2007: 186 809 113 980 208 304 219 355 $1,000, 2012: 6,259 70,730 (D) 2,345,931 25,064 9,869 35,738 39,009 2007: 6,443 38,579 2,129 2,127,681 17,096 13,120 27,112 17,621 Poultry and eggs ..............................farms, 2012: 39 99 42 61 31 61 71 85 2007: 33 107 34 104 21 68 54 85 $1,000, 2012: 255 279 37 56,304 (D) 190 1,889 45 2007: 122 56 17 47,625 (D) 352 2,541 90 Cattle and calves .............................farms, 2012: 120 532 72 676 159 101 68 161 2007: 101 479 74 721 142 94 99 183 $1,000, 2012: 4,068 41,968 (D) 454,901 (D) 2,483 17,741 14,222 2007: 2,888 20,953 1,527 365,126 (D) 4,161 10,391 4,420 Milk from cows (see text) .....................farms, 2012: - 15 - 244 - - 4 9 2007: (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) $1,000, 2012: - 21,188 - 1,786,174 - - (D) 23,553 2007: (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) Hogs and pigs .................................farms, 2012: 21 47 30 32 22 9 17 17 2007: 19 48 13 23 19 13 11 29 $1,000, 2012: 138 679 27 (D) 17 38 (D) (D) 2007: (D) 57 5 (D) 23 8 149 38 Sheep, goats, wool, mohair, and : milk (see text) ..............................farms, 2012: 51 179 46 86 41 39 84 86 2007: (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) $1,000, 2012: 946 1,131 38 11,368 158 (D) (D) 603 2007: (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) Horses, ponies, mules, burros, and : donkeys ......................................farms, 2012: 28 89 5 114 26 79 31 66 2007: 18 148 10 107 27 82 28 54 $1,000, 2012: 357 1,963 10 1,799 95 2,962 144 500 2007: 133 2,990 (D) 852 169 1,379 202 340 Aquaculture (see text) ....................... farms, 2012: 3 7 1 2 3 3 2 2 2007: 4 16 1 2 3 3 3 2 $1,000, 2012: 8 (D) (D) (D) (D) (D) (D) (D) 2007: (D) 3,732 (D) (D) (D) (D) 4 (D) Other animals and other animal : products (see text) ..........................farms, 2012: 13 32 18 52 14 40 30 15 2007: 17 26 10 49 11 44 17 12 $1,000, 2012: 487 (D) 11 (D) 22 3,454 502 50 2007: 361 208 5 5,465 53 6,237 749 (D) Value of agricultural products sold directly to : individuals for human : consumption (see text) ...........................farms, 2012: 81 169 73 377 64 193 136 122 2007: 92 168 46 336 34 180 95 97 $1,000, 2012: 929 758 206 15,418 235 4,732 9,426 753 2007: 1,190 923 89 11,677 191 4,501 6,324 650 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Table 3. Farm Production Expenses: 2012 and 2007 [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : California : Alameda : Alpine : Amador : Butte : Calaveras : Colusa ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Total farm production expenses ......................farms, 2012: 77,857 452 3 461 2,056 663 782 2007: 81,033 525 7 479 2,048 631 814 $1,000, 2012: 35,455,667 43,044 257 27,281 365,905 26,174 505,021 2007: 26,962,641 54,232 (D) 24,865 275,797 20,228 309,793 Average per farm ..............................dollars, 2012: 455,395 95,229 85,533 59,179 177,969 39,478 645,807 2007: 332,737 103,300 (D) 51,909 134,667 32,057 380,582 : Fertilizer, lime, and soil conditioners : purchased ........................................farms, 2012: 38,958 104 1 158 1,136 145 571 2007: 48,395 182 - 180 1,353 164 592 $1,000, 2012: 1,806,062 2,995 (D) 587 33,658 295 46,508 2007: 1,314,175 1,268 - 467 27,604 242 31,827 Chemicals purchased ...............................farms, 2012: 44,536 193 - 223 1,340 223 619 2007: 44,599 216 1 210 1,274 189 585 $1,000, 2012: 2,190,674 3,562 - 877 39,353 408 48,467 2007: 1,369,132 1,334 (D) 626 26,119 300 32,098 Seeds, plants, vines, and trees purchased .........farms, 2012: 27,527 105 - 109 855 146 506 2007: 26,247 108 - 78 779 129 498 $1,000, 2012: 1,317,934 1,156 - 346 12,273 192 20,257 2007: 991,450 2,184 - 289 6,235 180 13,842 : Livestock and poultry purchased or : leased ...........................................farms, 2012: 12,585 122 - 117 248 204 75 2007: 10,881 105 1 101 228 142 58 $1,000, 2012: 1,254,286 719 - 678 2,243 1,729 4,124 2007: 1,264,818 1,484 (D) 854 3,213 1,015 1,338 Breeding livestock purchased or : leased .........................................farms, 2012: 6,850 75 - 54 127 129 45 2007: 5,951 80 1 66 102 93 32 $1,000, 2012: 255,730 456 - 367 1,092 756 728 2007: 186,901 435 (D) 402 685 731 292 Other livestock and poultry purchased or : leased .........................................farms, 2012: 7,673 66 - 72 167 108 34 2007: 6,356 34 - 46 172 68 32 $1,000, 2012: 998,556 264 - 310 1,152 974 3,396 2007: 1,077,917 1,048 - 452 2,528 284 1,047 Feed purchased ....................................farms, 2012: 30,014 297 1 282 665 448 149 2007: 29,596 290 2 296 690 424 150 $1,000, 2012: 6,069,374 4,095 (D) 2,121 8,052 6,413 1,895 2007: 4,274,263 3,205 (D) 2,242 4,697 4,422 3,408 : Gasoline, fuels, and oils purchased ...............farms, 2012: 70,844 396 3 433 1,908 624 745 2007: 78,163 512 7 470 1,980 618 777 $1,000, 2012: 1,552,328 2,621 1 1,123 26,269 2,002 35,059 2007: 1,124,340 3,660 (D) 1,138 18,239 1,235 22,130 Utilities .........................................farms, 2012: 60,680 296 2 339 1,652 438 641 2007: 55,511 260 3 264 1,495 335 611 $1,000, 2012: 1,684,343 1,469 (D) 1,305 19,487 854 23,118 2007: 1,231,547 1,736 (D) 819 12,745 634 15,630 Repairs, supplies, and maintenance costs ..........farms, 2012: 63,106 341 2 353 1,692 505 677 2007: 74,487 463 7 434 1,876 568 752 $1,000, 2012: 2,042,434 2,125 (D) 1,802 27,873 1,348 44,119 2007: 1,782,730 3,062 (D) 1,926 22,659 1,822 22,493 Hired farm labor ..................................farms, 2012: 33,955 132 - 124 781 176 373 2007: 29,661 118 3 120 671 106 343 $1,000, 2012: 5,877,973 10,492 - 4,591 66,947 3,564 89,073 2007: 5,015,513 15,576 7 3,854 48,914 2,456 43,355 : Contract labor ....................................farms, 2012: 25,067 98 2 139 520 85 235 2007: 22,586 114 - 126 467 91 211 $1,000, 2012: 3,378,012 3,079 (D) 3,836 13,120 1,412 45,354 2007: 2,265,515 4,941 - 2,292 9,106 914 13,810 Customwork and custom hauling .....................farms, 2012: 19,644 59 2 66 672 74 464 2007: 15,667 63 2 58 536 50 350 $1,000, 2012: 1,258,384 478 (D) 781 21,270 444 37,387 2007: 860,315 1,890 (D) 549 15,075 134 24,113 Cash rent for land, buildings, : and grazing fees .................................farms, 2012: 15,007 112 2 85 345 116 308 2007: 13,299 123 1 73 302 102 304 $1,000, 2012: 1,511,985 2,430 (D) 2,387 16,149 1,863 34,209 2007: 1,013,008 2,854 (D) 1,821 13,603 2,048 26,093 Rent and lease expenses for machinery, : equipment, and farm share of vehicles ............farms, 2012: 7,895 46 - 38 197 21 161 2007: 6,623 25 1 30 236 16 144 $1,000, 2012: 400,054 235 - 114 3,779 79 10,680 2007: 216,265 298 (D) 160 4,218 84 5,657 : Interest expense ..................................farms, 2012: 26,459 137 3 126 726 149 408 2007: 23,854 147 1 109 657 121 337 $1,000, 2012: 1,217,781 2,673 49 1,761 24,333 1,412 18,575 2007: 1,099,536 3,454 (D) 2,488 16,588 1,392 13,405 : Secured by real estate ..........................farms, 2012: 20,307 110 1 106 602 122 217 2007: 18,896 112 - 92 528 98 201 $1,000, 2012: 941,302 2,341 (D) 1,479 21,316 1,256 12,522 2007: 773,509 2,480 - 1,896 13,680 1,041 7,747 Not secured by real estate ......................farms, 2012: 13,273 53 2 49 327 57 288 2007: 12,843 83 1 52 319 68 237 $1,000, 2012: 276,479 332 (D) 282 3,017 156 6,054 2007: 326,028 974 (D) 592 2,908 350 5,657 Property taxes paid ...............................farms, 2012: 71,398 404 3 436 1,910 617 636 2007: 72,181 445 7 423 1,826 572 640 $1,000, 2012: 827,587 2,914 15 2,929 18,149 2,288 7,993 2007: 638,682 2,468 40 2,471 13,075 2,198 6,144 : All other production expenses (see text) ..........farms, 2012: 43,111 241 2 254 1,167 316 571 2007: 44,163 247 3 254 1,158 296 593 $1,000, 2012: 3,066,456 2,000 (D) 2,044 32,949 1,871 38,202 2007: 2,501,352 4,820 (D) 2,871 33,707 1,151 34,452 : Depreciation expenses claimed (see text) ............farms, 2012: 39,342 165 - 236 1,060 273 548 2007: 37,834 233 3 215 943 261 458 $1,000, 2012: 2,256,892 4,651 - 3,539 39,434 3,136 38,824 2007: 1,800,646 6,774 (D) 3,840 28,354 2,184 23,314 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 3. Farm Production Expenses: 2012 and 2007 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Contra Costa : Del Norte : El Dorado : Fresno : Glenn : Humboldt : Imperial ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Total farm production expenses ......................farms, 2012: 602 121 1,358 5,683 1,311 930 421 2007: 634 85 1,268 6,081 1,242 852 452 $1,000, 2012: 80,019 31,190 38,139 4,003,281 493,164 181,245 1,650,321 2007: 62,302 27,789 35,236 3,028,036 299,929 132,066 1,119,951 Average per farm ..............................dollars, 2012: 132,922 257,771 28,084 704,431 376,174 194,887 3,920,003 2007: 98,269 326,932 27,788 497,950 241,489 155,007 2,477,769 : Fertilizer, lime, and soil conditioners : purchased ........................................farms, 2012: 193 38 525 3,387 834 296 293 2007: 251 32 598 4,342 802 267 348 $1,000, 2012: 2,299 545 509 216,341 37,479 1,032 159,170 2007: 2,712 623 506 155,531 30,470 1,225 80,861 Chemicals purchased ...............................farms, 2012: 241 22 685 4,247 959 227 284 2007: 264 15 603 4,540 858 145 308 $1,000, 2012: 5,931 (D) 721 297,669 39,710 892 109,151 2007: 4,097 957 850 189,193 27,593 (D) 54,693 Seeds, plants, vines, and trees purchased .........farms, 2012: 167 39 441 1,894 583 274 281 2007: 163 25 364 1,777 538 189 253 $1,000, 2012: (D) 521 406 146,570 11,514 (D) 89,130 2007: 2,330 860 637 75,107 9,405 3,442 30,388 : Livestock and poultry purchased or : leased ...........................................farms, 2012: 104 40 304 501 218 266 71 2007: 112 21 243 444 166 206 57 $1,000, 2012: (D) 260 1,698 218,172 14,343 (D) 264,679 2007: 1,346 2,224 1,115 292,315 7,541 5,472 270,978 Breeding livestock purchased or : leased .........................................farms, 2012: 64 24 128 248 126 151 7 2007: 70 11 136 177 100 124 14 $1,000, 2012: (D) 220 586 7,687 1,393 (D) 2,246 2007: 537 (D) 894 13,107 1,652 1,695 1,917 Other livestock and poultry purchased or : leased .........................................farms, 2012: 56 21 236 306 133 156 68 2007: 54 15 134 293 81 101 48 $1,000, 2012: 2,565 40 1,113 210,485 12,950 2,276 262,433 2007: 809 (D) 221 279,208 5,889 3,777 269,062 Feed purchased ....................................farms, 2012: 301 91 735 1,234 436 587 105 2007: 304 70 663 1,234 388 519 74 $1,000, 2012: 6,120 8,440 3,782 672,601 44,361 35,459 249,952 2007: 4,543 6,184 3,216 454,294 29,784 23,817 182,138 : Gasoline, fuels, and oils purchased ...............farms, 2012: 552 108 1,232 5,347 1,261 858 382 2007: 609 85 1,239 5,953 1,216 817 444 $1,000, 2012: 3,957 1,716 1,601 181,428 29,316 5,903 72,015 2007: 3,506 1,051 2,186 138,155 19,194 6,779 39,719 Utilities .........................................farms, 2012: 421 76 954 4,757 1,090 583 380 2007: 369 40 749 4,622 943 469 344 $1,000, 2012: 3,694 1,464 1,660 226,012 24,617 5,199 62,501 2007: 2,933 1,412 1,512 164,655 13,513 4,798 39,174 Repairs, supplies, and maintenance costs ..........farms, 2012: 458 68 1,026 4,809 1,122 755 381 2007: 562 81 1,170 5,730 1,159 761 419 $1,000, 2012: 5,154 2,763 2,333 219,633 37,044 14,356 69,195 2007: 4,315 1,980 3,909 176,286 23,227 15,735 47,058 Hired farm labor ..................................farms, 2012: 249 44 365 2,897 544 319 270 2007: 168 20 299 2,825 463 236 267 $1,000, 2012: 17,077 9,725 7,059 451,165 69,288 41,400 162,027 2007: 12,676 8,141 5,231 419,707 35,025 39,133 107,600 : Contract labor ....................................farms, 2012: 146 2 226 2,912 470 117 179 2007: 114 9 230 2,669 364 74 199 $1,000, 2012: 5,727 (D) 3,287 491,107 36,701 11,804 98,805 2007: 5,049 196 2,380 325,159 17,949 (D) 50,330 Customwork and custom hauling .....................farms, 2012: 82 28 103 1,899 533 186 237 2007: 71 7 79 1,719 423 117 214 $1,000, 2012: (D) 169 312 188,093 22,433 981 80,155 2007: 876 225 187 122,347 17,068 1,347 56,025 Cash rent for land, buildings, : and grazing fees .................................farms, 2012: 150 21 84 1,085 380 277 259 2007: 131 11 67 1,047 343 227 244 $1,000, 2012: 7,894 1,197 761 105,615 31,808 11,108 108,420 2007: 4,922 674 779 88,534 17,773 6,386 58,062 Rent and lease expenses for machinery, : equipment, and farm share of vehicles ............farms, 2012: 56 4 55 725 166 68 104 2007: 52 4 90 571 143 32 104 $1,000, 2012: (D) (D) 140 59,504 9,134 724 20,274 2007: 720 19 190 23,872 4,673 876 10,011 : Interest expense ..................................farms, 2012: 190 39 352 2,351 622 269 183 2007: 155 26 307 2,153 451 222 210 $1,000, 2012: 4,719 2,072 4,760 139,862 21,719 6,614 20,365 2007: 4,563 1,983 5,121 102,776 13,588 7,187 23,344 : Secured by real estate ..........................farms, 2012: 146 31 294 1,860 450 189 92 2007: 118 23 268 1,776 333 144 117 $1,000, 2012: 3,911 1,919 4,307 107,983 15,905 5,399 11,098 2007: 3,495 1,415 4,521 71,574 10,055 6,077 8,231 Not secured by real estate ......................farms, 2012: 97 15 130 1,185 319 171 138 2007: 99 15 155 1,107 267 151 154 $1,000, 2012: 807 153 453 31,879 5,814 1,215 9,267 2007: 1,068 568 600 31,202 3,534 1,111 15,113 Property taxes paid ...............................farms, 2012: 507 119 1,308 5,245 1,165 827 354 2007: 502 76 1,151 5,529 1,079 737 365 $1,000, 2012: 3,311 743 5,592 81,126 10,571 4,344 12,482 2007: 3,518 477 4,564 55,344 8,530 3,776 6,856 : All other production expenses (see text) ..........farms, 2012: 339 61 629 3,335 846 583 319 2007: 346 43 614 3,473 832 492 339 $1,000, 2012: 6,535 938 3,517 308,381 53,126 11,076 72,000 2007: 4,195 783 2,853 244,760 24,596 9,491 62,715 : Depreciation expenses claimed (see text) ............farms, 2012: 229 51 501 3,333 763 421 320 2007: 262 35 516 2,872 657 404 282 $1,000, 2012: 6,148 1,681 4,248 272,948 36,944 10,105 49,223 2007: 5,112 1,768 4,717 150,314 27,673 7,420 26,653 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 3. Farm Production Expenses: 2012 and 2007 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Inyo : Kern : Kings : Lake : Lassen : Los Angeles : Madera ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Total farm production expenses ......................farms, 2012: 125 1,938 1,056 838 448 1,294 1,507 2007: 94 2,117 1,129 845 459 1,734 1,708 $1,000, 2012: 16,828 3,394,697 1,591,497 74,236 73,976 208,532 1,144,550 2007: 12,042 2,419,092 1,043,310 60,528 52,763 288,150 739,200 Average per farm ..............................dollars, 2012: 134,622 1,751,650 1,507,099 88,587 165,125 161,153 759,489 2007: 128,109 1,142,698 924,101 71,631 114,952 166,177 432,787 : Fertilizer, lime, and soil conditioners : purchased ........................................farms, 2012: 32 887 636 291 145 444 716 2007: 26 1,116 723 530 135 587 1,029 $1,000, 2012: 565 179,664 64,247 1,521 4,191 11,555 58,831 2007: 804 136,598 49,502 2,417 2,196 13,609 37,738 Chemicals purchased ...............................farms, 2012: 25 1,057 722 369 159 430 1,020 2007: 28 1,113 681 340 147 433 1,115 $1,000, 2012: 124 248,270 86,303 3,410 4,645 16,269 83,874 2007: 198 164,309 46,411 3,047 1,920 10,507 45,437 Seeds, plants, vines, and trees purchased .........farms, 2012: 31 755 512 252 122 431 506 2007: 16 681 503 230 139 414 477 $1,000, 2012: 87 85,073 41,886 1,694 685 17,899 26,187 2007: 250 64,804 27,359 1,839 688 28,291 8,727 : Livestock and poultry purchased or : leased ...........................................farms, 2012: 53 386 191 94 141 201 185 2007: 27 299 178 80 160 269 249 $1,000, 2012: 1,085 88,369 104,841 264 3,069 1,260 36,448 2007: 1,219 59,074 63,833 184 2,606 2,530 31,820 Breeding livestock purchased or : leased .........................................farms, 2012: 36 219 112 44 90 88 105 2007: 21 158 113 41 116 119 118 $1,000, 2012: 732 4,910 91,894 181 891 582 17,524 2007: 452 8,103 20,969 117 918 533 4,800 Other livestock and poultry purchased or : leased .........................................farms, 2012: 27 246 116 55 75 153 111 2007: 13 179 89 54 75 192 169 $1,000, 2012: 352 83,459 12,947 84 2,178 678 18,924 2007: 767 50,971 42,864 67 1,689 1,997 27,020 Feed purchased ....................................farms, 2012: 97 861 424 277 291 611 506 2007: 66 805 426 264 310 1,019 582 $1,000, 2012: 3,809 341,371 515,810 1,517 6,507 15,532 159,266 2007: 1,715 267,831 285,130 1,258 3,983 15,872 129,545 : Gasoline, fuels, and oils purchased ...............farms, 2012: 107 1,802 1,011 796 430 1,140 1,378 2007: 89 2,029 1,108 820 456 1,632 1,657 $1,000, 2012: 854 147,659 74,769 3,069 5,349 10,952 68,476 2007: 1,076 96,626 52,679 3,161 4,768 11,018 35,558 Utilities .........................................farms, 2012: 72 1,571 928 524 312 951 1,231 2007: 52 1,444 887 449 281 903 1,242 $1,000, 2012: 853 245,677 72,816 2,825 3,638 9,466 86,043 2007: 569 178,069 45,826 1,656 2,467 11,931 43,145 Repairs, supplies, and maintenance costs ..........farms, 2012: 92 1,638 910 666 354 923 1,281 2007: 79 1,932 1,057 756 421 1,498 1,613 $1,000, 2012: 1,562 225,273 95,561 4,191 5,091 8,759 82,955 2007: 801 165,314 80,810 3,965 4,364 20,542 52,667 Hired farm labor ..................................farms, 2012: 57 1,004 498 301 104 584 813 2007: 32 858 474 248 96 526 758 $1,000, 2012: 3,149 463,843 153,584 15,340 18,026 52,566 143,685 2007: 1,726 340,948 128,323 14,362 12,712 93,356 128,657 : Contract labor ....................................farms, 2012: 10 804 382 246 38 189 682 2007: 12 721 331 179 41 190 718 $1,000, 2012: 312 568,491 69,679 14,725 (D) 10,121 103,792 2007: 62 334,785 55,367 6,567 1,819 18,089 59,583 Customwork and custom hauling .....................farms, 2012: 12 669 510 153 106 99 591 2007: 14 564 409 141 90 133 543 $1,000, 2012: 224 102,354 58,472 2,122 1,167 1,719 64,050 2007: 190 71,568 32,560 1,287 1,219 3,554 39,140 Cash rent for land, buildings, : and grazing fees .................................farms, 2012: 74 535 315 70 115 257 250 2007: 55 486 289 47 110 253 263 $1,000, 2012: 1,981 114,383 38,451 2,812 3,869 6,139 31,699 2007: 1,376 62,875 24,719 1,714 4,660 14,031 17,948 Rent and lease expenses for machinery, : equipment, and farm share of vehicles ............farms, 2012: 20 388 191 43 40 99 190 2007: 4 270 157 52 18 82 160 $1,000, 2012: 80 46,481 16,017 755 (D) 1,650 11,388 2007: 32 17,601 12,678 594 181 1,225 6,045 : Interest expense ..................................farms, 2012: 32 896 472 288 161 350 675 2007: 25 750 462 192 169 345 567 $1,000, 2012: 608 123,882 47,267 5,966 7,751 5,334 51,382 2007: 369 94,390 44,370 6,483 3,825 5,626 29,195 : Secured by real estate ..........................farms, 2012: 9 636 374 245 125 264 523 2007: 8 548 357 165 139 256 473 $1,000, 2012: 457 92,407 34,113 4,954 6,953 4,527 43,197 2007: 194 62,818 30,606 5,570 2,310 3,538 23,040 Not secured by real estate ......................farms, 2012: 23 544 289 125 96 154 369 2007: 19 442 288 96 89 213 312 $1,000, 2012: 150 31,475 13,155 1,012 798 807 8,185 2007: 174 31,572 13,764 914 1,515 2,088 6,155 Property taxes paid ...............................farms, 2012: 86 1,744 972 824 425 1,094 1,438 2007: 68 1,888 1,032 804 419 1,488 1,576 $1,000, 2012: 258 61,446 25,391 5,232 (D) 6,827 25,473 2007: 503 47,171 15,939 4,175 2,047 7,292 20,829 : All other production expenses (see text) ..........farms, 2012: 86 1,393 699 384 268 612 1,011 2007: 60 1,368 686 361 266 849 1,076 $1,000, 2012: 1,276 352,462 126,403 8,793 3,433 32,484 111,002 2007: 1,151 317,129 77,806 7,817 3,306 30,676 53,165 : Depreciation expenses claimed (see text) ............farms, 2012: 51 1,228 619 375 252 448 964 2007: 39 1,185 595 362 237 529 887 $1,000, 2012: 870 197,213 100,759 7,475 7,430 10,348 106,731 2007: 858 146,813 66,079 9,298 5,058 13,871 56,254 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 3. Farm Production Expenses: 2012 and 2007 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Marin : Mariposa : Mendocino : Merced : Modoc : Mono : Monterey ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Total farm production expenses ......................farms, 2012: 323 364 1,220 2,486 437 72 1,179 2007: 255 302 1,136 2,607 448 84 1,199 $1,000, 2012: 87,044 21,977 136,299 2,452,624 97,747 10,510 2,194,732 2007: 49,885 13,104 127,099 1,754,503 59,810 7,997 1,629,133 Average per farm ..............................dollars, 2012: 269,487 60,377 111,721 986,575 223,678 145,975 1,861,520 2007: 195,627 43,392 111,883 672,997 133,504 95,206 1,358,743 : Fertilizer, lime, and soil conditioners : purchased ........................................farms, 2012: 100 51 479 1,520 153 9 531 2007: 80 36 585 1,768 172 12 673 $1,000, 2012: 371 74 2,490 108,116 8,614 408 171,526 2007: 393 29 3,837 81,549 5,215 298 106,271 Chemicals purchased ...............................farms, 2012: 72 60 478 1,756 156 18 610 2007: 49 71 415 1,816 160 14 577 $1,000, 2012: 141 99 4,515 110,992 5,816 146 199,895 2007: 145 53 3,814 65,225 3,093 118 124,076 Seeds, plants, vines, and trees purchased .........farms, 2012: 101 42 375 1,194 174 18 480 2007: 72 24 324 1,148 160 14 547 $1,000, 2012: 441 50 1,776 55,188 3,280 135 140,054 2007: 221 20 1,871 34,964 1,532 89 104,103 : Livestock and poultry purchased or : leased ...........................................farms, 2012: 105 124 247 472 123 12 203 2007: 76 78 150 426 125 14 183 $1,000, 2012: 1,951 7,728 1,360 102,178 4,449 250 7,894 2007: 1,418 1,965 1,228 74,706 5,237 247 8,784 Breeding livestock purchased or : leased .........................................farms, 2012: 81 79 151 236 92 7 127 2007: 54 46 85 232 90 7 104 $1,000, 2012: 1,597 1,183 935 25,889 3,362 53 1,234 2007: 957 448 1,000 11,578 1,174 28 1,212 Other livestock and poultry purchased or : leased .........................................farms, 2012: 42 70 124 270 44 8 124 2007: 34 44 77 232 54 10 106 $1,000, 2012: 353 6,545 426 76,289 1,087 197 6,659 2007: 461 1,517 228 63,128 4,063 219 7,572 Feed purchased ....................................farms, 2012: 222 272 609 878 285 46 507 2007: 172 227 467 835 219 45 479 $1,000, 2012: 36,133 2,730 4,706 889,640 9,360 860 15,917 2007: 21,352 2,613 5,579 597,600 2,567 840 11,143 : Gasoline, fuels, and oils purchased ...............farms, 2012: 299 322 1,149 2,381 410 67 1,136 2007: 246 289 1,100 2,560 447 78 1,173 $1,000, 2012: 3,126 920 5,875 103,203 9,199 1,307 92,755 2007: 1,573 823 6,148 70,097 5,384 762 64,257 Utilities .........................................farms, 2012: 252 208 842 2,145 350 60 871 2007: 160 158 666 2,026 313 48 783 $1,000, 2012: 2,955 524 3,889 98,598 7,308 1,162 72,338 2007: 1,451 377 3,762 65,729 3,921 756 56,200 Repairs, supplies, and maintenance costs ..........farms, 2012: 262 262 951 2,171 369 55 1,008 2007: 222 259 1,025 2,424 414 68 1,113 $1,000, 2012: 5,315 847 7,926 130,072 7,619 1,177 111,811 2007: 4,291 1,077 9,764 118,550 5,052 1,159 111,834 Hired farm labor ..................................farms, 2012: 182 88 498 1,253 166 27 634 2007: 98 58 371 1,156 111 22 571 $1,000, 2012: 18,186 1,830 44,378 272,448 15,569 1,370 488,785 2007: 7,413 668 36,105 225,931 6,869 1,211 374,149 : Contract labor ....................................farms, 2012: 67 54 363 861 47 6 368 2007: 34 26 290 709 60 2 364 $1,000, 2012: 1,361 482 14,134 98,388 525 149 328,747 2007: 532 185 12,754 52,704 533 (D) 259,965 Customwork and custom hauling .....................farms, 2012: 81 66 252 1,243 170 13 177 2007: 50 23 162 1,018 110 12 164 $1,000, 2012: 1,254 790 4,206 111,668 2,290 296 39,564 2007: 740 74 2,295 75,602 1,635 80 34,884 Cash rent for land, buildings, : and grazing fees .................................farms, 2012: 150 116 203 748 153 27 432 2007: 104 73 121 653 160 17 402 $1,000, 2012: 4,864 2,447 7,023 63,650 8,335 (D) 220,481 2007: 3,034 2,465 3,641 62,892 6,592 435 115,423 Rent and lease expenses for machinery, : equipment, and farm share of vehicles ............farms, 2012: 20 10 102 330 32 5 202 2007: 16 8 78 293 33 3 184 $1,000, 2012: 133 157 737 18,131 1,000 (D) 27,875 2007: 157 48 1,132 10,507 726 (D) 20,248 : Interest expense ..................................farms, 2012: 114 97 373 1,162 197 29 394 2007: 74 69 312 1,075 184 19 376 $1,000, 2012: 1,924 817 12,707 75,879 5,078 526 42,108 2007: 1,614 880 12,746 65,556 4,548 526 42,034 : Secured by real estate ..........................farms, 2012: 50 64 312 919 155 11 247 2007: 37 58 252 866 148 15 243 $1,000, 2012: 1,309 641 11,515 59,872 3,758 388 25,584 2007: 660 615 10,993 45,606 3,098 469 22,099 Not secured by real estate ......................farms, 2012: 84 61 186 637 106 24 224 2007: 56 34 152 609 126 13 235 $1,000, 2012: 615 177 1,191 16,007 1,320 138 16,524 2007: 955 265 1,753 19,950 1,450 57 19,935 Property taxes paid ...............................farms, 2012: 260 325 1,139 2,239 426 67 962 2007: 182 279 1,031 2,370 398 68 965 $1,000, 2012: 3,817 1,407 8,758 44,393 3,285 556 26,767 2007: 1,274 919 7,908 31,581 2,407 487 19,759 : All other production expenses (see text) ..........farms, 2012: 223 204 695 1,613 328 51 754 2007: 180 166 607 1,702 300 45 773 $1,000, 2012: 5,074 1,076 11,819 170,080 6,021 1,692 208,216 2007: 4,276 908 14,515 121,310 4,499 899 176,003 : Depreciation expenses claimed (see text) ............farms, 2012: 177 134 571 1,600 258 48 679 2007: 118 118 564 1,482 234 31 595 $1,000, 2012: 4,876 2,176 15,225 159,244 8,528 1,069 104,546 2007: 4,079 1,241 20,929 116,891 5,975 1,489 80,059 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 3. Farm Production Expenses: 2012 and 2007 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Napa : Nevada : Orange : Placer : Plumas : Riverside : Sacramento ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Total farm production expenses ......................farms, 2012: 1,685 742 312 1,355 141 2,949 1,352 2007: 1,638 690 325 1,488 142 3,463 1,393 $1,000, 2012: 502,222 18,056 187,048 55,458 22,774 939,539 302,141 2007: 344,210 19,425 247,927 55,571 11,522 825,129 265,205 Average per farm ..............................dollars, 2012: 298,054 24,334 599,513 40,928 161,519 318,596 223,477 2007: 210,140 28,152 762,853 37,346 81,142 238,270 190,384 : Fertilizer, lime, and soil conditioners : purchased ........................................farms, 2012: 980 264 172 488 21 1,391 526 2007: 1,322 223 185 588 27 2,013 545 $1,000, 2012: 8,543 273 9,555 2,514 181 42,851 12,008 2007: 9,547 224 14,367 2,108 197 36,509 11,055 Chemicals purchased ...............................farms, 2012: 1,210 276 163 547 28 1,440 618 2007: 1,239 212 157 519 31 1,576 501 $1,000, 2012: 19,239 145 8,029 2,023 86 46,472 16,613 2007: 15,655 130 9,197 1,261 83 30,614 11,874 Seeds, plants, vines, and trees purchased .........farms, 2012: 585 242 115 347 35 849 458 2007: 709 191 113 319 30 933 414 $1,000, 2012: 15,180 224 15,152 1,387 222 45,655 7,123 2007: 8,210 223 29,505 2,500 86 35,586 8,276 : Livestock and poultry purchased or : leased ...........................................farms, 2012: 87 200 43 391 60 365 415 2007: 65 205 28 328 55 377 307 $1,000, 2012: (D) 525 696 2,147 (D) 12,214 11,324 2007: 208 976 1,288 2,322 2,711 14,648 6,341 Breeding livestock purchased or : leased .........................................farms, 2012: 42 101 10 211 46 189 176 2007: 34 107 5 184 30 188 169 $1,000, 2012: 187 294 19 701 169 5,220 1,948 2007: 147 474 48 685 (D) 5,979 1,479 Other livestock and poultry purchased or : leased .........................................farms, 2012: 57 140 39 255 40 243 301 2007: 38 133 25 184 33 243 183 $1,000, 2012: (D) 232 677 1,445 (D) 6,994 9,376 2007: 62 503 1,240 1,637 (D) 8,669 4,863 Feed purchased ....................................farms, 2012: 245 511 103 923 109 1,112 845 2007: 191 503 91 1,047 111 1,393 837 $1,000, 2012: 1,469 2,737 1,541 7,083 3,520 181,604 51,925 2007: 1,179 2,513 1,495 6,451 1,374 142,309 45,782 : Gasoline, fuels, and oils purchased ...............farms, 2012: 1,373 677 261 1,284 130 2,467 1,243 2007: 1,561 670 284 1,436 138 3,243 1,361 $1,000, 2012: 10,297 972 6,313 3,280 908 39,193 12,837 2007: 6,485 1,436 5,297 3,530 454 29,347 11,937 Utilities .........................................farms, 2012: 1,175 535 237 1,023 98 2,277 959 2007: 1,085 441 201 982 71 2,314 836 $1,000, 2012: 8,268 1,014 7,476 3,309 (D) 66,517 11,434 2007: 5,738 929 7,637 2,823 425 49,972 8,280 Repairs, supplies, and maintenance costs ..........farms, 2012: 1,315 539 250 1,106 109 2,242 1,060 2007: 1,506 640 266 1,311 121 3,127 1,269 $1,000, 2012: 20,550 1,465 8,044 4,352 (D) 61,094 18,571 2007: 19,022 2,345 13,666 5,352 829 59,002 16,791 Hired farm labor ..................................farms, 2012: 916 182 174 280 34 1,252 410 2007: 715 132 138 246 28 1,197 354 $1,000, 2012: 129,633 2,585 65,079 10,124 2,429 171,746 58,559 2007: 88,771 2,028 97,723 9,275 863 159,307 56,365 : Contract labor ....................................farms, 2012: 1,007 87 79 127 8 854 256 2007: 847 85 29 105 8 869 207 $1,000, 2012: 92,553 961 19,767 1,261 (D) 85,538 27,855 2007: 64,843 671 9,124 909 (D) 78,711 24,497 Customwork and custom hauling .....................farms, 2012: 369 70 23 141 13 364 329 2007: 288 57 21 126 13 338 205 $1,000, 2012: 17,946 98 1,108 935 (D) 20,109 11,615 2007: 10,927 424 1,687 1,050 (D) 16,349 8,051 Cash rent for land, buildings, : and grazing fees .................................farms, 2012: 179 78 76 157 46 336 337 2007: 142 65 83 138 22 285 266 $1,000, 2012: 20,792 691 5,924 3,840 4,486 31,739 11,192 2007: 4,722 538 8,165 3,122 1,345 27,882 10,655 Rent and lease expenses for machinery, : equipment, and farm share of vehicles ............farms, 2012: 157 34 34 80 2 190 85 2007: 161 14 26 70 - 215 88 $1,000, 2012: (D) 81 4,440 709 (D) 8,810 2,958 2007: 1,997 22 3,788 453 - 4,134 1,539 : Interest expense ..................................farms, 2012: 560 196 75 281 38 791 343 2007: 490 157 40 292 42 863 375 $1,000, 2012: 59,139 2,289 2,081 3,421 636 25,735 11,667 2007: 42,599 2,891 4,238 4,934 901 36,301 14,738 : Secured by real estate ..........................farms, 2012: 470 177 51 230 31 608 244 2007: 429 139 25 261 34 715 278 $1,000, 2012: 55,379 2,099 1,402 2,900 486 17,237 9,456 2007: 38,919 2,500 991 4,295 496 26,496 11,443 Not secured by real estate ......................farms, 2012: 220 74 34 107 19 382 198 2007: 203 86 25 158 26 461 215 $1,000, 2012: 3,761 190 678 521 150 8,498 2,210 2007: 3,681 391 3,248 639 405 9,804 3,295 Property taxes paid ...............................farms, 2012: 1,593 688 244 1,278 137 2,787 1,166 2007: 1,547 638 225 1,319 129 3,156 1,153 $1,000, 2012: 37,110 2,614 2,846 4,259 (D) 22,557 9,822 2007: 28,417 2,169 2,820 4,485 791 23,099 8,432 : All other production expenses (see text) ..........farms, 2012: 812 398 182 762 85 1,307 756 2007: 873 332 175 748 87 1,589 757 $1,000, 2012: 52,239 1,382 28,997 4,812 (D) 77,706 26,637 2007: 35,890 1,904 37,929 4,995 618 81,359 20,592 : Depreciation expenses claimed (see text) ............farms, 2012: 968 242 122 507 82 1,237 510 2007: 962 290 105 493 55 1,339 571 $1,000, 2012: 63,103 1,662 4,810 4,248 976 45,535 21,375 2007: 69,679 2,970 5,599 5,211 890 43,316 27,180 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 3. Farm Production Expenses: 2012 and 2007 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : San Benito :San Bernardino : San Diego : San Francisco : San Joaquin :San Luis Obispo: San Mateo :Santa Barbara ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Total farm production expenses ......................farms, 2012: 628 1,249 5,732 6 3,580 2,666 334 1,597 2007: 625 1,405 6,687 6 3,624 2,784 329 1,597 $1,000, 2012: 131,936 526,895 671,976 96 1,733,302 597,782 89,821 999,903 2007: 167,096 549,885 869,784 (D) 1,215,671 517,763 111,675 790,553 Average per farm ..............................dollars, 2012: 210,089 421,854 117,232 15,984 484,163 224,224 268,926 626,113 2007: 267,354 391,377 130,071 (D) 335,450 185,978 339,439 495,024 : Fertilizer, lime, and soil conditioners : purchased ........................................farms, 2012: 199 434 3,546 - 2,174 1,165 133 909 2007: 260 630 5,184 4 2,565 1,439 113 1,072 $1,000, 2012: 7,182 2,191 27,006 - 87,339 21,653 1,429 57,440 2007: 7,684 3,929 26,582 12 58,925 20,732 2,870 41,019 Chemicals purchased ...............................farms, 2012: 258 463 3,071 - 2,597 1,406 136 947 2007: 274 560 3,468 2 2,561 1,411 89 848 $1,000, 2012: 6,052 4,488 17,622 - 130,807 46,266 2,312 53,809 2007: 11,723 3,408 19,081 (D) 62,061 25,985 2,372 40,701 Seeds, plants, vines, and trees purchased .........farms, 2012: 223 360 1,556 - 1,565 942 142 647 2007: 197 352 1,778 4 1,481 917 118 585 $1,000, 2012: 7,533 7,846 64,358 - 76,539 37,394 12,498 69,247 2007: 6,995 12,253 96,597 (D) 36,313 48,395 15,952 53,630 : Livestock and poultry purchased or : leased ...........................................farms, 2012: 150 315 381 - 470 391 51 198 2007: 95 223 372 - 401 397 62 143 $1,000, 2012: 5,670 22,852 3,547 - 26,511 7,809 729 10,884 2007: 5,678 37,370 6,102 - 26,537 5,920 890 5,852 Breeding livestock purchased or : leased .........................................farms, 2012: 83 154 177 - 287 230 19 92 2007: 60 124 190 - 202 268 24 76 $1,000, 2012: 1,494 8,681 1,007 - 5,069 2,386 98 1,390 2007: 1,523 10,071 1,757 - 5,605 1,757 395 1,122 Other livestock and poultry purchased or : leased .........................................farms, 2012: 92 225 283 - 236 219 36 133 2007: 46 128 233 - 247 176 43 82 $1,000, 2012: 4,176 14,171 2,540 - 21,441 5,424 631 9,494 2007: 4,156 27,299 4,344 - 20,932 4,163 494 4,730 Feed purchased ....................................farms, 2012: 338 662 1,046 4 947 1,201 167 540 2007: 293 758 1,374 - 923 1,246 172 488 $1,000, 2012: 10,505 288,286 50,660 24 265,248 12,288 3,174 17,666 2007: 9,956 265,628 45,189 - 218,553 11,315 1,897 14,974 : Gasoline, fuels, and oils purchased ...............farms, 2012: 609 1,099 4,591 5 3,335 2,508 309 1,401 2007: 625 1,326 6,193 3 3,555 2,731 318 1,522 $1,000, 2012: 6,654 12,031 22,678 3 78,011 31,498 4,731 36,792 2007: 7,002 11,856 28,845 (D) 55,915 23,182 5,724 28,078 Utilities .........................................farms, 2012: 452 1,000 4,569 3 3,060 1,991 249 1,248 2007: 365 921 4,919 6 2,765 1,699 165 1,116 $1,000, 2012: 5,173 14,532 68,874 (D) 66,949 23,011 4,068 35,707 2007: 6,454 16,393 67,513 (D) 45,758 15,573 4,143 30,030 Repairs, supplies, and maintenance costs ..........farms, 2012: 531 1,015 4,401 2 3,008 2,192 279 1,314 2007: 563 1,281 6,238 6 3,407 2,547 291 1,477 $1,000, 2012: 8,694 22,722 36,369 (D) 101,843 39,099 6,981 61,307 2007: 9,093 30,107 68,793 (D) 86,600 38,080 8,370 50,489 Hired farm labor ..................................farms, 2012: 242 520 2,795 - 1,748 1,040 166 926 2007: 228 513 2,548 1 1,541 905 141 776 $1,000, 2012: 29,249 58,461 233,301 - 289,740 114,631 40,453 311,694 2007: 38,951 78,626 281,127 (D) 222,320 103,537 44,680 232,123 : Contract labor ....................................farms, 2012: 121 224 1,695 2 1,574 878 68 570 2007: 144 209 1,821 1 1,335 766 46 468 $1,000, 2012: 12,812 7,156 28,066 (D) 169,745 90,990 1,393 100,718 2007: 13,056 7,245 34,547 (D) 107,888 71,817 3,444 97,997 Customwork and custom hauling .....................farms, 2012: 128 161 487 1 1,503 472 20 244 2007: 58 160 378 - 1,174 334 19 157 $1,000, 2012: 1,599 10,485 3,897 (D) 82,074 15,339 280 13,302 2007: 1,387 9,151 4,180 - 52,978 12,570 836 14,403 Cash rent for land, buildings, : and grazing fees .................................farms, 2012: 199 197 361 - 701 500 99 414 2007: 152 193 414 2 612 446 114 325 $1,000, 2012: 10,203 7,261 13,196 - 68,574 35,497 1,840 73,411 2007: 9,672 10,261 20,463 (D) 45,274 21,238 2,841 47,217 Rent and lease expenses for machinery, : equipment, and farm share of vehicles ............farms, 2012: 65 118 380 - 409 283 22 247 2007: 52 98 347 - 315 206 17 185 $1,000, 2012: 1,381 4,253 4,855 - 25,015 9,759 591 10,678 2007: 2,040 1,530 4,990 - 10,624 4,023 414 5,838 : Interest expense ..................................farms, 2012: 198 354 1,354 - 1,396 851 101 446 2007: 146 365 1,396 - 1,283 797 54 410 $1,000, 2012: 4,123 9,854 20,362 - 67,408 32,363 2,229 18,879 2007: 5,947 15,357 32,603 - 56,595 26,660 2,090 21,337 : Secured by real estate ..........................farms, 2012: 153 235 1,108 - 1,105 668 54 274 2007: 117 264 1,178 - 1,035 628 32 298 $1,000, 2012: 3,267 5,398 17,164 - 51,336 27,505 1,569 13,816 2007: 5,007 6,175 26,542 - 38,859 22,054 1,626 15,339 Not secured by real estate ......................farms, 2012: 86 182 560 - 714 420 65 254 2007: 71 221 634 - 676 426 39 233 $1,000, 2012: 856 4,456 3,198 - 16,072 4,858 660 5,064 2007: 940 9,183 6,061 - 17,736 4,606 464 5,998 Property taxes paid ...............................farms, 2012: 545 1,107 5,447 6 3,331 2,411 264 1,336 2007: 534 1,221 6,044 5 3,291 2,410 233 1,313 $1,000, 2012: 5,089 6,442 28,232 58 44,249 23,656 2,099 21,627 2007: 4,953 6,360 28,738 26 31,645 20,325 2,286 16,229 : All other production expenses (see text) ..........farms, 2012: 371 642 1,950 1 2,173 1,452 193 914 2007: 350 742 2,548 3 2,144 1,496 180 836 $1,000, 2012: 10,017 48,035 48,952 (D) 153,250 56,529 5,015 106,743 2007: 26,506 40,410 104,435 (D) 97,684 68,412 12,869 90,637 : Depreciation expenses claimed (see text) ............farms, 2012: 331 524 2,149 1 2,198 1,272 151 799 2007: 253 477 2,592 1 2,049 1,284 126 747 $1,000, 2012: 8,497 22,114 38,280 (D) 134,448 45,093 4,105 49,452 2007: 14,475 33,468 45,942 (D) 102,066 47,079 4,714 54,017 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 3. Farm Production Expenses: 2012 and 2007 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Santa Clara : Santa Cruz : Shasta : Sierra : Siskiyou : Solano : Sonoma : Stanislaus ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Total farm production expenses ......................farms, 2012: 1,003 667 1,544 48 929 860 3,579 4,143 2007: 1,068 682 1,473 50 846 890 3,429 4,114 $1,000, 2012: 210,201 456,027 71,609 4,186 219,792 269,439 810,713 1,864,904 2007: 208,106 326,508 54,304 1,960 138,844 194,960 587,568 1,375,986 Average per farm ..............................dollars, 2012: 209,573 683,698 46,379 87,199 236,590 313,302 226,519 450,134 2007: 194,856 478,751 36,867 39,200 164,119 219,057 171,353 334,464 : Fertilizer, lime, and soil conditioners : purchased ........................................farms, 2012: 454 380 475 7 281 326 1,667 2,344 2007: 505 446 550 9 323 409 2,084 2,703 $1,000, 2012: 15,281 26,946 2,703 (D) 15,431 19,557 12,060 71,073 2007: 10,265 13,919 1,806 64 10,852 13,459 12,381 56,217 Chemicals purchased ...............................farms, 2012: 544 398 535 11 286 452 1,866 2,816 2007: 509 408 431 12 266 419 1,829 2,743 $1,000, 2012: 6,750 40,689 1,220 (D) 17,564 17,632 22,351 103,526 2007: 9,384 21,678 1,071 13 8,715 10,355 15,746 56,623 Seeds, plants, vines, and trees purchased .........farms, 2012: 417 327 391 7 256 278 1,246 1,625 2007: 401 319 288 9 237 264 1,230 1,464 $1,000, 2012: 18,926 22,024 625 24 6,370 13,343 10,081 29,780 2007: 21,487 25,570 600 (D) 3,530 7,251 12,994 19,981 : Livestock and poultry purchased or : leased ...........................................farms, 2012: 158 59 447 16 275 197 546 732 2007: 144 44 431 12 205 141 391 715 $1,000, 2012: 3,889 1,360 3,167 221 2,077 10,166 8,778 53,899 2007: 3,722 2,533 2,941 (D) 3,157 7,724 12,306 83,697 Breeding livestock purchased or : leased .........................................farms, 2012: 110 17 254 14 148 102 324 391 2007: 75 13 230 11 123 79 205 353 $1,000, 2012: 1,181 (D) 1,162 158 1,483 2,333 4,142 10,349 2007: 506 147 1,096 (D) 1,426 1,196 2,283 18,788 Other livestock and poultry purchased or : leased .........................................farms, 2012: 73 47 253 7 172 120 319 450 2007: 77 36 280 1 106 82 244 445 $1,000, 2012: 2,707 (D) 2,005 64 594 7,833 4,636 43,550 2007: 3,216 2,387 1,845 (D) 1,731 6,529 10,023 64,909 Feed purchased ....................................farms, 2012: 382 183 1,097 37 642 424 1,414 1,686 2007: 413 165 969 27 504 399 1,168 1,608 $1,000, 2012: 4,429 3,581 10,813 (D) 8,768 28,849 171,998 635,294 2007: 4,052 2,045 8,228 (D) 6,119 14,105 109,369 433,955 : Gasoline, fuels, and oils purchased ...............farms, 2012: 914 635 1,437 48 857 815 3,230 3,872 2007: 1,007 668 1,441 50 838 865 3,290 4,051 $1,000, 2012: 8,966 15,832 5,593 310 13,706 15,404 22,637 71,553 2007: 8,983 12,623 3,660 244 9,386 11,771 16,918 49,511 Utilities .........................................farms, 2012: 721 475 1,032 36 675 660 2,515 3,411 2007: 590 427 858 26 558 587 2,120 2,975 $1,000, 2012: 8,654 17,991 3,739 172 14,032 12,673 15,832 64,064 2007: 9,383 11,512 2,471 155 8,213 8,702 12,915 48,617 Repairs, supplies, and maintenance costs ..........farms, 2012: 826 562 1,144 39 708 698 2,827 3,464 2007: 957 640 1,331 45 783 811 3,118 3,831 $1,000, 2012: 11,871 21,664 4,970 257 14,086 14,509 41,537 111,336 2007: 14,363 19,666 5,859 173 11,105 15,662 33,692 94,309 Hired farm labor ..................................farms, 2012: 453 346 282 19 247 376 1,616 1,724 2007: 374 359 231 7 205 280 1,260 1,490 $1,000, 2012: 68,224 169,555 11,947 296 57,877 52,281 199,305 221,868 2007: 68,403 146,599 8,390 (D) 33,797 40,145 153,613 190,323 : Contract labor ....................................farms, 2012: 229 196 116 5 98 206 1,440 1,399 2007: 197 170 99 4 88 190 1,159 1,135 $1,000, 2012: 22,315 36,164 1,004 108 15,747 16,994 92,558 90,880 2007: 13,730 15,380 1,538 70 7,547 16,513 58,611 48,279 Customwork and custom hauling .....................farms, 2012: 117 79 160 14 201 204 640 1,866 2007: 91 58 113 8 147 172 498 1,278 $1,000, 2012: 3,761 1,293 1,379 387 8,487 13,566 12,929 82,022 2007: 5,627 2,008 715 16 4,074 6,686 13,078 49,667 Cash rent for land, buildings, : and grazing fees .................................farms, 2012: 197 163 222 27 190 203 533 844 2007: 178 181 196 8 182 167 424 755 $1,000, 2012: 8,912 27,160 7,105 546 17,737 14,555 51,597 43,761 2007: 5,539 9,642 2,414 262 9,474 9,203 15,077 49,077 Rent and lease expenses for machinery, : equipment, and farm share of vehicles ............farms, 2012: 74 78 49 - 61 73 319 397 2007: 71 71 43 - 52 70 234 338 $1,000, 2012: 2,236 7,521 144 - 6,050 2,802 4,483 12,723 2007: 2,248 2,128 305 - 2,858 1,686 3,021 7,705 : Interest expense ..................................farms, 2012: 220 209 381 23 320 321 1,101 1,661 2007: 188 180 308 12 300 258 895 1,425 $1,000, 2012: 4,313 5,424 3,611 480 4,836 13,117 48,177 70,529 2007: 5,195 7,864 3,623 (D) 7,021 9,014 39,555 61,446 : Secured by real estate ..........................farms, 2012: 132 138 296 18 258 258 870 1,336 2007: 132 110 252 11 244 201 733 1,175 $1,000, 2012: 3,034 3,961 3,133 (D) 3,688 9,479 43,872 56,197 2007: 4,116 4,974 2,990 144 4,316 6,708 34,994 44,740 Not secured by real estate ......................farms, 2012: 126 116 148 8 170 172 488 775 2007: 127 129 152 5 178 140 414 683 $1,000, 2012: 1,279 1,463 478 (D) 1,148 3,638 4,304 14,332 2007: 1,079 2,890 634 (D) 2,705 2,305 4,562 16,706 Property taxes paid ...............................farms, 2012: 882 559 1,473 48 884 770 3,324 3,865 2007: 903 515 1,353 48 765 761 3,070 3,750 $1,000, 2012: 6,233 13,803 5,550 392 5,004 8,028 38,963 41,855 2007: 5,447 4,339 5,208 269 3,907 5,939 30,409 29,147 : All other production expenses (see text) ..........farms, 2012: 486 391 769 41 594 503 1,864 2,467 2007: 457 402 765 24 503 465 1,710 2,364 $1,000, 2012: 15,443 45,020 8,038 380 12,021 15,963 57,427 160,741 2007: 20,278 29,001 5,475 139 9,090 16,745 47,881 97,433 : Depreciation expenses claimed (see text) ............farms, 2012: 438 346 543 13 426 443 1,817 2,225 2007: 404 335 554 26 437 396 1,673 2,061 $1,000, 2012: 7,788 25,689 6,211 (D) 12,682 18,929 89,491 117,358 2007: 14,491 12,458 6,835 242 11,751 13,963 81,339 102,571 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 3. Farm Production Expenses: 2012 and 2007 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Sutter : Tehama : Trinity : Tulare : Tuolumne : Ventura : Yolo : Yuba ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Total farm production expenses ......................farms, 2012: 1,358 1,743 247 4,931 391 2,150 1,011 795 2007: 1,263 1,752 181 5,240 366 2,437 983 828 $1,000, 2012: 401,603 213,326 10,271 3,419,642 33,076 1,162,843 417,052 161,744 2007: 268,268 125,090 5,687 2,574,837 21,667 1,020,310 312,706 106,951 Average per farm ..............................dollars, 2012: 295,731 122,390 41,585 693,499 84,594 540,857 412,514 203,452 2007: 212,405 71,398 31,421 491,381 59,198 418,674 318,114 129,168 : Fertilizer, lime, and soil conditioners : purchased ........................................farms, 2012: 934 636 81 2,863 73 1,437 543 380 2007: 971 808 70 3,736 91 1,962 583 392 $1,000, 2012: 39,021 9,673 57 92,250 147 63,863 34,063 10,116 2007: 22,857 8,142 47 69,484 110 49,359 27,594 8,065 Chemicals purchased ...............................farms, 2012: 1,109 788 76 3,651 107 1,491 615 436 2007: 972 739 49 3,894 104 1,651 563 395 $1,000, 2012: 44,729 11,429 42 146,988 193 71,434 29,683 10,737 2007: 24,270 6,988 (D) 91,474 (D) 49,805 20,565 10,103 Seeds, plants, vines, and trees purchased .........farms, 2012: 662 463 104 1,621 68 791 492 320 2007: 596 410 62 1,435 71 1,003 387 280 $1,000, 2012: 19,241 4,356 65 41,394 46 76,143 25,398 3,707 2007: 10,466 1,760 44 27,378 (D) 65,579 17,871 2,493 : Livestock and poultry purchased or : leased ...........................................farms, 2012: 140 483 102 522 116 108 148 212 2007: 85 409 46 528 109 99 101 165 $1,000, 2012: 1,872 17,433 165 149,681 1,776 799 3,705 1,923 2007: 697 5,731 239 171,850 555 1,151 6,609 1,252 Breeding livestock purchased or : leased .........................................farms, 2012: 68 272 50 320 71 58 75 114 2007: 46 245 25 308 61 44 60 102 $1,000, 2012: 308 2,585 100 30,802 423 360 2,231 523 2007: 96 1,756 62 50,247 323 619 1,618 465 Other livestock and poultry purchased or : leased .........................................farms, 2012: 80 260 68 269 73 72 98 125 2007: 51 223 28 300 61 66 60 96 $1,000, 2012: 1,564 14,848 64 118,879 1,353 439 1,474 1,400 2007: 601 3,975 177 121,604 232 532 4,991 787 Feed purchased ....................................farms, 2012: 261 1,035 187 1,229 299 391 348 429 2007: 177 949 102 1,220 277 456 282 433 $1,000, 2012: 3,682 21,685 3,310 1,183,990 17,443 4,361 12,037 14,300 2007: 1,094 13,756 570 810,169 9,980 5,505 8,264 9,206 : Gasoline, fuels, and oils purchased ...............farms, 2012: 1,297 1,654 226 4,469 374 1,766 933 748 2007: 1,244 1,710 181 5,036 361 2,280 961 803 $1,000, 2012: 29,085 12,465 492 117,353 1,239 40,635 31,336 8,999 2007: 18,761 8,488 464 86,433 1,367 34,549 24,648 6,480 Utilities .........................................farms, 2012: 1,207 1,265 129 4,219 243 1,834 793 643 2007: 1,000 1,108 81 4,110 171 1,875 670 553 $1,000, 2012: 21,000 8,514 304 142,241 859 49,354 19,481 8,727 2007: 13,756 5,455 205 114,317 420 39,935 13,027 5,318 Repairs, supplies, and maintenance costs ..........farms, 2012: 1,202 1,312 183 4,120 282 1,714 839 692 2007: 1,190 1,600 164 4,885 325 2,243 910 741 $1,000, 2012: 28,626 13,321 1,181 167,971 1,382 56,965 31,986 12,323 2007: 24,544 9,662 936 147,667 1,416 54,776 27,621 7,985 Hired farm labor ..................................farms, 2012: 703 537 62 2,448 75 1,167 438 294 2007: 559 472 42 2,103 58 1,134 368 238 $1,000, 2012: 64,896 43,695 1,566 366,333 2,334 364,348 83,137 27,459 2007: 48,347 22,404 1,036 330,240 1,182 362,525 61,746 16,781 : Contract labor ....................................farms, 2012: 457 304 29 2,382 22 939 301 146 2007: 345 307 26 2,217 15 959 255 135 $1,000, 2012: 20,388 21,617 361 316,466 1,217 137,750 32,093 7,776 2007: 15,107 7,124 85 198,953 (D) 107,315 20,560 3,511 Customwork and custom hauling .....................farms, 2012: 580 359 13 1,600 38 269 383 249 2007: 455 289 11 1,342 21 311 238 185 $1,000, 2012: 23,730 6,276 50 124,161 74 22,177 24,369 11,297 2007: 12,352 3,153 35 86,785 (D) 13,402 15,713 6,824 Cash rent for land, buildings, : and grazing fees .................................farms, 2012: 331 361 41 705 77 291 297 176 2007: 284 231 28 652 66 304 238 138 $1,000, 2012: 28,917 8,348 259 57,624 852 88,085 29,502 7,952 2007: 18,503 6,133 497 52,669 1,576 46,136 22,105 5,931 Rent and lease expenses for machinery, : equipment, and farm share of vehicles ............farms, 2012: 229 123 11 530 16 264 154 98 2007: 191 78 1 442 11 231 105 85 $1,000, 2012: 8,640 1,520 16 16,195 457 18,681 6,241 2,584 2007: 4,272 454 (D) 12,502 (D) 11,235 2,978 1,380 : Interest expense ..................................farms, 2012: 581 522 65 1,903 129 654 347 243 2007: 446 513 26 1,809 62 644 305 258 $1,000, 2012: 18,238 12,004 501 101,641 2,122 22,899 10,878 8,683 2007: 15,512 9,607 325 108,343 1,090 38,182 10,514 6,838 : Secured by real estate ..........................farms, 2012: 433 447 51 1,513 103 469 237 186 2007: 336 442 23 1,465 48 503 215 198 $1,000, 2012: 13,542 10,363 450 72,808 1,687 15,953 7,309 7,232 2007: 12,648 8,032 290 66,316 628 25,697 7,556 4,791 Not secured by real estate ......................farms, 2012: 314 229 23 944 63 309 196 124 2007: 252 260 13 940 25 326 167 166 $1,000, 2012: 4,696 1,641 52 28,833 435 6,946 3,569 1,450 2007: 2,864 1,575 36 42,027 462 12,485 2,958 2,046 Property taxes paid ...............................farms, 2012: 1,200 1,651 226 4,702 369 1,991 867 715 2007: 1,101 1,606 156 4,926 344 2,157 839 749 $1,000, 2012: 14,068 8,750 674 61,914 1,321 23,709 9,975 6,589 2007: 12,050 7,007 347 46,584 1,120 21,434 8,638 4,313 : All other production expenses (see text) ..........farms, 2012: 829 936 123 2,733 197 1,042 624 530 2007: 753 928 83 3,132 200 1,320 561 507 $1,000, 2012: 35,468 12,242 1,227 333,437 1,615 121,640 33,167 18,573 2007: 25,679 9,227 839 219,989 1,285 119,423 24,252 10,471 : Depreciation expenses claimed (see text) ............farms, 2012: 868 760 76 2,760 144 1,060 595 431 2007: 749 750 66 2,646 144 1,200 547 385 $1,000, 2012: 37,260 16,330 786 177,935 1,479 55,883 33,758 13,831 2007: 18,313 14,876 737 161,752 1,192 53,431 22,826 10,172 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Table 4. Net Cash Farm Income of the Operations and Operators: 2012 and 2007 [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : California : Alameda : Alpine : Amador : Butte : Calaveras : Colusa ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Net cash farm income of the operations .............$1,000, 2012: 8,523,285 18,557 (D) 7,262 213,050 3,029 107,214 2007: 7,983,228 3,499 138 -2,299 104,630 -2,731 118,133 Average per farm ..............................dollars, 2012: 109,474 41,056 (D) 15,753 103,624 4,568 137,103 2007: 98,518 6,664 19,756 -4,800 51,089 -4,328 145,126 : Farms with net gains 1/ ..........................number, 2012: 36,283 133 1 188 1,084 193 538 2007: 35,095 145 3 139 1,013 148 507 Average per farm ............................dollars, 2012: 314,056 200,997 (D) 65,923 226,205 58,195 310,262 2007: 282,231 100,582 (D) 38,391 136,484 33,268 281,609 : Farms with net losses ............................number, 2012: 41,574 319 2 273 972 470 244 2007: 45,938 380 4 340 1,035 483 307 Average per farm ............................dollars, 2012: 69,072 25,628 (D) 18,795 33,082 17,453 244,700 2007: 41,832 29,173 (D) 22,457 32,491 15,848 80,271 : Net cash farm income of operators ..................$1,000, 2012: 8,177,199 17,865 (D) 7,227 202,588 2,978 92,700 2007: 7,746,152 3,129 138 -2,402 94,866 -2,726 106,910 Average per farm ..............................dollars, 2012: 105,028 39,524 (D) 15,678 98,535 4,492 118,542 2007: 95,593 5,960 19,756 -5,014 46,321 -4,321 131,339 : Farm operators reporting net gains 1/ .............farms, 2012: 36,052 131 1 188 1,067 193 523 2007: 34,860 142 3 137 996 148 496 Average per farm ............................dollars, 2012: 308,890 198,934 (D) 65,838 221,592 58,111 295,808 2007: 278,379 101,961 (D) 38,366 130,116 33,328 269,498 : Farm operators reporting net losses ...............farms, 2012: 41,805 321 2 273 989 470 259 2007: 46,173 383 4 342 1,052 483 318 Average per farm ............................dollars, 2012: 70,779 25,531 (D) 18,865 34,227 17,526 239,412 2007: 42,409 29,633 (D) 22,391 33,013 15,857 84,155 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Contra Costa : Del Norte : El Dorado : Fresno : Glenn : Humboldt : Imperial ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Net cash farm income of the operations .............$1,000, 2012: 14,659 5,011 -4,724 1,079,176 178,745 40,319 261,916 2007: 13,839 5,326 -10,372 798,561 139,206 22,773 194,832 Average per farm ..............................dollars, 2012: 24,351 41,409 -3,479 189,896 136,343 43,353 622,127 2007: 21,828 62,664 -8,180 131,321 112,082 26,729 431,044 : Farms with net gains 1/ ..........................number, 2012: 183 43 447 3,532 747 388 258 2007: 220 29 342 3,536 728 384 270 Average per farm ............................dollars, 2012: 161,585 151,384 31,169 369,369 288,815 139,524 1,327,969 2007: 112,422 240,289 21,580 270,448 212,881 79,168 826,025 : Farms with net losses ............................number, 2012: 419 78 911 2,151 564 542 163 2007: 414 56 926 2,545 514 468 182 Average per farm ............................dollars, 2012: 35,587 19,218 20,479 104,805 65,603 25,492 495,094 2007: 26,313 29,320 19,171 61,982 30,685 16,299 154,917 : Net cash farm income of operators ..................$1,000, 2012: 13,570 5,018 -5,434 1,029,490 166,979 40,416 219,135 2007: 13,139 5,359 -10,366 747,954 132,792 22,428 201,841 Average per farm ..............................dollars, 2012: 22,541 41,471 -4,002 181,152 127,368 43,458 520,510 2007: 20,724 63,048 -8,175 122,998 106,918 26,323 446,550 : Farm operators reporting net gains 1/ .............farms, 2012: 182 43 442 3,509 733 387 256 2007: 219 29 340 3,501 720 377 268 Average per farm ............................dollars, 2012: 158,313 151,384 30,354 364,242 280,521 140,018 1,306,671 2007: 110,314 240,289 21,721 261,170 207,338 80,264 852,920 : Farm operators reporting net losses ...............farms, 2012: 420 78 916 2,174 578 543 165 2007: 415 56 928 2,580 522 475 184 Average per farm ............................dollars, 2012: 36,294 19,122 20,580 114,367 66,856 25,362 699,230 2007: 26,554 28,738 19,128 64,497 31,593 16,488 145,336 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Inyo : Kern : Kings : Lake : Lassen : Los Angeles : Madera ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Net cash farm income of the operations .............$1,000, 2012: 5,920 713,452 272,319 27,724 1,517 -4,281 490,016 2007: 3,809 869,363 363,233 2,999 5,293 47,808 273,852 Average per farm ..............................dollars, 2012: 47,361 368,138 257,878 33,083 3,385 -3,308 325,160 2007: 40,524 410,658 321,730 3,549 11,531 27,571 160,335 : Farms with net gains 1/ ..........................number, 2012: 60 971 603 414 136 413 882 2007: 38 1,002 614 259 98 413 911 Average per farm ............................dollars, 2012: 123,797 926,708 614,893 94,649 102,309 112,940 619,947 2007: 142,820 956,790 651,649 58,331 143,131 223,982 335,277 : Farms with net losses ............................number, 2012: 65 967 453 424 312 881 625 2007: 56 1,115 515 586 361 1,321 797 Average per farm ............................dollars, 2012: 23,196 192,742 217,355 27,030 39,735 57,803 90,844 2007: 28,891 80,126 71,610 20,663 24,194 33,835 39,630 : Net cash farm income of operators ..................$1,000, 2012: 5,951 698,603 284,663 27,520 1,603 -4,231 467,304 2007: 3,909 874,105 351,256 2,416 5,372 47,989 260,545 Average per farm ..............................dollars, 2012: 47,605 360,476 269,568 32,840 3,577 -3,270 310,089 2007: 41,587 412,898 311,121 2,859 11,704 27,676 152,544 : Farm operators reporting net gains 1/ .............farms, 2012: 60 964 596 414 136 413 876 2007: 38 1,002 609 258 99 411 905 Average per farm ............................dollars, 2012: 124,306 924,984 601,752 94,155 102,200 112,999 597,613 2007: 145,460 960,516 637,215 56,331 142,102 225,576 324,696 : Farm operators reporting net losses ...............farms, 2012: 65 974 460 424 312 881 631 2007: 56 1,115 520 587 360 1,323 803 Average per farm ............................dollars, 2012: 23,196 198,236 160,828 27,030 39,412 57,775 89,074 2007: 28,898 79,222 70,785 20,643 24,155 33,804 41,476 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 4. Net Cash Farm Income of the Operations and Operators: 2012 and 2007 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Marin : Mariposa : Mendocino : Merced : Modoc : Mono : Monterey ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Net cash farm income of the operations .............$1,000, 2012: 8,929 1,915 23,058 606,978 15,607 10,629 828,082 2007: 10,297 -1,005 1,852 626,679 14,408 3,268 567,691 Average per farm ..............................dollars, 2012: 27,645 5,262 18,900 244,159 35,714 147,626 702,360 2007: 40,381 -3,326 1,630 240,383 32,161 38,901 473,471 : Farms with net gains 1/ ..........................number, 2012: 159 103 515 1,613 229 39 575 2007: 106 65 424 1,581 192 31 511 Average per farm ............................dollars, 2012: 128,838 78,326 96,774 445,302 111,517 286,683 1,652,404 2007: 143,912 54,718 59,644 439,229 111,053 130,849 1,243,656 : Farms with net losses ............................number, 2012: 164 261 705 873 208 33 604 2007: 149 237 712 1,026 256 53 688 Average per farm ............................dollars, 2012: 70,464 23,572 37,987 127,485 47,742 16,713 202,070 2007: 33,272 19,246 32,918 66,025 27,008 14,880 98,571 : Net cash farm income of operators ..................$1,000, 2012: 8,917 1,443 22,613 588,585 14,878 10,629 819,915 2007: 10,089 -1,019 1,039 611,933 13,873 2,662 566,479 Average per farm ..............................dollars, 2012: 27,608 3,963 18,535 236,760 34,045 147,630 695,433 2007: 39,566 -3,373 914 234,727 30,966 31,689 472,459 : Farm operators reporting net gains 1/ .............farms, 2012: 159 103 509 1,602 225 39 567 2007: 105 65 421 1,574 192 31 504 Average per farm ............................dollars, 2012: 128,769 74,385 97,227 438,876 110,158 286,683 1,664,953 2007: 143,542 54,188 58,571 433,127 108,278 113,304 1,263,493 : Farm operators reporting net losses ...............farms, 2012: 164 261 711 884 212 33 612 2007: 150 237 715 1,033 256 53 695 Average per farm ............................dollars, 2012: 70,469 23,828 37,800 129,519 46,734 16,706 202,799 2007: 33,217 19,160 33,034 67,578 27,018 16,048 101,182 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Napa : Nevada : Orange : Placer : Plumas : Riverside : Sacramento ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Net cash farm income of the operations .............$1,000, 2012: 74,167 -6,087 -21,731 -4,584 117 131,182 37,955 2007: 41,402 -7,061 92,914 -3,585 21 219,482 92,550 Average per farm ..............................dollars, 2012: 44,016 -8,203 -69,652 -3,383 833 44,483 28,073 2007: 25,276 -10,233 285,890 -2,409 146 63,379 66,439 : Farms with net gains 1/ ..........................number, 2012: 799 197 118 324 44 1,069 499 2007: 758 127 166 361 35 1,102 456 Average per farm ............................dollars, 2012: 210,080 12,777 153,327 41,478 131,156 242,638 160,799 2007: 164,772 23,497 590,868 41,429 70,605 284,895 268,368 : Farms with net losses ............................number, 2012: 886 545 194 1,031 97 1,880 853 2007: 880 563 159 1,127 107 2,361 937 Average per farm ............................dollars, 2012: 105,742 15,787 205,278 17,481 58,282 68,191 49,571 2007: 94,881 17,842 32,514 16,452 22,902 40,014 31,832 : Net cash farm income of operators ..................$1,000, 2012: 72,878 -6,121 -21,666 -4,892 8 124,628 33,194 2007: 38,898 -7,083 93,599 -3,692 109 224,182 87,433 Average per farm ..............................dollars, 2012: 43,251 -8,249 -69,443 -3,610 55 42,261 24,552 2007: 23,747 -10,265 287,998 -2,481 770 64,736 62,766 : Farm operators reporting net gains 1/ .............farms, 2012: 798 197 118 324 44 1,062 494 2007: 754 126 167 359 35 1,102 451 Average per farm ............................dollars, 2012: 209,105 12,807 153,376 40,787 128,479 239,118 153,674 2007: 162,629 23,630 590,619 41,221 72,926 285,170 260,442 : Farm operators reporting net losses ...............farms, 2012: 887 545 194 1,031 97 1,887 858 2007: 884 564 158 1,129 107 2,361 942 Average per farm ............................dollars, 2012: 105,961 15,860 204,971 17,562 58,200 68,530 49,791 2007: 94,711 17,838 31,860 16,378 22,832 38,151 31,875 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : San Benito :San Bernardino : San Diego : San Francisco : San Joaquin :San Luis Obispo: San Mateo :Santa Barbara ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Net cash farm income of the operations .............$1,000, 2012: 35,792 66,719 81,755 (D) 581,327 113,282 -9,544 216,262 2007: 59,875 212,415 203,686 231 395,325 75,957 27,754 173,523 Average per farm ..............................dollars, 2012: 56,994 53,418 14,263 (D) 162,382 42,491 -28,574 135,417 2007: 95,800 151,185 30,460 38,446 109,085 27,284 84,357 108,655 : Farms with net gains 1/ ..........................number, 2012: 226 462 2,011 - 2,175 1,077 113 646 2007: 241 555 2,295 4 1,916 960 126 642 Average per farm ............................dollars, 2012: 241,584 267,393 102,834 - 313,051 191,553 102,095 501,095 2007: 314,173 426,229 137,325 (D) 246,579 154,965 291,721 376,096 : Farms with net losses ............................number, 2012: 402 787 3,721 6 1,405 1,589 221 951 2007: 384 850 4,392 2 1,708 1,824 203 955 Average per farm ............................dollars, 2012: 46,780 72,194 33,605 (D) 70,860 58,540 95,386 112,982 2007: 41,251 28,403 25,381 (D) 45,153 39,917 44,351 71,132 : Net cash farm income of operators ..................$1,000, 2012: 32,962 64,489 73,592 (D) 557,119 112,039 -9,494 200,625 2007: 59,524 212,194 203,657 231 371,579 72,352 27,787 169,710 Average per farm ..............................dollars, 2012: 52,488 51,632 12,839 (D) 155,620 42,025 -28,425 125,626 2007: 95,239 151,028 30,456 38,446 102,533 25,988 84,460 106,268 : Farm operators reporting net gains 1/ .............farms, 2012: 222 461 2,009 - 2,166 1,072 113 645 2007: 237 555 2,291 4 1,898 955 126 640 Average per farm ............................dollars, 2012: 232,940 263,173 98,882 - 305,150 191,480 102,073 478,031 2007: 318,084 425,839 137,381 (D) 238,545 152,207 291,728 371,392 : Farm operators reporting net losses ...............farms, 2012: 406 788 3,723 6 1,414 1,594 221 952 2007: 388 850 4,396 2 1,726 1,829 203 957 Average per farm ............................dollars, 2012: 46,183 72,124 33,592 (D) 73,434 58,486 95,149 113,135 2007: 40,880 28,408 25,269 (D) 47,033 39,916 44,189 71,036 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 4. Net Cash Farm Income of the Operations and Operators: 2012 and 2007 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Santa Clara : Santa Cruz : Shasta : Sierra : Siskiyou : Solano : Sonoma : Stanislaus ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Net cash farm income of the operations .............$1,000, 2012: 37,439 117,449 6,560 1,932 9,597 53,204 198,741 426,367 2007: 32,710 130,379 -6,084 145 4,384 60,832 81,169 491,823 Average per farm ..............................dollars, 2012: 37,327 176,085 4,249 40,240 10,331 61,866 55,530 102,913 2007: 30,627 191,171 -4,130 2,899 5,182 68,350 23,671 119,549 : Farms with net gains 1/ ..........................number, 2012: 368 305 405 22 317 351 1,547 2,303 2007: 356 363 357 22 305 312 1,433 2,147 Average per farm ............................dollars, 2012: 180,382 482,030 60,664 112,203 182,186 237,750 196,644 244,211 2007: 169,588 414,737 34,683 30,974 97,281 253,329 124,442 261,794 : Farms with net losses ............................number, 2012: 635 362 1,139 26 612 509 2,032 1,840 2007: 712 319 1,116 28 541 578 1,996 1,967 Average per farm ............................dollars, 2012: 45,577 81,686 15,811 20,652 78,686 59,422 51,903 73,941 2007: 38,853 63,231 16,546 19,160 46,741 31,499 48,675 35,714 : Net cash farm income of operators ..................$1,000, 2012: 37,215 118,987 6,373 1,943 9,120 43,051 195,936 404,881 2007: 31,679 129,992 -6,093 145 2,690 52,610 74,402 473,550 Average per farm ..............................dollars, 2012: 37,103 178,391 4,127 40,486 9,817 50,060 54,746 97,727 2007: 29,662 190,605 -4,136 2,899 3,179 59,112 21,698 115,107 : Farm operators reporting net gains 1/ .............farms, 2012: 367 306 405 22 317 349 1,546 2,287 2007: 355 364 353 22 302 308 1,423 2,134 Average per farm ............................dollars, 2012: 180,820 484,417 60,468 112,740 180,646 215,408 195,238 238,758 2007: 167,329 412,828 34,985 30,974 95,476 236,106 122,673 255,974 : Farm operators reporting net losses ...............farms, 2012: 636 361 1,139 26 612 511 2,033 1,856 2007: 713 318 1,120 28 544 582 2,006 1,980 Average per farm ............................dollars, 2012: 45,828 81,011 15,906 20,652 78,668 62,869 52,092 76,055 2007: 38,882 63,764 16,467 19,160 48,059 34,555 49,931 36,717 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Sutter : Tehama : Trinity : Tulare : Tuolumne : Ventura : Yolo : Yuba ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Net cash farm income of the operations .............$1,000, 2012: 144,695 42,921 (D) 719,065 -4,145 329,396 176,527 45,315 2007: 90,388 25,791 -1,019 871,303 -2,195 322,656 98,198 23,181 Average per farm ..............................dollars, 2012: 106,550 24,625 (D) 145,825 -10,602 153,208 174,606 57,000 2007: 71,566 14,721 -5,631 166,279 -5,997 132,399 99,897 27,997 : Farms with net gains 1/ ..........................number, 2012: 840 724 62 2,859 85 1,048 555 285 2007: 676 617 67 3,025 92 1,122 498 250 Average per farm ............................dollars, 2012: 209,884 100,460 (D) 323,429 28,184 389,133 365,111 233,574 2007: 175,884 80,090 18,901 333,118 21,299 344,979 239,606 154,929 : Farms with net losses ............................number, 2012: 518 1,019 185 2,072 306 1,102 456 510 2007: 587 1,135 114 2,215 274 1,315 485 578 Average per farm ............................dollars, 2012: 61,018 29,256 29,780 99,236 21,376 71,157 57,258 41,674 2007: 48,568 20,815 20,050 61,571 15,162 48,981 43,558 26,904 : Net cash farm income of operators ..................$1,000, 2012: 132,280 39,516 (D) 703,149 -4,404 330,430 150,891 42,014 2007: 81,602 25,268 -1,015 849,412 -1,889 317,819 80,590 21,197 Average per farm ..............................dollars, 2012: 97,408 22,671 (D) 142,598 -11,264 153,688 149,250 52,848 2007: 64,610 14,423 -5,609 162,102 -5,161 130,414 81,984 25,601 : Farm operators reporting net gains 1/ .............farms, 2012: 825 716 62 2,848 85 1,048 547 279 2007: 665 616 65 3,015 93 1,120 488 247 Average per farm ............................dollars, 2012: 202,874 97,638 (D) 322,577 25,100 390,066 336,209 232,078 2007: 166,875 79,454 19,399 329,135 23,863 341,290 214,420 152,061 : Farm operators reporting net losses ...............farms, 2012: 533 1,027 185 2,083 306 1,102 464 516 2007: 598 1,136 116 2,225 273 1,317 495 581 Average per farm ............................dollars, 2012: 65,837 29,594 29,763 103,481 21,366 71,106 71,153 44,061 2007: 49,114 20,841 19,621 64,238 15,048 48,918 48,579 28,162 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 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: 2012 and 2007 [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : California : Alameda : Alpine : Amador : Butte : Calaveras : Colusa ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- GOVERNMENT PAYMENTS : : Total received ......................................farms, 2012: 7,593 16 - 13 281 4 379 2007: 7,444 30 - 11 292 15 446 $1,000, 2012: 146,919 49 - 37 9,386 8 13,629 2007: 240,242 365 - 91 14,780 49 21,222 Average per farm ............................dollars, 2012: 19,349 3,034 - 2,862 33,403 1,930 35,961 2007: 32,273 12,170 - 8,287 50,617 3,268 47,584 : Amount from Conservation Reserve, Wetlands Reserve, : Farmable Wetlands, and Conservation Reserve : Enhancement Programs .............................farms, 2012: 470 6 - 1 5 1 27 2007: 668 6 - - 14 - 35 $1,000, 2012: 3,615 8 - (D) 8 (D) 110 2007: 7,528 44 - - 144 - 121 Average per farm ............................dollars, 2012: 7,692 1,352 - (D) 1,608 (D) 4,072 2007: 11,270 7,287 - - 10,267 - 3,470 : Amount from other federal farm programs ...........farms, 2012: 7,310 12 - 12 276 4 358 2007: 7,084 27 - 11 282 15 432 $1,000, 2012: 143,304 40 - (D) 9,378 (D) 13,519 2007: 232,714 321 - 91 14,636 49 21,101 Average per farm ............................dollars, 2012: 19,604 3,369 - (D) 33,979 (D) 37,763 2007: 32,851 11,902 - 8,287 51,902 3,268 48,845 : COMMODITY CREDIT CORPORATION LOANS : : Total ...............................................farms, 2012: 521 - - - 55 - 95 2007: 1,098 2 - 1 100 1 153 $1,000, 2012: 122,036 - - - 14,500 - 16,786 2007: 181,426 (D) - (D) 16,392 (D) 27,323 Amount spent to repay CCC loans....................farms, 2012: 228 - - - 27 - 47 2007: (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) $1,000, 2012: 47,734 - - - 7,043 - 6,572 2007: (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Contra Costa : Del Norte : El Dorado : Fresno : Glenn : Humboldt : Imperial ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- GOVERNMENT PAYMENTS : : Total received ......................................farms, 2012: 34 15 41 510 465 82 124 2007: 19 6 23 557 416 81 132 $1,000, 2012: 232 96 237 10,149 13,136 1,242 2,788 2007: 192 (D) 149 24,737 15,457 515 4,885 Average per farm ............................dollars, 2012: 6,811 6,399 5,786 19,901 28,249 15,150 22,485 2007: 10,079 (D) 6,464 44,412 37,156 6,355 37,006 : Amount from Conservation Reserve, Wetlands Reserve, : Farmable Wetlands, and Conservation Reserve : Enhancement Programs .............................farms, 2012: 7 1 - - 9 6 - 2007: 1 - 3 11 7 6 6 $1,000, 2012: 24 (D) - - 55 4 - 2007: (D) - 9 19 97 20 128 Average per farm ............................dollars, 2012: 3,434 (D) - - 6,166 731 - 2007: (D) - 3,100 1,767 13,806 3,307 21,250 : Amount from other federal farm programs ...........farms, 2012: 27 14 41 510 458 77 124 2007: 18 6 23 554 413 77 127 $1,000, 2012: 208 (D) 237 10,149 13,080 1,238 2,788 2007: (D) (D) 139 24,718 15,360 495 4,757 Average per farm ............................dollars, 2012: 7,687 (D) 5,786 19,901 28,560 16,076 22,485 2007: (D) (D) 6,060 44,617 37,191 6,427 37,459 : COMMODITY CREDIT CORPORATION LOANS : : Total ...............................................farms, 2012: - - - 44 55 - 3 2007: - - - 148 85 - 11 $1,000, 2012: - - - 14,918 11,645 - (D) 2007: - - - 30,691 15,729 - 844 Amount spent to repay CCC loans....................farms, 2012: - - - 22 22 - - 2007: (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) $1,000, 2012: - - - 5,870 3,697 - - 2007: (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 5. Federal Government Payments and Commodity Credit Corporation Loans: 2012 and 2007 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Inyo : Kern : Kings : Lake : Lassen : Los Angeles : Madera ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- GOVERNMENT PAYMENTS : : Total received ......................................farms, 2012: 2 300 384 40 43 40 172 2007: 3 363 401 20 20 28 193 $1,000, 2012: (D) 5,306 7,901 100 186 247 2,400 2007: (D) 27,346 23,258 154 160 138 4,608 Average per farm ............................dollars, 2012: (D) 17,687 20,577 2,499 4,332 6,180 13,956 2007: (D) 75,332 58,001 7,714 7,989 4,944 23,878 : Amount from Conservation Reserve, Wetlands Reserve, : Farmable Wetlands, and Conservation Reserve : Enhancement Programs .............................farms, 2012: - 11 4 2 3 26 6 2007: 2 13 8 2 2 13 5 $1,000, 2012: - 117 (D) (D) 5 109 13 2007: (D) 142 404 (D) (D) 43 7 Average per farm ............................dollars, 2012: - 10,632 (D) (D) 1,813 4,190 2,239 2007: (D) 10,931 50,534 (D) (D) 3,309 1,440 : Amount from other federal farm programs ...........farms, 2012: 2 296 384 39 41 20 170 2007: 3 357 396 18 19 21 190 $1,000, 2012: (D) 5,189 (D) (D) 181 138 2,387 2007: (D) 27,203 22,854 (D) (D) 95 4,601 Average per farm ............................dollars, 2012: (D) 17,531 (D) (D) 4,410 6,913 14,041 2007: (D) 76,200 57,712 (D) (D) 4,543 24,217 : COMMODITY CREDIT CORPORATION LOANS : : Total ...............................................farms, 2012: - 22 42 - - - 2 2007: - 76 60 4 2 2 20 $1,000, 2012: - 10,098 13,241 - - - (D) 2007: - 14,898 22,590 (Z) (D) (D) 1,907 Amount spent to repay CCC loans....................farms, 2012: 1 9 11 - - - - 2007: (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) $1,000, 2012: (D) 4,297 3,624 - - - - 2007: (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Marin : Mariposa : Mendocino : Merced : Modoc : Mono : Monterey ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- GOVERNMENT PAYMENTS : : Total received ......................................farms, 2012: 53 27 28 502 108 1 82 2007: 34 5 85 516 93 - 93 $1,000, 2012: 1,283 515 426 9,528 701 (D) 635 2007: 603 131 719 11,968 825 - 1,316 Average per farm ............................dollars, 2012: 24,206 19,092 15,221 18,980 6,489 (D) 7,745 2007: 17,735 26,136 8,465 23,193 8,874 - 14,152 : Amount from Conservation Reserve, Wetlands Reserve, : Farmable Wetlands, and Conservation Reserve : Enhancement Programs .............................farms, 2012: 5 - - 18 11 1 34 2007: 1 - 8 48 6 - 34 $1,000, 2012: 17 - - 108 35 (D) 303 2007: (D) - 204 360 17 - 610 Average per farm ............................dollars, 2012: 3,420 - - 6,005 3,141 (D) 8,924 2007: (D) - 25,484 7,506 2,831 - 17,953 : Amount from other federal farm programs ...........farms, 2012: 48 27 28 487 100 - 55 2007: 33 5 78 476 93 - 77 $1,000, 2012: 1,266 515 426 9,420 666 - 332 2007: (D) 131 516 11,607 808 - 706 Average per farm ............................dollars, 2012: 26,372 19,092 15,221 19,342 6,662 - 6,031 2007: (D) 26,136 6,610 24,385 8,692 - 9,165 : COMMODITY CREDIT CORPORATION LOANS : : Total ...............................................farms, 2012: - - - 25 - - - 2007: 1 - 2 47 4 - 4 $1,000, 2012: - - - 9,703 - - - 2007: (D) - (D) 9,162 313 - (D) Amount spent to repay CCC loans....................farms, 2012: - - 1 11 - - 1 2007: (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) $1,000, 2012: - - (D) 6,189 - - (D) 2007: (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 5. Federal Government Payments and Commodity Credit Corporation Loans: 2012 and 2007 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Napa : Nevada : Orange : Placer : Plumas : Riverside : Sacramento ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- GOVERNMENT PAYMENTS : : Total received ......................................farms, 2012: 19 16 15 38 - 138 139 2007: 26 26 11 59 2 84 154 $1,000, 2012: 85 126 43 1,305 - 2,189 2,474 2007: 233 227 38 2,838 (D) 5,740 3,631 Average per farm ............................dollars, 2012: 4,467 7,854 2,835 34,329 - 15,862 17,797 2007: 8,956 8,730 3,471 48,104 (D) 68,336 23,579 : Amount from Conservation Reserve, Wetlands Reserve, : Farmable Wetlands, and Conservation Reserve : Enhancement Programs .............................farms, 2012: 2 - 3 1 - 7 7 2007: 4 - 11 2 - 4 10 $1,000, 2012: (D) - 24 (D) - 32 64 2007: 21 - 38 (D) - 18 47 Average per farm ............................dollars, 2012: (D) - 7,942 (D) - 4,620 9,173 2007: 5,250 - 3,471 (D) - 4,540 4,730 : Amount from other federal farm programs ...........farms, 2012: 17 16 12 38 - 136 136 2007: 24 26 - 58 2 80 148 $1,000, 2012: (D) 126 19 (D) - 2,157 2,410 2007: 212 227 - (D) (D) 5,722 3,584 Average per farm ............................dollars, 2012: (D) 7,854 1,559 (D) - 15,857 17,717 2007: 8,827 8,730 - (D) (D) 71,526 24,215 : COMMODITY CREDIT CORPORATION LOANS : : Total ...............................................farms, 2012: 1 - - 8 - - 4 2007: 3 - - 18 - 11 13 $1,000, 2012: (D) - - 1,174 - - 279 2007: (Z) - - 2,219 - 1,573 407 Amount spent to repay CCC loans....................farms, 2012: 1 - - 6 - - 2 2007: (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) $1,000, 2012: (D) - - 1,073 - - (D) 2007: (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : San Benito :San Bernardino : San Diego : San Francisco : San Joaquin :San Luis Obispo: San Mateo :Santa Barbara ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- GOVERNMENT PAYMENTS : : Total received ......................................farms, 2012: 47 51 100 - 338 241 14 24 2007: 46 59 35 - 309 228 9 16 $1,000, 2012: 174 849 451 - 5,508 3,488 182 554 2007: 396 1,240 342 - 4,444 4,492 25 132 Average per farm ............................dollars, 2012: 3,692 16,653 4,514 - 16,297 14,472 13,035 23,084 2007: 8,605 21,025 9,784 - 14,383 19,701 2,818 8,226 : Amount from Conservation Reserve, Wetlands Reserve, : Farmable Wetlands, and Conservation Reserve : Enhancement Programs .............................farms, 2012: 8 6 11 - 2 53 2 - 2007: 3 4 1 - 11 113 4 2 $1,000, 2012: 23 9 37 - (D) 1,058 (D) - 2007: (D) 2 (D) - 67 2,763 (D) (D) Average per farm ............................dollars, 2012: 2,837 1,512 3,356 - (D) 19,954 (D) - 2007: (D) 435 (D) - 6,086 24,455 (D) (D) : Amount from other federal farm programs ...........farms, 2012: 43 45 95 - 337 216 12 24 2007: 46 55 34 - 304 152 5 16 $1,000, 2012: 151 840 414 - (D) 2,430 (D) 554 2007: (D) 1,239 (D) - 4,377 1,728 (D) (D) Average per farm ............................dollars, 2012: 3,507 18,672 4,363 - (D) 11,251 (D) 23,084 2007: (D) 22,523 (D) - 14,399 11,371 (D) (D) : COMMODITY CREDIT CORPORATION LOANS : : Total ...............................................farms, 2012: - 1 - - 9 - - - 2007: 5 2 3 - 23 9 - 7 $1,000, 2012: - (D) - - 387 - - - 2007: 1 (D) (D) - 2,688 5 - 214 Amount spent to repay CCC loans....................farms, 2012: - - - - 2 - - - 2007: (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) $1,000, 2012: - - - - (D) - - - 2007: (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 5. Federal Government Payments and Commodity Credit Corporation Loans: 2012 and 2007 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Santa Clara : Santa Cruz : Shasta : Sierra : Siskiyou : Solano : Sonoma : Stanislaus ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- GOVERNMENT PAYMENTS : : Total received ......................................farms, 2012: 12 1 71 1 183 135 148 443 2007: 31 5 56 3 188 155 89 413 $1,000, 2012: 20 (D) 420 (D) 2,029 1,911 2,615 7,049 2007: 132 40 252 47 2,395 2,289 711 4,379 Average per farm ............................dollars, 2012: 1,625 (D) 5,914 (D) 11,088 14,153 17,670 15,913 2007: 4,264 7,924 4,504 15,683 12,741 14,769 7,992 10,602 : Amount from Conservation Reserve, Wetlands Reserve, : Farmable Wetlands, and Conservation Reserve : Enhancement Programs .............................farms, 2012: 3 - 2 - 85 13 - 13 2007: 10 - 6 1 103 11 4 14 $1,000, 2012: 1 - (D) - 567 190 - 40 2007: 16 - 8 (D) 761 189 23 132 Average per farm ............................dollars, 2012: 460 - (D) - 6,669 14,587 - 3,056 2007: 1,589 - 1,289 (D) 7,385 17,223 5,671 9,430 : Amount from other federal farm programs ...........farms, 2012: 9 1 69 1 135 131 148 437 2007: 27 5 51 3 145 153 85 405 $1,000, 2012: 18 (D) (D) (D) 1,462 1,721 2,615 7,010 2007: 116 40 244 (D) 1,635 2,100 689 4,247 Average per farm ............................dollars, 2012: 2,014 (D) (D) (D) 10,831 13,138 17,670 16,040 2007: 4,307 7,924 4,794 (D) 11,274 13,724 8,101 10,485 : COMMODITY CREDIT CORPORATION LOANS : : Total ...............................................farms, 2012: - - - - - - 1 - 2007: - 4 3 - 6 5 3 6 $1,000, 2012: - - - - - - (D) - 2007: - (Z) (D) - 182 629 (D) 68 Amount spent to repay CCC loans....................farms, 2012: - - - - 1 - - 2 2007: (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) $1,000, 2012: - - - - (D) - - (D) 2007: (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Sutter : Tehama : Trinity : Tulare : Tuolumne : Ventura : Yolo : Yuba ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- GOVERNMENT PAYMENTS : : Total received ......................................farms, 2012: 368 157 30 667 2 43 284 122 2007: 334 122 15 591 9 47 295 145 $1,000, 2012: 11,326 1,627 247 12,174 (D) 154 6,240 3,341 2007: 16,822 1,065 75 20,335 37 554 8,306 5,161 Average per farm ............................dollars, 2012: 30,776 10,365 8,238 18,251 (D) 3,586 21,971 27,384 2007: 50,365 8,728 4,986 34,407 4,158 11,798 28,157 35,594 : Amount from Conservation Reserve, Wetlands Reserve, : Farmable Wetlands, and Conservation Reserve : Enhancement Programs .............................farms, 2012: 4 7 1 7 - - 44 5 2007: 17 5 1 15 - 6 67 8 $1,000, 2012: 42 32 (D) 29 - - 343 53 2007: 124 8 (D) 33 - 6 775 60 Average per farm ............................dollars, 2012: 10,475 4,538 (D) 4,193 - - 7,794 10,637 2007: 7,318 1,660 (D) 2,206 - 929 11,574 7,497 : Amount from other federal farm programs ...........farms, 2012: 368 152 29 664 2 43 265 119 2007: 325 120 14 586 9 41 272 142 $1,000, 2012: 11,284 1,596 (D) 12,144 (D) 154 5,897 3,288 2007: 16,698 1,057 (D) 20,301 37 549 7,531 5,101 Average per farm ............................dollars, 2012: 30,662 10,497 (D) 18,290 (D) 3,586 22,253 27,627 2007: 51,377 8,804 (D) 34,644 4,158 13,388 27,687 35,924 : COMMODITY CREDIT CORPORATION LOANS : : Total ...............................................farms, 2012: 109 1 - 13 - - 11 20 2007: 122 3 1 47 - 2 42 37 $1,000, 2012: 17,690 (D) - 4,941 - - 2,128 3,493 2007: 16,534 99 (D) 6,315 - (D) 5,267 4,653 Amount spent to repay CCC loans....................farms, 2012: 46 - - 6 - - 5 5 2007: (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) $1,000, 2012: 6,668 - - 1,304 - - 372 551 2007: (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Table 6. Income From Farm-Related Sources: 2012 and 2007 [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : California : Alameda : Alpine : Amador : Butte : Calaveras : Colusa ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Total income from farm-related sources, : gross before taxes and expenses (see text) .........farms, 2012: 23,685 115 2 96 719 140 333 2007: 16,846 88 2 68 491 73 240 $1,000, 2012: 1,204,560 4,031 (D) 2,539 28,296 3,191 21,293 2007: 820,562 7,008 (D) 1,773 22,880 950 20,403 Average per farm ..............................dollars, 2012: 50,857 35,048 (D) 26,444 39,354 22,791 63,944 2007: 48,710 79,639 (D) 26,080 46,599 13,007 85,014 : Customwork and other agricultural services ........farms, 2012: 5,255 19 - 15 190 8 107 2007: 3,869 6 - 9 174 12 89 $1,000, 2012: 383,434 192 - 494 12,001 69 8,712 2007: 257,785 112 - (D) 9,939 59 9,923 : Gross cash rent or share payments (see text) ......farms, 2012: 6,000 34 2 30 138 58 146 2007: 4,652 36 1 19 121 35 109 $1,000, 2012: 256,997 428 (D) 547 5,372 312 9,373 2007: 170,043 321 (D) 346 3,249 241 7,517 : Sales of forest products, excluding Christmas : trees, short rotation woody crops, and : maple products ...................................farms, 2012: 862 1 - 11 18 20 2 2007: 546 - 1 6 28 5 6 $1,000, 2012: 27,613 (D) - 12 194 29 (D) 2007: 9,408 - (D) 9 259 (D) 13 : Agri-tourism and recreational services ............farms, 2012: 1,699 16 - 13 38 20 18 2007: 685 4 - 5 22 6 18 $1,000, 2012: 64,520 196 - 1,037 392 1,493 206 2007: 34,880 29 - (D) 287 116 171 : Patronage dividends and refunds : from cooperatives ................................farms, 2012: 7,469 6 - 3 360 7 111 2007: 5,381 6 - 7 234 3 81 $1,000, 2012: 171,066 1 - 11 5,497 2 1,095 2007: 113,546 (D) - 11 3,520 5 843 : Crop and livestock insurance payments .............farms, 2012: 1,568 3 - - 28 - 6 2007: 1,511 4 - - 36 4 10 $1,000, 2012: 62,457 (D) - - 692 - 248 2007: 63,418 (D) - - 2,046 (D) 280 : Amount from state and local government : agricultural program payments ....................farms, 2012: 343 4 - - 10 4 3 2007: 223 - - - - 1 8 $1,000, 2012: 4,218 (D) - - 274 (Z) (D) 2007: 2,460 - - - - (D) 155 Average per farm ..............................dollars, 2012: 12,297 (D) - - 27,392 3 (D) 2007: 11,032 - - - - (D) 19,361 : Other farm-related income sources (see text) ......farms, 2012: 5,192 40 - 31 105 36 40 2007: 3,875 41 1 29 93 15 29 $1,000, 2012: 234,255 3,114 - 438 3,873 1,285 1,549 2007: 169,021 6,510 (D) 523 3,581 306 1,501 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 6. Income From Farm-Related Sources: 2012 and 2007 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Contra Costa : Del Norte : El Dorado : Fresno : Glenn : Humboldt : Imperial ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Total income from farm-related sources, : gross before taxes and expenses (see text) .........farms, 2012: 162 49 262 1,850 506 287 187 2007: 127 22 154 1,416 376 180 176 $1,000, 2012: 5,088 454 2,669 99,266 21,411 17,061 20,810 2007: 5,140 461 4,767 71,313 18,238 4,480 19,645 Average per farm ..............................dollars, 2012: 31,410 9,256 10,189 53,658 42,314 59,445 111,281 2007: 40,473 20,951 30,957 50,362 48,506 24,888 111,621 : Customwork and other agricultural services ........farms, 2012: 37 7 19 520 162 60 77 2007: 27 - 14 376 127 22 65 $1,000, 2012: 2,148 12 319 37,565 8,521 623 7,676 2007: 1,259 - 184 28,290 8,781 734 8,475 : Gross cash rent or share payments (see text) ......farms, 2012: 42 7 39 347 139 99 78 2007: 22 15 32 349 110 70 75 $1,000, 2012: 615 (D) 229 17,530 4,741 838 6,515 2007: 361 282 87 13,132 3,064 571 7,319 : Sales of forest products, excluding Christmas : trees, short rotation woody crops, and : maple products ...................................farms, 2012: 5 5 66 10 7 45 - 2007: 1 1 32 5 5 50 2 $1,000, 2012: (D) 6 205 (D) (D) 13,893 - 2007: (D) (D) 67 (D) 5 2,123 (D) : Agri-tourism and recreational services ............farms, 2012: 33 13 42 39 11 28 3 2007: 13 4 19 15 14 19 4 $1,000, 2012: 665 137 1,146 743 53 302 57 2007: 487 45 2,539 442 334 112 (D) : Patronage dividends and refunds : from cooperatives ................................farms, 2012: 19 12 7 770 208 42 47 2007: 12 3 4 527 165 32 48 $1,000, 2012: 39 (D) (D) 19,041 2,743 119 752 2007: (D) (D) 17 8,673 2,762 388 523 : Crop and livestock insurance payments .............farms, 2012: 2 2 19 242 27 22 11 2007: 6 - 4 236 25 2 9 $1,000, 2012: (D) (D) 115 15,071 685 116 (D) 2007: 89 - 7 8,977 366 (D) 353 : Amount from state and local government : agricultural program payments ....................farms, 2012: 3 2 2 17 2 11 1 2007: - - - 16 4 5 6 $1,000, 2012: (D) (D) (D) (D) (D) 49 (D) 2007: - - - (D) 5 (D) 162 Average per farm ..............................dollars, 2012: (D) (D) (D) (D) (D) 4,433 (D) 2007: - - - (D) 1,325 (D) 27,044 : Other farm-related income sources (see text) ......farms, 2012: 58 4 100 267 92 73 45 2007: 66 8 66 195 51 33 32 $1,000, 2012: 1,516 67 644 8,994 4,652 1,121 5,428 2007: 2,901 100 1,866 11,319 2,922 488 2,742 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 6. Income From Farm-Related Sources: 2012 and 2007 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Inyo : Kern : Kings : Lake : Lassen : Los Angeles : Madera ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Total income from farm-related sources, : gross before taxes and expenses (see text) .........farms, 2012: 32 680 456 222 138 353 526 2007: 15 590 354 110 124 262 349 $1,000, 2012: 3,035 103,853 26,678 2,397 2,635 10,907 29,399 2007: 1,367 56,962 24,875 2,271 2,392 9,940 18,322 Average per farm ..............................dollars, 2012: 94,838 152,725 58,505 10,796 19,096 30,898 55,891 2007: 91,111 96,546 70,267 20,647 19,293 37,938 52,500 : Customwork and other agricultural services ........farms, 2012: 8 126 106 47 33 51 104 2007: 1 117 98 34 45 10 100 $1,000, 2012: (D) 35,786 11,109 338 1,540 3,555 7,125 2007: (D) 11,973 8,155 989 1,207 765 7,287 : Gross cash rent or share payments (see text) ......farms, 2012: 2 164 95 53 50 31 114 2007: 1 150 87 20 40 31 67 $1,000, 2012: (D) 16,610 5,248 478 422 836 3,952 2007: (D) 14,862 7,771 (D) 617 593 2,583 : Sales of forest products, excluding Christmas : trees, short rotation woody crops, and : maple products ...................................farms, 2012: - 11 - 34 2 6 4 2007: - 6 5 18 5 - 4 $1,000, 2012: - 185 - 217 (D) 8 23 2007: - 15 12 328 (D) - 11 : Agri-tourism and recreational services ............farms, 2012: 9 27 8 27 5 104 16 2007: 3 11 - 15 7 17 6 $1,000, 2012: 2,025 1,091 46 450 43 716 986 2007: (D) 594 - 213 42 (D) 546 : Patronage dividends and refunds : from cooperatives ................................farms, 2012: 5 285 225 21 30 10 263 2007: 4 264 181 22 15 7 135 $1,000, 2012: 2 27,752 5,516 70 (D) 6 8,013 2007: (D) 10,803 5,712 225 51 (D) 3,487 : Crop and livestock insurance payments .............farms, 2012: 3 48 43 5 4 8 42 2007: 1 56 38 1 2 3 39 $1,000, 2012: (D) 9,384 3,226 58 (D) 42 2,104 2007: (D) 8,667 1,855 (D) (D) 83 1,028 : Amount from state and local government : agricultural program payments ....................farms, 2012: - 12 9 7 - - 4 2007: - 9 4 - 2 - 5 $1,000, 2012: - 307 165 3 - - 62 2007: - 197 39 - (D) - 52 Average per farm ..............................dollars, 2012: - 25,542 18,354 440 - - 15,529 2007: - 21,854 9,750 - (D) - 10,345 : Other farm-related income sources (see text) ......farms, 2012: 8 177 77 73 48 213 71 2007: 5 141 35 36 36 200 57 $1,000, 2012: 603 12,739 1,368 782 293 5,745 7,135 2007: 31 9,852 1,330 371 428 7,693 3,329 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 6. Income From Farm-Related Sources: 2012 and 2007 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Marin : Mariposa : Mendocino : Merced : Modoc : Mono : Monterey ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Total income from farm-related sources, : gross before taxes and expenses (see text) .........farms, 2012: 121 111 351 1,117 160 24 399 2007: 58 60 286 858 105 16 249 $1,000, 2012: 2,882 1,056 10,033 82,552 6,047 3,154 42,444 2007: 1,708 505 5,823 38,806 2,582 1,495 17,038 Average per farm ..............................dollars, 2012: 23,819 9,513 28,585 73,905 37,796 131,407 106,375 2007: 29,451 8,421 20,360 45,229 24,592 93,419 68,426 : Customwork and other agricultural services ........farms, 2012: 18 5 57 249 44 2 55 2007: 6 2 47 199 33 - 29 $1,000, 2012: 295 (D) 1,121 28,070 1,007 (D) 11,392 2007: 31 (D) 1,210 13,630 968 - 2,818 : Gross cash rent or share payments (see text) ......farms, 2012: 32 47 89 295 83 9 153 2007: 14 36 59 255 57 6 110 $1,000, 2012: 710 733 1,869 18,480 2,520 113 23,575 2007: 289 385 569 9,351 1,180 94 10,889 : Sales of forest products, excluding Christmas : trees, short rotation woody crops, and : maple products ...................................farms, 2012: 5 22 40 23 1 - 14 2007: 1 2 51 9 - - 2 $1,000, 2012: (D) 72 3,837 17 (D) - (D) 2007: (D) (D) 1,130 52 - - (D) : Agri-tourism and recreational services ............farms, 2012: 30 12 32 35 8 8 46 2007: 9 6 21 12 8 3 26 $1,000, 2012: 99 69 1,221 405 132 2,663 1,292 2007: (D) 17 1,778 632 61 (D) 504 : Patronage dividends and refunds : from cooperatives ................................farms, 2012: 15 20 98 632 20 - 92 2007: 9 8 105 473 21 4 37 $1,000, 2012: 46 55 413 21,566 154 - 866 2007: 52 2 (D) 9,898 135 16 472 : Crop and livestock insurance payments .............farms, 2012: 5 - 8 29 4 2 18 2007: 1 - 18 31 1 - 14 $1,000, 2012: (D) - (D) 659 46 (D) 535 2007: (D) - 117 501 (D) - (D) : Amount from state and local government : agricultural program payments ....................farms, 2012: 10 1 5 16 8 1 1 2007: 5 - 6 20 4 1 2 $1,000, 2012: 18 (D) (D) 481 (D) (D) (D) 2007: 21 - (D) 182 (D) (D) (D) Average per farm ..............................dollars, 2012: 1,774 (D) (D) 30,082 (D) (D) (D) 2007: 4,208 - (D) 9,079 (D) (D) (D) : Other farm-related income sources (see text) ......farms, 2012: 34 15 69 171 33 8 110 2007: 20 12 52 109 19 6 67 $1,000, 2012: 1,643 48 1,457 12,874 2,163 315 4,710 2007: 1,295 81 785 4,560 219 (D) 1,923 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 6. Income From Farm-Related Sources: 2012 and 2007 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Napa : Nevada : Orange : Placer : Plumas : Riverside : Sacramento ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Total income from farm-related sources, : gross before taxes and expenses (see text) .........farms, 2012: 389 178 80 248 43 778 379 2007: 170 146 33 192 24 449 248 $1,000, 2012: 40,157 2,750 6,761 6,132 275 29,583 11,034 2007: 8,511 2,669 4,413 4,180 2,341 26,830 7,984 Average per farm ..............................dollars, 2012: 103,230 15,449 84,511 24,726 6,388 38,024 29,113 2007: 50,064 18,279 133,742 21,773 97,541 59,754 32,194 : Customwork and other agricultural services ........farms, 2012: 72 28 13 32 2 147 69 2007: 41 16 2 33 2 89 48 $1,000, 2012: 3,280 279 90 435 (D) 5,236 1,950 2007: 2,623 36 (D) 634 (D) 6,918 1,624 : Gross cash rent or share payments (see text) ......farms, 2012: 77 39 15 73 23 116 92 2007: 35 37 9 48 18 54 89 $1,000, 2012: 2,662 262 2,488 826 97 5,922 2,085 2007: 1,289 144 (D) 811 180 3,910 2,331 : Sales of forest products, excluding Christmas : trees, short rotation woody crops, and : maple products ...................................farms, 2012: 3 28 6 23 1 16 9 2007: 3 26 2 11 1 6 9 $1,000, 2012: 3 30 (D) (D) (D) (D) 137 2007: (D) 87 (D) (D) (D) 89 (D) : Agri-tourism and recreational services ............farms, 2012: 119 33 12 20 15 75 45 2007: 29 9 1 22 1 24 18 $1,000, 2012: 23,723 155 2,179 72 31 1,932 1,137 2007: 1,816 7 (D) 302 (D) 883 435 : Patronage dividends and refunds : from cooperatives ................................farms, 2012: 18 6 10 4 3 202 66 2007: 22 2 2 8 1 126 32 $1,000, 2012: 430 1 (D) (D) 15 3,044 722 2007: 194 (D) (D) 79 (D) 999 786 : Crop and livestock insurance payments .............farms, 2012: 42 3 10 8 1 51 8 2007: 16 2 3 11 - 27 8 $1,000, 2012: 1,296 190 56 98 (D) 1,538 (D) 2007: 193 (D) 26 252 - 1,423 88 : Amount from state and local government : agricultural program payments ....................farms, 2012: 3 - 1 1 - 18 1 2007: 1 5 - 1 - 5 1 $1,000, 2012: 8 - (D) (D) - (D) (D) 2007: (D) 46 - (D) - 33 (D) Average per farm ..............................dollars, 2012: 2,733 - (D) (D) - (D) (D) 2007: (D) 9,202 - (D) - 6,537 (D) : Other farm-related income sources (see text) ......farms, 2012: 77 68 22 115 11 235 139 2007: 43 76 14 80 8 177 88 $1,000, 2012: 8,755 1,833 1,932 4,526 81 11,651 4,861 2007: 2,345 2,338 973 1,975 36 12,575 2,699 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 6. Income From Farm-Related Sources: 2012 and 2007 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : San Benito :San Bernardino : San Diego : San Francisco : San Joaquin :San Luis Obispo: San Mateo :Santa Barbara ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Total income from farm-related sources, : gross before taxes and expenses (see text) .........farms, 2012: 178 374 1,226 - 1,131 934 87 487 2007: 119 271 602 - 900 634 63 320 $1,000, 2012: 3,523 10,535 27,285 - 58,963 42,592 4,206 37,694 2007: 3,715 17,398 18,946 - 42,197 28,622 3,853 12,618 Average per farm ..............................dollars, 2012: 19,793 28,169 22,255 - 52,134 45,602 48,350 77,401 2007: 31,216 64,198 31,472 - 46,886 45,144 61,162 39,432 : Customwork and other agricultural services ........farms, 2012: 36 62 348 - 448 130 38 94 2007: 25 25 107 - 352 80 3 49 $1,000, 2012: 288 2,381 4,751 - 32,003 19,721 145 15,839 2007: 332 (D) 3,328 - 25,128 10,402 (D) 1,001 : Gross cash rent or share payments (see text) ......farms, 2012: 68 28 92 - 271 289 25 171 2007: 60 36 85 - 217 237 23 108 $1,000, 2012: 1,829 149 2,103 - 8,855 13,003 398 6,781 2007: 1,513 323 1,548 - 5,056 7,196 135 4,842 : Sales of forest products, excluding Christmas : trees, short rotation woody crops, and : maple products ...................................farms, 2012: 5 - 54 - 23 40 4 11 2007: 6 - 22 - 14 24 2 6 $1,000, 2012: 19 - 1,099 - 21 18 5 27 2007: (D) - (D) - 52 112 (D) 8 : Agri-tourism and recreational services ............farms, 2012: 22 63 46 - 23 76 8 23 2007: 7 9 18 - 11 41 7 10 $1,000, 2012: 139 1,298 2,322 - 427 1,272 520 1,240 2007: 71 (D) 1,607 - 913 3,024 977 453 : Patronage dividends and refunds : from cooperatives ................................farms, 2012: 18 129 284 - 365 377 1 114 2007: 9 124 132 - 299 211 2 82 $1,000, 2012: 43 3,022 658 - 4,820 1,777 (D) 976 2007: 29 (D) 415 - 2,708 1,420 (D) 541 : Crop and livestock insurance payments .............farms, 2012: 17 7 53 - 71 89 1 29 2007: 10 6 34 - 67 35 1 16 $1,000, 2012: 131 (D) 1,483 - 4,422 1,312 (D) 670 2007: 101 191 1,204 - 1,580 835 (D) 417 : Amount from state and local government : agricultural program payments ....................farms, 2012: 7 1 35 - 10 18 2 11 2007: 3 - 6 - 9 8 - 7 $1,000, 2012: 4 (D) 20 - 633 111 (D) 7 2007: (D) - (D) - 34 45 - 1 Average per farm ..............................dollars, 2012: 509 (D) 576 - 63,265 6,182 (D) 591 2007: (D) - (D) - 3,816 5,600 - 173 : Other farm-related income sources (see text) ......farms, 2012: 51 156 372 - 201 195 23 148 2007: 26 93 237 - 160 158 30 97 $1,000, 2012: 1,072 3,649 14,847 - 7,783 5,376 3,136 12,155 2007: 1,635 (D) 10,487 - 6,728 5,588 2,549 5,354 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 6. Income From Farm-Related Sources: 2012 and 2007 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Santa Clara : Santa Cruz : Shasta : Sierra : Siskiyou : Solano : Sonoma : Stanislaus ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Total income from farm-related sources, : gross before taxes and expenses (see text) .........farms, 2012: 208 218 365 11 363 298 810 1,436 2007: 161 156 208 5 257 217 487 1,100 $1,000, 2012: 3,792 7,636 12,127 (D) 4,264 13,315 32,445 56,087 2007: 4,756 9,430 3,293 (D) 4,441 9,208 20,447 42,867 Average per farm ..............................dollars, 2012: 18,230 35,029 33,224 (D) 11,748 44,681 40,055 39,058 2007: 29,543 60,448 15,834 (D) 17,280 42,434 41,986 38,970 : Customwork and other agricultural services ........farms, 2012: 46 53 61 2 49 52 136 343 2007: 43 30 41 - 62 55 103 285 $1,000, 2012: 495 1,228 435 (D) 630 3,562 15,365 24,362 2007: 1,471 796 471 - 1,140 2,387 7,966 19,522 : Gross cash rent or share payments (see text) ......farms, 2012: 68 50 128 5 187 119 210 387 2007: 58 48 86 3 125 89 171 295 $1,000, 2012: 1,120 2,636 996 (D) 2,395 3,670 3,915 9,251 2007: 1,335 3,055 857 (D) 1,075 2,545 3,949 6,334 : Sales of forest products, excluding Christmas : trees, short rotation woody crops, and : maple products ...................................farms, 2012: - 41 29 - 9 6 70 10 2007: 6 10 23 2 12 7 28 19 $1,000, 2012: - 503 2,743 - (D) 9 1,740 535 2007: 7 360 242 (D) 383 25 (D) 171 : Agri-tourism and recreational services ............farms, 2012: 57 32 36 - 16 44 135 28 2007: 17 10 11 - 17 13 46 10 $1,000, 2012: 642 254 489 - 108 1,557 3,894 134 2007: 1,091 191 155 - 302 1,742 1,934 484 : Patronage dividends and refunds : from cooperatives ................................farms, 2012: 7 36 30 1 77 53 75 686 2007: 7 15 12 - 40 47 47 507 $1,000, 2012: 21 2,391 99 (D) 63 985 353 12,093 2007: (D) 2,832 34 - 104 550 (D) 9,456 : Crop and livestock insurance payments .............farms, 2012: 3 2 20 - 14 15 84 52 2007: 5 2 4 - 10 18 25 27 $1,000, 2012: 125 (D) 93 - 407 1,141 1,285 1,056 2007: 9 (D) (D) - 229 345 607 723 : Amount from state and local government : agricultural program payments ....................farms, 2012: 5 7 4 - 5 3 10 13 2007: 3 3 3 - 3 4 3 10 $1,000, 2012: 3 (D) 72 - (D) 30 31 382 2007: (D) (D) (D) - 29 5 (D) 20 Average per farm ..............................dollars, 2012: 542 (D) 17,889 - (D) 9,833 3,063 29,377 2007: (D) (D) (D) - 9,517 1,285 (D) 2,033 : Other farm-related income sources (see text) ......farms, 2012: 72 25 102 3 67 73 216 162 2007: 65 47 70 - 52 57 139 182 $1,000, 2012: 1,386 616 7,200 20 539 2,361 5,863 8,275 2007: 824 2,183 1,495 - 1,180 1,610 5,363 6,157 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 6. Income From Farm-Related Sources: 2012 and 2007 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Sutter : Tehama : Trinity : Tulare : Tuolumne : Ventura : Yolo : Yuba ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Total income from farm-related sources, : gross before taxes and expenses (see text) .........farms, 2012: 502 473 56 1,636 83 690 387 239 2007: 371 326 26 1,437 62 520 301 192 $1,000, 2012: 26,797 13,802 469 109,460 1,273 51,953 26,098 10,269 2007: 24,226 6,858 1,426 90,792 781 26,097 18,380 12,063 Average per farm ..............................dollars, 2012: 53,381 29,181 8,383 66,907 15,334 75,294 67,436 42,968 2007: 65,300 21,035 54,860 63,181 12,595 50,186 61,062 62,826 : Customwork and other agricultural services ........farms, 2012: 141 113 - 376 10 70 100 58 2007: 110 64 2 318 8 67 105 62 $1,000, 2012: 10,347 6,029 - 33,329 (D) 9,329 8,341 3,586 2007: 6,501 2,636 (D) 24,305 (D) 3,476 4,807 6,084 : Gross cash rent or share payments (see text) ......farms, 2012: 184 153 7 309 28 164 183 63 2007: 112 108 6 220 19 137 131 61 $1,000, 2012: 9,965 2,684 (D) 9,221 192 29,958 8,281 2,869 2007: 5,969 1,166 (D) 5,403 101 12,463 5,184 2,021 : Sales of forest products, excluding Christmas : trees, short rotation woody crops, and : maple products ...................................farms, 2012: 3 22 29 40 3 7 2 16 2007: 3 25 9 7 8 1 3 6 $1,000, 2012: (D) 847 144 192 (Z) 4 (D) 234 2007: (D) 155 796 (D) 120 (D) (D) 113 : Agri-tourism and recreational services ............farms, 2012: 8 14 5 17 18 33 23 12 2007: 1 11 4 7 6 9 20 9 $1,000, 2012: 25 147 233 263 664 1,164 734 101 2007: (D) 178 50 (D) 390 (D) 361 (D) : Patronage dividends and refunds : from cooperatives ................................farms, 2012: 183 109 2 784 6 338 98 79 2007: 145 68 1 637 6 279 69 42 $1,000, 2012: 2,926 1,777 (D) 33,147 (D) 4,382 2,528 700 2007: 2,768 290 (D) 34,108 (D) 2,980 2,796 654 : Crop and livestock insurance payments .............farms, 2012: 48 43 5 225 - 61 15 10 2007: 95 26 - 430 - 44 13 35 $1,000, 2012: 1,366 (D) 1 9,110 - 974 742 397 2007: 7,373 467 - 20,374 - 687 176 1,181 : Amount from state and local government : agricultural program payments ....................farms, 2012: 4 1 - 31 - 8 6 5 2007: 2 11 - 35 1 - 1 - $1,000, 2012: (D) (D) - 176 - 7 (D) 386 2007: (D) 243 - 357 (D) - (D) - Average per farm ..............................dollars, 2012: (D) (D) - 5,680 - 828 (D) 77,200 2007: (D) 22,122 - 10,196 (D) - (D) - : Other farm-related income sources (see text) ......farms, 2012: 68 95 17 207 32 127 63 52 2007: 56 77 9 147 21 90 87 35 $1,000, 2012: 1,973 2,022 27 24,023 322 6,135 5,287 1,997 2007: 1,579 1,722 (D) 5,922 128 5,956 5,008 (D) ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Table 7. Hired Farm Labor - Workers and Payroll: 2012 [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : California : Alameda : Alpine : Amador : Butte : Calaveras : Colusa ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Hired farm labor ..........................................farms: 33,955 132 - 124 781 176 373 workers: 465,422 804 - 697 5,136 601 3,205 $1,000 payroll: 5,877,973 10,492 - 4,591 66,947 3,564 89,073 Farms with- : 1 worker ..............................................farms: 10,208 49 - 44 205 73 98 workers: 10,208 49 - 44 205 73 98 2 workers .............................................farms: 5,878 18 - 37 146 35 65 workers: 11,756 36 - 74 292 70 130 : 3 or 4 workers ........................................farms: 5,737 30 - 15 160 41 81 workers: 19,632 97 - 52 546 140 282 5 to 9 workers ........................................farms: 4,968 15 - 9 145 15 62 workers: 32,329 91 - 55 955 85 418 10 workers or more ....................................farms: 7,164 20 - 19 125 12 67 workers: 391,497 531 - 472 3,138 233 2,277 : Workers by days worked: : 150 days or more ........................................farms: 20,018 67 - 65 421 69 250 workers: 205,851 355 - 221 1,667 140 1,839 Farms with- : 1 worker ............................................farms: 6,915 33 - 24 193 36 79 workers: 6,915 33 - 24 193 36 79 2 workers ...........................................farms: 3,547 14 - 15 75 13 40 workers: 7,094 28 - 30 150 26 80 : 3 or 4 workers ......................................farms: 3,249 11 - 20 51 17 61 workers: 11,066 (D) - (D) 168 57 212 5 to 9 workers ......................................farms: 2,704 2 - 1 60 2 24 workers: 17,448 (D) - (D) 402 (D) 156 10 workers or more ..................................farms: 3,603 7 - 5 42 1 46 workers: 163,328 245 - 90 754 (D) 1,312 : Less than 150 days ......................................farms: 22,621 91 - 83 626 137 248 workers: 259,571 449 - 476 3,469 461 1,366 Farms with- : 1 worker ............................................farms: 7,384 32 - 30 164 55 73 workers: 7,384 32 - 30 164 55 73 2 workers ...........................................farms: 4,303 6 - 25 150 33 49 workers: 8,606 12 - 50 300 66 98 : 3 or 4 workers ......................................farms: 3,938 30 - 8 114 32 57 workers: 13,371 98 - 26 390 102 195 5 to 9 workers ......................................farms: 2,833 9 - 7 117 6 41 workers: 17,758 48 - 42 741 33 247 10 workers or more ..................................farms: 4,163 14 - 13 81 11 28 workers: 212,452 259 - 328 1,874 205 753 : Reported only workers working : 150 days or more .........................................farms: 11,334 41 - 41 155 39 125 workers: 71,384 214 - 86 435 70 771 $1,000 payroll: 1,917,652 4,286 - 2,197 10,324 1,679 36,134 : Reported only workers working : less than 150 days .......................................farms: 13,937 65 - 59 360 107 123 workers: 69,900 234 - 189 1,266 323 306 $1,000 payroll: 234,497 516 - 367 4,265 518 2,140 : Reported both - workers working 150 : days or more and workers : working less than 150 days ...............................farms: 8,684 26 - 24 266 30 125 150 days or more, workers: 134,467 141 - 135 1,232 70 1,068 less than 150 days, workers: 189,671 215 - 287 2,203 138 1,060 $1,000 payroll: 3,725,823 5,689 - 2,026 52,358 1,367 50,800 : Total migrant workers (see text) ..........................farms: 3,676 8 - 32 49 12 28 workers: 131,457 (D) - 539 393 228 796 : Migrant farm labor on farms with hired labor ..............farms: 2,921 6 - 12 42 10 24 workers: 118,662 (D) - 270 319 (D) 760 : Migrant farm labor on farms reporting only : contract labor ...........................................farms: 755 2 - 20 7 2 4 workers: 12,795 (D) - 269 74 (D) 36 : Unpaid workers (see text) .................................farms: 31,965 220 2 258 923 345 277 workers: 72,020 574 (D) 633 2,074 931 578 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 7. Hired Farm Labor - Workers and Payroll: 2012 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Contra Costa : Del Norte : El Dorado : Fresno : Glenn : Humboldt : Imperial ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Hired farm labor ..........................................farms: 249 44 365 2,897 544 319 270 workers: 2,049 833 1,537 58,624 4,728 2,226 8,563 $1,000 payroll: 17,077 9,725 7,059 451,165 69,288 41,400 162,027 Farms with- : 1 worker ..............................................farms: 82 5 104 543 123 106 37 workers: 82 5 104 543 123 106 37 2 workers .............................................farms: 35 12 96 496 124 68 10 workers: 70 24 192 992 248 136 20 : 3 or 4 workers ........................................farms: 57 9 63 421 130 59 33 workers: 198 31 219 1,452 441 203 119 5 to 9 workers ........................................farms: 31 3 62 487 101 51 60 workers: 179 22 369 3,173 652 309 385 10 workers or more ....................................farms: 44 15 40 950 66 35 130 workers: 1,520 751 653 52,464 3,264 1,472 8,002 : Workers by days worked: : 150 days or more ........................................farms: 123 20 123 1,669 317 182 229 workers: 509 230 355 17,751 2,070 1,248 4,123 Farms with- : 1 worker ............................................farms: 58 8 77 510 114 62 31 workers: 58 8 77 510 114 62 31 2 workers ...........................................farms: 20 2 10 287 71 43 12 workers: 40 4 20 574 142 86 24 : 3 or 4 workers ......................................farms: 20 3 20 327 59 38 27 workers: 75 (D) 68 1,095 196 129 98 5 to 9 workers ......................................farms: 10 2 9 231 36 28 59 workers: 58 (D) 50 1,476 229 163 399 10 workers or more ..................................farms: 15 5 7 314 37 11 100 workers: 278 192 140 14,096 1,389 808 3,571 : Less than 150 days ......................................farms: 171 34 315 2,046 393 213 134 workers: 1,540 603 1,182 40,873 2,658 978 4,440 Farms with- : 1 worker ............................................farms: 56 - 91 344 110 81 30 workers: 56 - 91 344 110 81 30 2 workers ...........................................farms: 20 13 91 357 92 59 19 workers: 40 26 182 714 184 118 38 : 3 or 4 workers ......................................farms: 42 6 57 292 114 28 18 workers: 137 23 201 1,015 385 98 63 5 to 9 workers ......................................farms: 20 3 44 352 41 32 19 workers: 113 15 259 2,253 238 181 115 10 workers or more ..................................farms: 33 12 32 701 36 13 48 workers: 1,194 539 449 36,547 1,741 500 4,194 : Reported only workers working : 150 days or more .........................................farms: 78 10 50 851 151 106 136 workers: 226 23 142 5,243 699 321 1,613 $1,000 payroll: 4,963 (D) 1,140 148,349 23,855 5,927 62,752 : Reported only workers working : less than 150 days .......................................farms: 126 24 242 1,228 227 137 41 workers: 596 401 802 12,158 907 472 496 $1,000 payroll: 1,253 (D) 1,983 23,827 2,844 1,572 7,989 : Reported both - workers working 150 : days or more and workers : working less than 150 days ...............................farms: 45 10 73 818 166 76 93 150 days or more, workers: 283 207 213 12,508 1,371 927 2,510 less than 150 days, workers: 944 202 380 28,715 1,751 506 3,944 $1,000 payroll: 10,861 9,201 3,936 278,988 42,589 33,901 91,286 : Total migrant workers (see text) ..........................farms: 13 1 23 605 71 11 26 workers: 89 (D) 170 26,175 1,106 55 4,278 : Migrant farm labor on farms with hired labor ..............farms: 12 1 18 453 45 10 22 workers: (D) (D) 122 22,697 760 (D) 4,271 : Migrant farm labor on farms reporting only : contract labor ...........................................farms: 1 - 5 152 26 1 4 workers: (D) - 48 3,478 346 (D) 7 : Unpaid workers (see text) .................................farms: 294 68 713 1,844 506 433 82 workers: 729 174 1,924 3,727 1,182 1,033 169 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 7. Hired Farm Labor - Workers and Payroll: 2012 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Inyo : Kern : Kings : Lake : Lassen : Los Angeles : Madera ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Hired farm labor ..........................................farms: 57 1,004 498 301 104 584 813 workers: 239 34,501 8,385 2,762 1,556 3,825 14,050 $1,000 payroll: 3,149 463,843 153,584 15,340 18,026 52,566 143,685 Farms with- : 1 worker ..............................................farms: 23 212 89 110 44 198 218 workers: 23 212 89 110 44 198 218 2 workers .............................................farms: 3 169 42 42 19 132 136 workers: 6 338 84 84 38 264 272 : 3 or 4 workers ........................................farms: 13 180 110 40 24 101 127 workers: 46 608 384 134 83 342 453 5 to 9 workers ........................................farms: 14 160 84 45 10 61 130 workers: (D) 1,086 597 287 (D) 368 840 10 workers or more ....................................farms: 4 283 173 64 7 92 202 workers: (D) 32,257 7,231 2,147 (D) 2,653 12,267 : Workers by days worked: : 150 days or more ........................................farms: 36 737 359 120 58 359 587 workers: 106 16,235 4,861 487 (D) 1,875 7,110 Farms with- : 1 worker ............................................farms: 11 146 62 55 26 102 193 workers: 11 146 62 55 26 102 193 2 workers ...........................................farms: 7 141 24 26 10 83 121 workers: 14 282 48 52 20 166 242 : 3 or 4 workers ......................................farms: 9 148 87 14 12 71 88 workers: (D) 506 306 44 43 232 305 5 to 9 workers ......................................farms: 8 108 69 19 6 50 90 workers: 43 681 479 127 (D) 288 590 10 workers or more ..................................farms: 1 194 117 6 4 53 95 workers: (D) 14,620 3,966 209 290 1,087 5,780 : Less than 150 days ......................................farms: 33 592 293 258 68 321 468 workers: 133 18,266 3,524 2,275 (D) 1,950 6,940 Farms with- : 1 worker ............................................farms: 14 174 69 98 31 146 109 workers: 14 174 69 98 31 146 109 2 workers ...........................................farms: 4 117 64 37 21 85 93 workers: 8 234 128 74 42 170 186 : 3 or 4 workers ......................................farms: 10 87 51 34 9 27 77 workers: (D) 296 172 113 (D) 99 277 5 to 9 workers ......................................farms: 2 65 43 34 6 16 69 workers: (D) 427 264 220 34 100 422 10 workers or more ..................................farms: 3 149 66 55 1 47 120 workers: 62 17,135 2,891 1,770 (D) 1,435 5,946 : Reported only workers working : 150 days or more .........................................farms: 24 412 205 43 36 263 345 workers: 63 3,556 1,873 117 (D) 1,153 1,665 $1,000 payroll: 1,933 111,414 54,102 2,458 1,636 26,661 45,364 : Reported only workers working : less than 150 days .......................................farms: 21 267 139 181 46 225 226 workers: 45 2,038 795 755 85 882 1,134 $1,000 payroll: 138 12,845 3,243 1,663 285 3,992 7,265 : Reported both - workers working 150 : days or more and workers : working less than 150 days ...............................farms: 12 325 154 77 22 96 242 150 days or more, workers: 43 12,679 2,988 370 331 722 5,445 less than 150 days, workers: 88 16,228 2,729 1,520 (D) 1,068 5,806 $1,000 payroll: 1,078 339,583 96,238 11,219 16,105 21,912 91,055 : Total migrant workers (see text) ..........................farms: 5 113 43 31 2 19 109 workers: 10 7,438 1,916 1,186 (D) 283 8,129 : Migrant farm labor on farms with hired labor ..............farms: 5 103 32 26 2 15 98 workers: 10 6,896 1,771 1,089 (D) 275 8,013 : Migrant farm labor on farms reporting only : contract labor ...........................................farms: - 10 11 5 - 4 11 workers: - 542 145 97 - 8 116 : Unpaid workers (see text) .................................farms: 49 631 327 404 188 567 466 workers: 151 1,447 740 888 446 1,228 1,136 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 7. Hired Farm Labor - Workers and Payroll: 2012 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Marin : Mariposa : Mendocino : Merced : Modoc : Mono : Monterey ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Hired farm labor ..........................................farms: 182 88 498 1,253 166 27 634 workers: 1,072 369 5,314 17,265 1,200 165 32,872 $1,000 payroll: 18,186 1,830 44,378 272,448 15,569 1,370 488,785 Farms with- : 1 worker ..............................................farms: 54 34 132 247 57 7 158 workers: 54 34 132 247 57 7 158 2 workers .............................................farms: 34 17 83 185 38 10 86 workers: 68 34 166 370 76 20 172 : 3 or 4 workers ........................................farms: 32 11 64 243 24 2 78 workers: 100 36 216 810 80 (D) 264 5 to 9 workers ........................................farms: 42 19 68 210 28 3 82 workers: 274 135 411 1,348 186 (D) 533 10 workers or more ....................................farms: 20 7 151 368 19 5 230 workers: 576 130 4,389 14,490 801 110 31,745 : Workers by days worked: : 150 days or more ........................................farms: 124 43 252 811 95 10 443 workers: 510 131 1,442 8,448 549 108 16,159 Farms with- : 1 worker ............................................farms: 36 10 80 194 37 4 108 workers: 36 10 80 194 37 4 108 2 workers ...........................................farms: 24 13 60 116 15 - 39 workers: 48 26 120 232 30 - 78 : 3 or 4 workers ......................................farms: 29 13 43 151 16 1 58 workers: 100 45 145 518 52 (D) 196 5 to 9 workers ......................................farms: 25 7 25 127 16 2 54 workers: 164 50 168 815 100 (D) 340 10 workers or more ..................................farms: 10 - 44 223 11 3 184 workers: 162 - 929 6,689 330 84 15,437 : Less than 150 days ......................................farms: 119 64 407 838 113 24 391 workers: 562 238 3,872 8,817 651 57 16,713 Farms with- : 1 worker ............................................farms: 53 26 104 222 40 9 102 workers: 53 26 104 222 40 9 102 2 workers ...........................................farms: 24 11 66 135 33 10 71 workers: 48 22 132 270 66 20 142 : 3 or 4 workers ......................................farms: 23 18 53 169 20 2 61 workers: 79 56 178 557 65 (D) 213 5 to 9 workers ......................................farms: 6 4 64 116 11 3 34 workers: 36 30 377 742 70 (D) 225 10 workers or more ..................................farms: 13 5 120 196 9 - 123 workers: 346 104 3,081 7,026 410 - 16,031 : Reported only workers working : 150 days or more .........................................farms: 63 24 91 415 53 3 243 workers: 185 (D) 332 3,511 178 6 4,321 $1,000 payroll: 4,888 645 8,131 90,721 3,386 (D) 144,686 : Reported only workers working : less than 150 days .......................................farms: 58 45 246 442 71 17 191 workers: 295 168 1,332 2,072 166 45 1,122 $1,000 payroll: 696 381 3,270 11,795 926 (D) 5,561 : Reported both - workers working 150 : days or more and workers : working less than 150 days ...............................farms: 61 19 161 396 42 7 200 150 days or more, workers: 325 61 1,110 4,937 371 102 11,838 less than 150 days, workers: 267 (D) 2,540 6,745 485 12 15,591 $1,000 payroll: 12,602 804 32,977 169,932 11,258 908 338,537 : Total migrant workers (see text) ..........................farms: 14 4 65 103 5 4 92 workers: 132 102 1,224 4,464 39 26 6,277 : Migrant farm labor on farms with hired labor ..............farms: 14 4 59 88 5 4 82 workers: 132 102 1,089 4,383 39 26 6,113 : Migrant farm labor on farms reporting only : contract labor ...........................................farms: - - 6 15 - - 10 workers: - - 135 81 - - 164 : Unpaid workers (see text) .................................farms: 140 177 547 809 199 18 442 workers: 307 483 1,536 1,888 427 39 1,060 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 7. Hired Farm Labor - Workers and Payroll: 2012 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Napa : Nevada : Orange : Placer : Plumas : Riverside : Sacramento ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Hired farm labor ..........................................farms: 916 182 174 280 34 1,252 410 workers: 9,857 657 3,300 1,219 121 13,843 4,778 $1,000 payroll: 129,633 2,585 65,079 10,124 2,429 171,746 58,559 Farms with- : 1 worker ..............................................farms: 272 82 59 83 10 475 109 workers: 272 82 59 83 10 475 109 2 workers .............................................farms: 124 33 30 68 8 199 60 workers: 248 66 60 136 16 398 120 : 3 or 4 workers ........................................farms: 134 48 23 69 4 210 82 workers: 472 157 81 223 (D) 736 281 5 to 9 workers ........................................farms: 138 10 24 35 11 163 68 workers: 908 70 134 219 66 1,021 432 10 workers or more ....................................farms: 248 9 38 25 1 205 91 workers: 7,957 282 2,966 558 (D) 11,213 3,836 : Workers by days worked: : 150 days or more ........................................farms: 586 56 124 95 25 775 263 workers: 3,732 118 1,676 359 80 7,480 1,792 Farms with- : 1 worker ............................................farms: 231 37 48 28 10 302 77 workers: 231 37 48 28 10 302 77 2 workers ...........................................farms: 87 9 18 32 - 136 41 workers: 174 18 36 64 - 272 82 : 3 or 4 workers ......................................farms: 61 3 12 19 8 105 48 workers: 203 (D) 47 59 32 354 172 5 to 9 workers ......................................farms: 97 5 12 10 7 105 49 workers: 622 31 65 63 38 703 305 10 workers or more ..................................farms: 110 2 34 6 - 127 48 workers: 2,502 (D) 1,480 145 - 5,849 1,156 : Less than 150 days ......................................farms: 568 158 101 227 22 770 254 workers: 6,125 539 1,624 860 41 6,363 2,986 Farms with- : 1 worker ............................................farms: 142 70 42 72 13 317 83 workers: 142 70 42 72 13 317 83 2 workers ...........................................farms: 65 43 24 48 4 147 44 workers: 130 86 48 96 8 294 88 : 3 or 4 workers ......................................farms: 112 32 8 72 3 138 43 workers: 399 101 28 236 (D) 483 144 5 to 9 workers ......................................farms: 112 6 11 20 2 81 27 workers: 716 34 59 130 (D) 515 159 10 workers or more ..................................farms: 137 7 16 15 - 87 57 workers: 4,738 248 1,447 326 - 4,754 2,512 : Reported only workers working : 150 days or more .........................................farms: 348 24 73 53 12 482 156 workers: 1,487 46 580 180 36 2,191 753 $1,000 payroll: 43,787 512 18,044 3,673 928 55,316 20,595 : Reported only workers working : less than 150 days .......................................farms: 330 126 50 185 9 477 147 workers: 2,768 449 126 480 16 1,386 851 $1,000 payroll: 7,002 806 365 984 197 7,581 1,790 : Reported both - workers working 150 : days or more and workers : working less than 150 days ...............................farms: 238 32 51 42 13 293 107 150 days or more, workers: 2,245 72 1,096 179 44 5,289 1,039 less than 150 days, workers: 3,357 90 1,498 380 25 4,977 2,135 $1,000 payroll: 78,844 1,267 46,670 5,467 1,303 108,849 36,174 : Total migrant workers (see text) ..........................farms: 122 10 5 14 - 117 46 workers: 2,676 40 601 80 - 3,386 1,346 : Migrant farm labor on farms with hired labor ..............farms: 97 4 4 10 - 107 41 workers: 2,334 31 (D) 72 - 3,324 1,186 : Migrant farm labor on farms reporting only : contract labor ...........................................farms: 25 6 1 4 - 10 5 workers: 342 9 (D) 8 - 62 160 : Unpaid workers (see text) .................................farms: 531 440 137 691 79 1,271 626 workers: 1,164 1,085 254 1,728 206 2,715 1,492 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 7. Hired Farm Labor - Workers and Payroll: 2012 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : San Benito :San Bernardino : San Diego : San Francisco : San Joaquin :San Luis Obispo: San Mateo :Santa Barbara ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Hired farm labor ..........................................farms: 242 520 2,795 - 1,748 1,040 166 926 workers: 2,169 4,052 17,844 - 24,872 10,669 1,722 22,333 $1,000 payroll: 29,249 58,461 233,301 - 289,740 114,631 40,453 311,694 Farms with- : 1 worker ..............................................farms: 62 199 1,414 - 412 397 43 278 workers: 62 199 1,414 - 412 397 43 278 2 workers .............................................farms: 39 90 500 - 245 178 27 152 workers: 78 180 1,000 - 490 356 54 304 : 3 or 4 workers ........................................farms: 43 74 441 - 313 178 29 171 workers: 161 259 1,479 - 1,078 598 99 585 5 to 9 workers ........................................farms: 39 45 219 - 317 136 40 105 workers: 249 294 1,434 - 2,124 869 268 745 10 workers or more ....................................farms: 59 112 221 - 461 151 27 220 workers: 1,619 3,120 12,517 - 20,768 8,449 1,258 20,421 : Workers by days worked: : 150 days or more ........................................farms: 157 312 1,323 - 1,091 636 122 628 workers: 1,118 1,725 10,506 - 9,149 4,704 (D) 11,038 Farms with- : 1 worker ............................................farms: 41 134 694 - 322 267 31 184 workers: 41 134 694 - 322 267 31 184 2 workers ...........................................farms: 39 46 200 - 198 125 19 85 workers: 78 92 400 - 396 250 38 170 : 3 or 4 workers ......................................farms: 23 43 187 - 201 87 37 109 workers: 79 145 633 - 683 304 132 374 5 to 9 workers ......................................farms: 25 35 98 - 169 79 15 78 workers: 157 239 627 - 1,084 532 (D) 527 10 workers or more ..................................farms: 29 54 144 - 201 78 20 172 workers: 763 1,115 8,152 - 6,664 3,351 1,030 9,783 : Less than 150 days ......................................farms: 150 309 1,850 - 1,248 638 105 548 workers: 1,051 2,327 7,338 - 15,723 5,965 (D) 11,295 Farms with- : 1 worker ............................................farms: 43 125 1,008 - 316 270 39 206 workers: 43 125 1,008 - 316 270 39 206 2 workers ...........................................farms: 23 73 349 - 182 136 23 121 workers: 46 146 698 - 364 272 46 242 : 3 or 4 workers ......................................farms: 30 39 303 - 247 89 23 75 workers: 105 127 1,007 - 840 302 83 243 5 to 9 workers ......................................farms: 30 33 103 - 206 56 13 53 workers: 180 228 639 - 1,328 339 81 345 10 workers or more ..................................farms: 24 39 87 - 297 87 7 93 workers: 677 1,701 3,986 - 12,875 4,782 (D) 10,259 : Reported only workers working : 150 days or more .........................................farms: 92 211 945 - 500 402 61 378 workers: 586 1,284 4,826 - 2,228 1,898 602 4,569 $1,000 payroll: 13,515 34,451 110,514 - 61,888 42,064 17,761 131,323 : Reported only workers working : less than 150 days .......................................farms: 85 208 1,472 - 657 404 44 298 workers: 609 1,669 3,054 - 4,029 1,418 73 631 $1,000 payroll: 1,724 7,235 8,969 - 10,573 3,998 529 3,356 : Reported both - workers working 150 : days or more and workers : working less than 150 days ...............................farms: 65 101 378 - 591 234 61 250 150 days or more, workers: 532 441 5,680 - 6,921 2,806 718 6,469 less than 150 days, workers: 442 658 4,284 - 11,694 4,547 329 10,664 $1,000 payroll: 14,010 16,776 113,818 - 217,280 68,570 22,164 177,015 : Total migrant workers (see text) ..........................farms: 32 23 198 - 304 135 15 81 workers: 807 546 1,185 - 13,134 2,656 88 3,623 : Migrant farm labor on farms with hired labor ..............farms: 27 17 135 - 231 111 15 76 workers: 707 474 927 - 11,214 2,251 88 3,589 : Migrant farm labor on farms reporting only : contract labor ...........................................farms: 5 6 63 - 73 24 - 5 workers: 100 72 258 - 1,920 405 - 34 : Unpaid workers (see text) .................................farms: 259 625 2,600 1 1,334 1,209 120 571 workers: 642 1,456 5,069 (D) 2,859 2,866 325 1,242 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 7. Hired Farm Labor - Workers and Payroll: 2012 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Santa Clara : Santa Cruz : Shasta : Sierra : Siskiyou : Solano : Sonoma : Stanislaus ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Hired farm labor ..........................................farms: 453 346 282 19 247 376 1,616 1,724 workers: 4,237 16,705 1,067 32 6,848 2,846 13,710 14,657 $1,000 payroll: 68,224 169,555 11,947 296 57,877 52,281 199,305 221,868 Farms with- : 1 worker ..............................................farms: 145 74 146 15 100 122 499 431 workers: 145 74 146 15 100 122 499 431 2 workers .............................................farms: 100 33 62 1 40 57 272 309 workers: 200 66 124 2 80 114 544 618 : 3 or 4 workers ........................................farms: 84 46 26 2 52 61 243 324 workers: 298 156 90 (D) 176 212 833 1,110 5 to 9 workers ........................................farms: 60 69 23 1 25 62 262 345 workers: 387 486 148 (D) 166 388 1,717 2,315 10 workers or more ....................................farms: 64 124 25 - 30 74 340 315 workers: 3,207 15,923 559 - 6,326 2,010 10,117 10,183 : Workers by days worked: : 150 days or more ........................................farms: 269 211 114 11 148 219 962 991 workers: 2,243 9,397 411 (D) 1,358 1,387 5,900 5,928 Farms with- : 1 worker ............................................farms: 96 50 70 10 68 77 387 301 workers: 96 50 70 10 68 77 387 301 2 workers ...........................................farms: 66 26 16 - 25 27 176 187 workers: 132 52 32 - 50 54 352 374 : 3 or 4 workers ......................................farms: 39 30 13 - 21 35 120 182 workers: 134 102 48 - 73 112 411 634 5 to 9 workers ......................................farms: 27 31 6 1 10 42 137 184 workers: 186 224 37 (D) 60 268 860 1,217 10 workers or more ..................................farms: 41 74 9 - 24 38 142 137 workers: 1,695 8,969 224 - 1,107 876 3,890 3,402 : Less than 150 days ......................................farms: 278 260 200 8 165 275 1,060 1,173 workers: 1,994 7,308 656 (D) 5,490 1,459 7,810 8,729 Farms with- : 1 worker ............................................farms: 103 66 94 5 61 110 329 358 workers: 103 66 94 5 61 110 329 358 2 workers ...........................................farms: 50 28 51 1 36 42 188 194 workers: 100 56 102 2 72 84 376 388 : 3 or 4 workers ......................................farms: 56 42 21 2 34 42 162 282 workers: 200 141 70 (D) 108 146 562 958 5 to 9 workers ......................................farms: 35 48 16 - 17 42 159 147 workers: 214 322 102 - 108 258 1,009 964 10 workers or more ..................................farms: 34 76 18 - 17 39 222 192 workers: 1,377 6,723 288 - 5,141 861 5,534 6,061 : Reported only workers working : 150 days or more .........................................farms: 175 86 82 11 82 101 556 551 workers: 1,258 1,466 181 18 186 432 2,756 2,875 $1,000 payroll: 36,426 23,248 3,553 287 4,205 12,456 83,510 98,240 : Reported only workers working : less than 150 days .......................................farms: 184 135 168 8 99 157 654 733 workers: 554 1,518 423 14 220 467 3,831 3,500 $1,000 payroll: 1,619 6,831 1,119 9 1,464 2,833 12,539 11,312 : Reported both - workers working 150 : days or more and workers : working less than 150 days ...............................farms: 94 125 32 - 66 118 406 440 150 days or more, workers: 985 7,931 230 - 1,172 955 3,144 3,053 less than 150 days, workers: 1,440 5,790 233 - 5,270 992 3,979 5,229 $1,000 payroll: 30,179 139,477 7,275 - 52,209 36,993 103,256 112,316 : Total migrant workers (see text) ..........................farms: 48 64 25 - 21 53 178 156 workers: 2,156 2,511 182 - 1,458 1,235 2,916 5,064 : Migrant farm labor on farms with hired labor ..............farms: 37 58 17 - 13 47 138 119 workers: 1,991 2,477 98 - 1,436 1,105 2,515 4,641 : Migrant farm labor on farms reporting only : contract labor ...........................................farms: 11 6 8 - 8 6 40 37 workers: 165 34 84 - 22 130 401 423 : Unpaid workers (see text) .................................farms: 452 277 820 16 419 402 1,598 1,465 workers: 1,206 606 1,824 (D) 1,025 858 3,465 3,219 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 7. Hired Farm Labor - Workers and Payroll: 2012 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Sutter : Tehama : Trinity : Tulare : Tuolumne : Ventura : Yolo : Yuba ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Hired farm labor ..........................................farms: 703 537 62 2,448 75 1,167 438 294 workers: 6,319 4,905 332 25,247 266 30,172 5,155 2,910 $1,000 payroll: 64,896 43,695 1,566 366,333 2,334 364,348 83,137 27,459 Farms with- : 1 worker ..............................................farms: 173 149 21 704 32 442 111 97 workers: 173 149 21 704 32 442 111 97 2 workers .............................................farms: 116 116 10 540 14 230 46 41 workers: 232 232 20 1,080 28 460 92 82 : 3 or 4 workers ........................................farms: 152 92 7 343 7 204 75 52 workers: 527 302 24 1,181 28 685 258 177 5 to 9 workers ........................................farms: 111 72 16 325 18 100 92 40 workers: 704 459 112 2,141 99 616 576 258 10 workers or more ....................................farms: 151 108 8 536 4 191 114 64 workers: 4,683 3,763 155 20,141 79 27,969 4,118 2,296 : Workers by days worked: : 150 days or more ........................................farms: 352 246 30 1,528 24 729 268 154 workers: 1,748 1,202 97 11,745 (D) 17,120 2,581 890 Farms with- : 1 worker ............................................farms: 139 91 11 493 16 262 94 55 workers: 139 91 11 493 16 262 94 55 2 workers ...........................................farms: 55 61 6 361 3 164 30 28 workers: 110 122 12 722 6 328 60 56 : 3 or 4 workers ......................................farms: 80 33 1 200 - 95 40 23 workers: 269 117 (D) 674 - 313 135 77 5 to 9 workers ......................................farms: 39 29 11 178 2 78 49 26 workers: 247 178 (D) 1,166 (D) 498 304 158 10 workers or more ..................................farms: 39 32 1 296 3 130 55 22 workers: 983 694 (D) 8,690 44 15,719 1,988 544 : Less than 150 days ......................................farms: 576 405 46 1,452 56 678 327 234 workers: 4,571 3,703 235 13,502 (D) 13,052 2,574 2,020 Farms with- : 1 worker ............................................farms: 142 105 19 496 17 297 88 85 workers: 142 105 19 496 17 297 88 85 2 workers ...........................................farms: 109 99 9 305 15 126 46 37 workers: 218 198 18 610 30 252 92 74 : 3 or 4 workers ......................................farms: 124 70 2 201 6 120 79 42 workers: 416 229 (D) 673 (D) 399 269 144 5 to 9 workers ......................................farms: 89 51 12 181 16 31 45 27 workers: 573 310 (D) 1,083 84 181 271 160 10 workers or more ..................................farms: 112 80 4 269 2 104 69 43 workers: 3,222 2,861 100 10,640 (D) 11,923 1,854 1,557 : Reported only workers working : 150 days or more .........................................farms: 127 132 16 996 19 489 111 60 workers: 327 337 57 6,500 51 5,664 878 170 $1,000 payroll: 8,524 8,263 486 173,640 1,696 83,207 22,779 4,565 : Reported only workers working : less than 150 days .......................................farms: 351 291 32 920 51 438 170 140 workers: 2,005 1,679 111 5,193 154 2,004 1,055 529 $1,000 payroll: 7,655 2,629 179 14,511 330 9,709 4,514 2,379 : Reported both - workers working 150 : days or more and workers : working less than 150 days ...............................farms: 225 114 14 532 5 240 157 94 150 days or more, workers: 1,421 865 40 5,245 29 11,456 1,703 720 less than 150 days, workers: 2,566 2,024 124 8,309 32 11,048 1,519 1,491 $1,000 payroll: 48,716 32,803 901 178,183 307 271,432 55,844 20,516 : Total migrant workers (see text) ..........................farms: 57 79 9 245 4 80 48 19 workers: 991 3,785 57 9,518 4 3,111 2,053 377 : Migrant farm labor on farms with hired labor ..............farms: 50 55 9 180 4 68 44 15 workers: 893 2,993 57 8,097 4 2,949 2,029 327 : Migrant farm labor on farms reporting only : contract labor ...........................................farms: 7 24 - 65 - 12 4 4 workers: 98 792 - 1,421 - 162 24 50 : Unpaid workers (see text) .................................farms: 546 805 151 1,774 198 829 419 371 workers: 1,150 1,903 330 3,680 599 1,636 1,033 847 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Table 8. Farms, Land in Farms, Value of Land and Buildings, and Land Use: 2012 and 2007 [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : California : Alameda : Alpine : Amador : Butte : Calaveras : Colusa ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- FARMS AND LAND IN FARMS : : Farms ..............................................number, 2012: 77,857 452 3 461 2,056 663 782 2007: 81,033 525 7 479 2,048 631 814 Land in farms .......................................acres, 2012: 25,569,001 177,798 (D) 155,187 381,019 212,140 453,061 2007: 25,364,695 204,633 1,810 163,482 373,786 201,026 474,092 Average size of farm ............................acres, 2012: 328 393 (D) 337 185 320 579 2007: 313 390 259 341 183 319 582 : Estimated market value of land and buildings ........farms, 2012: 77,857 452 3 461 2,056 663 782 2007: 81,033 525 7 479 2,048 631 814 $1,000, 2012: 160,524,953 980,960 5,400 610,549 2,895,258 692,061 2,460,439 2007: 162,533,390 793,469 12,400 778,896 2,808,308 736,816 1,886,574 Average per farm ..............................dollars, 2012: 2,061,792 2,170,266 1,800,000 1,324,402 1,408,200 1,043,832 3,146,342 2007: 2,005,768 1,511,370 1,771,429 1,626,088 1,371,244 1,167,695 2,317,659 Average per acre ..............................dollars, 2012: 6,278 5,517 4,289 3,934 7,599 3,262 5,431 2007: 6,408 3,878 6,851 4,764 7,513 3,665 3,979 2012 farms by value group: : $1 to $49,999 ..............................................: 3,768 32 - 12 93 37 9 $50,000 to $99,999 .........................................: 2,993 21 - 7 81 32 14 $100,000 to $199,999 .......................................: 6,849 21 - 18 208 97 70 $200,000 to $499,999 .......................................: 22,324 86 - 138 737 238 169 $500,000 to $999,999 .......................................: 17,939 111 - 126 440 145 124 : $1,000,000 to $1,999,999 ...................................: 9,621 95 1 87 192 49 137 $2,000,000 to $4,999,999 ...................................: 8,056 62 2 52 183 41 149 $5,000,000 to $9,999,999 ...................................: 3,283 5 - 10 74 13 59 $10,000,000 or more ........................................: 3,024 19 - 11 48 11 51 : Approximate land area ...............................acres, 2012: 99,698,909 472,974 472,524 380,529 1,047,337 652,808 736,466 Proportion in farms ...........................percent, 2012: 25.6 37.6 (D) 40.8 36.4 32.5 61.5 : 2012 size of farm: : 1 to 9 acres ..........................................farms: 24,637 168 - 68 635 145 63 acres: 95,670 546 - 305 2,761 607 310 10 to 49 acres ........................................farms: 25,811 104 - 152 738 253 152 acres: 584,643 2,267 - 4,158 16,352 5,592 3,416 50 to 69 acres ........................................farms: 3,700 18 - 50 96 48 34 acres: 212,480 970 - 2,847 5,373 2,909 2,028 70 to 99 acres ........................................farms: 3,601 18 - 29 88 25 57 acres: 294,439 1,533 - 2,327 7,318 2,072 4,641 : 100 to 139 acres ......................................farms: 3,222 35 2 45 67 45 53 acres: 369,985 3,805 (D) 5,091 7,995 5,223 5,846 140 to 179 acres ......................................farms: 2,533 15 - 19 71 25 44 acres: 398,520 2,378 - 2,978 10,917 3,879 6,896 180 to 219 acres ......................................farms: 1,477 9 - 16 53 4 39 acres: 292,751 1,819 - 3,208 10,561 810 7,654 220 to 259 acres ......................................farms: 1,189 3 - 3 35 14 24 acres: 282,281 695 - 694 8,298 3,385 5,774 : 260 to 499 acres ......................................farms: 3,983 27 - 27 129 38 136 acres: 1,428,792 9,397 - 9,576 45,640 13,224 48,264 500 to 999 acres ......................................farms: 3,230 18 - 27 84 25 93 acres: 2,244,264 11,903 - 18,023 56,278 18,480 61,562 1,000 to 1,999 acres ..................................farms: 2,040 15 1 14 34 19 33 acres: 2,800,180 22,217 (D) 21,576 45,723 26,171 47,471 2,000 acres or more ...................................farms: 2,434 22 - 11 26 22 54 acres: 16,564,996 120,268 - 84,404 163,803 129,788 259,199 2007 size of farm: : 1 to 9 acres ..........................................farms: 25,278 161 - 70 613 148 64 acres: 100,816 675 - 348 2,782 673 322 10 to 49 acres ........................................farms: 28,080 156 1 193 707 227 190 acres: 637,914 3,316 (D) 5,138 15,536 5,425 4,208 50 to 69 acres ........................................farms: 3,776 21 - 36 88 35 31 acres: 217,567 1,144 - 1,991 4,983 2,106 1,847 70 to 99 acres ........................................farms: 3,678 22 - 27 75 37 40 acres: 300,943 1,839 - 2,272 6,090 3,096 3,321 : 100 to 139 acres ......................................farms: 3,067 40 2 28 85 28 38 acres: 353,529 4,388 (D) 3,211 9,781 3,304 4,322 140 to 179 acres ......................................farms: 2,418 10 1 27 56 26 28 acres: 381,684 1,615 (D) 4,375 8,788 4,039 4,342 180 to 219 acres ......................................farms: 1,626 10 2 15 55 10 36 acres: 321,033 2,009 (D) 2,859 10,899 2,022 7,031 220 to 259 acres ......................................farms: 1,305 12 - 7 48 11 42 acres: 310,154 2,825 - 1,644 11,421 2,635 9,908 : 260 to 499 acres ......................................farms: 4,083 30 - 31 159 31 126 acres: 1,461,559 10,589 - 10,998 56,022 11,102 42,938 500 to 999 acres ......................................farms: 3,267 27 1 19 105 34 115 acres: 2,280,819 19,858 (D) 12,668 73,249 24,873 76,619 1,000 to 1,999 acres ..................................farms: 2,194 14 - 10 37 23 61 acres: 2,999,788 17,995 - 12,170 50,987 30,663 85,316 2,000 acres or more ...................................farms: 2,261 22 - 16 20 21 43 acres: 15,998,889 138,380 - 105,808 123,248 111,088 233,918 : LAND IN FARMS ACCORDING TO USE : : Total cropland ......................................farms, 2012: 57,731 228 3 236 1,606 280 711 2007: 61,215 316 4 236 1,574 298 743 acres, 2012: 9,591,783 20,347 563 16,022 227,279 6,059 285,689 2007: 9,464,647 30,549 490 15,593 222,713 12,097 298,996 Harvested cropland ................................farms, 2012: 53,372 194 3 217 1,510 235 654 2007: 53,000 237 4 189 1,460 193 661 acres, 2012: 8,007,461 9,901 (D) 8,521 203,573 4,165 263,675 2007: 7,633,173 10,759 490 7,457 200,943 2,872 276,588 : Other pasture and grazing land that could have been : used for crops without additional : improvements (see text) ..........................farms, 2012: 2,879 28 - 15 54 37 32 2007: 10,890 87 - 77 201 120 85 acres, 2012: 492,270 7,584 - 5,947 3,176 794 3,397 2007: 800,204 15,864 - 6,418 8,821 9,034 6,398 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 8. Farms, Land in Farms, Value of Land and Buildings, and Land Use: 2012 and 2007 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Contra Costa : Del Norte : El Dorado : Fresno : Glenn : Humboldt : Imperial ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- FARMS AND LAND IN FARMS : : Farms ..............................................number, 2012: 602 121 1,358 5,683 1,311 930 421 2007: 634 85 1,268 6,081 1,242 852 452 Land in farms .......................................acres, 2012: 127,670 (D) 128,365 1,721,202 668,784 593,597 515,783 2007: 146,993 18,168 107,080 1,636,224 489,186 597,477 427,349 Average size of farm ............................acres, 2012: 212 (D) 95 303 510 638 1,225 2007: 232 214 84 269 394 701 945 : Estimated market value of land and buildings ........farms, 2012: 602 121 1,358 5,683 1,311 930 421 2007: 634 85 1,268 6,081 1,242 852 452 $1,000, 2012: 1,075,682 179,244 1,056,228 14,261,398 3,071,619 1,534,054 3,611,281 2007: 970,838 123,550 1,088,011 12,970,248 2,359,392 1,468,721 2,260,463 Average per farm ..............................dollars, 2012: 1,786,848 1,481,355 777,782 2,509,484 2,342,959 1,649,521 8,577,864 2007: 1,531,291 1,453,524 858,053 2,132,914 1,899,672 1,723,851 5,001,024 Average per acre ..............................dollars, 2012: 8,425 8,716 8,228 8,286 4,593 2,584 7,002 2007: 6,605 6,800 10,161 7,927 4,823 2,458 5,290 2012 farms by value group: : $1 to $49,999 ..............................................: 41 2 50 271 74 63 18 $50,000 to $99,999 .........................................: 20 8 67 196 60 66 15 $100,000 to $199,999 .......................................: 34 3 127 449 107 70 48 $200,000 to $499,999 .......................................: 96 45 539 1,864 397 216 65 $500,000 to $999,999 .......................................: 214 21 363 1,068 250 235 34 : $1,000,000 to $1,999,999 ...................................: 77 24 134 648 125 133 30 $2,000,000 to $4,999,999 ...................................: 85 9 55 640 170 83 55 $5,000,000 to $9,999,999 ...................................: 10 7 16 269 79 37 50 $10,000,000 or more ........................................: 25 2 7 278 49 27 106 : Approximate land area ...............................acres, 2012: 458,940 644,085 1,093,055 3,813,676 840,926 2,283,509 2,673,027 Proportion in farms ...........................percent, 2012: 27.8 (D) 11.7 45.1 79.5 26.0 19.3 : 2012 size of farm: : 1 to 9 acres ..........................................farms: 285 33 435 969 225 253 53 acres: 1,053 115 1,998 4,245 984 1,015 217 10 to 49 acres ........................................farms: 156 39 630 2,425 447 249 72 acres: 3,520 746 12,888 60,454 10,881 5,728 1,884 50 to 69 acres ........................................farms: 20 4 80 380 92 41 6 acres: 1,210 262 4,610 21,809 5,344 2,291 378 70 to 99 acres ........................................farms: 14 9 61 336 78 60 24 acres: 1,150 700 5,042 27,420 6,431 4,973 1,900 : 100 to 139 acres ......................................farms: 36 5 51 299 59 32 14 acres: 4,087 520 6,094 34,043 6,785 3,571 1,688 140 to 179 acres ......................................farms: 10 10 12 189 44 32 19 acres: 1,482 1,541 1,912 29,381 6,963 5,114 2,961 180 to 219 acres ......................................farms: 2 7 15 85 21 28 15 acres: (D) 1,300 3,065 16,629 4,225 5,540 2,984 220 to 259 acres ......................................farms: 2 2 7 72 30 27 9 acres: (D) (D) 1,713 17,048 7,080 6,361 2,092 : 260 to 499 acres ......................................farms: 29 4 26 290 114 64 38 acres: 10,351 1,514 8,735 106,226 41,712 22,802 14,050 500 to 999 acres ......................................farms: 14 4 21 296 101 37 37 acres: 8,922 2,542 15,064 212,852 70,242 24,390 27,947 1,000 to 1,999 acres ..................................farms: 11 3 10 194 58 43 45 acres: 14,187 4,690 12,110 260,674 79,934 57,821 71,267 2,000 acres or more ...................................farms: 23 1 10 148 42 64 89 acres: 80,803 (D) 55,134 930,421 428,203 453,991 388,415 2007 size of farm: : 1 to 9 acres ..........................................farms: 263 28 393 964 211 191 54 acres: 1,064 144 1,827 4,193 965 746 198 10 to 49 acres ........................................farms: 205 17 610 2,766 402 255 73 acres: 4,731 373 12,425 69,144 10,029 6,133 1,851 50 to 69 acres ........................................farms: 25 7 76 351 74 40 15 acres: 1,469 454 4,348 20,302 4,291 2,338 834 70 to 99 acres ........................................farms: 11 4 50 355 62 46 27 acres: 957 339 4,069 28,983 5,043 3,855 2,163 : 100 to 139 acres ......................................farms: 22 4 36 253 50 48 20 acres: 2,490 498 4,206 28,965 5,644 5,455 2,396 140 to 179 acres ......................................farms: 18 8 24 189 46 29 15 acres: 2,751 1,213 3,710 29,612 7,205 4,573 2,306 180 to 219 acres ......................................farms: 8 2 9 104 37 20 22 acres: 1,500 (D) 1,805 20,460 7,406 4,027 4,225 220 to 259 acres ......................................farms: 11 2 19 88 25 20 10 acres: 2,654 (D) 4,477 20,893 5,996 4,692 2,326 : 260 to 499 acres ......................................farms: 14 6 31 355 145 62 38 acres: 5,015 2,261 11,022 127,911 51,774 22,326 14,216 500 to 999 acres ......................................farms: 26 3 5 311 91 37 54 acres: 17,055 2,156 3,425 230,175 64,250 24,259 38,918 1,000 to 1,999 acres ..................................farms: 11 2 4 198 60 48 58 acres: 15,177 (D) 4,646 266,780 83,156 66,104 82,169 2,000 acres or more ...................................farms: 20 2 11 147 39 56 66 acres: 92,130 (D) 51,120 788,806 243,427 452,969 275,747 : LAND IN FARMS ACCORDING TO USE : : Total cropland ......................................farms, 2012: 365 63 828 4,816 1,058 575 361 2007: 360 43 794 5,234 1,015 492 393 acres, 2012: 46,531 8,609 11,130 1,153,351 274,310 20,936 487,892 2007: 35,853 7,986 15,275 1,102,163 250,279 33,867 396,663 Harvested cropland ................................farms, 2012: 330 53 769 4,480 999 547 337 2007: 289 29 645 4,736 924 389 365 acres, 2012: 33,420 6,321 5,898 992,479 244,761 12,253 466,877 2007: 23,876 3,244 5,930 978,948 228,533 13,358 375,904 : Other pasture and grazing land that could have been : used for crops without additional : improvements (see text) ..........................farms, 2012: 20 5 74 110 27 57 11 2007: 84 25 222 654 166 183 30 acres, 2012: 2,993 (D) 2,521 31,720 11,628 6,511 (D) 2007: 9,048 4,543 6,871 30,804 9,131 17,478 4,546 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 8. Farms, Land in Farms, Value of Land and Buildings, and Land Use: 2012 and 2007 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Inyo : Kern : Kings : Lake : Lassen : Los Angeles : Madera ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- FARMS AND LAND IN FARMS : : Farms ..............................................number, 2012: 125 1,938 1,056 838 448 1,294 1,507 2007: 94 2,117 1,129 845 459 1,734 1,708 Land in farms .......................................acres, 2012: 330,840 2,330,233 673,634 150,721 482,680 91,689 653,584 2007: 292,552 2,361,765 680,662 124,199 459,126 108,463 679,729 Average size of farm ............................acres, 2012: 2,647 1,202 638 180 1,077 71 434 2007: 3,112 1,116 603 147 1,000 63 398 : Estimated market value of land and buildings ........farms, 2012: 125 1,938 1,056 838 448 1,294 1,507 2007: 94 2,117 1,129 845 459 1,734 1,708 $1,000, 2012: 257,872 10,334,478 4,062,689 917,777 930,019 1,142,385 4,976,164 2007: 278,151 10,925,379 3,720,124 1,140,453 634,890 1,521,391 4,610,431 Average per farm ..............................dollars, 2012: 2,062,977 5,332,548 3,847,243 1,095,200 2,075,936 882,832 3,302,033 2007: 2,959,058 5,160,784 3,295,061 1,349,648 1,383,204 877,388 2,699,315 Average per acre ..............................dollars, 2012: 779 4,435 6,031 6,089 1,927 12,459 7,614 2007: 951 4,626 5,465 9,182 1,383 14,027 6,783 2012 farms by value group: : $1 to $49,999 ..............................................: 13 70 57 21 17 170 36 $50,000 to $99,999 .........................................: 4 56 32 50 15 104 44 $100,000 to $199,999 .......................................: 25 212 99 89 55 173 120 $200,000 to $499,999 .......................................: 16 408 285 318 173 389 408 $500,000 to $999,999 .......................................: 28 306 132 205 74 286 299 : $1,000,000 to $1,999,999 ...................................: 11 205 131 71 47 87 204 $2,000,000 to $4,999,999 ...................................: 19 321 112 51 29 57 194 $5,000,000 to $9,999,999 ...................................: 4 127 109 19 23 8 102 $10,000,000 or more ........................................: 5 233 99 14 15 20 100 : Approximate land area ...............................acres, 2012: 6,515,800 5,204,448 889,229 804,141 2,906,358 2,597,181 1,367,729 Proportion in farms ...........................percent, 2012: 5.1 44.8 75.8 18.7 16.6 3.5 47.8 : 2012 size of farm: : 1 to 9 acres ..........................................farms: 43 375 240 220 59 886 165 acres: 85 1,224 986 958 263 2,341 696 10 to 49 acres ........................................farms: 20 411 301 356 123 264 510 acres: 519 10,106 6,775 8,124 3,083 4,912 14,213 50 to 69 acres ........................................farms: - 55 48 52 28 17 93 acres: - 3,185 2,814 2,906 1,670 1,012 5,328 70 to 99 acres ........................................farms: 4 97 63 53 21 27 177 acres: 353 8,072 5,028 4,253 1,645 2,163 14,473 : 100 to 139 acres ......................................farms: 3 93 44 28 18 20 83 acres: 368 10,725 5,082 3,256 2,127 (D) 9,808 140 to 179 acres ......................................farms: 9 128 40 26 21 19 67 acres: 1,476 20,163 6,243 4,038 3,274 2,985 10,435 180 to 219 acres ......................................farms: 4 56 37 20 17 2 55 acres: 788 11,183 7,290 3,839 3,371 (D) 10,955 220 to 259 acres ......................................farms: 3 41 15 8 10 11 39 acres: 720 9,761 3,608 1,938 2,345 2,572 9,235 : 260 to 499 acres ......................................farms: - 167 72 32 38 10 102 acres: - 60,346 27,050 10,904 14,704 3,819 36,016 500 to 999 acres ......................................farms: 11 186 83 22 40 15 98 acres: 8,071 133,295 60,390 16,395 29,545 10,312 66,539 1,000 to 1,999 acres ..................................farms: - 139 56 11 26 15 57 acres: - 195,948 76,022 15,192 34,756 22,171 76,668 2,000 acres or more ...................................farms: 28 190 57 10 47 8 61 acres: 318,460 1,866,225 472,346 78,918 385,897 36,756 399,218 2007 size of farm: : 1 to 9 acres ..........................................farms: 20 384 247 237 67 1,141 189 acres: (D) 1,270 1,007 1,043 328 3,271 811 10 to 49 acres ........................................farms: 21 527 355 324 98 365 603 acres: 645 12,579 8,252 7,895 2,621 7,525 15,700 50 to 69 acres ........................................farms: - 56 54 58 34 30 130 acres: - 3,225 3,082 3,415 2,000 1,720 7,536 70 to 99 acres ........................................farms: 4 133 54 49 46 39 170 acres: 348 10,699 4,381 3,949 3,743 3,149 13,710 : 100 to 139 acres ......................................farms: 1 86 45 48 20 28 77 acres: (D) 10,068 5,465 5,574 2,208 3,230 8,828 140 to 179 acres ......................................farms: 5 114 33 33 26 19 73 acres: 763 17,887 5,304 5,191 3,959 2,979 11,467 180 to 219 acres ......................................farms: 8 36 37 9 13 21 60 acres: 1,646 7,152 7,236 1,808 2,585 4,187 11,969 220 to 259 acres ......................................farms: 3 48 26 16 14 11 54 acres: 730 11,408 6,268 3,834 3,353 2,522 12,650 : 260 to 499 acres ......................................farms: 5 211 78 30 36 32 129 acres: 1,612 78,067 28,259 10,975 13,219 10,548 47,030 500 to 999 acres ......................................farms: 9 174 87 22 33 21 111 acres: (D) 122,332 61,049 14,650 21,690 (D) 75,174 1,000 to 1,999 acres ..................................farms: 1 156 60 10 27 15 55 acres: (D) 216,632 81,304 12,619 36,003 19,922 75,335 2,000 acres or more ...................................farms: 17 192 53 9 45 12 57 acres: 278,214 1,870,446 469,055 53,246 367,417 (D) 399,519 : LAND IN FARMS ACCORDING TO USE : : Total cropland ......................................farms, 2012: 44 1,263 841 712 252 814 1,145 2007: 43 1,449 928 707 275 940 1,288 acres, 2012: 18,670 899,395 501,500 29,106 70,870 59,556 304,248 2007: 8,261 942,827 512,870 28,997 82,567 49,158 290,683 Harvested cropland ................................farms, 2012: 37 1,115 767 641 199 718 1,066 2007: 25 1,169 805 638 197 632 1,123 acres, 2012: (D) 740,061 415,706 24,175 40,182 40,796 289,693 2007: (D) 764,929 419,964 18,800 46,908 25,829 264,767 : Other pasture and grazing land that could have been : used for crops without additional : improvements (see text) ..........................farms, 2012: 7 71 21 40 40 48 38 2007: 15 222 151 111 100 268 162 acres, 2012: (D) 31,537 (D) 1,216 14,445 4,698 5,356 2007: (D) 41,081 7,256 4,092 25,614 4,533 9,213 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 8. Farms, Land in Farms, Value of Land and Buildings, and Land Use: 2012 and 2007 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Marin : Mariposa : Mendocino : Merced : Modoc : Mono : Monterey ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- FARMS AND LAND IN FARMS : : Farms ..............................................number, 2012: 323 364 1,220 2,486 437 72 1,179 2007: 255 302 1,136 2,607 448 84 1,199 Land in farms .......................................acres, 2012: 170,876 283,611 770,257 978,667 523,522 56,386 1,268,144 2007: 133,275 212,524 608,674 1,041,115 597,740 44,610 1,327,972 Average size of farm ............................acres, 2012: 529 779 631 394 1,198 783 1,076 2007: 523 704 536 399 1,334 531 1,108 : Estimated market value of land and buildings ........farms, 2012: 323 364 1,220 2,486 437 72 1,179 2007: 255 302 1,136 2,607 448 84 1,199 $1,000, 2012: 1,064,419 596,586 3,090,747 7,571,804 900,917 158,819 6,205,157 2007: 673,654 350,351 3,233,377 7,506,920 872,190 137,739 6,167,962 Average per farm ..............................dollars, 2012: 3,295,414 1,638,972 2,533,399 3,045,778 2,061,595 2,205,825 5,263,068 2007: 2,641,781 1,160,104 2,846,283 2,879,524 1,946,852 1,639,748 5,144,255 Average per acre ..............................dollars, 2012: 6,229 2,104 4,013 7,737 1,721 2,817 4,893 2007: 5,055 1,649 5,312 7,210 1,459 3,088 4,645 2012 farms by value group: : $1 to $49,999 ..............................................: 16 8 52 124 11 3 34 $50,000 to $99,999 .........................................: 5 7 62 85 18 - 37 $100,000 to $199,999 .......................................: 11 55 48 189 57 7 108 $200,000 to $499,999 .......................................: 38 122 272 615 114 20 220 $500,000 to $999,999 .......................................: 52 57 346 525 94 13 240 : $1,000,000 to $1,999,999 ...................................: 78 46 178 323 58 11 166 $2,000,000 to $4,999,999 ...................................: 69 40 160 301 53 4 149 $5,000,000 to $9,999,999 ...................................: 40 17 46 168 16 12 84 $10,000,000 or more ........................................: 14 12 56 156 16 2 141 : Approximate land area ...............................acres, 2012: 333,108 927,245 2,244,068 1,238,376 2,505,857 1,951,323 2,099,585 Proportion in farms ...........................percent, 2012: 51.3 30.6 34.3 79.0 20.9 2.9 60.4 : 2012 size of farm: : 1 to 9 acres ..........................................farms: 61 39 251 374 35 7 234 acres: (D) 217 898 1,650 213 (D) 895 10 to 49 acres ........................................farms: 68 99 344 1,035 63 16 261 acres: 1,640 2,575 8,635 25,385 1,874 384 6,586 50 to 69 acres ........................................farms: 10 7 64 125 16 3 50 acres: 577 387 3,622 7,217 954 168 2,887 70 to 99 acres ........................................farms: 20 30 53 139 37 5 62 acres: 1,689 2,436 4,404 11,564 2,881 437 4,993 : 100 to 139 acres ......................................farms: 15 14 90 123 29 1 58 acres: 1,763 1,682 10,540 14,109 3,428 (D) 6,911 140 to 179 acres ......................................farms: 5 24 103 103 11 5 63 acres: 770 3,851 16,514 16,103 1,725 804 10,008 180 to 219 acres ......................................farms: 15 13 34 63 13 1 22 acres: 3,089 2,567 6,772 12,496 2,617 (D) 4,442 220 to 259 acres ......................................farms: 2 16 28 38 9 4 25 acres: (D) 3,752 6,782 9,017 2,168 964 5,973 : 260 to 499 acres ......................................farms: 17 36 79 168 59 10 93 acres: 6,400 13,159 27,817 60,958 20,783 3,201 33,297 500 to 999 acres ......................................farms: 46 26 66 140 57 5 98 acres: 31,433 16,208 44,561 98,085 38,388 3,398 71,864 1,000 to 1,999 acres ..................................farms: 46 28 30 75 46 9 89 acres: 63,279 37,206 37,910 106,416 59,160 13,305 128,938 2,000 acres or more ...................................farms: 18 32 78 103 62 6 124 acres: 59,581 199,571 601,802 615,667 389,331 33,390 991,350 2007 size of farm: : 1 to 9 acres ..........................................farms: 41 43 217 337 27 13 245 acres: (D) 224 891 1,611 131 47 967 10 to 49 acres ........................................farms: 70 93 352 1,114 69 15 294 acres: 1,575 2,336 8,687 27,430 1,790 356 7,169 50 to 69 acres ........................................farms: 7 6 75 171 18 5 57 acres: 370 350 4,340 9,866 1,011 (D) 3,338 70 to 99 acres ........................................farms: 13 14 37 150 35 6 66 acres: 1,069 1,154 3,090 12,253 2,694 546 5,518 : 100 to 139 acres ......................................farms: 10 11 67 134 24 6 43 acres: 1,216 1,356 7,758 15,711 2,823 655 5,098 140 to 179 acres ......................................farms: 3 24 59 103 18 9 55 acres: (D) 3,911 9,372 16,165 2,895 1,421 8,827 180 to 219 acres ......................................farms: 2 16 49 56 10 5 22 acres: (D) 3,172 9,665 11,023 1,947 957 4,508 220 to 259 acres ......................................farms: 4 4 27 54 16 4 29 acres: 982 945 6,426 12,902 3,825 989 6,933 : 260 to 499 acres ......................................farms: 24 26 101 160 69 1 89 acres: 8,185 10,274 35,085 57,748 24,303 (D) 32,085 500 to 999 acres ......................................farms: 32 22 71 139 59 8 84 acres: 21,925 13,784 47,861 97,073 41,546 4,848 60,548 1,000 to 1,999 acres ..................................farms: 33 19 27 94 44 8 84 acres: 47,011 25,593 37,180 130,717 59,842 10,096 119,841 2,000 acres or more ...................................farms: 16 24 54 95 59 4 131 acres: 49,937 149,425 438,319 648,616 454,933 23,956 1,073,140 : LAND IN FARMS ACCORDING TO USE : : Total cropland ......................................farms, 2012: 162 99 832 1,998 327 33 814 2007: 116 80 826 2,178 327 41 911 acres, 2012: 14,409 12,575 49,298 522,593 154,728 11,378 358,294 2007: 11,973 4,377 53,838 537,716 145,784 10,479 311,052 Harvested cropland ................................farms, 2012: 135 66 758 1,903 257 30 694 2007: 86 34 729 1,946 267 28 685 acres, 2012: 7,868 835 31,411 480,103 123,008 10,591 282,694 2007: 4,007 286 31,609 466,304 103,467 8,144 227,834 : Other pasture and grazing land that could have been : used for crops without additional : improvements (see text) ..........................farms, 2012: 26 24 83 64 49 3 72 2007: 38 44 182 319 102 17 223 acres, 2012: 5,536 10,962 14,366 13,309 18,249 (D) 22,428 2007: 6,786 3,713 15,750 (D) 26,531 (D) 43,473 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 8. Farms, Land in Farms, Value of Land and Buildings, and Land Use: 2012 and 2007 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Napa : Nevada : Orange : Placer : Plumas : Riverside : Sacramento ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- FARMS AND LAND IN FARMS : : Farms ..............................................number, 2012: 1,685 742 312 1,355 141 2,949 1,352 2007: 1,638 690 325 1,488 142 3,463 1,393 Land in farms .......................................acres, 2012: 253,370 42,114 60,497 91,403 174,210 344,044 246,840 2007: 223,246 70,167 87,435 132,221 120,253 354,753 328,593 Average size of farm ............................acres, 2012: 150 57 194 67 1,236 117 183 2007: 136 102 269 89 847 102 236 : Estimated market value of land and buildings ........farms, 2012: 1,685 742 312 1,355 141 2,949 1,352 2007: 1,638 690 325 1,488 142 3,463 1,393 $1,000, 2012: 5,523,649 456,271 1,322,112 974,692 309,427 3,513,485 1,761,164 2007: 6,054,884 514,399 1,057,529 1,347,133 220,222 5,592,639 2,208,429 Average per farm ..............................dollars, 2012: 3,278,130 614,921 4,237,538 719,330 2,194,519 1,191,416 1,302,636 2007: 3,696,510 745,506 3,253,936 905,331 1,550,857 1,614,969 1,585,376 Average per acre ..............................dollars, 2012: 21,801 10,834 21,854 10,664 1,776 10,212 7,135 2007: 27,122 7,331 12,095 10,188 1,831 15,765 6,721 2012 farms by value group: : $1 to $49,999 ..............................................: 67 24 39 62 6 183 150 $50,000 to $99,999 .........................................: 68 21 13 19 4 105 65 $100,000 to $199,999 .......................................: 162 66 35 75 6 276 86 $200,000 to $499,999 .......................................: 344 287 83 592 48 990 447 $500,000 to $999,999 .......................................: 249 230 73 406 26 835 309 : $1,000,000 to $1,999,999 ...................................: 263 81 36 117 15 278 129 $2,000,000 to $4,999,999 ...................................: 295 31 17 66 20 167 93 $5,000,000 to $9,999,999 ...................................: 119 2 7 12 11 52 41 $10,000,000 or more ........................................: 118 - 9 6 5 63 32 : Approximate land area ...............................acres, 2012: 478,953 612,975 505,994 900,373 1,633,932 4,612,118 617,560 Proportion in farms ...........................percent, 2012: 52.9 6.9 12.0 10.2 10.7 7.5 40.0 : 2012 size of farm: : 1 to 9 acres ..........................................farms: 670 255 210 540 17 1,581 561 acres: 2,388 1,253 552 2,334 (D) 5,974 2,020 10 to 49 acres ........................................farms: 542 331 56 574 36 955 417 acres: 12,799 6,325 1,134 11,299 945 18,831 8,384 50 to 69 acres ........................................farms: 107 41 9 39 5 57 52 acres: 6,193 2,301 560 2,195 320 3,282 3,086 70 to 99 acres ........................................farms: 71 25 3 53 3 60 50 acres: 5,882 2,054 266 4,453 253 4,897 4,239 : 100 to 139 acres ......................................farms: 56 24 8 37 - 57 31 acres: 6,371 2,884 898 4,318 - 6,466 3,406 140 to 179 acres ......................................farms: 42 5 1 22 15 44 39 acres: 6,758 807 (D) 3,458 2,235 6,931 6,028 180 to 219 acres ......................................farms: 23 12 1 15 1 28 19 acres: 4,513 2,415 (D) 2,958 (D) 5,515 3,707 220 to 259 acres ......................................farms: 26 11 3 9 7 6 16 acres: 6,103 (D) 722 2,160 1,732 1,415 3,822 : 260 to 499 acres ......................................farms: 58 23 6 33 9 59 64 acres: 20,586 7,830 2,159 12,449 3,703 20,719 22,708 500 to 999 acres ......................................farms: 40 11 9 21 10 47 42 acres: 29,012 8,059 6,229 13,953 6,091 34,241 29,475 1,000 to 1,999 acres ..................................farms: 28 3 2 7 15 15 31 acres: 37,397 3,045 (D) 9,002 19,945 23,133 42,127 2,000 acres or more ...................................farms: 22 1 4 5 23 40 30 acres: 115,368 (D) 45,340 22,824 138,736 212,640 117,838 2007 size of farm: : 1 to 9 acres ..........................................farms: 624 209 203 624 26 1,899 534 acres: 2,320 1,040 515 2,948 103 7,261 2,170 10 to 49 acres ........................................farms: 572 332 66 592 48 1,119 454 acres: 13,685 6,460 1,407 11,518 1,142 22,343 8,629 50 to 69 acres ........................................farms: 96 22 10 56 6 71 42 acres: 5,554 1,260 520 3,157 330 4,144 2,580 70 to 99 acres ........................................farms: 62 23 12 61 13 75 51 acres: 5,213 1,881 1,016 4,973 1,068 6,157 4,357 : 100 to 139 acres ......................................farms: 47 27 5 19 6 57 28 acres: 5,436 3,029 560 2,218 695 6,570 3,179 140 to 179 acres ......................................farms: 48 19 6 29 8 52 32 acres: 7,588 3,179 923 4,683 1,237 8,270 4,980 180 to 219 acres ......................................farms: 22 11 2 15 2 24 42 acres: 4,338 2,195 (D) 2,921 (D) 4,732 8,148 220 to 259 acres ......................................farms: 16 8 3 15 1 18 14 acres: 3,869 1,883 716 3,567 (D) 4,264 3,317 : 260 to 499 acres ......................................farms: 65 13 9 38 10 46 71 acres: 23,897 4,300 3,083 13,167 3,455 16,165 24,784 500 to 999 acres ......................................farms: 35 15 4 25 3 39 47 acres: 24,620 10,231 (D) 17,522 1,864 26,937 33,231 1,000 to 1,999 acres ..................................farms: 34 5 3 5 7 25 44 acres: 44,722 7,110 (D) 6,070 7,934 36,146 59,086 2,000 acres or more ...................................farms: 17 6 2 9 12 38 34 acres: 82,004 27,599 (D) 59,477 101,749 211,764 174,132 : LAND IN FARMS ACCORDING TO USE : : Total cropland ......................................farms, 2012: 1,561 354 226 600 68 2,127 750 2007: 1,546 314 229 726 57 2,517 810 acres, 2012: 63,049 3,349 15,183 33,607 25,970 227,246 105,721 2007: 66,184 7,301 14,623 50,334 18,487 219,943 133,628 Harvested cropland ................................farms, 2012: 1,521 312 217 508 62 1,962 660 2007: 1,503 218 200 487 33 2,096 583 acres, 2012: 52,180 1,555 10,058 19,535 11,767 156,469 92,090 2007: 51,860 2,621 7,846 21,990 7,692 163,783 113,315 : Other pasture and grazing land that could have been : used for crops without additional : improvements (see text) ..........................farms, 2012: 35 39 3 85 12 81 87 2007: 195 112 16 290 30 550 279 acres, 2012: 2,859 432 (D) 8,526 12,838 13,815 3,939 2007: 9,475 3,659 (D) 20,436 9,854 6,704 10,858 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 8. Farms, Land in Farms, Value of Land and Buildings, and Land Use: 2012 and 2007 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : San Benito :San Bernardino : San Diego : San Francisco : San Joaquin :San Luis Obispo: San Mateo :Santa Barbara ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- FARMS AND LAND IN FARMS : : Farms ..............................................number, 2012: 628 1,249 5,732 6 3,580 2,666 334 1,597 2007: 625 1,405 6,687 6 3,624 2,784 329 1,597 Land in farms .......................................acres, 2012: 604,319 77,199 221,538 12 787,015 1,338,874 48,160 701,039 2007: 579,851 514,234 303,889 7 737,503 1,369,604 57,089 727,050 Average size of farm ............................acres, 2012: 962 62 39 2 220 502 144 439 2007: 928 366 45 1 204 492 174 455 : Estimated market value of land and buildings ........farms, 2012: 628 1,249 5,732 6 3,580 2,666 334 1,597 2007: 625 1,405 6,687 6 3,624 2,784 329 1,597 $1,000, 2012: 1,718,906 1,038,684 3,979,804 1,513 7,940,940 5,639,683 544,167 5,163,199 2007: 1,615,881 1,628,434 5,849,002 3,200 7,498,570 6,225,932 533,227 5,147,982 Average per farm ..............................dollars, 2012: 2,737,112 831,613 694,313 252,222 2,218,140 2,115,410 1,629,243 3,233,061 2007: 2,585,410 1,159,028 874,683 533,333 2,069,142 2,236,326 1,620,751 3,223,533 Average per acre ..............................dollars, 2012: 2,844 13,455 17,964 126,111 10,090 4,212 11,299 7,365 2007: 2,787 3,167 19,247 457,143 10,168 4,546 9,340 7,081 2012 farms by value group: : $1 to $49,999 ..............................................: 20 61 233 3 138 123 33 94 $50,000 to $99,999 .........................................: 14 114 207 - 113 105 12 17 $100,000 to $199,999 .......................................: 50 244 466 - 214 130 24 113 $200,000 to $499,999 .......................................: 138 418 2,293 2 898 459 39 228 $500,000 to $999,999 .......................................: 176 197 1,818 1 931 736 79 359 : $1,000,000 to $1,999,999 ...................................: 67 115 437 - 532 508 78 264 $2,000,000 to $4,999,999 ...................................: 94 73 191 - 405 374 40 286 $5,000,000 to $9,999,999 ...................................: 31 13 61 - 195 131 20 125 $10,000,000 or more ........................................: 38 14 26 - 154 100 9 111 : Approximate land area ...............................acres, 2012: 888,774 12,836,549 2,692,228 30,011 890,470 2,111,068 287,016 1,750,458 Proportion in farms ...........................percent, 2012: 68.0 0.6 8.2 (Z) 88.4 63.4 16.8 40.0 : 2012 size of farm: : 1 to 9 acres ..........................................farms: 205 710 3,932 6 849 555 126 519 acres: 1,014 2,275 12,737 12 4,057 2,002 439 1,685 10 to 49 acres ........................................farms: 119 363 1,321 - 1,426 933 80 501 acres: 2,923 7,594 26,400 - 30,271 21,542 1,791 11,337 50 to 69 acres ........................................farms: 29 22 118 - 196 182 22 77 acres: 1,582 1,280 6,898 - 11,102 10,303 1,235 4,291 70 to 99 acres ........................................farms: 25 41 71 - 185 171 9 59 acres: 2,115 3,303 5,879 - 14,875 13,965 705 4,715 : 100 to 139 acres ......................................farms: 30 27 87 - 165 147 16 84 acres: 3,594 3,040 10,069 - 19,134 16,504 (D) 9,578 140 to 179 acres ......................................farms: 23 27 41 - 118 115 21 22 acres: 3,626 4,404 6,336 - 18,396 18,148 3,347 3,580 180 to 219 acres ......................................farms: 5 9 32 - 90 54 10 33 acres: 998 1,785 6,317 - 17,954 10,521 2,086 6,522 220 to 259 acres ......................................farms: 11 9 22 - 64 43 3 27 acres: 2,692 2,125 5,310 - 15,163 10,100 720 6,364 : 260 to 499 acres ......................................farms: 35 15 55 - 190 142 26 94 acres: 12,353 5,180 19,831 - 67,147 51,565 10,052 32,527 500 to 999 acres ......................................farms: 62 9 25 - 151 136 11 50 acres: 39,950 5,685 15,843 - 102,909 92,572 7,302 36,122 1,000 to 1,999 acres ..................................farms: 32 8 16 - 80 86 6 72 acres: 41,657 10,639 21,085 - 108,768 120,183 7,250 93,841 2,000 acres or more ...................................farms: 52 9 12 - 66 102 4 59 acres: 491,815 29,889 84,833 - 377,239 971,469 (D) 490,477 2007 size of farm: : 1 to 9 acres ..........................................farms: 246 772 4,562 6 875 509 111 510 acres: 1,257 2,617 14,964 7 4,203 2,189 386 1,787 10 to 49 acres ........................................farms: 110 389 1,527 - 1,449 1,069 101 527 acres: 2,636 8,460 30,247 - 32,495 24,998 2,370 11,957 50 to 69 acres ........................................farms: 21 43 130 - 198 163 7 64 acres: 1,198 2,438 7,462 - 11,352 9,424 367 3,709 70 to 99 acres ........................................farms: 20 56 94 - 198 156 17 61 acres: 1,636 4,519 7,645 - 16,255 12,816 1,361 4,923 : 100 to 139 acres ......................................farms: 19 39 87 - 172 157 27 90 acres: 2,142 4,375 9,982 - 19,716 17,933 3,127 10,161 140 to 179 acres ......................................farms: 11 15 60 - 123 91 15 32 acres: 1,755 2,355 9,529 - 19,477 14,467 2,418 5,069 180 to 219 acres ......................................farms: 20 9 35 - 76 83 8 35 acres: 3,965 1,790 6,919 - 14,900 16,425 1,599 7,043 220 to 259 acres ......................................farms: 14 14 28 - 51 55 9 33 acres: 3,413 3,391 6,708 - 12,081 13,056 2,226 7,699 : 260 to 499 acres ......................................farms: 31 35 78 - 170 154 9 68 acres: 10,716 (D) 29,273 - 60,764 54,390 3,217 23,765 500 to 999 acres ......................................farms: 44 15 40 - 156 133 11 58 acres: 28,123 (D) 26,337 - 105,889 94,733 6,256 42,602 1,000 to 1,999 acres ..................................farms: 38 7 24 - 95 108 7 56 acres: 49,991 9,358 30,286 - 130,108 150,132 8,059 75,328 2,000 acres or more ...................................farms: 51 11 22 - 61 106 7 63 acres: 473,019 (D) 124,537 - 310,263 959,041 25,703 533,007 : LAND IN FARMS ACCORDING TO USE : : Total cropland ......................................farms, 2012: 407 773 5,100 3 3,025 1,955 228 1,281 2007: 419 894 5,873 6 3,083 2,061 208 1,265 acres, 2012: 38,532 29,827 68,219 9 517,918 255,378 8,477 132,323 2007: 55,213 35,898 102,502 7 492,032 299,572 10,377 124,965 Harvested cropland ................................farms, 2012: 355 691 4,933 3 2,875 1,664 202 1,165 2007: 324 709 5,522 6 2,843 1,557 161 1,132 acres, 2012: 24,016 22,699 51,097 (D) 484,804 113,141 4,033 98,772 2007: 32,571 27,516 67,279 (D) 444,670 105,492 4,909 93,280 : Other pasture and grazing land that could have been : used for crops without additional : improvements (see text) ..........................farms, 2012: 37 39 115 - 80 178 31 79 2007: 117 204 624 1 426 525 53 195 acres, 2012: 5,489 3,689 5,913 - 10,217 29,800 1,816 17,305 2007: 17,791 (D) 16,760 (D) 26,293 70,494 3,625 15,313 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 8. Farms, Land in Farms, Value of Land and Buildings, and Land Use: 2012 and 2007 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Santa Clara : Santa Cruz : Shasta : Sierra : Siskiyou : Solano : Sonoma : Stanislaus ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- FARMS AND LAND IN FARMS : : Farms ..............................................number, 2012: 1,003 667 1,544 48 929 860 3,579 4,143 2007: 1,068 682 1,473 50 846 890 3,429 4,114 Land in farms .......................................acres, 2012: 229,927 99,983 376,306 39,141 722,855 407,101 589,771 768,046 2007: 299,866 47,489 390,812 28,782 597,534 358,225 530,895 788,954 Average size of farm ............................acres, 2012: 229 150 244 815 778 473 165 185 2007: 281 70 265 576 706 403 155 192 : Estimated market value of land and buildings ........farms, 2012: 1,003 667 1,544 48 929 860 3,579 4,143 2007: 1,068 682 1,473 50 846 890 3,429 4,114 $1,000, 2012: 1,543,483 1,238,779 1,053,881 58,864 1,474,055 2,262,669 8,622,376 7,400,595 2007: 1,714,877 1,064,849 1,234,170 75,106 1,494,340 1,767,374 8,434,396 7,476,390 Average per farm ..............................dollars, 2012: 1,538,866 1,857,240 682,566 1,226,339 1,586,711 2,631,011 2,409,158 1,786,289 2007: 1,605,690 1,561,362 837,861 1,502,130 1,766,360 1,985,813 2,459,725 1,817,304 Average per acre ..............................dollars, 2012: 6,713 12,390 2,801 1,504 2,039 5,558 14,620 9,636 2007: 5,719 22,423 3,158 2,609 2,501 4,934 15,887 9,476 2012 farms by value group: : $1 to $49,999 ..............................................: 81 46 97 2 45 42 151 146 $50,000 to $99,999 .........................................: 57 25 83 1 40 23 100 88 $100,000 to $199,999 .......................................: 78 62 306 6 121 38 168 288 $200,000 to $499,999 .......................................: 177 100 608 13 328 201 541 1,302 $500,000 to $999,999 .......................................: 278 197 248 10 172 238 1,040 1,017 : $1,000,000 to $1,999,999 ...................................: 176 125 108 9 73 143 663 510 $2,000,000 to $4,999,999 ...................................: 104 75 67 4 100 86 590 447 $5,000,000 to $9,999,999 ...................................: 27 18 22 2 21 44 167 230 $10,000,000 or more ........................................: 25 19 5 1 29 45 159 115 : Approximate land area ...............................acres, 2012: 825,648 284,921 2,416,241 610,034 4,017,848 525,930 1,008,536 956,493 Proportion in farms ...........................percent, 2012: 27.8 35.1 15.6 6.4 18.0 77.4 58.5 80.3 : 2012 size of farm: : 1 to 9 acres ..........................................farms: 483 273 597 1 93 207 1,453 1,124 acres: 1,762 1,089 2,660 (D) 402 898 5,694 5,061 10 to 49 acres ........................................farms: 283 219 528 6 237 334 1,099 1,725 acres: 5,530 4,586 10,739 240 6,057 7,876 24,319 37,342 50 to 69 acres ........................................farms: 46 52 64 5 38 32 183 227 acres: 2,599 3,024 3,746 254 2,164 1,767 10,597 13,109 70 to 99 acres ........................................farms: 25 27 44 7 68 51 142 162 acres: 2,071 2,221 3,609 582 5,390 4,131 11,660 13,180 : 100 to 139 acres ......................................farms: 21 14 51 2 74 24 121 174 acres: 2,329 1,641 5,877 (D) 8,355 2,627 13,891 20,190 140 to 179 acres ......................................farms: 35 10 43 3 58 29 100 121 acres: 5,345 1,505 6,921 (D) 9,230 4,614 15,668 19,253 180 to 219 acres ......................................farms: 10 8 34 1 34 19 59 84 acres: 1,929 1,600 6,536 (D) 6,949 3,802 11,727 16,591 220 to 259 acres ......................................farms: 8 9 30 7 20 12 59 84 acres: 1,824 2,169 7,170 1,692 4,707 2,793 14,113 19,808 : 260 to 499 acres ......................................farms: 36 24 59 3 98 51 148 198 acres: 12,880 8,812 22,879 1,084 35,798 18,595 52,781 68,365 500 to 999 acres ......................................farms: 21 7 42 5 81 32 78 113 acres: 13,522 4,961 29,445 3,138 57,624 23,062 54,875 77,349 1,000 to 1,999 acres ..................................farms: 14 7 21 4 47 28 77 64 acres: 18,052 9,259 29,222 5,590 63,963 41,279 104,177 81,210 2,000 acres or more ...................................farms: 21 17 31 4 81 41 60 67 acres: 162,084 59,116 247,502 25,605 522,216 295,657 270,269 396,588 2007 size of farm: : 1 to 9 acres ..........................................farms: 455 287 495 - 80 232 1,315 1,118 acres: 1,640 1,172 2,283 - 389 1,011 5,458 5,300 10 to 49 acres ........................................farms: 348 243 528 4 229 320 1,167 1,738 acres: 6,601 4,944 11,480 (D) 5,702 7,634 26,225 37,744 50 to 69 acres ........................................farms: 41 40 68 5 50 35 182 218 acres: 2,331 2,314 3,883 (D) 2,949 2,070 10,594 12,441 70 to 99 acres ........................................farms: 30 33 55 8 51 53 134 183 acres: 2,472 2,606 4,505 682 4,224 4,332 11,005 14,804 : 100 to 139 acres ......................................farms: 39 10 58 7 61 23 116 152 acres: 4,551 1,153 6,747 861 7,072 2,598 13,487 17,591 140 to 179 acres ......................................farms: 15 11 49 3 66 34 86 117 acres: 2,409 1,835 7,792 491 10,427 5,272 13,186 18,665 180 to 219 acres ......................................farms: 28 17 31 2 31 19 62 82 acres: 5,470 3,379 6,082 (D) 6,178 3,773 12,167 16,008 220 to 259 acres ......................................farms: 17 10 18 5 19 12 55 55 acres: 4,090 2,427 4,224 1,239 4,518 2,826 12,943 13,045 : 260 to 499 acres ......................................farms: 30 16 46 8 80 54 129 200 acres: 10,711 5,544 16,624 2,709 30,306 19,239 47,797 70,693 500 to 999 acres ......................................farms: 20 4 48 - 79 41 74 118 acres: 13,627 3,087 33,300 - 57,072 28,795 49,739 82,701 1,000 to 1,999 acres ..................................farms: 21 8 35 4 42 26 66 59 acres: 27,271 10,143 48,730 6,022 57,240 37,025 86,497 76,272 2,000 acres or more ...................................farms: 24 3 42 4 58 41 43 74 acres: 218,693 8,885 245,162 16,079 411,457 243,650 241,797 423,690 : LAND IN FARMS ACCORDING TO USE : : Total cropland ......................................farms, 2012: 761 544 755 28 556 571 2,645 3,022 2007: 772 563 749 29 526 638 2,691 3,164 acres, 2012: 38,350 41,094 36,855 4,019 194,828 169,637 130,632 340,890 2007: 33,302 23,588 40,180 6,236 164,392 154,937 134,418 351,195 Harvested cropland ................................farms, 2012: 691 522 626 21 435 499 2,507 2,921 2007: 647 522 510 21 381 506 2,386 2,833 acres, 2012: 23,128 29,900 24,254 (D) 128,647 133,171 91,307 319,190 2007: 23,381 20,698 21,942 2,412 102,647 120,410 91,197 307,992 : Other pasture and grazing land that could have been : used for crops without additional : improvements (see text) ..........................farms, 2012: 61 31 118 4 68 49 173 72 2007: 179 71 294 10 186 163 526 525 acres, 2012: 12,546 8,256 8,074 (D) 24,639 9,402 24,679 11,651 2007: 7,551 823 14,382 (D) 28,349 15,772 32,946 31,568 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 8. Farms, Land in Farms, Value of Land and Buildings, and Land Use: 2012 and 2007 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Sutter : Tehama : Trinity : Tulare : Tuolumne : Ventura : Yolo : Yuba ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- FARMS AND LAND IN FARMS : : Farms ..............................................number, 2012: 1,358 1,743 247 4,931 391 2,150 1,011 795 2007: 1,263 1,752 181 5,240 366 2,437 983 828 Land in farms .......................................acres, 2012: 375,174 616,521 175,948 1,239,000 87,813 281,046 460,824 187,638 2007: 359,802 532,206 124,943 1,168,684 117,085 259,055 479,858 160,898 Average size of farm ............................acres, 2012: 276 354 712 251 225 131 456 236 2007: 285 304 690 223 320 106 488 194 : Estimated market value of land and buildings ........farms, 2012: 1,358 1,743 247 4,931 391 2,150 1,011 795 2007: 1,263 1,752 181 5,240 366 2,437 983 828 $1,000, 2012: 2,483,124 1,835,725 200,532 9,335,720 406,630 4,390,278 2,599,740 1,086,796 2007: 2,360,114 1,694,542 155,403 9,659,952 397,798 5,901,684 2,619,981 954,256 Average per farm ..............................dollars, 2012: 1,828,515 1,053,199 811,869 1,893,271 1,039,975 2,041,990 2,571,454 1,367,039 2007: 1,868,657 967,204 858,580 1,843,502 1,086,881 2,421,700 2,665,291 1,152,483 Average per acre ..............................dollars, 2012: 6,619 2,978 1,140 7,535 4,631 15,621 5,642 5,792 2007: 6,559 3,184 1,244 8,266 3,398 22,782 5,460 5,931 2012 farms by value group: : $1 to $49,999 ..............................................: 61 78 35 213 11 87 52 51 $50,000 to $99,999 .........................................: 40 95 18 300 6 46 37 51 $100,000 to $199,999 .......................................: 136 293 40 567 33 95 52 119 $200,000 to $499,999 .......................................: 370 657 88 1,649 155 406 209 266 $500,000 to $999,999 .......................................: 293 287 35 852 88 606 260 105 : $1,000,000 to $1,999,999 ...................................: 157 177 16 479 65 424 154 74 $2,000,000 to $4,999,999 ...................................: 177 93 7 460 23 318 136 72 $5,000,000 to $9,999,999 ...................................: 79 25 5 226 7 98 53 35 $10,000,000 or more ........................................: 45 38 3 185 3 70 58 22 : Approximate land area ...............................acres, 2012: 385,542 1,887,815 2,034,745 3,087,528 1,421,381 1,179,528 649,440 404,493 Proportion in farms ...........................percent, 2012: 97.3 32.7 8.6 40.1 6.2 23.8 71.0 46.4 : 2012 size of farm: : 1 to 9 acres ..........................................farms: 242 350 47 1,285 69 943 165 248 acres: 1,125 1,710 193 5,886 313 3,361 708 1,226 10 to 49 acres ........................................farms: 462 723 90 1,735 140 733 315 240 acres: 10,953 15,481 2,329 40,642 4,052 17,380 7,702 5,143 50 to 69 acres ........................................farms: 80 92 17 258 24 84 66 39 acres: 4,760 5,130 1,007 14,896 1,282 4,810 3,750 2,199 70 to 99 acres ........................................farms: 75 83 10 316 29 68 50 31 acres: 6,161 6,827 839 25,656 2,377 5,777 3,994 2,465 : 100 to 139 acres ......................................farms: 81 77 21 274 24 52 54 27 acres: 9,375 8,778 2,467 31,241 2,629 5,978 6,072 3,194 140 to 179 acres ......................................farms: 61 56 21 189 27 42 61 28 acres: 9,395 8,650 3,543 29,966 4,262 6,639 9,532 4,496 180 to 219 acres ......................................farms: 36 39 - 97 11 31 21 15 acres: 7,173 7,797 - 19,141 2,131 6,070 4,109 3,100 220 to 259 acres ......................................farms: 19 34 16 80 5 23 24 25 acres: 4,520 8,095 3,713 19,100 1,220 5,487 5,567 5,865 : 260 to 499 acres ......................................farms: 111 103 5 282 24 62 106 59 acres: 38,548 36,961 1,996 102,300 9,643 22,413 36,342 20,641 500 to 999 acres ......................................farms: 110 85 4 200 18 54 58 48 acres: 74,803 60,886 2,520 136,218 12,176 36,814 39,999 32,740 1,000 to 1,999 acres ..................................farms: 49 37 4 98 13 22 31 16 acres: 70,305 51,982 4,424 134,243 19,049 29,798 43,499 21,964 2,000 acres or more ...................................farms: 32 64 12 117 7 36 60 19 acres: 138,056 404,224 152,917 679,711 28,679 136,519 299,550 84,605 2007 size of farm: : 1 to 9 acres ..........................................farms: 193 291 28 1,242 86 1,028 146 204 acres: 941 1,379 107 5,851 396 3,694 698 1,015 10 to 49 acres ........................................farms: 450 811 63 2,128 99 867 311 317 acres: 10,543 17,244 1,651 50,133 2,785 19,877 7,145 6,910 50 to 69 acres ........................................farms: 78 126 4 266 26 108 55 45 acres: 4,516 7,103 202 15,378 1,406 6,237 3,138 2,596 70 to 99 acres ........................................farms: 68 80 11 299 29 80 57 36 acres: 5,632 6,388 896 24,466 2,348 6,737 4,647 3,049 : 100 to 139 acres ......................................farms: 58 75 14 247 22 71 49 31 acres: 6,794 8,412 1,618 28,296 2,610 8,393 5,605 3,603 140 to 179 acres ......................................farms: 56 50 16 169 17 67 43 27 acres: 8,769 7,961 2,604 26,647 2,696 10,643 6,820 4,268 180 to 219 acres ......................................farms: 42 59 8 96 7 23 36 25 acres: 8,336 11,709 1,590 18,942 1,386 4,540 7,017 4,948 220 to 259 acres ......................................farms: 36 18 5 99 5 22 27 18 acres: 8,664 4,350 1,141 23,488 1,237 5,154 6,503 4,179 : 260 to 499 acres ......................................farms: 111 82 7 277 18 70 84 55 acres: 39,474 29,462 2,639 98,810 6,413 24,136 30,018 (D) 500 to 999 acres ......................................farms: 89 63 11 217 25 47 69 37 acres: 63,788 43,745 7,970 150,468 16,138 34,428 47,210 25,190 1,000 to 1,999 acres ..................................farms: 53 47 6 102 12 33 47 16 acres: 74,107 69,326 6,520 140,159 17,169 46,601 66,297 21,536 2,000 acres or more ...................................farms: 29 50 8 98 20 21 59 17 acres: 128,238 325,127 98,005 586,046 62,501 88,615 294,760 (D) : LAND IN FARMS ACCORDING TO USE : : Total cropland ......................................farms, 2012: 1,201 1,004 127 4,216 123 1,941 849 464 2007: 1,165 1,116 103 4,469 121 2,175 832 483 acres, 2012: 275,849 89,348 2,084 677,506 2,785 101,084 306,915 89,761 2007: 274,439 94,214 2,985 638,789 5,622 113,862 311,307 71,009 Harvested cropland ................................farms, 2012: 1,165 877 113 4,013 99 1,880 731 428 2007: 1,055 826 81 4,158 78 2,078 682 377 acres, 2012: 262,556 72,847 862 609,270 921 89,321 263,697 68,297 2007: 241,597 60,556 1,040 560,320 714 96,889 258,261 62,510 : Other pasture and grazing land that could have been : used for crops without additional : improvements (see text) ..........................farms, 2012: 34 89 8 76 12 49 48 30 2007: 152 329 32 390 56 208 142 122 acres, 2012: 737 10,315 165 12,678 1,124 4,936 (D) 1,059 2007: (D) 22,403 1,549 27,464 4,785 5,301 17,137 3,679 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 8. Farms, Land in Farms, Value of Land and Buildings, and Land Use: 2012 and 2007 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : California : Alameda : Alpine : Amador : Butte : Calaveras : Colusa ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- LAND IN FARMS ACCORDING TO USE - Con. : : Total cropland - Con. : : Other cropland ....................................farms, 2012: 9,329 31 1 32 250 42 113 2007: 9,372 50 - 26 168 23 121 acres, 2012: 1,092,052 2,862 (D) 1,554 20,530 1,100 18,617 2007: 1,031,270 3,926 - 1,718 12,949 191 16,010 : Cropland idle or used for cover crops or : soil improvement, but not harvested and : not pastured or grazed .........................farms, 2012: 6,204 24 1 17 141 38 79 2007: 6,118 40 - 23 110 15 79 acres, 2012: 674,022 1,174 (D) 1,200 9,671 1,031 16,462 2007: 667,291 3,588 - (D) 7,929 145 12,430 Cropland on which all crops failed ..............farms, 2012: 2,425 9 - 11 55 10 17 2007: 2,631 6 - 2 40 5 16 acres, 2012: 207,072 1,688 - 350 2,160 (D) 282 2007: 173,651 133 - (D) 1,692 29 1,528 : Cropland in cultivated summer fallow ............farms, 2012: 1,477 - - 4 61 1 22 2007: 1,435 6 - 2 31 5 28 acres, 2012: 210,958 - - 4 8,699 (D) 1,873 2007: 190,328 205 - (D) 3,328 17 2,052 : Total woodland ......................................farms, 2012: 7,345 33 - 125 179 179 22 2007: 6,913 41 1 128 166 150 27 acres, 2012: 1,575,520 3,016 - 22,393 9,457 34,289 14,752 2007: 1,270,720 1,665 (D) 16,451 10,567 24,741 12,471 : Woodland pastured .................................farms, 2012: 3,519 20 - 67 111 135 12 2007: 3,520 24 1 86 99 109 15 acres, 2012: 855,116 2,625 - 15,445 6,304 30,052 13,019 2007: 782,561 712 (D) 13,598 6,325 20,094 11,481 Woodland not pastured .............................farms, 2012: 4,610 17 - 69 89 56 10 2007: 4,083 17 - 60 92 57 12 acres, 2012: 720,404 391 - 6,948 3,153 4,237 1,733 2007: 488,159 953 - 2,853 4,242 4,647 990 : Permanent pasture and rangeland, other than : cropland and woodland pastured (see text) ..........farms, 2012: 21,886 212 3 268 465 339 132 2007: 21,348 244 7 241 526 325 124 acres, 2012: 13,036,448 147,400 (D) 110,412 116,402 167,664 137,345 2007: 13,275,042 167,666 (D) 122,836 117,831 159,254 150,394 : Land in farmsteads, homes, buildings, livestock : facilities, ponds, roads, wasteland, etc. ..........farms, 2012: 41,259 260 3 321 1,041 367 303 2007: 34,169 227 3 258 740 281 237 acres, 2012: 1,365,250 7,035 5 6,360 27,881 4,128 15,275 2007: 1,354,286 4,753 (D) 8,602 22,675 4,934 12,231 Pastureland, all types ..............................farms, 2012: 25,082 235 3 304 557 436 158 2007: 31,560 329 7 332 738 478 194 acres, 2012: 14,383,834 157,609 (D) 131,804 125,882 198,510 153,761 2007: 14,857,807 184,242 (D) 142,852 132,977 188,382 168,273 : CONSERVATION AND CROP INSURANCE : : Land enrolled in Conservation Reserve, Wetlands : Reserve, Farmable Wetlands, or Conservation : Reserve Enhancement Programs .......................farms, 2012: 470 6 - 1 5 1 27 2007: 668 6 - - 14 - 35 acres, 2012: 105,504 166 - (D) 480 (D) 2,878 2007: 254,013 2,496 - - 4,380 - 4,456 : Land enrolled in crop insurance programs ............farms, 2012: 13,813 24 - 24 446 21 388 2007: 14,236 39 - 18 566 10 353 acres, 2012: 4,929,132 13,345 - 1,027 156,847 1,001 220,714 2007: 4,018,816 9,734 - 985 143,804 543 197,958 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 8. Farms, Land in Farms, Value of Land and Buildings, and Land Use: 2012 and 2007 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Contra Costa : Del Norte : El Dorado : Fresno : Glenn : Humboldt : Imperial ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- LAND IN FARMS ACCORDING TO USE - Con. : : Total cropland - Con. : : Other cropland ....................................farms, 2012: 44 16 151 825 141 87 70 2007: 65 3 134 899 124 75 71 acres, 2012: 10,118 (D) 2,711 129,152 17,921 2,172 (D) 2007: 2,929 199 2,474 92,411 12,615 3,031 16,213 : Cropland idle or used for cover crops or : soil improvement, but not harvested and : not pastured or grazed .........................farms, 2012: 28 15 98 489 119 69 54 2007: 52 2 95 573 84 65 48 acres, 2012: 4,745 (D) 1,561 65,810 12,300 1,992 15,231 2007: 2,530 (D) 1,843 50,713 8,347 2,867 13,878 Cropland on which all crops failed ..............farms, 2012: 9 - 43 264 9 25 2 2007: 16 1 37 224 19 4 10 acres, 2012: 2,153 - 462 39,920 859 78 (D) 2007: 347 (D) 484 23,621 475 7 244 : Cropland in cultivated summer fallow ............farms, 2012: 9 1 25 134 16 18 21 2007: 4 3 9 159 31 9 15 acres, 2012: 3,220 (D) 688 23,422 4,762 102 (D) 2007: 52 (D) 147 18,077 3,793 157 2,091 : Total woodland ......................................farms, 2012: 43 44 433 131 36 304 5 2007: 32 32 460 148 29 306 2 acres, 2012: 4,384 2,229 30,991 12,411 12,337 181,278 39 2007: 2,250 2,724 25,662 12,005 4,609 191,647 (D) : Woodland pastured .................................farms, 2012: 36 24 198 78 17 136 1 2007: 21 17 255 83 10 145 - acres, 2012: 3,937 (D) 16,892 11,689 10,356 95,079 (D) 2007: 1,958 1,231 16,667 9,431 2,808 99,232 - Woodland not pastured .............................farms, 2012: 9 28 287 58 24 207 4 2007: 16 19 259 73 19 196 2 acres, 2012: 447 (D) 14,099 722 1,981 86,199 (D) 2007: 292 1,493 8,995 2,574 1,801 92,415 (D) : Permanent pasture and rangeland, other than : cropland and woodland pastured (see text) ..........farms, 2012: 204 80 572 899 407 546 39 2007: 245 50 483 913 351 481 30 acres, 2012: 70,693 7,914 69,425 486,638 358,007 373,008 7,703 2007: 101,811 6,595 59,388 467,551 216,037 347,988 4,083 : Land in farmsteads, homes, buildings, livestock : facilities, ponds, roads, wasteland, etc. ..........farms, 2012: 312 84 1,000 2,464 655 493 186 2007: 256 41 726 1,891 499 341 178 acres, 2012: 6,062 (D) 16,819 68,802 24,130 18,375 20,149 2007: 7,079 863 6,755 54,505 18,261 23,975 (D) Pastureland, all types ..............................farms, 2012: 232 84 714 1,038 431 620 45 2007: 328 67 753 1,540 481 631 57 acres, 2012: 77,623 9,633 88,838 530,047 379,991 474,598 (D) 2007: 112,817 12,369 82,926 507,786 227,976 464,698 8,629 : CONSERVATION AND CROP INSURANCE : : Land enrolled in Conservation Reserve, Wetlands : Reserve, Farmable Wetlands, or Conservation : Reserve Enhancement Programs .......................farms, 2012: 7 1 - - 9 6 - 2007: 1 - 3 11 7 6 6 acres, 2012: 1,094 (D) - - 1,195 73 - 2007: (D) - 120 411 4,274 1,020 4,576 : Land enrolled in crop insurance programs ............farms, 2012: 43 5 56 2,056 397 65 57 2007: 33 - 44 2,115 388 16 51 acres, 2012: 18,260 935 10,402 596,217 136,153 136,201 49,960 2007: 11,481 - 1,002 668,359 132,202 1,465 41,340 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 8. Farms, Land in Farms, Value of Land and Buildings, and Land Use: 2012 and 2007 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Inyo : Kern : Kings : Lake : Lassen : Los Angeles : Madera ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- LAND IN FARMS ACCORDING TO USE - Con. : : Total cropland - Con. : : Other cropland ....................................farms, 2012: 12 286 167 144 92 141 156 2007: 11 334 169 155 98 168 194 acres, 2012: (D) 127,797 (D) 3,715 16,243 14,062 9,199 2007: (D) 136,817 85,650 6,105 10,045 18,796 16,703 : Cropland idle or used for cover crops or : soil improvement, but not harvested and : not pastured or grazed .........................farms, 2012: 11 212 93 110 38 111 126 2007: 9 230 96 111 38 110 118 acres, 2012: (D) 81,068 63,484 2,552 8,704 7,384 6,286 2007: (D) 95,845 58,418 4,272 3,981 12,031 10,596 Cropland on which all crops failed ..............farms, 2012: - 65 46 29 51 39 20 2007: 4 79 56 49 59 44 45 acres, 2012: - 25,473 13,777 332 5,706 2,001 1,579 2007: (D) 17,438 14,260 (D) 4,380 2,128 2,795 : Cropland in cultivated summer fallow ............farms, 2012: 1 49 46 17 20 14 12 2007: - 59 38 9 20 28 34 acres, 2012: (D) 21,256 (D) 831 1,833 4,677 1,334 2007: - 23,534 12,972 (D) 1,684 4,637 3,312 : Total woodland ......................................farms, 2012: 12 75 4 181 69 50 73 2007: 12 76 19 164 82 76 82 acres, 2012: (D) 21,668 (D) 33,732 23,400 2,336 18,719 2007: 24,212 19,338 192 35,764 28,734 3,359 20,407 : Woodland pastured .................................farms, 2012: 2 56 1 82 37 27 50 2007: 6 52 12 58 53 43 59 acres, 2012: (D) 10,714 (D) 15,961 10,945 812 16,716 2007: (D) 16,412 58 20,904 18,353 1,608 19,317 Woodland not pastured .............................farms, 2012: 10 27 3 118 46 27 28 2007: 6 25 7 119 40 40 24 acres, 2012: 799 10,954 4 17,771 12,455 1,524 2,003 2007: (D) 2,926 134 14,860 10,381 1,751 1,090 : Permanent pasture and rangeland, other than : cropland and woodland pastured (see text) ..........farms, 2012: 62 596 255 217 263 161 366 2007: 59 600 243 186 262 411 391 acres, 2012: 294,516 1,342,619 123,421 75,549 374,268 16,247 305,359 2007: 255,192 1,304,006 143,831 44,044 317,871 45,134 348,231 : Land in farmsteads, homes, buildings, livestock : facilities, ponds, roads, wasteland, etc. ..........farms, 2012: 76 929 598 498 291 676 650 2007: 44 854 482 401 282 782 622 acres, 2012: (D) 66,551 (D) 12,334 14,142 13,550 25,258 2007: 4,887 95,594 23,769 15,394 29,954 10,812 20,408 Pastureland, all types ..............................farms, 2012: 67 681 265 268 292 213 432 2007: 68 825 364 301 334 674 564 acres, 2012: 315,445 1,384,870 123,927 92,726 399,658 21,757 327,431 2007: 275,895 1,361,499 151,145 69,040 361,838 51,275 376,761 : CONSERVATION AND CROP INSURANCE : : Land enrolled in Conservation Reserve, Wetlands : Reserve, Farmable Wetlands, or Conservation : Reserve Enhancement Programs .......................farms, 2012: - 11 4 2 3 26 6 2007: 2 13 8 2 2 13 5 acres, 2012: - 3,858 (D) (D) (D) 2,178 753 2007: (D) 3,485 6,461 (D) (D) 1,448 459 : Land enrolled in crop insurance programs ............farms, 2012: 7 530 201 84 25 38 503 2007: 6 644 197 78 12 102 442 acres, 2012: 5,782 613,282 242,704 9,036 32,408 5,242 153,810 2007: 1,910 512,818 249,851 5,457 14,716 3,571 119,600 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 8. Farms, Land in Farms, Value of Land and Buildings, and Land Use: 2012 and 2007 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Marin : Mariposa : Mendocino : Merced : Modoc : Mono : Monterey ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- LAND IN FARMS ACCORDING TO USE - Con. : : Total cropland - Con. : : Other cropland ....................................farms, 2012: 21 20 153 230 103 5 195 2007: 11 12 137 256 101 6 186 acres, 2012: 1,005 778 3,521 29,181 13,471 (D) 53,172 2007: 1,180 378 6,479 (D) 15,786 (D) 39,745 : Cropland idle or used for cover crops or : soil improvement, but not harvested and : not pastured or grazed .........................farms, 2012: 11 12 107 162 38 5 132 2007: 9 10 111 145 25 4 111 acres, 2012: (D) 736 2,711 15,052 7,678 (D) 42,211 2007: (D) 304 5,255 15,725 5,690 168 24,848 Cropland on which all crops failed ..............farms, 2012: 2 6 30 37 52 1 40 2007: 3 2 18 91 58 2 66 acres, 2012: (D) (D) 391 8,221 3,708 (D) 2,458 2007: (D) (D) 930 (D) 6,884 (D) 7,264 : Cropland in cultivated summer fallow ............farms, 2012: 13 2 29 42 27 - 52 2007: - 2 19 35 31 1 38 acres, 2012: 667 (D) 419 5,908 2,085 - 8,503 2007: - (D) 294 10,681 3,212 (D) 7,633 : Total woodland ......................................farms, 2012: 60 87 486 52 68 2 140 2007: 28 61 376 25 74 4 160 acres, 2012: 17,172 24,557 197,734 7,465 28,866 (D) 55,886 2007: 5,253 11,034 124,257 3,164 32,821 806 35,732 : Woodland pastured .................................farms, 2012: 29 54 217 23 42 2 72 2007: 18 48 154 6 42 1 92 acres, 2012: 5,999 18,352 94,834 5,054 17,531 (D) 23,264 2007: 4,713 9,902 81,216 (D) 25,448 (D) 24,013 Woodland not pastured .............................farms, 2012: 40 42 327 31 51 2 104 2007: 13 24 271 20 43 4 85 acres, 2012: 11,173 6,205 102,900 2,411 11,335 (D) 32,622 2007: 540 1,132 43,041 (D) 7,373 (D) 11,719 : Permanent pasture and rangeland, other than : cropland and woodland pastured (see text) ..........farms, 2012: 205 248 541 556 281 41 461 2007: 162 194 461 553 263 48 364 acres, 2012: 130,161 240,936 461,536 411,166 317,403 41,785 788,593 2007: 108,950 194,517 384,578 456,195 396,382 (D) 911,089 : Land in farmsteads, homes, buildings, livestock : facilities, ponds, roads, wasteland, etc. ..........farms, 2012: 175 181 796 1,313 276 46 607 2007: 120 139 619 1,069 219 51 474 acres, 2012: 9,134 5,543 61,689 37,443 22,525 (D) 65,371 2007: 7,099 2,596 46,001 44,040 22,753 (D) 70,099 Pastureland, all types ..............................farms, 2012: 227 291 641 604 309 41 524 2007: 191 264 643 820 336 57 570 acres, 2012: 141,696 270,250 570,736 429,529 353,183 42,258 834,285 2007: 120,449 208,132 481,544 491,995 448,361 32,080 978,575 : CONSERVATION AND CROP INSURANCE : : Land enrolled in Conservation Reserve, Wetlands : Reserve, Farmable Wetlands, or Conservation : Reserve Enhancement Programs .......................farms, 2012: 5 - - 18 11 1 34 2007: 1 - 8 48 6 - 34 acres, 2012: 264 - - 5,622 1,014 (D) 10,714 2007: (D) - 3,396 21,802 309 - 26,779 : Land enrolled in crop insurance programs ............farms, 2012: 23 18 123 646 35 2 108 2007: 10 2 80 765 37 2 121 acres, 2012: 15,630 23,352 34,989 252,304 49,237 (D) 98,383 2007: 5,480 (D) 35,825 210,908 19,746 (D) 52,336 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 8. Farms, Land in Farms, Value of Land and Buildings, and Land Use: 2012 and 2007 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Napa : Nevada : Orange : Placer : Plumas : Riverside : Sacramento ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- LAND IN FARMS ACCORDING TO USE - Con. : : Total cropland - Con. : : Other cropland ....................................farms, 2012: 152 72 28 147 9 387 117 2007: 127 50 33 124 13 422 117 acres, 2012: 8,010 1,362 (D) 5,546 1,365 56,962 9,692 2007: 4,849 1,021 (D) 7,908 941 49,456 9,455 : Cropland idle or used for cover crops or : soil improvement, but not harvested and : not pastured or grazed .........................farms, 2012: 128 49 22 104 8 228 70 2007: 106 39 29 93 9 257 66 acres, 2012: 7,282 457 1,286 3,806 (D) 24,066 3,838 2007: 4,409 880 4,366 5,058 (D) 28,421 3,606 Cropland on which all crops failed ..............farms, 2012: 15 26 9 28 1 160 22 2007: 14 10 6 15 5 168 29 acres, 2012: 668 141 (D) 246 (D) 24,845 3,779 2007: 220 123 (D) 515 478 15,309 1,172 : Cropland in cultivated summer fallow ............farms, 2012: 14 13 3 24 - 44 32 2007: 16 5 3 20 1 39 33 acres, 2012: 60 764 734 1,494 - 8,051 2,075 2007: 220 18 (D) 2,335 (D) 5,726 4,677 : Total woodland ......................................farms, 2012: 253 282 12 228 46 119 55 2007: 227 260 7 201 45 91 45 acres, 2012: 37,616 14,161 (D) 11,202 29,005 8,949 2,227 2007: 23,018 12,658 (D) 11,729 14,977 2,885 3,748 : Woodland pastured .................................farms, 2012: 52 151 4 146 17 31 22 2007: 63 165 1 114 12 25 35 acres, 2012: 12,108 8,241 (D) 6,157 3,488 973 783 2007: 8,601 7,473 (D) 6,836 4,762 672 1,579 Woodland not pastured .............................farms, 2012: 211 177 8 94 32 93 33 2007: 176 135 7 104 34 72 16 acres, 2012: 25,508 5,920 100 5,045 25,517 7,976 1,444 2007: 14,417 5,185 241 4,893 10,215 2,213 2,169 : Permanent pasture and rangeland, other than : cropland and woodland pastured (see text) ..........farms, 2012: 188 410 41 798 108 398 571 2007: 158 388 50 825 98 452 569 acres, 2012: 95,831 19,391 37,047 40,103 116,119 84,817 123,097 2007: 96,459 47,012 (D) 63,822 81,525 70,249 176,387 : Land in farmsteads, homes, buildings, livestock : facilities, ponds, roads, wasteland, etc. ..........farms, 2012: 973 548 128 867 71 1,709 811 2007: 801 400 117 782 81 1,617 702 acres, 2012: 56,874 5,213 (D) 6,491 3,116 23,032 15,795 2007: 37,585 3,196 (D) 6,336 5,264 61,676 14,830 Pastureland, all types ..............................farms, 2012: 242 477 43 877 112 476 642 2007: 364 521 66 1,077 122 960 810 acres, 2012: 110,798 28,064 40,592 54,786 132,445 99,605 127,819 2007: 114,535 58,144 (D) 91,094 96,141 77,625 188,824 : CONSERVATION AND CROP INSURANCE : : Land enrolled in Conservation Reserve, Wetlands : Reserve, Farmable Wetlands, or Conservation : Reserve Enhancement Programs .......................farms, 2012: 2 - 3 1 - 7 7 2007: 4 - 11 2 - 4 10 acres, 2012: (D) - 979 (D) - 991 2,171 2007: 1,008 - 1,641 (D) - 389 1,297 : Land enrolled in crop insurance programs ............farms, 2012: 317 1 22 35 10 261 137 2007: 279 4 12 25 5 296 123 acres, 2012: 21,985 (D) 3,333 10,077 2,152 74,810 48,436 2007: 24,376 (D) 768 8,274 (D) 58,045 61,303 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 8. Farms, Land in Farms, Value of Land and Buildings, and Land Use: 2012 and 2007 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : San Benito :San Bernardino : San Diego : San Francisco : San Joaquin :San Luis Obispo: San Mateo :Santa Barbara ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- LAND IN FARMS ACCORDING TO USE - Con. : : Total cropland - Con. : : Other cropland ....................................farms, 2012: 84 119 681 2 366 535 63 211 2007: 68 122 719 - 332 556 44 191 acres, 2012: 9,027 3,439 11,209 (D) 22,897 112,437 2,628 16,246 2007: 4,851 (D) 18,463 - 21,069 123,586 1,843 16,372 : Cropland idle or used for cover crops or : soil improvement, but not harvested and : not pastured or grazed .........................farms, 2012: 36 77 394 - 227 372 41 154 2007: 32 78 431 - 211 334 35 107 acres, 2012: 2,331 2,784 8,004 - 15,008 57,980 1,890 10,702 2007: 1,293 (D) 13,133 - 15,043 83,934 1,353 11,811 Cropland on which all crops failed ..............farms, 2012: 37 41 282 - 73 116 13 62 2007: 31 31 316 - 71 201 7 85 acres, 2012: 4,842 536 3,004 - 3,854 24,452 110 1,982 2007: 2,196 (D) 5,252 - 2,199 14,890 48 3,943 : Cropland in cultivated summer fallow ............farms, 2012: 16 4 38 2 81 105 22 18 2007: 20 23 24 - 67 108 9 14 acres, 2012: 1,854 119 201 (D) 4,035 30,005 628 3,562 2007: 1,362 1,215 78 - 3,827 24,762 442 618 : Total woodland ......................................farms, 2012: 49 60 227 - 47 407 60 143 2007: 44 54 244 - 53 429 47 129 acres, 2012: 25,638 1,384 19,205 - 3,651 73,729 7,972 22,274 2007: 16,467 1,503 12,960 - 4,548 48,949 2,977 23,569 : Woodland pastured .................................farms, 2012: 25 13 67 - 19 205 17 63 2007: 27 19 68 - 20 221 19 70 acres, 2012: 21,270 213 7,492 - 3,016 56,544 2,018 15,636 2007: 14,987 571 4,435 - 1,754 31,166 819 16,965 Woodland not pastured .............................farms, 2012: 27 51 179 - 29 249 50 99 2007: 17 42 189 - 33 245 41 69 acres, 2012: 4,368 1,171 11,713 - 635 17,185 5,954 6,638 2007: 1,480 932 8,525 - 2,794 17,783 2,158 6,604 : Permanent pasture and rangeland, other than : cropland and woodland pastured (see text) ..........farms, 2012: 313 188 479 - 690 981 132 458 2007: 241 271 621 - 688 1,029 129 449 acres, 2012: 515,751 32,158 75,704 - 229,008 940,992 22,181 500,924 2007: 502,856 (D) 130,778 - 206,363 932,754 35,320 527,893 : Land in farmsteads, homes, buildings, livestock : facilities, ponds, roads, wasteland, etc. ..........farms, 2012: 338 745 2,598 3 1,618 1,705 224 846 2007: 256 675 2,392 - 1,336 1,465 196 694 acres, 2012: 24,398 13,830 58,410 3 36,438 68,775 9,530 45,518 2007: 5,315 (D) 57,649 - 34,560 88,329 8,415 50,623 Pastureland, all types ..............................farms, 2012: 353 230 609 - 754 1,154 152 511 2007: 347 458 1,202 1 1,072 1,531 161 634 acres, 2012: 542,510 36,060 89,109 - 242,241 1,027,336 26,015 533,865 2007: 535,634 (D) 151,973 (D) 234,410 1,034,414 39,764 560,171 : CONSERVATION AND CROP INSURANCE : : Land enrolled in Conservation Reserve, Wetlands : Reserve, Farmable Wetlands, or Conservation : Reserve Enhancement Programs .......................farms, 2012: 8 6 11 - 2 53 2 - 2007: 3 4 1 - 11 113 4 2 acres, 2012: 1,330 318 1,701 - (D) 31,175 (D) - 2007: (D) 56 (D) - 2,763 93,420 529 (D) : Land enrolled in crop insurance programs ............farms, 2012: 47 73 316 - 1,014 385 11 199 2007: 50 79 612 1 923 362 30 186 acres, 2012: 57,865 2,176 14,747 - 312,111 102,499 476 122,163 2007: 20,033 1,367 23,965 (D) 236,387 77,270 2,698 36,583 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 8. Farms, Land in Farms, Value of Land and Buildings, and Land Use: 2012 and 2007 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Santa Clara : Santa Cruz : Shasta : Sierra : Siskiyou : Solano : Sonoma : Stanislaus ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- LAND IN FARMS ACCORDING TO USE - Con. : : Total cropland - Con. : : Other cropland ....................................farms, 2012: 113 106 154 8 200 147 326 226 2007: 92 93 102 6 176 128 325 256 acres, 2012: 2,676 2,938 4,527 390 41,542 27,064 14,646 10,049 2007: 2,370 2,067 3,856 (D) 33,396 18,755 10,275 11,635 : Cropland idle or used for cover crops or : soil improvement, but not harvested and : not pastured or grazed .........................farms, 2012: 77 79 89 7 158 94 282 150 2007: 73 75 67 1 121 93 273 149 acres, 2012: 2,029 2,625 2,078 (D) 33,572 12,513 13,780 5,224 2007: 1,778 1,517 1,331 (D) 25,823 8,530 9,354 5,533 Cropland on which all crops failed ..............farms, 2012: 38 18 55 1 39 21 38 55 2007: 13 21 33 5 55 21 42 67 acres, 2012: (D) 163 727 (D) 4,247 570 702 2,290 2007: 211 432 1,368 380 2,805 2,728 647 2,571 : Cropland in cultivated summer fallow ............farms, 2012: 3 17 24 - 27 43 23 30 2007: 13 6 15 2 31 30 30 50 acres, 2012: (D) 150 1,722 - 3,723 13,981 164 2,535 2007: 381 118 1,157 (D) 4,768 7,497 274 3,531 : Total woodland ......................................farms, 2012: 98 158 309 11 278 52 618 57 2007: 111 145 286 7 208 53 598 76 acres, 2012: 15,505 8,565 74,336 2,500 110,093 2,114 149,302 9,463 2007: 14,974 12,562 51,947 1,743 99,009 3,011 116,777 7,382 : Woodland pastured .................................farms, 2012: 35 38 195 10 142 19 210 25 2007: 48 50 177 3 114 23 226 44 acres, 2012: 10,647 1,980 22,875 (D) 58,534 662 55,574 7,805 2007: 10,129 6,275 34,981 (D) 64,515 2,733 37,765 5,833 Woodland not pastured .............................farms, 2012: 69 136 158 3 178 36 463 32 2007: 68 108 152 4 137 33 433 37 acres, 2012: 4,858 6,585 51,461 (D) 51,559 1,452 93,728 1,658 2007: 4,845 6,287 16,966 (D) 34,494 278 79,012 1,549 : Permanent pasture and rangeland, other than : cropland and woodland pastured (see text) ..........farms, 2012: 259 109 908 33 582 356 1,141 1,210 2007: 293 92 835 35 497 328 975 1,156 acres, 2012: 165,611 42,913 239,871 (D) 351,865 220,758 244,358 380,662 2007: 236,212 7,478 246,275 19,598 305,142 189,346 227,167 403,786 : Land in farmsteads, homes, buildings, livestock : facilities, ponds, roads, wasteland, etc. ..........farms, 2012: 515 338 1,039 23 623 555 2,104 2,058 2007: 471 304 731 18 448 444 1,718 1,572 acres, 2012: 10,461 7,411 25,244 (D) 66,069 14,592 65,479 37,031 2007: 15,378 3,861 52,410 1,205 28,991 10,931 52,533 26,591 Pastureland, all types ..............................farms, 2012: 312 150 1,017 38 653 394 1,350 1,283 2007: 461 181 1,100 38 641 475 1,467 1,614 acres, 2012: 188,804 53,149 270,820 34,733 435,038 230,822 324,611 400,118 2007: 253,892 14,576 295,638 23,839 398,006 207,851 297,878 441,187 : CONSERVATION AND CROP INSURANCE : : Land enrolled in Conservation Reserve, Wetlands : Reserve, Farmable Wetlands, or Conservation : Reserve Enhancement Programs .......................farms, 2012: 3 - 2 - 85 13 - 13 2007: 10 - 6 1 103 11 4 14 acres, 2012: 33 - (D) - 12,185 4,534 - 1,580 2007: 578 - 228 (D) 24,398 3,663 432 3,366 : Land enrolled in crop insurance programs ............farms, 2012: 52 40 59 3 69 130 547 793 2007: 38 38 54 1 50 112 421 727 acres, 2012: 12,872 1,306 10,210 513 103,018 116,106 53,488 154,762 2007: 1,648 1,887 7,912 (D) 33,901 75,570 48,152 129,539 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 8. Farms, Land in Farms, Value of Land and Buildings, and Land Use: 2012 and 2007 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Sutter : Tehama : Trinity : Tulare : Tuolumne : Ventura : Yolo : Yuba ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- LAND IN FARMS ACCORDING TO USE - Con. : : Total cropland - Con. : : Other cropland ....................................farms, 2012: 169 170 37 661 24 192 223 72 2007: 208 178 26 691 9 244 226 97 acres, 2012: 12,556 6,186 1,057 55,558 740 6,827 (D) 20,405 2007: (D) 11,255 396 51,005 123 11,672 35,909 4,820 : Cropland idle or used for cover crops or : soil improvement, but not harvested and : not pastured or grazed .........................farms, 2012: 118 107 28 400 18 133 164 50 2007: 139 127 21 420 5 158 182 74 acres, 2012: 8,618 4,259 833 23,857 698 4,162 26,474 18,707 2007: 13,282 7,523 136 28,073 95 8,938 29,475 3,905 Cropland on which all crops failed ..............farms, 2012: 26 49 9 196 9 56 51 7 2007: 43 31 11 210 4 75 37 18 acres, 2012: 709 943 (D) 9,434 42 1,570 3,662 67 2007: (D) 1,538 (D) 10,638 28 2,259 2,020 192 : Cropland in cultivated summer fallow ............farms, 2012: 44 29 3 107 - 21 39 15 2007: 46 25 2 116 - 27 32 12 acres, 2012: 3,229 984 (D) 22,267 - 1,095 (D) 1,631 2007: 6,984 2,194 (D) 12,294 - 475 4,414 723 : Total woodland ......................................farms, 2012: 38 202 171 92 121 85 65 109 2007: 31 172 114 126 101 91 58 99 acres, 2012: 4,155 50,430 45,134 24,580 9,093 4,345 15,507 20,771 2007: 17,250 23,150 33,937 21,009 12,175 6,307 7,031 11,678 : Woodland pastured .................................farms, 2012: 12 133 84 60 76 25 20 74 2007: 14 109 46 93 73 36 31 65 acres, 2012: 2,308 39,909 21,383 19,722 6,563 989 (D) 15,892 2007: (D) 16,406 22,613 15,090 9,224 3,218 4,282 5,529 Woodland not pastured .............................farms, 2012: 26 86 127 35 50 70 45 50 2007: 18 79 82 35 37 66 27 44 acres, 2012: 1,847 10,521 23,751 4,858 2,530 3,356 (D) 4,879 2007: (D) 6,744 11,324 5,919 2,951 3,089 2,749 6,149 : Permanent pasture and rangeland, other than : cropland and woodland pastured (see text) ..........farms, 2012: 222 839 158 785 255 302 238 315 2007: 156 800 91 844 227 261 219 354 acres, 2012: 79,088 446,028 125,767 486,027 72,298 148,509 122,281 68,146 2007: (D) 390,731 83,913 444,810 98,460 106,676 150,079 66,729 : Land in farmsteads, homes, buildings, livestock : facilities, ponds, roads, wasteland, etc. ..........farms, 2012: 594 1,038 181 2,076 218 1,051 593 468 2007: 420 768 112 1,784 143 1,061 444 381 acres, 2012: 16,082 30,715 2,963 50,887 3,637 27,108 16,121 8,960 2007: (D) 24,111 4,108 64,076 828 32,210 11,441 11,482 Pastureland, all types ..............................farms, 2012: 248 950 177 871 304 339 276 376 2007: 296 1,068 130 1,236 311 451 346 473 acres, 2012: 82,133 496,252 147,315 518,427 79,985 154,434 145,070 85,097 2007: 77,988 429,540 108,075 487,364 112,469 115,195 171,498 75,937 : CONSERVATION AND CROP INSURANCE : : Land enrolled in Conservation Reserve, Wetlands : Reserve, Farmable Wetlands, or Conservation : Reserve Enhancement Programs .......................farms, 2012: 4 7 1 7 - - 44 5 2007: 17 5 1 15 - 6 67 8 acres, 2012: 781 2,490 (D) 893 - - 8,617 811 2007: 4,499 520 (D) 1,466 - 215 24,108 1,266 : Land enrolled in crop insurance programs ............farms, 2012: 541 236 2 1,668 - 579 201 140 2007: 449 213 - 1,915 - 785 194 121 acres, 2012: 197,217 43,466 (D) 330,740 - 68,739 150,289 36,063 2007: 148,786 26,249 - 299,661 - 58,097 152,092 36,797 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Table 9. Harvested Cropland by Size of Farm and Acres Harvested: 2012 and 2007 [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : California : Alameda : Alpine : Amador : Butte : Calaveras : Colusa ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Farms ..............................................number, 2012: 53,372 194 3 217 1,510 235 654 2007: 53,000 237 4 189 1,460 193 661 acres harvested, 2012: 8,007,461 9,901 (D) 8,521 203,573 4,165 263,675 2007: 7,633,173 10,759 490 7,457 200,943 2,872 276,588 : HARVESTED CROPLAND BY SIZE OF FARM : : 2012 size of farm: : 1 to 9 acres ..........................................farms: 16,772 90 - 41 429 71 45 acres harvested: 47,435 (D) - 88 1,514 164 180 10 to 49 acres ........................................farms: 17,517 54 - 86 545 99 119 acres harvested: 279,832 628 - 1,058 9,341 982 2,174 50 to 69 acres ........................................farms: 2,659 8 - 26 59 11 27 acres harvested: 106,190 235 - 504 2,717 296 1,284 70 to 99 acres ........................................farms: 2,576 13 - 16 58 6 43 acres harvested: 153,014 659 - 348 3,892 202 2,981 100 to 139 acres ......................................farms: 2,247 1 2 11 56 12 46 acres harvested: 179,277 (D) (D) 413 5,304 97 4,186 140 to 179 acres ......................................farms: 1,714 7 - 2 46 7 37 acres harvested: 188,404 843 - (D) 6,021 39 5,559 180 to 219 acres ......................................farms: 1,085 3 - 10 44 - 36 acres harvested: 153,270 249 - 304 7,402 - 6,564 220 to 259 acres ......................................farms: 867 - - 1 35 8 23 acres harvested: 145,206 - - (D) 6,773 323 5,275 260 to 499 acres ......................................farms: 2,829 4 - 10 113 5 116 acres harvested: 748,857 238 - 1,591 32,577 1,033 36,693 500 to 999 acres ......................................farms: 2,255 5 - 5 78 7 86 acres harvested: 1,152,032 855 - 1,435 44,895 730 52,774 1,000 to 1,999 acres ..................................farms: 1,389 1 1 5 29 5 30 acres harvested: 1,285,858 (D) (D) 151 33,117 190 34,002 2,000 acres or more ...................................farms: 1,462 8 - 4 18 4 46 acres harvested: 3,568,086 5,709 - 2,564 50,020 109 112,003 : 2007 size of farm: : 1 to 9 acres ..........................................farms: 15,948 93 - 41 404 58 55 acres harvested: 48,197 268 - (D) 1,520 155 224 10 to 49 acres ........................................farms: 18,425 93 1 89 478 67 131 acres harvested: 309,862 1,084 (D) 951 8,256 428 2,466 50 to 69 acres ........................................farms: 2,647 8 - 16 54 14 26 acres harvested: 107,665 225 - 226 2,631 316 1,219 70 to 99 acres ........................................farms: 2,526 9 - 11 58 11 20 acres harvested: 148,849 149 - 367 4,269 308 1,601 100 to 139 acres ......................................farms: 1,991 5 2 4 61 6 32 acres harvested: 164,950 439 (D) 164 5,502 146 3,103 140 to 179 acres ......................................farms: 1,525 3 - 3 50 2 25 acres harvested: 171,762 65 - 116 6,523 (D) 3,110 180 to 219 acres ......................................farms: 1,078 2 - 4 45 2 29 acres harvested: 153,602 (D) - 478 8,106 (D) 5,171 220 to 259 acres ......................................farms: 899 1 - 4 40 6 34 acres harvested: 156,291 (D) - 357 7,775 38 7,216 260 to 499 acres ......................................farms: 2,899 8 - 8 134 12 113 acres harvested: 762,434 326 - 1,131 41,936 522 35,527 500 to 999 acres ......................................farms: 2,306 7 1 4 95 7 107 acres harvested: 1,187,402 1,943 (D) 1,616 56,517 359 65,932 1,000 to 1,999 acres ..................................farms: 1,479 2 - 1 29 4 53 acres harvested: 1,391,250 (D) - (D) 26,043 206 64,684 2,000 acres or more ...................................farms: 1,277 6 - 4 12 4 36 acres harvested: 3,030,909 5,415 - 1,940 31,865 299 86,335 : HARVESTED CROPLAND BY ACRES HARVESTED : : 2012 acres harvested: : 1 to 9 acres ..........................................farms: 23,534 122 - 109 605 148 80 acres: 77,271 331 - 354 2,386 409 423 10 to 19 acres ........................................farms: 7,128 19 - 33 197 33 40 acres: 97,471 241 - 433 2,527 414 498 20 to 29 acres ........................................farms: 3,563 9 - 21 92 15 40 acres: 80,805 192 - (D) 2,116 360 936 30 to 49 acres ........................................farms: 4,166 14 - 26 137 18 34 acres: 155,694 534 - 879 5,139 645 1,269 50 to 99 acres ........................................farms: 4,412 16 3 14 104 11 63 acres: 306,254 1,143 (D) 920 7,363 707 4,551 100 to 199 acres ......................................farms: 3,567 7 - 5 135 7 100 acres: 492,973 1,160 - 605 19,606 730 14,526 200 to 499 acres ......................................farms: 3,538 2 - 6 142 3 161 acres: 1,106,824 (D) - 1,549 44,328 900 50,960 500 to 999 acres ......................................farms: 1,780 3 - 2 63 - 81 acres: 1,239,268 1,700 - (D) 43,858 - 53,795 1,000 acres or more ...................................farms: 1,684 2 - 1 35 - 55 acres: 4,450,901 (D) - (D) 76,250 - 136,717 : 2007 acres harvested: : 1 to 9 acres ..........................................farms: 22,216 146 - 105 542 131 86 acres: 76,646 506 - 390 2,118 380 430 10 to 19 acres ........................................farms: 7,442 49 - 30 180 21 50 acres: 101,744 671 - 381 2,360 291 666 20 to 29 acres ........................................farms: 4,009 9 1 10 111 7 36 acres: 90,982 200 (D) 219 2,596 (D) 825 30 to 49 acres ........................................farms: 4,526 8 1 18 98 15 36 acres: 169,004 325 (D) 656 3,717 556 1,381 50 to 99 acres ........................................farms: 4,326 8 1 13 116 17 56 acres: 298,960 613 (D) 928 8,084 1,188 4,157 100 to 199 acres ......................................farms: 3,399 7 - 5 133 1 65 acres: 472,328 1,010 - 674 19,218 (D) 9,564 200 to 499 acres ......................................farms: 3,620 6 1 5 171 1 164 acres: 1,126,298 2,029 (D) 1,343 53,862 (D) 50,626 500 to 999 acres ......................................farms: 1,819 2 - 2 84 - 101 acres: 1,266,100 (D) - (D) 57,175 - 66,797 1,000 acres or more ...................................farms: 1,643 2 - 1 25 - 67 acres: 4,031,111 (D) - (D) 51,813 - 142,142 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 9. Harvested Cropland by Size of Farm and Acres Harvested: 2012 and 2007 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Contra Costa : Del Norte : El Dorado : Fresno : Glenn : Humboldt : Imperial ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Farms ..............................................number, 2012: 330 53 769 4,480 999 547 337 2007: 289 29 645 4,736 924 389 365 acres harvested, 2012: 33,420 6,321 5,898 992,479 244,761 12,253 466,877 2007: 23,876 3,244 5,930 978,948 228,533 13,358 375,904 : HARVESTED CROPLAND BY SIZE OF FARM : : 2012 size of farm: : 1 to 9 acres ..........................................farms: 165 14 292 622 140 162 21 acres harvested: 405 22 588 2,295 477 308 66 10 to 49 acres ........................................farms: 91 12 339 1,917 317 162 49 acres harvested: 1,529 122 2,103 39,630 6,304 1,400 968 50 to 69 acres ........................................farms: 12 1 43 334 72 27 5 acres harvested: 449 (D) 480 16,924 3,230 293 298 70 to 99 acres ........................................farms: 4 5 38 294 66 41 18 acres harvested: (D) 110 611 22,205 4,635 957 1,400 100 to 139 acres ......................................farms: 10 - 29 243 49 23 11 acres harvested: 791 - 750 24,973 4,690 223 1,190 140 to 179 acres ......................................farms: 3 7 5 154 33 16 14 acres harvested: 390 94 155 21,014 4,650 494 2,150 180 to 219 acres ......................................farms: 1 4 5 74 19 20 11 acres harvested: (D) 352 155 12,801 3,661 675 2,110 220 to 259 acres ......................................farms: 1 2 2 64 26 9 7 acres harvested: (D) (D) (D) 13,005 5,070 538 1,156 260 to 499 acres ......................................farms: 19 2 10 252 112 36 36 acres harvested: 3,349 (D) 304 82,960 36,585 2,965 10,582 500 to 999 acres ......................................farms: 7 2 2 255 85 20 31 acres harvested: 3,750 (D) (D) 163,095 50,912 2,316 22,008 1,000 to 1,999 acres ..................................farms: 6 3 1 163 50 15 45 acres harvested: 6,168 2,200 (D) 177,410 52,493 1,592 65,006 2,000 acres or more ...................................farms: 11 1 3 108 30 16 89 acres harvested: 15,833 (D) 520 416,167 72,054 492 359,943 : 2007 size of farm: : 1 to 9 acres ..........................................farms: 117 6 204 610 121 89 22 acres harvested: 346 16 454 2,205 424 163 80 10 to 49 acres ........................................farms: 105 4 328 2,195 272 118 52 acres harvested: 1,605 61 2,238 47,373 5,488 887 1,163 50 to 69 acres ........................................farms: 18 2 46 293 57 21 10 acres harvested: 865 (D) 644 14,613 2,393 427 544 70 to 99 acres ........................................farms: 8 - 20 291 50 25 22 acres harvested: 276 - 658 21,682 3,192 386 1,530 100 to 139 acres ......................................farms: 4 - 18 195 40 23 14 acres harvested: 310 - 540 19,524 3,221 579 1,458 140 to 179 acres ......................................farms: 3 8 11 140 37 14 10 acres harvested: (D) 137 464 19,535 4,992 591 1,473 180 to 219 acres ......................................farms: 1 - - 99 33 4 18 acres harvested: (D) - - 16,725 5,196 267 2,930 220 to 259 acres ......................................farms: 5 1 7 74 22 10 8 acres harvested: 1,200 (D) 263 14,289 4,879 1,065 1,307 260 to 499 acres ......................................farms: 7 1 8 284 138 35 35 acres harvested: 966 (D) (D) 87,865 44,526 3,616 10,418 500 to 999 acres ......................................farms: 7 3 - 269 82 24 53 acres harvested: 3,649 616 - 179,521 45,562 2,236 33,044 1,000 to 1,999 acres ..................................farms: 6 2 - 179 50 12 57 acres harvested: 6,745 (D) - 201,912 59,437 1,918 74,716 2,000 acres or more ...................................farms: 8 2 3 107 22 14 64 acres harvested: 7,579 (D) (D) 353,704 49,223 1,223 247,241 : HARVESTED CROPLAND BY ACRES HARVESTED : : 2012 acres harvested: : 1 to 9 acres ..........................................farms: 197 28 613 895 194 332 32 acres: 586 81 1,752 3,641 758 918 124 10 to 19 acres ........................................farms: 31 4 88 767 129 68 13 acres: 380 59 1,116 11,484 1,821 864 185 20 to 29 acres ........................................farms: 22 5 27 436 70 45 14 acres: 511 110 643 9,598 1,616 (D) 318 30 to 49 acres ........................................farms: 23 4 23 589 121 33 13 acres: 913 120 815 21,828 4,519 1,205 473 50 to 99 acres ........................................farms: 12 4 14 593 123 35 28 acres: 763 305 942 41,622 8,449 2,377 2,112 100 to 199 acres ......................................farms: 13 3 3 393 71 19 32 acres: 1,558 (D) (D) 52,793 9,980 2,188 4,674 200 to 499 acres ......................................farms: 13 1 1 362 159 14 40 acres: 3,740 (D) (D) 121,117 50,757 3,171 12,034 500 to 999 acres ......................................farms: 7 3 - 239 82 1 39 acres: 4,944 2,200 - 173,815 57,544 (D) 28,970 1,000 acres or more ...................................farms: 12 1 - 206 50 - 126 acres: 20,025 (D) - 556,581 109,317 - 417,987 : 2007 acres harvested: : 1 to 9 acres ..........................................farms: 166 13 469 881 171 215 27 acres: 556 35 1,452 3,642 688 591 91 10 to 19 acres ........................................farms: 34 4 111 841 112 49 24 acres: 467 62 1,414 12,518 1,555 598 347 20 to 29 acres ........................................farms: 14 2 26 537 78 23 8 acres: 330 (D) (D) 11,911 1,826 (D) 165 30 to 49 acres ........................................farms: 26 1 21 700 95 35 25 acres: 973 (D) 789 25,888 3,406 1,329 939 50 to 99 acres ........................................farms: 21 2 16 544 92 23 36 acres: 1,273 (D) 1,173 37,893 6,404 1,585 2,554 100 to 199 acres ......................................farms: 6 2 1 378 71 27 38 acres: 745 (D) (D) 53,054 10,027 3,197 5,610 200 to 499 acres ......................................farms: 9 2 1 358 181 15 44 acres: 2,706 (D) (D) 114,782 57,536 3,860 14,612 500 to 999 acres ......................................farms: 5 2 - 271 68 1 48 acres: 3,414 (D) - 198,297 46,773 (D) 34,040 1,000 acres or more ...................................farms: 8 1 - 226 56 1 115 acres: 13,412 (D) - 520,963 100,318 (D) 317,546 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 9. Harvested Cropland by Size of Farm and Acres Harvested: 2012 and 2007 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Inyo : Kern : Kings : Lake : Lassen : Los Angeles : Madera ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Farms ..............................................number, 2012: 37 1,115 767 641 199 718 1,066 2007: 25 1,169 805 638 197 632 1,123 acres harvested, 2012: (D) 740,061 415,706 24,175 40,182 40,796 289,693 2007: (D) 764,929 419,964 18,800 46,908 25,829 264,767 : HARVESTED CROPLAND BY SIZE OF FARM : : 2012 size of farm: : 1 to 9 acres ..........................................farms: 14 110 117 172 16 510 87 acres harvested: 14 240 331 527 63 1,053 287 10 to 49 acres ........................................farms: 7 214 200 275 43 145 328 acres harvested: 21 4,215 3,712 3,487 747 1,632 7,947 50 to 69 acres ........................................farms: - 32 40 45 9 10 80 acres harvested: - 1,179 2,062 1,144 296 221 4,087 70 to 99 acres ........................................farms: - 59 50 39 7 13 132 acres harvested: - 4,357 3,517 1,257 232 571 9,660 100 to 139 acres ......................................farms: - 59 36 24 9 5 70 acres harvested: - 6,384 3,584 1,792 352 462 7,159 140 to 179 acres ......................................farms: 1 97 33 21 9 4 59 acres harvested: (D) 12,934 4,623 1,092 573 361 7,975 180 to 219 acres ......................................farms: 3 43 36 15 8 1 37 acres harvested: (D) 6,250 6,575 782 1,048 (D) 6,246 220 to 259 acres ......................................farms: 3 31 15 6 9 7 32 acres harvested: 240 6,679 2,557 777 1,156 952 6,533 260 to 499 acres ......................................farms: - 133 67 16 27 2 85 acres harvested: - 42,164 22,043 2,274 3,533 (D) 26,784 500 to 999 acres ......................................farms: 2 129 75 12 22 5 77 acres harvested: (D) 81,106 46,911 3,642 4,812 1,721 48,014 1,000 to 1,999 acres ..................................farms: - 91 54 9 14 9 41 acres harvested: - 107,877 67,497 5,136 4,650 5,834 46,242 2,000 acres or more ...................................farms: 7 117 44 7 26 7 38 acres harvested: 5,207 466,676 252,294 2,265 22,720 27,488 118,759 : 2007 size of farm: : 1 to 9 acres ..........................................farms: 6 108 111 182 9 446 73 acres harvested: 6 273 327 607 30 1,069 200 10 to 49 acres ........................................farms: 2 258 240 258 32 112 385 acres harvested: (D) 5,034 4,777 3,708 454 1,123 9,558 50 to 69 acres ........................................farms: - 36 37 47 14 11 87 acres harvested: - 1,701 1,842 1,314 491 (D) 4,205 70 to 99 acres ........................................farms: 1 77 43 33 11 12 142 acres harvested: (D) 5,416 3,072 862 475 421 10,084 100 to 139 acres ......................................farms: - 56 40 37 10 7 50 acres harvested: - 6,085 4,208 1,671 406 478 5,012 140 to 179 acres ......................................farms: 3 88 24 15 12 6 52 acres harvested: 150 11,787 2,950 594 1,200 579 7,359 180 to 219 acres ......................................farms: 3 25 34 7 6 8 45 acres harvested: 127 4,531 5,946 236 663 327 8,212 220 to 259 acres ......................................farms: 2 39 25 8 10 5 40 acres harvested: (D) 8,549 5,507 470 1,140 319 8,211 260 to 499 acres ......................................farms: 1 146 70 24 14 4 87 acres harvested: (D) 45,294 22,471 3,645 1,476 (D) 28,195 500 to 999 acres ......................................farms: 3 124 78 13 26 6 91 acres harvested: 1,402 75,345 50,735 2,687 6,868 2,821 53,556 1,000 to 1,999 acres ..................................farms: 1 106 58 6 21 11 39 acres harvested: (D) 123,662 67,884 763 8,860 9,110 42,982 2,000 acres or more ...................................farms: 3 106 45 8 32 4 32 acres harvested: 790 477,252 250,245 2,243 24,845 8,781 87,193 : HARVESTED CROPLAND BY ACRES HARVESTED : : 2012 acres harvested: : 1 to 9 acres ..........................................farms: 23 188 147 326 36 585 118 acres: 37 524 480 1,250 162 1,332 445 10 to 19 acres ........................................farms: - 61 100 124 23 53 113 acres: - 922 1,433 1,625 290 662 1,727 20 to 29 acres ........................................farms: 1 45 44 53 7 22 91 acres: (D) 1,035 998 1,239 140 493 1,964 30 to 49 acres ........................................farms: 2 64 53 55 28 19 140 acres: (D) 2,403 2,018 2,008 976 697 5,411 50 to 99 acres ........................................farms: 3 99 94 37 24 12 207 acres: (D) 7,358 6,763 2,420 1,649 877 14,596 100 to 199 acres ......................................farms: 3 172 88 23 35 9 135 acres: 427 24,098 13,217 3,041 4,797 1,195 18,518 200 to 499 acres ......................................farms: - 199 92 15 24 5 127 acres: - 64,434 31,621 4,829 7,333 1,133 39,433 500 to 999 acres ......................................farms: - 127 69 5 15 5 67 acres: - 91,313 52,499 3,457 9,022 3,993 46,497 1,000 acres or more ...................................farms: 5 160 80 3 7 8 68 acres: 5,000 547,974 306,677 4,306 15,813 30,414 161,102 : 2007 acres harvested: : 1 to 9 acres ..........................................farms: 9 174 141 335 27 520 103 acres: 10 517 506 (D) 134 1,348 288 10 to 19 acres ........................................farms: 2 72 104 107 13 53 113 acres: (D) 992 1,403 (D) 149 693 1,700 20 to 29 acres ........................................farms: 1 64 61 69 13 11 125 acres: (D) 1,425 1,407 1,591 275 249 2,837 30 to 49 acres ........................................farms: - 88 66 60 25 11 171 acres: - 3,320 2,466 2,235 927 395 6,432 50 to 99 acres ........................................farms: 4 126 75 34 24 12 213 acres: 250 9,086 5,323 2,325 1,519 774 15,103 100 to 199 acres ......................................farms: 4 147 82 14 40 7 116 acres: 470 20,527 11,682 1,776 5,310 925 17,042 200 to 499 acres ......................................farms: 1 208 109 13 26 3 149 acres: (D) 67,026 33,895 4,132 7,896 945 45,946 500 to 999 acres ......................................farms: 4 117 82 5 20 5 76 acres: 2,880 84,910 56,868 3,040 13,612 3,249 50,847 1,000 acres or more ...................................farms: - 173 85 1 9 10 57 acres: - 577,126 306,414 (D) 17,086 17,251 124,572 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 9. Harvested Cropland by Size of Farm and Acres Harvested: 2012 and 2007 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Marin : Mariposa : Mendocino : Merced : Modoc : Mono : Monterey ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Farms ..............................................number, 2012: 135 66 758 1,903 257 30 694 2007: 86 34 729 1,946 267 28 685 acres harvested, 2012: 7,868 835 31,411 480,103 123,008 10,591 282,694 2007: 4,007 286 31,609 466,304 103,467 8,144 227,834 : HARVESTED CROPLAND BY SIZE OF FARM : : 2012 size of farm: : 1 to 9 acres ..........................................farms: 45 14 180 158 8 2 155 acres harvested: 74 28 427 713 40 (D) 420 10 to 49 acres ........................................farms: 35 24 207 822 34 5 165 acres harvested: 315 204 2,180 17,572 438 89 2,050 50 to 69 acres ........................................farms: 6 4 37 114 5 - 37 acres harvested: 230 12 1,009 5,781 274 - 1,045 70 to 99 acres ........................................farms: 6 5 35 123 7 1 29 acres harvested: 42 73 899 9,085 509 (D) 1,239 100 to 139 acres ......................................farms: 6 1 57 104 19 - 29 acres harvested: 409 (D) 2,387 10,898 1,320 - 2,115 140 to 179 acres ......................................farms: 2 3 62 88 7 3 34 acres harvested: (D) 10 3,317 11,880 496 436 2,742 180 to 219 acres ......................................farms: 3 2 23 49 8 - 14 acres harvested: 63 (D) 1,198 8,291 885 - 2,157 220 to 259 acres ......................................farms: 1 - 19 34 8 4 13 acres harvested: (D) - 1,251 7,016 1,170 (D) 2,627 260 to 499 acres ......................................farms: 2 6 41 145 33 3 50 acres harvested: (D) 134 3,188 47,224 5,597 709 14,744 500 to 999 acres ......................................farms: 14 1 39 125 42 4 59 acres harvested: 2,012 (D) 3,926 73,125 11,682 1,364 27,195 1,000 to 1,999 acres ..................................farms: 12 5 15 57 37 6 48 acres harvested: 3,445 152 2,885 65,461 16,902 3,150 48,169 2,000 acres or more ...................................farms: 3 1 43 84 49 2 61 acres harvested: (D) (D) 8,744 223,057 83,695 (D) 178,191 : 2007 size of farm: : 1 to 9 acres ..........................................farms: 33 12 152 149 7 5 137 acres harvested: 69 44 381 667 38 29 498 10 to 49 acres ........................................farms: 20 8 241 854 37 2 175 acres harvested: 174 15 2,698 19,193 579 (D) 2,087 50 to 69 acres ........................................farms: 2 2 48 141 6 1 42 acres harvested: (D) (D) 1,529 7,327 293 (D) 1,773 70 to 99 acres ........................................farms: 3 3 22 129 20 - 42 acres harvested: 21 10 659 9,459 1,231 - 1,915 100 to 139 acres ......................................farms: 3 - 44 119 7 - 25 acres harvested: 103 - 1,553 12,554 583 - 1,805 140 to 179 acres ......................................farms: 1 4 37 74 7 - 32 acres harvested: (D) 30 2,059 10,361 590 - 3,346 180 to 219 acres ......................................farms: - 2 28 42 5 - 16 acres harvested: - (D) 1,789 7,066 667 - 2,012 220 to 259 acres ......................................farms: - - 17 46 7 4 18 acres harvested: - - 1,332 9,371 710 573 3,494 260 to 499 acres ......................................farms: 3 1 51 138 46 1 55 acres harvested: 602 (D) 3,911 41,810 8,145 (D) 13,264 500 to 999 acres ......................................farms: 9 1 38 110 48 7 53 acres harvested: 561 (D) 3,287 65,555 15,569 1,480 28,873 1,000 to 1,999 acres ..................................farms: 9 - 19 79 28 6 39 acres harvested: 1,947 - 3,342 84,510 13,657 1,677 42,748 2,000 acres or more ...................................farms: 3 1 32 65 49 2 51 acres harvested: (D) (D) 9,069 198,431 61,405 (D) 126,019 : HARVESTED CROPLAND BY ACRES HARVESTED : : 2012 acres harvested: : 1 to 9 acres ..........................................farms: 80 46 381 249 28 6 281 acres: 224 144 1,229 1,239 123 (D) 925 10 to 19 acres ........................................farms: 12 4 106 353 8 - 64 acres: 165 48 1,415 5,269 87 - 821 20 to 29 acres ........................................farms: 3 10 69 183 9 3 26 acres: 63 216 1,575 4,280 210 73 605 30 to 49 acres ........................................farms: 7 3 45 256 15 - 35 acres: (D) 115 1,697 9,691 602 - 1,332 50 to 99 acres ........................................farms: 8 2 64 231 51 2 59 acres: 481 (D) 4,390 16,283 3,639 (D) 3,853 100 to 199 acres ......................................farms: 18 1 61 202 40 7 42 acres: 2,233 (D) 8,086 27,769 5,372 1,145 5,776 200 to 499 acres ......................................farms: 3 - 25 215 61 2 70 acres: 1,320 - 7,504 68,585 18,872 (D) 21,702 500 to 999 acres ......................................farms: 3 - 4 106 18 8 49 acres: 1,882 - 2,300 73,625 11,872 4,274 34,795 1,000 acres or more ...................................farms: 1 - 3 108 27 2 68 acres: (D) - 3,215 273,362 82,231 (D) 212,885 : 2007 acres harvested: : 1 to 9 acres ..........................................farms: 52 27 359 225 24 6 284 acres: 146 77 1,191 1,138 120 32 1,099 10 to 19 acres ........................................farms: 11 3 98 349 9 2 56 acres: 150 34 1,328 5,433 102 (D) 700 20 to 29 acres ........................................farms: 3 2 65 206 14 - 24 acres: (D) (D) 1,502 4,617 319 - 532 30 to 49 acres ........................................farms: 3 - 57 285 13 - 41 acres: 115 - 2,040 10,763 468 - 1,511 50 to 99 acres ........................................farms: 5 2 72 261 54 4 58 acres: 320 (D) 4,912 18,106 3,760 262 4,039 100 to 199 acres ......................................farms: 6 - 52 224 52 6 55 acres: 890 - 6,988 30,570 7,271 990 7,579 200 to 499 acres ......................................farms: 4 - 20 193 51 7 64 acres: 1,252 - 6,028 61,751 16,315 2,160 20,692 500 to 999 acres ......................................farms: 2 - 3 103 27 1 44 acres: (D) - 1,947 73,857 18,228 (D) 32,035 1,000 acres or more ...................................farms: - - 3 100 23 2 59 acres: - - 5,673 260,069 56,884 (D) 159,647 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 9. Harvested Cropland by Size of Farm and Acres Harvested: 2012 and 2007 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Napa : Nevada : Orange : Placer : Plumas : Riverside : Sacramento ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Farms ..............................................number, 2012: 1,521 312 217 508 62 1,962 660 2007: 1,503 218 200 487 33 2,096 583 acres harvested, 2012: 52,180 1,555 10,058 19,535 11,767 156,469 92,090 2007: 51,860 2,621 7,846 21,990 7,692 163,783 113,315 : HARVESTED CROPLAND BY SIZE OF FARM : : 2012 size of farm: : 1 to 9 acres ..........................................farms: 638 129 144 226 3 1,002 241 acres harvested: 1,696 242 336 (D) 6 3,085 504 10 to 49 acres ........................................farms: 488 131 36 185 17 665 150 acres harvested: 6,384 512 627 1,419 89 8,441 2,099 50 to 69 acres ........................................farms: 102 18 9 12 5 38 31 acres harvested: 2,753 113 150 266 70 1,771 1,387 70 to 99 acres ........................................farms: 69 10 3 18 2 39 28 acres harvested: 2,750 205 (D) (D) (D) 2,035 1,663 100 to 139 acres ......................................farms: 42 7 4 5 - 43 22 acres harvested: 1,642 210 432 83 - 3,208 1,742 140 to 179 acres ......................................farms: 37 1 1 11 1 30 30 acres harvested: 2,536 (D) (D) 802 (D) 3,097 3,198 180 to 219 acres ......................................farms: 22 9 1 4 - 20 16 acres harvested: 2,144 30 (D) (D) - 3,172 2,011 220 to 259 acres ......................................farms: 16 1 3 5 6 5 7 acres harvested: 1,825 (D) 560 696 346 990 1,176 260 to 499 acres ......................................farms: 51 5 2 20 7 39 49 acres harvested: 6,501 173 (D) 3,611 407 7,963 13,713 500 to 999 acres ......................................farms: 20 1 8 17 5 32 40 acres harvested: 4,622 (D) 1,722 6,476 952 17,167 17,957 1,000 to 1,999 acres ..................................farms: 21 - 2 4 3 14 24 acres harvested: 10,088 - (D) 1,577 945 15,200 21,859 2,000 acres or more ...................................farms: 15 - 4 1 13 35 22 acres harvested: 9,239 - 3,028 (D) 8,782 90,340 24,781 : 2007 size of farm: : 1 to 9 acres ..........................................farms: 586 87 130 227 2 1,052 138 acres harvested: 1,680 186 277 511 (D) 3,409 337 10 to 49 acres ........................................farms: 537 89 43 161 8 757 141 acres harvested: 7,699 409 660 1,174 48 10,069 1,957 50 to 69 acres ........................................farms: 93 12 4 21 - 47 31 acres harvested: 2,338 175 185 583 - 2,320 1,324 70 to 99 acres ........................................farms: 59 5 6 17 2 42 35 acres harvested: 2,314 56 458 489 (D) 1,957 1,817 100 to 139 acres ......................................farms: 37 8 2 5 2 35 16 acres harvested: 1,514 160 (D) 174 (D) 2,458 1,325 140 to 179 acres ......................................farms: 48 1 1 6 4 23 20 acres harvested: 3,888 (D) (D) 397 282 1,919 2,143 180 to 219 acres ......................................farms: 19 1 2 3 - 18 26 acres harvested: 1,411 (D) (D) 239 - 2,894 3,677 220 to 259 acres ......................................farms: 14 6 1 5 1 9 13 acres harvested: 1,490 106 (D) 1,043 (D) 1,589 2,221 260 to 499 acres ......................................farms: 57 1 5 18 4 32 63 acres harvested: 9,245 (D) 1,296 2,732 312 9,344 15,832 500 to 999 acres ......................................farms: 24 4 3 17 2 31 40 acres harvested: 4,159 (D) 1,895 5,059 (D) 14,322 22,791 1,000 to 1,999 acres ..................................farms: 19 1 1 4 1 22 34 acres harvested: 7,526 (D) (D) 1,489 (D) 24,829 32,796 2,000 acres or more ...................................farms: 10 3 2 3 7 28 26 acres harvested: 8,596 (D) (D) 8,100 6,185 88,673 27,095 : HARVESTED CROPLAND BY ACRES HARVESTED : : 2012 acres harvested: : 1 to 9 acres ..........................................farms: 916 275 158 375 18 1,273 314 acres: 2,932 669 382 920 40 4,277 836 10 to 19 acres ........................................farms: 228 20 16 40 11 279 49 acres: 3,091 249 215 503 125 3,635 684 20 to 29 acres ........................................farms: 98 6 11 21 6 99 31 acres: 2,299 138 274 (D) 152 2,155 709 30 to 49 acres ........................................farms: 97 7 7 21 3 74 40 acres: 3,682 238 269 760 105 2,793 1,453 50 to 99 acres ........................................farms: 91 4 7 10 6 68 64 acres: 6,074 261 559 654 (D) 4,501 4,393 100 to 199 acres ......................................farms: 44 - 6 13 6 61 60 acres: 6,231 - 742 1,849 750 8,025 8,636 200 to 499 acres ......................................farms: 30 - 6 17 5 49 48 acres: 8,934 - 2,190 5,241 1,780 14,027 16,371 500 to 999 acres ......................................farms: 10 - 3 10 2 23 32 acres: 5,829 - 2,183 6,131 (D) 16,088 22,780 1,000 acres or more ...................................farms: 7 - 3 1 5 36 22 acres: 13,108 - 3,244 (D) 6,898 100,968 36,228 : 2007 acres harvested: : 1 to 9 acres ..........................................farms: 849 185 141 357 11 1,355 195 acres: 2,899 504 (D) 962 38 4,918 586 10 to 19 acres ........................................farms: 238 13 18 45 4 323 67 acres: 3,160 166 252 559 50 4,261 871 20 to 29 acres ........................................farms: 128 10 14 21 2 119 29 acres: 3,020 225 319 473 (D) 2,563 654 30 to 49 acres ........................................farms: 113 5 6 12 2 75 39 acres: 4,241 (D) 233 441 (D) 2,695 1,451 50 to 99 acres ........................................farms: 74 3 6 19 3 73 63 acres: 5,124 190 476 1,258 232 4,662 4,155 100 to 199 acres ......................................farms: 49 1 4 6 3 38 52 acres: 6,686 (D) 485 900 455 5,383 7,417 200 to 499 acres ......................................farms: 41 - 6 18 4 52 70 acres: 13,092 - 1,841 5,295 1,365 15,894 22,694 500 to 999 acres ......................................farms: 4 - 4 6 2 20 42 acres: 2,590 - 2,399 4,002 (D) 13,773 32,350 1,000 acres or more ...................................farms: 7 1 1 3 2 41 26 acres: 11,048 (D) (D) 8,100 (D) 109,634 43,137 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 9. Harvested Cropland by Size of Farm and Acres Harvested: 2012 and 2007 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : San Benito :San Bernardino : San Diego : San Francisco : San Joaquin :San Luis Obispo: San Mateo :Santa Barbara ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Farms ..............................................number, 2012: 355 691 4,933 3 2,875 1,664 202 1,165 2007: 324 709 5,522 6 2,843 1,557 161 1,132 acres harvested, 2012: 24,016 22,699 51,097 (D) 484,804 113,141 4,033 98,772 2007: 32,571 27,516 67,279 (D) 444,670 105,492 4,909 93,280 : HARVESTED CROPLAND BY SIZE OF FARM : : 2012 size of farm: : 1 to 9 acres ..........................................farms: 132 403 3,535 3 584 370 90 428 acres harvested: (D) 1,102 8,388 (D) 2,242 1,055 218 1,037 10 to 49 acres ........................................farms: 90 190 1,066 - 1,117 614 51 344 acres harvested: 1,510 2,351 12,641 - 21,003 7,249 428 4,683 50 to 69 acres ........................................farms: 11 8 99 - 174 111 18 61 acres harvested: 459 (D) 3,142 - 8,401 2,407 563 1,696 70 to 99 acres ........................................farms: 11 26 51 - 152 109 7 50 acres harvested: 583 1,056 2,488 - 11,057 3,998 118 2,472 100 to 139 acres ......................................farms: 22 15 59 - 151 108 5 72 acres harvested: 878 827 2,937 - 15,234 4,899 184 3,303 140 to 179 acres ......................................farms: 14 8 18 - 110 71 10 14 acres harvested: 1,464 476 1,289 - 14,032 4,190 484 1,186 180 to 219 acres ......................................farms: 1 7 20 - 83 26 3 30 acres harvested: (D) 1,145 1,697 - 15,087 2,232 (D) 3,753 220 to 259 acres ......................................farms: 8 9 16 - 59 24 2 15 acres harvested: 1,239 1,263 1,781 - 12,766 2,446 (D) 1,932 260 to 499 acres ......................................farms: 16 11 43 - 168 72 8 58 acres harvested: 3,018 2,500 7,177 - 49,715 12,343 935 11,215 500 to 999 acres ......................................farms: 25 7 14 - 144 58 5 30 acres harvested: 3,920 4,005 5,712 - 84,051 17,961 721 10,122 1,000 to 1,999 acres ..................................farms: 12 6 9 - 75 54 3 29 acres harvested: 8,256 7,366 2,915 - 83,098 23,656 (D) 19,674 2,000 acres or more ...................................farms: 13 1 3 - 58 47 - 34 acres harvested: 2,216 (D) 930 - 168,118 30,705 - 37,699 : 2007 size of farm: : 1 to 9 acres ..........................................farms: 144 392 3,931 6 595 299 49 428 acres harvested: 494 1,147 9,857 (D) 2,369 890 94 1,086 10 to 49 acres ........................................farms: 77 184 1,231 - 1,130 612 54 371 acres harvested: 1,319 2,367 15,426 - 22,401 7,919 583 5,679 50 to 69 acres ........................................farms: 13 23 98 - 162 103 5 50 acres harvested: 641 830 3,858 - 7,857 2,626 70 1,504 70 to 99 acres ........................................farms: 8 25 59 - 171 119 5 40 acres harvested: 401 1,055 2,471 - 12,493 4,425 202 1,829 100 to 139 acres ......................................farms: 12 21 55 - 145 85 16 49 acres harvested: 1,086 1,440 3,452 - 14,589 3,975 1,278 3,082 140 to 179 acres ......................................farms: 3 9 28 - 104 54 5 19 acres harvested: 470 515 2,622 - 14,652 3,353 205 1,922 180 to 219 acres ......................................farms: 8 4 16 - 66 41 4 27 acres harvested: 890 710 (D) - 11,065 2,719 431 3,356 220 to 259 acres ......................................farms: 5 7 21 - 44 32 6 18 acres harvested: 1,096 514 3,343 - 9,389 2,688 186 2,407 260 to 499 acres ......................................farms: 12 24 51 - 157 73 8 37 acres harvested: 2,260 4,802 9,909 - 47,961 11,162 1,190 7,229 500 to 999 acres ......................................farms: 11 12 21 - 139 58 6 30 acres harvested: 2,075 5,721 6,919 - 80,826 12,866 350 11,457 1,000 to 1,999 acres ..................................farms: 17 5 10 - 83 45 2 32 acres harvested: 12,716 4,328 3,272 - 87,779 19,108 (D) 21,276 2,000 acres or more ...................................farms: 14 3 1 - 47 36 1 31 acres harvested: 9,123 4,087 (D) - 133,289 33,761 (D) 32,453 : HARVESTED CROPLAND BY ACRES HARVESTED : : 2012 acres harvested: : 1 to 9 acres ..........................................farms: 168 493 4,092 3 803 790 133 611 acres: 557 1,471 10,824 (D) 3,624 2,786 404 1,808 10 to 19 acres ........................................farms: 46 79 422 - 484 248 28 143 acres: 637 1,004 5,444 - 6,569 3,209 346 1,881 20 to 29 acres ........................................farms: 22 31 143 - 225 146 10 89 acres: (D) 716 (D) - 5,093 3,395 225 2,010 30 to 49 acres ........................................farms: 30 22 118 - 293 141 7 76 acres: 1,079 794 4,494 - 10,987 5,095 259 2,757 50 to 99 acres ........................................farms: 33 26 73 - 319 138 15 93 acres: 2,319 1,740 4,972 - 22,277 9,042 930 6,174 100 to 199 acres ......................................farms: 23 13 45 - 263 80 6 49 acres: 2,878 1,939 6,235 - 36,697 10,644 769 6,606 200 to 499 acres ......................................farms: 22 15 32 - 253 60 3 68 acres: 6,153 4,124 9,983 - 77,362 18,377 1,100 19,650 500 to 999 acres ......................................farms: 9 7 6 - 125 41 - 14 acres: 6,114 4,262 3,829 - 85,826 26,606 - 9,142 1,000 acres or more ...................................farms: 2 5 2 - 110 20 - 22 acres: (D) 6,649 (D) - 236,369 33,987 - 48,744 : 2007 acres harvested: : 1 to 9 acres ..........................................farms: 160 494 4,489 6 773 691 86 589 acres: 561 1,555 12,436 (D) 3,487 2,513 223 1,828 10 to 19 acres ........................................farms: 40 70 507 - 474 227 19 155 acres: 517 882 6,603 - 6,321 3,024 251 2,056 20 to 29 acres ........................................farms: 18 25 165 - 240 180 14 76 acres: 423 580 3,824 - 5,395 4,111 302 1,740 30 to 49 acres ........................................farms: 26 32 144 - 325 153 6 97 acres: 982 1,145 5,276 - 12,270 5,754 201 3,547 50 to 99 acres ........................................farms: 22 32 103 - 319 134 20 70 acres: 1,505 2,122 6,598 - 22,460 9,453 1,309 4,907 100 to 199 acres ......................................farms: 22 22 53 - 267 75 12 58 acres: 2,791 2,970 7,344 - 37,120 9,856 1,518 8,176 200 to 499 acres ......................................farms: 21 23 51 - 228 56 4 50 acres: 5,977 6,925 14,595 - 70,521 16,645 1,105 15,595 500 to 999 acres ......................................farms: 6 6 8 - 119 24 - 19 acres: 3,821 3,689 (D) - 81,035 16,922 - 12,076 1,000 acres or more ...................................farms: 9 5 2 - 98 17 - 18 acres: 15,994 7,648 (D) - 206,061 37,214 - 43,355 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 9. Harvested Cropland by Size of Farm and Acres Harvested: 2012 and 2007 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Santa Clara : Santa Cruz : Shasta : Sierra : Siskiyou : Solano : Sonoma : Stanislaus ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Farms ..............................................number, 2012: 691 522 626 21 435 499 2,507 2,921 2007: 647 522 510 21 381 506 2,386 2,833 acres harvested, 2012: 23,128 29,900 24,254 (D) 128,647 133,171 91,307 319,190 2007: 23,381 20,698 21,942 2,412 102,647 120,410 91,197 307,992 : HARVESTED CROPLAND BY SIZE OF FARM : : 2012 size of farm: : 1 to 9 acres ..........................................farms: 366 215 266 - 35 88 1,094 597 acres harvested: 1,029 563 625 - 61 243 2,750 2,399 10 to 49 acres ........................................farms: 202 176 195 - 93 198 814 1,233 acres harvested: 1,906 1,895 1,763 - 903 3,390 10,220 24,355 50 to 69 acres ........................................farms: 23 38 34 4 27 12 93 184 acres harvested: (D) 1,088 827 180 747 398 2,798 9,355 70 to 99 acres ........................................farms: 22 27 19 2 30 41 79 149 acres harvested: 926 972 592 (D) 1,225 2,092 3,128 10,891 100 to 139 acres ......................................farms: 15 14 16 - 33 13 87 141 acres harvested: 1,334 968 1,034 - 1,426 1,024 4,026 14,462 140 to 179 acres ......................................farms: 14 10 16 1 16 18 58 112 acres harvested: 596 (D) 347 (D) 1,616 1,351 3,481 14,965 180 to 219 acres ......................................farms: 8 3 17 - 21 17 42 70 acres harvested: 672 359 1,085 - 2,040 1,972 3,029 12,532 220 to 259 acres ......................................farms: 6 9 10 4 6 8 35 82 acres harvested: (D) 1,290 967 680 280 1,391 2,529 15,556 260 to 499 acres ......................................farms: 14 18 19 3 42 26 84 185 acres harvested: 2,976 3,462 2,642 735 7,936 7,278 10,947 54,029 500 to 999 acres ......................................farms: 6 6 11 3 34 28 42 88 acres harvested: 2,394 3,749 1,831 (D) 9,384 12,214 6,786 51,708 1,000 to 1,999 acres ..................................farms: 8 1 9 3 34 21 47 46 acres harvested: 6,533 (D) 4,045 619 20,595 20,023 19,501 43,567 2,000 acres or more ...................................farms: 7 5 14 1 64 29 32 34 acres harvested: 3,739 13,138 8,496 (D) 82,434 81,795 22,112 65,371 : 2007 size of farm: : 1 to 9 acres ..........................................farms: 300 208 189 - 10 93 941 592 acres harvested: 772 551 488 - 13 256 2,681 2,583 10 to 49 acres ........................................farms: 226 201 163 2 86 186 850 1,205 acres harvested: 2,434 2,416 1,552 (D) 1,136 2,714 11,283 24,240 50 to 69 acres ........................................farms: 26 30 26 4 28 27 122 188 acres harvested: 679 922 560 162 622 1,064 3,253 9,313 70 to 99 acres ........................................farms: 16 31 17 2 30 39 87 154 acres harvested: 573 1,229 480 (D) 928 2,031 3,714 11,054 100 to 139 acres ......................................farms: 19 7 15 2 20 17 83 118 acres harvested: 1,279 547 572 (D) 951 1,621 4,042 12,071 140 to 179 acres ......................................farms: 3 11 17 3 18 24 54 101 acres harvested: (D) 988 665 110 1,466 1,602 3,735 13,596 180 to 219 acres ......................................farms: 9 11 13 - 19 14 40 74 acres harvested: 793 1,209 995 - 1,969 1,588 2,969 12,198 220 to 259 acres ......................................farms: 4 4 5 2 11 7 27 48 acres harvested: (D) 906 648 (D) 565 1,107 2,239 9,681 260 to 499 acres ......................................farms: 13 12 18 4 38 28 79 176 acres harvested: 2,429 3,098 1,217 790 6,477 8,468 9,750 50,467 500 to 999 acres ......................................farms: 10 3 14 - 43 26 41 98 acres harvested: 3,132 2,080 2,612 - 12,115 11,261 11,066 54,837 1,000 to 1,999 acres ..................................farms: 9 1 13 2 30 17 43 45 acres harvested: 7,692 (D) 3,133 (D) 14,129 19,240 19,916 46,302 2,000 acres or more ...................................farms: 12 3 20 - 48 28 19 34 acres harvested: 3,083 (D) 9,020 - 62,276 69,458 16,549 61,650 : HARVESTED CROPLAND BY ACRES HARVESTED : : 2012 acres harvested: : 1 to 9 acres ..........................................farms: 502 338 416 - 94 159 1,538 767 acres: 1,561 1,029 1,197 - 251 530 4,877 3,530 10 to 19 acres ........................................farms: 86 62 78 - 56 73 372 599 acres: 1,071 806 1,003 - 802 1,000 4,941 8,690 20 to 29 acres ........................................farms: 15 18 25 1 47 44 149 246 acres: 322 423 539 (D) 1,116 994 3,455 5,560 30 to 49 acres ........................................farms: 20 36 28 7 34 59 159 312 acres: 736 1,333 1,055 (D) 1,233 2,223 5,919 11,720 50 to 99 acres ........................................farms: 22 28 37 1 44 39 119 344 acres: 1,415 1,849 2,396 (D) 3,035 2,708 8,253 23,623 100 to 199 acres ......................................farms: 19 17 18 6 48 30 87 261 acres: 2,282 2,208 2,275 935 6,381 3,866 11,746 37,342 200 to 499 acres ......................................farms: 16 12 15 6 49 41 54 272 acres: 4,237 3,789 4,414 1,639 14,769 12,935 15,596 80,751 500 to 999 acres ......................................farms: 5 5 6 - 29 21 10 73 acres: 3,129 3,416 4,425 - 20,747 15,029 6,370 51,720 1,000 acres or more ...................................farms: 6 6 3 - 34 33 19 47 acres: 8,375 15,047 6,950 - 80,313 93,886 30,150 96,254 : 2007 acres harvested: : 1 to 9 acres ..........................................farms: 434 325 300 2 67 184 1,382 755 acres: 1,351 987 911 (D) 244 645 4,679 3,612 10 to 19 acres ........................................farms: 86 75 78 - 43 59 372 544 acres: 1,055 1,010 (D) - 514 829 4,895 7,849 20 to 29 acres ........................................farms: 33 24 23 2 32 39 183 271 acres: 770 542 (D) (D) 750 879 4,210 6,236 30 to 49 acres ........................................farms: 31 27 34 5 50 50 156 318 acres: 1,102 978 (D) 164 1,783 1,781 5,854 12,036 50 to 99 acres ........................................farms: 23 37 28 5 38 50 126 336 acres: 1,490 2,504 1,952 290 2,502 3,577 8,468 22,813 100 to 199 acres ......................................farms: 17 14 23 - 44 34 77 252 acres: 1,976 2,069 2,780 - 5,985 4,515 10,098 35,757 200 to 499 acres ......................................farms: 13 14 16 7 59 41 58 223 acres: 4,068 3,808 4,621 1,912 17,930 13,622 16,394 67,667 500 to 999 acres ......................................farms: 4 3 6 - 25 19 16 89 acres: 2,756 2,080 4,042 - 15,886 12,220 11,109 60,333 1,000 acres or more ...................................farms: 6 3 2 - 23 30 16 45 acres: 8,813 6,720 (D) - 57,053 82,342 25,490 91,689 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 9. Harvested Cropland by Size of Farm and Acres Harvested: 2012 and 2007 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Sutter : Tehama : Trinity : Tulare : Tuolumne : Ventura : Yolo : Yuba ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Farms ..............................................number, 2012: 1,165 877 113 4,013 99 1,880 731 428 2007: 1,055 826 81 4,158 78 2,078 682 377 acres harvested, 2012: 262,556 72,847 862 609,270 921 89,321 263,697 68,297 2007: 241,597 60,556 1,040 560,320 714 96,889 258,261 62,510 : HARVESTED CROPLAND BY SIZE OF FARM : : 2012 size of farm: : 1 to 9 acres ..........................................farms: 190 196 29 1,017 21 846 90 114 acres harvested: 756 747 54 3,979 52 2,383 267 (D) 10 to 49 acres ........................................farms: 359 341 45 1,404 48 652 223 96 acres harvested: 7,185 4,603 152 26,986 265 10,911 3,770 1,244 50 to 69 acres ........................................farms: 75 48 5 220 7 79 48 21 acres harvested: 3,964 2,099 25 10,801 (D) 3,060 1,906 784 70 to 99 acres ........................................farms: 68 56 7 271 6 61 37 18 acres harvested: 5,173 2,890 19 19,508 35 3,522 1,828 1,202 100 to 139 acres ......................................farms: 79 40 6 238 - 43 37 18 acres harvested: 7,418 1,283 128 22,990 - 3,374 3,135 1,452 140 to 179 acres ......................................farms: 59 24 9 167 6 27 46 21 acres harvested: 8,101 2,245 197 22,534 22 2,760 5,611 2,954 180 to 219 acres ......................................farms: 34 21 - 81 4 28 16 12 acres harvested: 5,447 2,961 - 14,405 (D) 3,984 2,442 1,691 220 to 259 acres ......................................farms: 17 20 6 66 1 23 16 22 acres harvested: 3,613 2,869 17 13,381 (D) 3,910 2,584 4,459 260 to 499 acres ......................................farms: 105 48 3 223 2 48 87 48 acres harvested: 32,256 9,270 (D) 70,135 (D) 11,461 23,423 14,238 500 to 999 acres ......................................farms: 106 32 - 171 3 34 53 43 acres harvested: 63,056 10,635 - 97,293 (D) 15,157 30,310 22,918 1,000 to 1,999 acres ..................................farms: 48 21 2 82 - 17 29 13 acres harvested: 50,639 14,794 (D) 92,268 - 15,504 32,938 15,673 2,000 acres or more ...................................farms: 25 30 1 73 1 22 49 2 acres harvested: 74,948 18,451 (D) 214,990 (D) 13,295 155,483 (D) : 2007 size of farm: : 1 to 9 acres ..........................................farms: 155 162 17 911 24 867 89 74 acres harvested: 643 574 31 3,842 47 2,643 318 239 10 to 49 acres ........................................farms: 354 358 32 1,705 28 764 217 96 acres harvested: 6,935 4,845 187 34,352 106 13,311 3,626 1,567 50 to 69 acres ........................................farms: 72 49 2 213 4 96 39 20 acres harvested: 3,328 1,743 (D) 10,231 30 3,963 1,633 930 70 to 99 acres ........................................farms: 54 39 5 249 5 79 35 28 acres harvested: 3,652 1,762 24 17,141 29 4,112 2,219 1,697 100 to 139 acres ......................................farms: 56 44 8 208 5 55 27 17 acres harvested: 5,623 3,527 182 21,260 11 4,641 2,509 1,659 140 to 179 acres ......................................farms: 50 22 3 142 2 45 24 20 acres harvested: 7,042 1,867 (D) 19,222 (D) 4,992 2,691 2,664 180 to 219 acres ......................................farms: 29 30 2 82 1 22 21 18 acres harvested: 4,897 4,547 (D) 14,115 (D) 2,540 3,574 2,497 220 to 259 acres ......................................farms: 31 12 2 86 - 20 16 9 acres harvested: 6,835 2,164 (D) 17,839 - 3,816 3,090 1,885 260 to 499 acres ......................................farms: 99 36 3 238 6 63 72 48 acres harvested: 30,620 7,406 14 73,546 156 13,306 19,733 14,699 500 to 999 acres ......................................farms: 83 29 1 178 1 34 51 30 acres harvested: 50,501 6,592 (D) 102,454 (D) 16,571 27,371 17,694 1,000 to 1,999 acres ..................................farms: 47 22 4 80 - 23 39 11 acres harvested: 52,489 11,400 250 95,734 - 14,804 36,304 12,786 2,000 acres or more ...................................farms: 25 23 2 66 2 10 52 6 acres harvested: 69,032 14,129 (D) 150,584 (D) 12,190 155,193 4,193 : HARVESTED CROPLAND BY ACRES HARVESTED : : 2012 acres harvested: : 1 to 9 acres ..........................................farms: 245 385 97 1,272 82 1,042 164 162 acres: 1,058 1,583 249 5,308 231 3,353 626 448 10 to 19 acres ........................................farms: 143 132 5 568 9 276 94 39 acres: 1,944 1,737 73 7,599 105 3,805 1,279 538 20 to 29 acres ........................................farms: 95 50 - 360 2 134 65 12 acres: 2,168 1,120 - 8,130 (D) 3,024 1,483 245 30 to 49 acres ........................................farms: 122 78 6 361 5 154 68 24 acres: 4,584 2,875 215 13,704 (D) 5,740 2,571 925 50 to 99 acres ........................................farms: 131 96 5 497 - 104 53 32 acres: 9,307 6,673 325 35,399 - 6,923 3,503 2,213 100 to 199 acres ......................................farms: 143 51 - 376 - 81 89 48 acres: 19,677 7,413 - 51,721 - 10,990 12,893 6,823 200 to 499 acres ......................................farms: 139 54 - 315 1 54 91 69 acres: 44,405 16,534 - 99,348 (D) 17,003 28,211 20,599 500 to 999 acres ......................................farms: 91 19 - 145 - 20 48 30 acres: 61,791 12,987 - 98,536 - 13,728 32,221 20,634 1,000 acres or more ...................................farms: 56 12 - 119 - 15 59 12 acres: 117,622 21,925 - 289,525 - 24,755 180,910 15,872 : 2007 acres harvested: : 1 to 9 acres ..........................................farms: 218 307 60 1,158 64 1,069 157 115 acres: 947 1,212 158 5,290 (D) 3,709 646 415 10 to 19 acres ........................................farms: 149 167 4 724 9 319 85 31 acres: 2,061 2,137 (D) 9,761 135 4,432 1,207 421 20 to 29 acres ........................................farms: 93 72 4 396 2 198 62 14 acres: 2,213 1,610 100 8,899 (D) 4,488 1,410 319 30 to 49 acres ........................................farms: 111 76 5 471 - 172 56 30 acres: 4,334 2,858 173 17,821 - 6,476 2,121 1,114 50 to 99 acres ........................................farms: 100 66 7 441 2 132 63 42 acres: 6,939 4,458 461 30,866 (D) 8,918 4,230 2,918 100 to 199 acres ......................................farms: 117 61 1 357 - 89 64 48 acres: 16,872 8,177 (D) 49,499 - 11,755 8,980 6,895 200 to 499 acres ......................................farms: 138 53 - 352 1 66 88 61 acres: 43,414 15,088 - 108,778 (D) 19,827 27,040 19,175 500 to 999 acres ......................................farms: 75 13 - 147 - 20 41 28 acres: 52,249 8,638 - 100,697 - 14,365 29,187 20,136 1,000 acres or more ...................................farms: 54 11 - 112 - 13 66 8 acres: 112,568 16,378 - 228,709 - 22,919 183,440 11,117 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Table 10. Irrigation: 2012 and 2007 [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : California : Alameda : Alpine : Amador : Butte : Calaveras : Colusa ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Farms ..............................................number, 2012: 53,546 159 3 236 1,547 224 665 2007: 53,400 215 3 192 1,429 201 682 Land in irrigated farms .............................acres, 2012: 16,039,761 51,369 (D) 89,665 308,576 32,162 409,640 2007: 16,231,930 51,767 (D) 86,502 315,466 78,495 431,304 : Harvested cropland ................................farms, 2012: 48,276 149 3 186 1,403 177 631 2007: 45,769 188 3 136 1,245 148 632 acres, 2012: 7,753,480 8,056 (D) 8,019 198,631 2,683 262,051 2007: 7,465,841 9,086 (D) 6,355 196,559 2,299 275,499 Other cropland, excluding cropland pastured .......farms, 2012: 6,080 16 1 17 183 22 71 2007: 6,318 20 - 16 126 11 67 acres, 2012: 664,791 567 (D) 225 14,964 358 10,882 2007: 620,748 385 - 729 9,094 47 10,536 Pastureland, excluding woodland pastured ..........farms, 2012: 11,535 28 3 113 288 97 99 2007: 15,458 73 3 100 382 112 143 acres, 2012: 5,998,187 40,795 (D) 67,038 64,336 20,747 112,075 2007: 6,630,443 39,667 (D) 67,618 89,949 65,660 123,129 : Irrigated land ......................................acres, 2012: 7,861,964 8,893 239 11,321 199,662 4,523 260,859 2007: 8,016,159 9,687 (D) 10,132 202,234 4,888 277,332 Harvested cropland ................................farms, 2012: 47,972 149 3 173 1,391 166 629 2007: 45,412 188 3 133 1,236 141 631 acres, 2012: 7,371,411 7,635 (D) 6,719 193,721 2,356 252,047 2007: 7,274,248 8,456 (D) 5,678 192,928 2,061 268,737 Pastureland and other land ........................farms, 2012: 7,884 17 2 73 225 76 55 2007: 10,546 34 2 69 263 73 77 acres, 2012: 490,553 1,258 (D) 4,602 5,941 2,167 8,812 2007: 741,911 1,231 (D) 4,454 9,306 2,827 8,595 : 2012 irrigated acres by size of farm: : 1 to 9 acres ..........................................farms: 16,781 80 - 38 465 62 54 acres irrigated: 48,555 157 - (D) 1,700 135 215 10 to 49 acres ........................................farms: 17,952 41 - 97 539 89 123 acres irrigated: 277,751 477 - 1,072 8,977 793 2,266 50 to 69 acres ........................................farms: 2,579 5 - 24 67 14 23 acres irrigated: 100,629 61 - 353 2,776 367 1,062 70 to 99 acres ........................................farms: 2,555 4 - 17 59 10 39 acres irrigated: 149,309 (D) - 449 3,608 224 2,921 : 100 to 139 acres ......................................farms: 2,193 1 2 16 54 9 45 acres irrigated: 171,412 (D) (D) 453 4,983 52 4,173 140 to 179 acres ......................................farms: 1,650 6 - 1 44 10 43 acres irrigated: 179,907 798 - (D) 5,970 73 5,669 180 to 219 acres ......................................farms: 1,045 4 - 10 43 1 35 acres irrigated: 146,234 269 - 264 6,667 (D) 6,294 220 to 259 acres ......................................farms: 834 - - 2 33 6 22 acres irrigated: 137,641 - - (D) 6,106 (D) 5,031 : 260 to 499 acres ......................................farms: 2,810 4 - 9 115 9 114 acres irrigated: 720,848 228 - 1,418 30,860 1,130 35,770 500 to 999 acres ......................................farms: 2,267 3 - 11 75 6 86 acres irrigated: 1,125,266 (D) - 791 42,222 662 51,930 1,000 to 1,999 acres ..................................farms: 1,400 3 1 7 31 6 31 acres irrigated: 1,250,285 217 (D) 990 33,382 797 34,984 2,000 acres or more ...................................farms: 1,480 8 - 4 22 2 50 acres irrigated: 3,554,127 5,679 - 5,428 52,411 (D) 110,544 : 2007 irrigated acres by size of farm: : 1 to 9 acres ..........................................farms: 15,614 90 - 28 372 56 52 acres irrigated: 47,640 258 - (D) 1,348 118 199 10 to 49 acres ........................................farms: 18,690 85 1 90 461 63 141 acres irrigated: 297,094 1,125 (D) 757 7,165 350 2,624 50 to 69 acres ........................................farms: 2,560 6 - 14 73 11 21 acres irrigated: 102,227 173 - 272 2,882 209 971 70 to 99 acres ........................................farms: 2,462 6 - 9 52 13 24 acres irrigated: 143,394 52 - 222 3,481 319 1,877 : 100 to 139 acres ......................................farms: 2,038 5 1 7 59 6 32 acres irrigated: 166,382 389 (D) 95 5,500 54 3,103 140 to 179 acres ......................................farms: 1,608 2 - 9 49 5 24 acres irrigated: 176,842 (D) - 191 6,553 (D) 3,208 180 to 219 acres ......................................farms: 1,117 1 - 4 45 2 33 acres irrigated: 158,398 (D) - 311 7,905 (D) 5,251 220 to 259 acres ......................................farms: 932 2 - 5 41 4 39 acres irrigated: 159,057 (D) - 339 7,646 204 7,678 : 260 to 499 acres ......................................farms: 2,977 7 - 7 135 16 110 acres irrigated: 771,942 256 - 1,048 41,071 823 34,865 500 to 999 acres ......................................farms: 2,401 4 1 10 96 13 109 acres irrigated: 1,208,174 (D) (D) 1,588 57,710 560 65,650 1,000 to 1,999 acres ..................................farms: 1,563 2 - 3 29 5 57 acres irrigated: 1,418,462 (D) - (D) 26,449 546 61,594 2,000 acres or more ...................................farms: 1,438 5 - 6 17 7 40 acres irrigated: 3,366,547 5,752 - 5,100 34,524 1,651 90,312 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 10. Irrigation: 2012 and 2007 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Contra Costa : Del Norte : El Dorado : Fresno : Glenn : Humboldt : Imperial ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Farms ..............................................number, 2012: 289 53 779 4,521 1,095 431 348 2007: 275 32 664 4,602 1,020 331 390 Land in irrigated farms .............................acres, 2012: 59,565 (D) 65,378 1,347,893 537,212 122,710 510,837 2007: 45,266 14,413 46,620 1,285,773 382,251 146,011 421,050 : Harvested cropland ................................farms, 2012: 264 46 668 4,284 949 389 330 2007: 234 23 541 4,233 850 272 364 acres, 2012: 26,890 6,085 4,747 984,266 234,396 8,926 466,699 2007: 22,799 3,160 5,263 966,083 227,165 9,999 375,902 Other cropland, excluding cropland pastured .......farms, 2012: 20 8 115 539 90 66 46 2007: 49 3 85 603 95 35 57 acres, 2012: (D) 289 2,170 95,004 9,029 1,319 18,602 2007: 1,703 199 823 77,858 7,348 869 15,316 Pastureland, excluding woodland pastured ..........farms, 2012: 46 28 287 493 308 203 43 2007: 75 25 278 862 352 191 49 acres, 2012: 27,510 6,506 36,623 214,849 270,322 75,693 8,585 2007: 19,265 8,294 27,554 196,278 130,332 96,428 6,833 : Irrigated land ......................................acres, 2012: 27,272 9,229 6,811 968,727 242,932 17,051 455,033 2007: 27,421 7,660 9,892 984,455 236,134 17,490 376,535 Harvested cropland ................................farms, 2012: 263 45 665 4,274 926 370 330 2007: 233 22 536 4,211 842 259 364 acres, 2012: 26,476 5,455 4,351 960,075 227,439 6,016 450,186 2007: 22,476 2,848 4,614 960,215 222,803 7,383 375,167 Pastureland and other land ........................farms, 2012: 32 19 161 361 236 107 34 2007: 49 17 177 528 260 115 27 acres, 2012: 796 3,774 2,460 8,652 15,493 11,035 4,847 2007: 4,945 4,812 5,278 24,240 13,331 10,107 1,368 : 2012 irrigated acres by size of farm: : 1 to 9 acres ..........................................farms: 165 18 293 693 169 150 29 acres irrigated: 403 35 583 2,550 651 280 100 10 to 49 acres ........................................farms: 72 12 355 1,910 367 111 49 acres irrigated: 1,206 (D) 2,272 38,481 7,363 703 996 50 to 69 acres ........................................farms: 9 - 33 316 74 18 4 acres irrigated: 229 - 262 16,018 3,450 163 230 70 to 99 acres ........................................farms: 3 5 43 294 72 33 17 acres irrigated: (D) 25 1,042 21,830 4,464 917 1,320 : 100 to 139 acres ......................................farms: 5 - 25 239 53 19 11 acres irrigated: 530 - 751 24,183 4,948 510 1,168 140 to 179 acres ......................................farms: 1 7 6 152 38 10 14 acres irrigated: (D) 274 111 20,929 5,463 600 2,150 180 to 219 acres ......................................farms: - 4 6 73 21 7 11 acres irrigated: - (D) 161 12,905 4,001 730 2,020 220 to 259 acres ......................................farms: 1 - 4 60 25 12 7 acres irrigated: (D) - (D) 12,987 5,000 1,222 1,158 : 260 to 499 acres ......................................farms: 11 1 7 250 108 29 36 acres irrigated: 2,527 (D) 162 80,826 34,455 4,528 10,742 500 to 999 acres ......................................farms: 7 2 1 259 89 20 36 acres irrigated: 3,740 (D) (D) 161,928 49,819 4,288 25,433 1,000 to 1,999 acres ..................................farms: 6 3 2 164 48 11 45 acres irrigated: 6,128 3,200 (D) 173,383 50,768 2,259 64,382 2,000 acres or more ...................................farms: 9 1 4 111 31 11 89 acres irrigated: 11,922 (D) 1,230 402,707 72,550 851 345,334 : 2007 irrigated acres by size of farm: : 1 to 9 acres ..........................................farms: 121 9 213 641 148 96 32 acres irrigated: 380 29 479 2,329 567 181 98 10 to 49 acres ........................................farms: 98 4 328 2,036 312 103 60 acres irrigated: 1,349 33 2,171 42,570 6,404 690 1,292 50 to 69 acres ........................................farms: 14 - 40 283 56 15 10 acres irrigated: 556 - 660 14,133 2,672 263 544 70 to 99 acres ........................................farms: 5 - 27 275 55 24 24 acres irrigated: 202 - 787 20,198 3,571 743 1,690 : 100 to 139 acres ......................................farms: 5 - 18 187 43 12 16 acres irrigated: 382 - 500 19,137 3,871 432 1,538 140 to 179 acres ......................................farms: 3 8 17 152 40 11 10 acres irrigated: 180 197 419 20,297 5,216 858 1,473 180 to 219 acres ......................................farms: - 1 2 100 31 4 18 acres irrigated: - (D) (D) 16,839 5,156 521 2,925 220 to 259 acres ......................................farms: 5 1 9 74 25 11 10 acres irrigated: 1,220 (D) 237 14,092 5,211 1,423 1,819 : 260 to 499 acres ......................................farms: 6 2 6 287 138 26 34 acres irrigated: 1,029 (D) (D) 88,771 44,148 3,202 10,416 500 to 999 acres ......................................farms: 6 3 - 271 88 12 53 acres irrigated: 3,604 1,061 - 180,020 47,201 3,663 33,057 1,000 to 1,999 acres ..................................farms: 5 2 - 179 53 9 57 acres irrigated: 6,645 (D) - 201,616 60,995 2,926 73,986 2,000 acres or more ...................................farms: 7 2 4 117 31 8 66 acres irrigated: 11,874 (D) 4,511 364,453 51,122 2,588 247,697 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 10. Irrigation: 2012 and 2007 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Inyo : Kern : Kings : Lake : Lassen : Los Angeles : Madera ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Farms ..............................................number, 2012: 60 1,140 845 393 220 656 1,038 2007: 65 1,306 915 360 238 682 1,177 Land in irrigated farms .............................acres, 2012: 161,142 1,502,337 596,571 95,049 334,104 53,824 462,006 2007: 264,658 1,438,144 515,462 69,751 390,055 50,123 512,108 : Harvested cropland ................................farms, 2012: 36 1,060 738 388 182 645 1,008 2007: 25 1,164 801 332 179 592 1,106 acres, 2012: (D) 735,334 414,937 15,060 38,799 40,117 286,491 2007: (D) 764,306 419,870 14,545 45,095 25,611 263,533 Other cropland, excluding cropland pastured .......farms, 2012: 6 172 112 83 58 85 100 2007: 7 228 114 65 66 82 126 acres, 2012: 2,011 98,801 69,821 1,094 12,867 5,183 7,479 2007: 2,553 94,076 59,875 2,330 7,173 7,137 12,556 Pastureland, excluding woodland pastured ..........farms, 2012: 41 218 182 78 140 35 111 2007: 48 267 267 82 167 162 189 acres, 2012: 149,026 598,521 67,648 55,064 257,789 (D) 149,383 2007: 239,205 493,113 18,227 12,013 286,922 9,617 216,253 : Irrigated land ......................................acres, 2012: 23,832 729,956 407,417 13,499 65,960 39,653 292,274 2007: 32,530 786,255 421,571 13,551 69,876 29,710 281,658 Harvested cropland ................................farms, 2012: 34 1,059 738 386 182 642 1,004 2007: 25 1,162 801 329 176 592 1,106 acres, 2012: (D) 719,971 404,943 13,304 34,270 39,424 282,728 2007: 4,025 756,645 419,080 13,066 37,812 25,309 260,596 Pastureland and other land ........................farms, 2012: 34 102 154 15 74 27 56 2007: 46 183 174 44 108 107 122 acres, 2012: (D) 9,985 2,474 195 31,690 229 9,546 2007: 28,505 29,610 2,491 485 32,064 4,401 21,062 : 2012 irrigated acres by size of farm: : 1 to 9 acres ..........................................farms: 16 130 161 75 20 460 87 acres irrigated: 16 320 514 196 49 904 279 10 to 49 acres ........................................farms: 11 223 228 169 45 140 302 acres irrigated: 93 4,142 4,059 1,775 665 1,452 7,542 50 to 69 acres ........................................farms: - 28 43 37 12 7 80 acres irrigated: - 1,160 2,109 849 323 210 4,093 70 to 99 acres ........................................farms: - 58 51 36 7 13 131 acres irrigated: - 4,312 3,674 1,068 215 490 9,371 : 100 to 139 acres ......................................farms: - 57 37 19 8 5 70 acres irrigated: - 6,282 3,587 1,212 262 389 7,112 140 to 179 acres ......................................farms: 3 95 31 11 9 3 59 acres irrigated: 300 12,742 4,388 540 674 (D) 8,065 180 to 219 acres ......................................farms: 3 43 36 12 8 1 40 acres irrigated: 125 6,250 6,321 554 908 (D) 6,111 220 to 259 acres ......................................farms: 3 31 15 4 8 7 28 acres irrigated: 380 6,695 2,599 615 1,243 790 5,652 : 260 to 499 acres ......................................farms: - 132 67 9 27 1 83 acres irrigated: - 41,316 21,413 2,153 3,328 (D) 26,051 500 to 999 acres ......................................farms: 4 131 72 7 23 6 77 acres irrigated: 1,494 78,739 45,687 1,404 7,625 1,531 47,058 1,000 to 1,999 acres ..................................farms: - 90 54 6 19 6 42 acres irrigated: - 103,317 66,000 1,180 8,435 5,744 45,768 2,000 acres or more ...................................farms: 20 122 50 8 34 7 39 acres irrigated: 21,424 464,681 247,066 1,953 42,233 27,488 125,172 : 2007 irrigated acres by size of farm: : 1 to 9 acres ..........................................farms: 9 163 171 59 16 478 88 acres irrigated: (D) 370 584 184 54 1,044 269 10 to 49 acres ........................................farms: 14 300 277 147 33 115 403 acres irrigated: 232 5,696 5,313 1,784 469 1,074 9,621 50 to 69 acres ........................................farms: - 36 44 38 24 15 88 acres irrigated: - 1,701 2,233 816 717 (D) 4,235 70 to 99 acres ........................................farms: 2 84 45 19 16 14 142 acres irrigated: (D) 5,712 3,268 412 815 465 10,122 : 100 to 139 acres ......................................farms: 1 59 41 31 10 7 50 acres irrigated: (D) 6,305 4,354 1,268 406 477 5,040 140 to 179 acres ......................................farms: 4 92 25 10 14 6 54 acres irrigated: 400 12,172 3,020 412 1,518 379 7,654 180 to 219 acres ......................................farms: 8 30 34 5 3 9 49 acres irrigated: 312 5,059 5,970 (D) 370 364 8,669 220 to 259 acres ......................................farms: 2 44 25 6 10 6 41 acres irrigated: (D) 9,216 5,518 (D) 1,349 809 8,219 : 260 to 499 acres ......................................farms: 4 144 71 17 24 8 89 acres irrigated: 1,035 45,867 22,852 2,752 2,828 (D) 28,398 500 to 999 acres ......................................farms: 6 126 79 15 25 8 96 acres irrigated: 3,428 74,928 50,539 2,549 6,546 3,426 53,153 1,000 to 1,999 acres ..................................farms: 1 114 58 5 25 11 40 acres irrigated: (D) 126,525 67,894 472 10,020 9,110 43,799 2,000 acres or more ...................................farms: 14 114 45 8 38 5 37 acres irrigated: 25,727 492,704 250,026 2,333 44,784 11,781 102,479 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 10. Irrigation: 2012 and 2007 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Marin : Mariposa : Mendocino : Merced : Modoc : Mono : Monterey ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Farms ..............................................number, 2012: 99 87 648 1,987 282 44 608 2007: 66 74 590 2,127 306 64 700 Land in irrigated farms .............................acres, 2012: 24,761 58,496 323,964 787,845 388,123 45,694 572,657 2007: 19,089 46,711 352,350 811,046 503,660 40,864 602,631 : Harvested cropland ................................farms, 2012: 92 49 608 1,776 235 29 585 2007: 62 29 538 1,820 253 28 642 acres, 2012: 2,494 (D) 25,197 470,957 115,935 10,481 273,951 2007: 1,552 (D) 25,900 463,395 101,621 8,144 226,317 Other cropland, excluding cropland pastured .......farms, 2012: 11 8 90 159 69 4 89 2007: 8 - 88 171 77 5 103 acres, 2012: 58 33 1,829 18,425 8,443 374 31,787 2007: 180 - 2,200 27,279 9,466 358 13,777 Pastureland, excluding woodland pastured ..........farms, 2012: 38 51 197 427 210 26 120 2007: 24 57 241 595 217 51 165 acres, 2012: 10,237 52,476 200,665 262,126 225,910 32,410 209,746 2007: 15,237 42,669 237,613 283,633 344,798 29,483 331,117 : Irrigated land ......................................acres, 2012: 3,732 1,806 25,693 468,226 128,360 21,506 263,835 2007: 1,614 (D) 27,120 514,162 132,731 22,217 232,969 Harvested cropland ................................farms, 2012: 92 49 604 1,769 222 29 585 2007: 62 29 535 1,810 246 28 640 acres, 2012: 2,217 512 23,305 449,569 99,580 10,480 263,118 2007: 1,094 (D) 24,323 458,017 95,139 8,144 224,333 Pastureland and other land ........................farms, 2012: 11 40 69 331 130 17 32 2007: 6 45 99 421 123 49 79 acres, 2012: 1,515 1,294 2,388 18,657 28,780 11,026 717 2007: 520 (D) 2,797 56,145 37,592 14,073 8,636 : 2012 irrigated acres by size of farm: : 1 to 9 acres ..........................................farms: 38 12 163 204 12 2 141 acres irrigated: 58 24 374 846 68 (D) 394 10 to 49 acres ........................................farms: 28 28 186 854 37 9 144 acres irrigated: 168 229 1,777 17,998 483 (D) 1,717 50 to 69 acres ........................................farms: 6 4 39 106 7 - 35 acres irrigated: 116 30 937 5,465 366 - 1,049 70 to 99 acres ........................................farms: 6 5 26 121 17 1 21 acres irrigated: 32 33 388 9,051 802 (D) 986 : 100 to 139 acres ......................................farms: 5 3 35 102 20 1 27 acres irrigated: 304 16 1,268 10,672 1,360 (D) 1,950 140 to 179 acres ......................................farms: - 12 49 93 6 3 24 acres irrigated: - 39 2,783 11,884 466 416 2,094 180 to 219 acres ......................................farms: - 2 22 53 10 - 14 acres irrigated: - (D) 1,390 8,504 843 - 2,157 220 to 259 acres ......................................farms: - 3 14 33 8 4 12 acres irrigated: - (D) 760 6,489 1,200 366 2,447 : 260 to 499 acres ......................................farms: - 3 36 140 36 9 46 acres irrigated: - 34 2,349 43,068 6,351 2,479 13,787 500 to 999 acres ......................................farms: 12 1 28 125 44 4 46 acres irrigated: (D) (D) 3,375 69,836 11,966 2,541 25,182 1,000 to 1,999 acres ..................................farms: 1 10 15 68 43 7 44 acres irrigated: (D) 923 3,863 66,786 22,737 3,450 47,210 2,000 acres or more ...................................farms: 3 4 35 88 42 4 54 acres irrigated: (D) 409 6,429 217,627 81,718 11,908 164,862 : 2007 irrigated acres by size of farm: : 1 to 9 acres ..........................................farms: 30 12 117 213 14 8 148 acres irrigated: 61 32 297 957 79 35 491 10 to 49 acres ........................................farms: 16 19 191 897 39 13 186 acres irrigated: 140 36 1,791 19,078 568 176 2,004 50 to 69 acres ........................................farms: 2 2 37 151 9 1 37 acres irrigated: (D) (D) 862 7,908 414 (D) 1,599 70 to 99 acres ........................................farms: 1 3 21 133 26 5 41 acres irrigated: (D) (D) 785 9,752 1,467 67 1,938 : 100 to 139 acres ......................................farms: 3 5 42 123 14 2 24 acres irrigated: 103 124 1,394 12,648 775 (D) 1,657 140 to 179 acres ......................................farms: 1 5 25 87 8 7 31 acres irrigated: (D) 70 1,405 11,366 973 290 3,228 180 to 219 acres ......................................farms: - 2 22 46 6 4 17 acres irrigated: - (D) 1,456 7,737 881 440 2,112 220 to 259 acres ......................................farms: - 4 11 49 7 4 18 acres irrigated: - 162 919 9,508 680 573 3,548 : 260 to 499 acres ......................................farms: 1 3 48 144 51 1 53 acres irrigated: (D) (D) 3,544 43,897 8,755 (D) 12,634 500 to 999 acres ......................................farms: 6 5 27 124 49 8 52 acres irrigated: 238 24 2,570 70,540 17,847 3,396 28,885 1,000 to 1,999 acres ..................................farms: 3 9 21 88 29 8 37 acres irrigated: 540 335 3,545 92,019 18,244 5,547 41,611 2,000 acres or more ...................................farms: 3 5 28 72 54 3 56 acres irrigated: (D) 974 8,552 228,752 82,048 10,943 133,262 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 10. Irrigation: 2012 and 2007 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Napa : Nevada : Orange : Placer : Plumas : Riverside : Sacramento ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Farms ..............................................number, 2012: 1,353 475 207 875 68 1,926 788 2007: 1,202 421 203 1,027 50 2,206 844 Land in irrigated farms .............................acres, 2012: 181,250 26,185 56,201 63,391 115,430 275,638 172,027 2007: 148,163 53,805 80,254 109,155 94,876 234,216 238,098 : Harvested cropland ................................farms, 2012: 1,347 292 207 451 48 1,847 598 2007: 1,197 194 193 414 28 1,993 536 acres, 2012: 50,179 1,414 9,720 18,643 11,140 153,338 89,065 2007: 48,223 2,454 7,823 21,614 7,633 159,354 110,151 Other cropland, excluding cropland pastured .......farms, 2012: 102 51 19 119 7 236 79 2007: 98 34 14 101 7 292 88 acres, 2012: 2,904 377 1,896 3,748 875 32,688 6,802 2007: 4,296 517 2,179 6,128 728 23,129 7,167 Pastureland, excluding woodland pastured ..........farms, 2012: 95 272 5 567 60 204 333 2007: 192 302 22 760 44 491 458 acres, 2012: 52,636 12,487 37,720 29,589 97,843 67,786 64,221 2007: 46,575 41,399 (D) 70,772 76,764 30,517 106,415 : Irrigated land ......................................acres, 2012: 54,580 5,314 8,054 20,674 19,142 145,961 85,979 2007: 51,604 7,223 8,955 30,247 20,229 168,051 113,427 Harvested cropland ................................farms, 2012: 1,347 286 207 439 48 1,842 592 2007: 1,193 186 193 399 28 1,986 531 acres, 2012: (D) 1,226 (D) 14,031 10,105 142,249 77,557 2007: 46,403 2,367 (D) 15,168 6,717 158,437 102,160 Pastureland and other land ........................farms, 2012: 28 244 2 531 30 126 250 2007: 33 276 15 703 40 283 367 acres, 2012: (D) 4,088 (D) 6,643 9,037 3,712 8,422 2007: 5,201 4,856 (D) 15,079 13,512 9,614 11,267 : 2012 irrigated acres by size of farm: : 1 to 9 acres ..........................................farms: 543 162 138 358 3 969 299 acres irrigated: 1,452 401 286 962 (D) 2,974 681 10 to 49 acres ........................................farms: 437 201 36 366 16 662 227 acres irrigated: 5,534 1,263 613 3,393 79 8,333 2,519 50 to 69 acres ........................................farms: 95 27 9 30 4 48 28 acres irrigated: 2,396 456 150 583 40 2,167 1,073 70 to 99 acres ........................................farms: 65 21 1 30 2 40 27 acres irrigated: 2,467 563 (D) 1,227 (D) 1,948 1,823 : 100 to 139 acres ......................................farms: 39 22 4 15 - 44 22 acres irrigated: 1,662 514 432 403 - 3,230 1,654 140 to 179 acres ......................................farms: 36 5 - 14 12 22 24 acres irrigated: 2,212 173 - 756 1,028 2,341 2,034 180 to 219 acres ......................................farms: 20 11 1 6 - 19 15 acres irrigated: 2,085 130 (D) 706 - 2,900 1,246 220 to 259 acres ......................................farms: 14 7 3 5 5 5 7 acres irrigated: 1,778 180 560 600 286 1,070 1,214 : 260 to 499 acres ......................................farms: 47 12 2 24 4 38 51 acres irrigated: 6,130 1,175 (D) 3,488 450 7,686 13,556 500 to 999 acres ......................................farms: 21 6 7 19 8 32 40 acres irrigated: 4,654 (D) 1,542 5,466 2,232 16,337 15,063 1,000 to 1,999 acres ..................................farms: 21 - 2 5 4 14 27 acres irrigated: 10,071 - (D) 1,950 1,530 15,990 21,873 2,000 acres or more ...................................farms: 15 1 4 3 10 33 21 acres irrigated: 14,139 (D) 1,408 1,140 13,451 80,985 23,243 : 2007 irrigated acres by size of farm: : 1 to 9 acres ..........................................farms: 441 133 131 427 2 1,070 275 acres irrigated: 1,241 336 266 1,273 (D) 3,366 676 10 to 49 acres ........................................farms: 418 192 45 430 13 831 253 acres irrigated: 5,459 1,400 632 4,587 (D) 10,598 2,934 50 to 69 acres ........................................farms: 80 13 4 32 - 50 23 acres irrigated: 1,889 (D) 185 982 - 2,322 912 70 to 99 acres ........................................farms: 46 15 6 36 4 51 37 acres irrigated: 1,521 312 458 1,200 250 2,301 1,870 : 100 to 139 acres ......................................farms: 33 18 2 12 3 35 21 acres irrigated: 1,174 715 (D) 447 247 2,676 1,663 140 to 179 acres ......................................farms: 42 15 1 18 6 26 21 acres irrigated: 3,775 479 (D) 1,788 570 2,204 2,424 180 to 219 acres ......................................farms: 18 1 2 10 - 19 25 acres irrigated: 1,613 (D) (D) 829 - 2,942 2,540 220 to 259 acres ......................................farms: 13 7 1 8 1 9 14 acres irrigated: 1,380 206 (D) 1,119 (D) 1,639 2,174 : 260 to 499 acres ......................................farms: 55 7 5 22 4 33 68 acres irrigated: 8,890 255 1,263 2,117 810 9,136 15,623 500 to 999 acres ......................................farms: 24 11 3 18 3 31 43 acres irrigated: 4,118 676 1,895 5,133 697 14,527 22,250 1,000 to 1,999 acres ..................................farms: 21 3 1 5 6 23 37 acres irrigated: 7,523 488 (D) 2,028 925 26,938 32,272 2,000 acres or more ...................................farms: 11 6 2 9 8 28 27 acres irrigated: 13,021 2,126 (D) 8,744 16,602 89,402 28,089 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 10. Irrigation: 2012 and 2007 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : San Benito :San Bernardino : San Diego : San Francisco : San Joaquin :San Luis Obispo: San Mateo :Santa Barbara ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Farms ..............................................number, 2012: 274 689 4,644 - 2,969 1,365 179 1,151 2007: 318 779 4,737 6 2,837 1,304 136 1,108 Land in irrigated farms .............................acres, 2012: 101,189 37,367 156,573 - 669,690 411,175 16,532 385,494 2007: 145,892 57,489 128,960 7 651,582 510,265 (D) 433,674 : Harvested cropland ................................farms, 2012: 255 640 4,577 - 2,744 1,281 160 1,055 2007: 269 696 4,581 6 2,494 1,146 117 991 acres, 2012: 19,666 21,790 45,752 - 481,158 85,046 2,549 95,474 2007: 30,366 27,200 61,178 (D) 436,669 84,203 3,484 91,571 Other cropland, excluding cropland pastured .......farms, 2012: 30 68 532 - 256 238 45 132 2007: 40 91 533 - 247 266 29 144 acres, 2012: 1,547 1,442 5,634 - 15,711 32,692 772 12,371 2007: 2,585 2,223 9,737 - 18,768 25,215 976 12,277 Pastureland, excluding woodland pastured ..........farms, 2012: 77 89 270 - 463 394 57 262 2007: 105 179 547 1 699 494 37 301 acres, 2012: 70,749 6,517 43,829 - 138,188 231,244 7,454 225,382 2007: 105,300 17,805 34,044 (D) 164,194 309,673 (D) 282,399 : Irrigated land ......................................acres, 2012: 19,202 21,788 45,164 - 485,402 81,636 2,822 96,695 2007: 30,372 28,977 62,213 6 453,980 98,898 3,579 95,091 Harvested cropland ................................farms, 2012: 254 638 4,574 - 2,735 1,262 160 1,049 2007: 265 696 4,558 6 2,476 1,128 117 985 acres, 2012: 17,193 20,615 43,614 - 460,727 77,716 2,341 93,334 2007: 29,362 26,614 58,264 6 426,670 78,279 3,320 88,559 Pastureland and other land ........................farms, 2012: 29 67 145 - 343 158 31 138 2007: 68 112 300 - 477 247 25 199 acres, 2012: 2,009 1,173 1,550 - 24,675 3,920 481 3,361 2007: 1,010 2,363 3,949 - 27,310 20,619 259 6,532 : 2012 irrigated acres by size of farm: : 1 to 9 acres ..........................................farms: 128 404 3,286 - 606 324 81 406 acres irrigated: 367 1,056 7,676 - 2,411 859 186 1,046 10 to 49 acres ........................................farms: 61 182 1,037 - 1,188 506 52 371 acres irrigated: 968 2,283 11,859 - 21,566 5,238 419 4,949 50 to 69 acres ........................................farms: 5 9 94 - 173 92 10 61 acres irrigated: 261 370 2,969 - 8,214 1,789 342 1,584 70 to 99 acres ........................................farms: 6 28 48 - 152 97 8 50 acres irrigated: 353 956 2,360 - 10,974 2,987 198 2,511 : 100 to 139 acres ......................................farms: 13 16 59 - 151 78 5 59 acres irrigated: 679 842 2,595 - 14,560 2,966 207 2,779 140 to 179 acres ......................................farms: 5 7 15 - 108 65 9 13 acres irrigated: 646 (D) 962 - 13,822 3,376 257 1,403 180 to 219 acres ......................................farms: - 7 22 - 86 23 2 27 acres irrigated: - 1,163 1,505 - 14,516 1,913 (D) 3,390 220 to 259 acres ......................................farms: 6 9 15 - 58 23 - 18 acres irrigated: 864 1,131 1,650 - 12,346 2,169 - 2,299 : 260 to 499 acres ......................................farms: 15 12 41 - 169 49 5 63 acres irrigated: 2,968 2,630 6,784 - 49,284 8,997 584 10,851 500 to 999 acres ......................................farms: 15 7 12 - 142 51 4 25 acres irrigated: 2,876 4,005 4,419 - 82,587 13,848 189 9,271 1,000 to 1,999 acres ..................................farms: 13 6 8 - 75 36 1 28 acres irrigated: 8,029 6,587 925 - 81,341 19,639 (D) 19,249 2,000 acres or more ...................................farms: 7 2 7 - 61 21 2 30 acres irrigated: 1,191 (D) 1,460 - 173,781 17,855 (D) 37,363 : 2007 irrigated acres by size of farm: : 1 to 9 acres ..........................................farms: 163 437 3,290 6 598 250 46 377 acres irrigated: 542 1,236 8,173 6 2,406 668 91 982 10 to 49 acres ........................................farms: 61 196 1,104 - 1,116 518 55 376 acres irrigated: 1,005 2,414 12,685 - 21,092 5,838 524 5,458 50 to 69 acres ........................................farms: 13 25 80 - 153 80 1 46 acres irrigated: 668 906 3,028 - 7,063 2,052 (D) 1,404 70 to 99 acres ........................................farms: 7 28 45 - 151 93 5 43 acres irrigated: 329 1,162 2,056 - 10,563 2,979 125 2,033 : 100 to 139 acres ......................................farms: 9 22 52 - 149 72 9 60 acres irrigated: 771 1,539 3,133 - 14,439 3,196 947 3,418 140 to 179 acres ......................................farms: 3 9 31 - 106 51 4 20 acres irrigated: 440 515 2,671 - 14,367 3,319 231 2,168 180 to 219 acres ......................................farms: 4 4 19 - 69 33 3 25 acres irrigated: 698 750 (D) - 11,496 3,049 (D) 3,157 220 to 259 acres ......................................farms: 6 8 20 - 43 30 3 27 acres irrigated: 1,076 828 3,358 - 9,398 2,330 (D) 2,534 : 260 to 499 acres ......................................farms: 9 24 56 - 166 64 5 40 acres irrigated: 2,002 4,832 10,138 - 47,525 9,068 915 7,436 500 to 999 acres ......................................farms: 15 15 24 - 144 46 3 31 acres irrigated: 2,136 6,475 6,388 - 80,289 10,910 163 11,620 1,000 to 1,999 acres ..................................farms: 15 5 11 - 88 33 2 33 acres irrigated: 12,322 4,053 3,437 - 90,560 17,307 (D) 22,547 2,000 acres or more ...................................farms: 13 6 5 - 54 34 - 30 acres irrigated: 8,383 4,267 (D) - 144,782 38,182 - 32,334 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 10. Irrigation: 2012 and 2007 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Santa Clara : Santa Cruz : Shasta : Sierra : Siskiyou : Solano : Sonoma : Stanislaus ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Farms ..............................................number, 2012: 575 440 906 25 518 505 2,146 3,450 2007: 538 411 915 29 546 517 1,926 3,413 Land in irrigated farms .............................acres, 2012: 60,610 39,521 258,984 34,867 512,585 274,841 262,952 518,075 2007: 131,661 30,610 306,849 23,826 499,934 269,849 237,085 646,337 : Harvested cropland ................................farms, 2012: 553 424 544 17 364 406 2,092 2,780 2007: 476 385 425 14 341 400 1,844 2,542 acres, 2012: 19,275 28,649 20,350 2,106 112,843 123,736 74,110 313,465 2007: 20,031 19,490 20,952 1,594 98,248 114,332 80,372 301,047 Other cropland, excluding cropland pastured .......farms, 2012: 75 88 110 1 107 86 231 156 2007: 58 62 65 3 113 90 245 204 acres, 2012: 1,451 2,708 2,094 (D) 17,832 16,199 9,924 7,007 2007: 1,319 1,522 2,670 60 15,062 10,662 8,452 9,782 Pastureland, excluding woodland pastured ..........farms, 2012: 72 54 592 24 358 186 376 975 2007: 136 70 694 23 410 228 433 1,322 acres, 2012: 29,731 2,016 165,567 30,440 282,530 121,594 72,977 160,509 2007: 102,672 4,763 194,670 21,120 277,160 134,006 68,002 306,963 : Irrigated land ......................................acres, 2012: 17,756 28,897 38,234 9,687 160,033 130,909 74,969 320,784 2007: 22,245 19,641 48,690 6,955 144,112 145,988 78,265 374,997 Harvested cropland ................................farms, 2012: 549 423 525 16 358 405 2,086 2,763 2007: 468 382 410 14 328 396 1,835 2,526 acres, 2012: 17,208 28,389 18,324 1,867 103,638 97,890 69,207 299,331 2007: 18,330 18,964 18,315 1,569 90,488 97,638 74,628 297,053 Pastureland and other land ........................farms, 2012: 38 23 498 13 273 119 129 871 2007: 76 37 595 16 346 158 155 1,099 acres, 2012: 548 508 19,910 7,820 56,395 33,019 5,762 21,453 2007: 3,915 677 30,375 5,386 53,624 48,350 3,637 77,944 : 2012 irrigated acres by size of farm: : 1 to 9 acres ..........................................farms: 315 185 370 1 53 94 914 836 acres irrigated: 886 434 1,055 (D) 144 260 2,235 3,421 10 to 49 acres ........................................farms: 172 147 299 - 135 225 708 1,480 acres irrigated: 1,406 1,556 2,820 - 1,443 3,484 8,311 27,509 50 to 69 acres ........................................farms: 16 33 43 4 22 13 85 185 acres irrigated: 388 1,050 939 180 666 460 2,148 9,204 70 to 99 acres ........................................farms: 15 19 24 2 43 27 69 154 acres irrigated: 771 749 626 (D) 1,946 1,506 2,673 10,929 : 100 to 139 acres ......................................farms: 7 12 33 - 38 12 80 156 acres irrigated: 418 852 1,460 - 1,966 829 3,361 14,636 140 to 179 acres ......................................farms: 9 7 18 2 18 15 53 110 acres irrigated: (D) 479 561 (D) 1,706 981 2,842 15,009 180 to 219 acres ......................................farms: 3 3 16 1 15 15 33 69 acres irrigated: 600 (D) 1,047 (D) 1,571 1,952 2,448 12,292 220 to 259 acres ......................................farms: 6 9 16 3 7 6 28 76 acres irrigated: (D) 1,290 1,318 534 1,140 893 1,692 15,291 : 260 to 499 acres ......................................farms: 14 12 29 1 52 28 78 185 acres irrigated: 1,756 3,032 3,232 (D) 9,657 7,679 11,854 53,090 500 to 999 acres ......................................farms: 5 6 26 3 42 24 35 97 acres irrigated: 2,167 3,749 5,275 530 11,170 9,175 6,689 49,649 1,000 to 1,999 acres ..................................farms: 8 2 17 4 35 16 37 58 acres irrigated: 5,813 (D) 5,036 1,890 22,927 15,357 13,075 43,147 2,000 acres or more ...................................farms: 5 5 15 4 58 30 26 44 acres irrigated: 2,768 13,138 14,865 6,210 105,697 88,333 17,641 66,607 : 2007 irrigated acres by size of farm: : 1 to 9 acres ..........................................farms: 250 147 290 - 41 103 716 856 acres irrigated: 646 368 1,017 - 152 264 1,892 3,753 10 to 49 acres ........................................farms: 187 172 336 2 145 194 710 1,452 acres irrigated: 1,882 1,894 3,113 (D) 1,968 2,792 8,125 27,349 50 to 69 acres ........................................farms: 18 26 43 5 39 27 103 196 acres irrigated: 447 838 876 163 1,107 997 2,356 9,452 70 to 99 acres ........................................farms: 18 17 29 6 35 38 64 144 acres irrigated: 819 835 1,071 204 1,357 2,030 2,562 10,177 : 100 to 139 acres ......................................farms: 10 5 34 - 40 18 73 126 acres irrigated: 641 397 1,112 - 2,474 1,741 3,592 12,648 140 to 179 acres ......................................farms: 2 9 27 1 33 14 41 107 acres irrigated: (D) 927 891 (D) 1,856 1,074 2,926 13,537 180 to 219 acres ......................................farms: 12 9 16 2 20 9 35 77 acres irrigated: 1,143 1,195 1,213 (D) 2,597 1,120 3,077 12,386 220 to 259 acres ......................................farms: 5 6 13 2 8 5 26 50 acres irrigated: (D) 986 740 (D) 1,287 800 2,210 9,813 : 260 to 499 acres ......................................farms: 9 12 34 4 52 38 70 189 acres irrigated: 1,854 3,067 3,308 940 10,080 10,473 9,675 53,075 500 to 999 acres ......................................farms: 8 3 34 - 50 24 36 110 acres irrigated: 2,766 2,080 7,880 - 16,025 9,740 10,564 59,292 1,000 to 1,999 acres ..................................farms: 9 2 27 3 33 16 35 50 acres irrigated: 6,967 (D) 8,371 1,842 15,076 19,131 16,818 48,478 2,000 acres or more ...................................farms: 10 3 32 4 50 31 17 56 acres irrigated: 4,632 (D) 19,098 2,900 90,133 95,826 14,468 115,037 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 10. Irrigation: 2012 and 2007 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Sutter : Tehama : Trinity : Tulare : Tuolumne : Ventura : Yolo : Yuba ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Farms ..............................................number, 2012: 1,185 1,039 140 4,004 125 1,791 685 592 2007: 1,039 1,010 90 3,896 129 1,775 694 588 Land in irrigated farms .............................acres, 2012: 355,386 391,096 67,743 906,448 40,791 160,768 380,005 148,886 2007: 334,105 361,928 14,729 814,099 51,422 161,833 396,632 131,170 : Harvested cropland ................................farms, 2012: 1,098 761 113 3,799 82 1,770 641 420 2007: 931 678 66 3,582 70 1,725 649 346 acres, 2012: 258,479 66,597 862 588,139 669 87,367 256,051 68,118 2007: 237,436 55,479 739 548,675 675 91,948 256,507 61,660 Other cropland, excluding cropland pastured .......farms, 2012: 148 99 30 472 11 137 120 55 2007: 159 102 22 512 6 179 133 74 acres, 2012: 11,282 2,651 391 40,493 64 3,048 11,496 4,414 2007: 14,108 5,547 218 39,446 38 9,442 19,570 3,058 Pastureland, excluding woodland pastured ..........farms, 2012: 185 504 92 458 73 156 145 227 2007: 218 549 59 702 98 237 178 292 acres, 2012: 66,623 272,251 38,424 229,645 33,625 46,399 87,069 55,508 2007: 50,865 267,721 7,066 180,247 46,082 34,587 106,181 56,707 : Irrigated land ......................................acres, 2012: 244,305 84,912 1,614 557,361 2,265 87,148 229,901 82,475 2007: 231,713 76,081 1,384 550,342 2,135 91,253 246,341 70,987 Harvested cropland ................................farms, 2012: 1,089 743 113 3,792 82 1,769 629 418 2007: 919 659 63 3,561 66 1,710 644 344 acres, 2012: 240,003 59,900 751 548,400 (D) 86,667 223,046 66,695 2007: 223,199 51,546 704 540,887 503 90,018 237,811 60,957 Pastureland and other land ........................farms, 2012: 135 390 78 311 48 52 85 209 2007: 162 435 44 466 70 95 79 271 acres, 2012: 4,302 25,012 863 8,961 (D) 481 6,855 15,780 2007: 8,514 24,535 680 9,455 1,632 1,235 8,530 10,030 : 2012 irrigated acres by size of farm: : 1 to 9 acres ..........................................farms: 188 216 36 1,047 20 805 94 163 acres irrigated: 731 810 81 4,090 47 2,290 279 494 10 to 49 acres ........................................farms: 384 421 53 1,376 51 623 204 163 acres irrigated: 7,638 5,488 352 26,023 293 10,327 3,096 2,047 50 to 69 acres ........................................farms: 73 51 9 213 12 73 44 27 acres irrigated: 3,877 1,695 228 10,545 41 2,764 1,475 897 70 to 99 acres ........................................farms: 65 58 7 277 11 58 34 28 acres irrigated: 4,822 3,009 88 19,197 113 3,500 1,590 1,550 : 100 to 139 acres ......................................farms: 77 37 9 234 5 41 33 24 acres irrigated: 7,079 1,030 (D) 22,517 82 3,323 2,784 1,970 140 to 179 acres ......................................farms: 57 29 9 164 6 27 36 25 acres irrigated: 7,854 1,831 305 22,092 22 2,771 3,915 2,956 180 to 219 acres ......................................farms: 36 22 - 77 3 28 14 12 acres irrigated: 5,262 2,599 - 12,741 (D) 3,983 2,328 1,790 220 to 259 acres ......................................farms: 16 22 6 60 - 23 14 25 acres irrigated: 3,378 2,594 67 11,566 - 3,863 1,940 4,214 : 260 to 499 acres ......................................farms: 104 59 4 235 2 47 89 57 acres irrigated: 29,335 8,336 169 66,548 (D) 11,313 19,426 14,503 500 to 999 acres ......................................farms: 109 50 1 173 5 34 49 44 acres irrigated: 59,891 13,242 (D) 95,137 42 15,157 26,883 23,182 1,000 to 1,999 acres ..................................farms: 48 28 2 79 5 17 28 13 acres irrigated: 44,035 14,069 (D) 88,130 470 15,504 27,054 16,057 2,000 acres or more ...................................farms: 28 46 4 69 5 15 46 11 acres irrigated: 70,403 30,209 90 178,775 1,062 12,353 139,131 12,815 : 2007 irrigated acres by size of farm: : 1 to 9 acres ..........................................farms: 144 162 18 858 31 727 101 140 acres irrigated: 550 549 31 3,493 55 2,237 344 505 10 to 49 acres ........................................farms: 358 457 37 1,509 31 648 221 191 acres irrigated: 6,848 6,276 367 29,909 145 11,021 3,402 2,791 50 to 69 acres ........................................farms: 56 58 4 197 9 81 39 32 acres irrigated: 2,733 2,062 34 9,100 (D) 3,411 1,669 1,132 70 to 99 acres ........................................farms: 45 51 5 242 7 65 33 30 acres irrigated: 2,903 2,635 32 16,357 57 3,525 1,970 1,573 : 100 to 139 acres ......................................farms: 53 54 7 210 6 49 28 25 acres irrigated: 5,389 3,957 99 21,038 31 4,166 2,449 2,061 140 to 179 acres ......................................farms: 51 25 2 145 8 42 24 25 acres irrigated: 7,244 2,127 (D) 19,444 71 4,647 2,293 2,898 180 to 219 acres ......................................farms: 38 38 4 82 4 20 21 22 acres irrigated: 5,581 4,337 114 14,127 (D) 2,435 3,368 3,158 220 to 259 acres ......................................farms: 30 13 2 83 - 20 15 11 acres irrigated: 6,427 1,993 (D) 17,576 - 3,815 3,002 1,950 : 260 to 499 acres ......................................farms: 102 49 3 238 9 56 69 53 acres irrigated: 30,592 8,925 (D) 73,348 230 12,923 18,825 15,086 500 to 999 acres ......................................farms: 84 36 3 185 11 32 49 33 acres irrigated: 47,834 7,483 232 102,950 349 16,140 25,984 17,915 1,000 to 1,999 acres ..................................farms: 50 33 4 82 5 24 43 14 acres irrigated: 47,016 17,840 250 95,098 140 14,724 33,614 13,391 2,000 acres or more ...................................farms: 28 34 1 65 8 11 51 12 acres irrigated: 68,596 17,897 (D) 147,902 809 12,209 149,421 8,527 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Table 11. Cattle and Calves - Inventory and Sales: 2012 and 2007 [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : California : Alameda : Alpine : Amador : Butte : Calaveras : Colusa ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- INVENTORY : : Cattle and calves ...................................farms, 2012: 16,764 157 1 183 377 304 84 2007: 16,638 186 6 183 347 283 93 number, 2012: 5,370,531 16,613 (D) 14,736 14,282 14,170 14,757 2007: 5,498,025 15,956 692 13,791 15,930 21,959 16,501 : Farms by inventory: : 1 to 9 ......................................... farms, 2012: 7,396 34 - 73 238 133 25 2007: 6,106 50 - 53 183 106 33 number, 2012: 31,252 183 - 267 965 557 69 2007: 27,344 250 - 226 816 516 133 10 to 19 ....................................... farms, 2012: 2,451 35 - 34 59 64 19 2007: 2,681 40 1 42 81 49 8 number, 2012: 32,475 455 - 471 776 849 322 2007: 35,601 541 (D) 591 989 652 105 20 to 49 ....................................... farms, 2012: 2,236 33 - 38 45 49 11 2007: 2,719 35 2 43 37 57 21 number, 2012: 67,476 984 - 1,194 1,415 1,468 325 2007: 81,339 1,111 (D) 1,365 1,077 1,663 671 50 to 99 ....................................... farms, 2012: 1,128 18 - 14 12 23 7 2007: 1,187 23 2 21 15 22 6 number, 2012: 78,554 1,340 - 978 887 1,759 491 2007: 81,470 1,540 (D) 1,366 1,095 1,538 419 100 to 199 ..................................... farms, 2012: 914 19 - 11 7 18 7 2007: 942 16 - 11 16 22 6 number, 2012: 126,681 2,630 - 1,504 864 2,333 1,015 2007: 129,392 2,090 - 1,483 2,275 3,222 938 200 to 499 ..................................... farms, 2012: 896 9 1 8 10 11 6 2007: 1,049 15 1 8 8 19 9 number, 2012: 283,466 2,941 (D) 2,386 3,195 3,312 2,128 2007: 338,760 4,921 (D) 2,215 2,813 5,808 2,587 500 or more .................................... farms, 2012: 1,743 9 - 5 6 6 9 2007: 1,954 7 - 5 7 8 10 number, 2012: 4,750,627 8,080 - 7,936 6,180 3,892 10,407 2007: 4,804,119 5,503 - 6,545 6,865 8,560 11,648 : Cows and heifers that calved ......................farms, 2012: 12,566 148 1 146 280 217 74 2007: 13,544 158 6 147 284 248 67 number, 2012: 2,399,249 9,378 (D) 7,710 7,773 7,572 8,460 2007: 2,503,153 9,186 394 8,998 8,440 10,672 10,123 : Beef cows ...................................... farms, 2012: 10,925 148 1 146 262 214 66 2007: 11,827 158 6 147 283 248 67 number, 2012: 583,594 (D) (D) (D) 7,346 7,569 8,358 2007: 662,423 9,186 394 8,990 (D) 10,623 (D) : 2012 farms by inventory: : 1 to 9 ........................................... farms: 6,173 51 - 64 191 110 24 number: 22,566 (D) - (D) 620 498 91 10 to 19 ......................................... farms: 1,280 26 - 30 19 33 11 number: 16,727 328 - 422 242 426 153 20 to 49 ......................................... farms: 1,424 31 - 22 29 32 6 number: 43,410 950 - 646 867 1,061 169 50 to 99 ......................................... farms: 801 18 - 18 7 17 8 number: 54,765 1,264 - 1,256 460 1,096 593 100 to 199 ....................................... farms: 542 7 - 5 6 14 4 number: 73,119 869 - 688 814 1,958 526 200 to 499 ....................................... farms: 479 13 1 5 6 8 7 number: 141,855 4,042 (D) 1,520 1,409 2,530 2,276 500 or more ...................................... farms: 226 2 - 2 4 - 6 number: 231,152 (D) - (D) 2,934 - 4,550 : Milk cows ...................................... farms, 2012: 1,931 2 - 2 21 3 8 2007: 2,165 - - 4 7 9 1 number, 2012: 1,815,655 (D) - (D) 427 3 102 2007: 1,840,730 - - 8 (D) 49 (D) : 2012 farms by inventory: : 1 to 9 ........................................... farms: 457 2 - 2 16 3 6 number: 954 (D) - (D) (D) 3 (D) 10 to 19 ......................................... farms: 26 - - - 4 - - number: 305 - - - (D) - - 20 to 49 ......................................... farms: 36 - - - - - 2 number: 1,158 - - - - - (D) 50 to 99 ......................................... farms: 52 - - - - - - number: 3,558 - - - - - - 100 to 199 ....................................... farms: 110 - - - - - - number: 15,428 - - - - - - 200 to 499 ....................................... farms: 258 - - - 1 - - number: 84,334 - - - (D) - - 500 or more ...................................... farms: 992 - - - - - - number: 1,709,918 - - - - - - : Other cattle (see text) .......................... farms, 2012: 13,380 137 1 141 275 255 60 2007: 13,149 157 6 161 241 208 85 number, 2012: 2,971,282 7,235 (D) 7,026 6,509 6,598 6,297 2007: 2,994,872 6,770 298 4,793 7,490 11,287 6,378 : 2012 farms by inventory: : 1 to 9 ............................................. farms: 6,751 63 - 76 190 146 15 number: 25,859 334 - 303 775 548 54 10 to 19 ........................................... farms: 1,793 24 - 18 34 33 21 number: 23,273 322 - 229 477 469 290 20 to 49 ........................................... farms: 1,668 21 - 24 31 48 6 number: 49,083 647 - 654 863 1,439 197 50 to 99 ........................................... farms: 790 15 1 11 9 16 5 number: 53,830 1,063 (D) 736 650 1,103 321 100 to 199 ......................................... farms: 591 6 - 4 3 4 3 number: 79,732 882 - (D) (D) 657 422 200 to 499 ......................................... farms: 711 4 - 7 6 8 7 number: 219,260 1,335 - 1,835 1,767 2,382 2,239 500 or more ........................................ farms: 1,076 4 - 1 2 - 3 number: 2,520,245 2,652 - (D) (D) - 2,774 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 11. Cattle and Calves - Inventory and Sales: 2012 and 2007 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Contra Costa : Del Norte : El Dorado : Fresno : Glenn : Humboldt : Imperial ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- INVENTORY : : Cattle and calves ...................................farms, 2012: 123 70 328 751 294 449 60 2007: 124 45 215 796 327 433 66 number, 2012: 22,673 14,654 8,134 397,919 62,329 56,524 376,513 2007: 19,578 14,651 6,738 424,069 62,012 58,900 438,217 : Farms by inventory: : 1 to 9 ......................................... farms, 2012: 60 27 233 324 89 146 17 2007: 39 16 129 285 87 124 23 number, 2012: 274 (D) 877 1,348 382 652 52 2007: 161 64 582 1,244 416 562 92 10 to 19 ....................................... farms, 2012: 6 21 45 127 44 41 2 2007: 22 4 36 155 44 54 1 number, 2012: 88 303 572 1,700 555 529 (D) 2007: 307 (D) 501 2,081 566 719 (D) 20 to 49 ....................................... farms, 2012: 16 2 29 116 49 78 8 2007: 23 10 33 137 68 70 4 number, 2012: 470 (D) 934 3,380 1,468 2,420 255 2007: 735 388 975 4,011 2,139 2,094 (D) 50 to 99 ....................................... farms, 2012: 16 5 8 41 27 51 1 2007: 11 5 8 54 25 48 4 number, 2012: 1,059 385 515 2,826 1,838 3,598 (D) 2007: 781 285 453 3,751 1,686 3,400 266 100 to 199 ..................................... farms, 2012: 5 8 9 30 35 51 7 2007: 12 1 5 26 32 50 1 number, 2012: 713 1,105 1,493 4,151 4,769 7,382 860 2007: 1,872 (D) 651 3,542 4,904 6,968 (D) 200 to 499 ..................................... farms, 2012: 10 3 2 24 17 50 2 2007: 9 5 2 40 34 58 7 number, 2012: 2,813 1,031 (D) 7,775 4,930 15,649 (D) 2007: 2,522 1,395 (D) 12,541 10,672 18,577 2,096 500 or more .................................... farms, 2012: 10 4 2 89 33 32 23 2007: 8 4 2 99 37 29 26 number, 2012: 17,256 11,652 (D) 376,739 48,387 26,294 374,506 2007: 13,200 12,351 (D) 396,899 41,629 26,580 435,491 : Cows and heifers that calved ......................farms, 2012: 84 60 244 540 221 364 19 2007: 98 34 165 614 263 380 27 number, 2012: 9,531 7,679 3,396 127,304 32,927 30,502 7,678 2007: 8,016 6,690 3,574 134,461 37,632 32,405 15,165 : Beef cows ...................................... farms, 2012: 81 50 226 453 189 294 19 2007: 97 29 162 531 203 322 24 number, 2012: 9,519 748 3,369 15,097 12,464 14,071 (D) 2007: (D) 1,133 3,569 19,693 15,133 16,971 5,651 : 2012 farms by inventory: : 1 to 9 ........................................... farms: 31 40 169 259 86 143 9 number: 120 166 567 1,046 331 479 18 10 to 19 ......................................... farms: 10 2 23 73 19 28 2 number: 134 (D) 297 972 265 349 (D) 20 to 49 ......................................... farms: 17 2 23 57 36 54 1 number: (D) (D) 690 1,701 1,095 1,802 (D) 50 to 99 ......................................... farms: 7 4 5 26 20 24 2 number: (D) 230 306 1,786 1,404 1,687 (D) 100 to 199 ....................................... farms: 7 2 3 20 15 26 - number: 923 (D) 312 2,720 2,153 3,618 - 200 to 499 ....................................... farms: 7 - 2 15 6 16 2 number: 1,965 - (D) 4,156 1,639 4,216 (D) 500 or more ...................................... farms: 2 - 1 3 7 3 3 number: (D) - (D) 2,716 5,577 1,920 4,240 : Milk cows ...................................... farms, 2012: 3 15 19 91 34 77 1 2007: 1 9 5 93 74 82 4 number, 2012: 12 6,931 27 112,207 20,463 16,431 (D) 2007: (D) 5,557 5 114,768 22,499 15,434 9,514 : 2012 farms by inventory: : 1 to 9 ........................................... farms: 3 4 19 11 3 8 - number: 12 26 27 14 (D) (D) - 10 to 19 ......................................... farms: - - - 10 - - - number: - - - (D) - - - 20 to 49 ......................................... farms: - - - 3 2 2 - number: - - - 105 (D) (D) - 50 to 99 ......................................... farms: - 4 - 3 4 9 - number: - 365 - 230 244 565 - 100 to 199 ....................................... farms: - 2 - 1 3 28 - number: - (D) - (D) 395 3,590 - 200 to 499 ....................................... farms: - 3 - 7 7 23 - number: - (D) - 2,413 1,930 7,360 - 500 or more ...................................... farms: - 2 - 56 15 7 1 number: - (D) - 109,195 17,820 4,800 (D) : Other cattle (see text) .......................... farms, 2012: 92 56 235 594 253 378 55 2007: 102 37 156 634 276 338 59 number, 2012: 13,142 6,975 4,738 270,615 29,402 26,022 368,835 2007: 11,562 7,961 3,164 289,608 24,380 26,495 423,052 : 2012 farms by inventory: : 1 to 9 ............................................. farms: 46 25 200 306 93 138 17 number: (D) 108 699 1,219 358 572 40 10 to 19 ........................................... farms: 3 11 15 82 39 44 - number: 39 123 192 1,011 493 623 - 20 to 49 ........................................... farms: 15 4 8 70 47 73 8 number: 422 114 236 2,058 1,276 2,167 264 50 to 99 ........................................... farms: 10 8 4 28 24 49 1 number: 649 620 (D) 1,900 1,551 3,466 (D) 100 to 199 ......................................... farms: 8 4 6 17 17 38 6 number: 1,110 488 1,007 2,182 2,284 5,066 750 200 to 499 ......................................... farms: 2 - - 22 15 26 2 number: (D) - - 6,722 4,524 7,825 (D) 500 or more ........................................ farms: 8 4 2 69 18 10 21 number: 9,877 5,522 (D) 255,523 18,916 6,303 366,961 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 11. Cattle and Calves - Inventory and Sales: 2012 and 2007 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Inyo : Kern : Kings : Lake : Lassen : Los Angeles : Madera ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- INVENTORY : : Cattle and calves ...................................farms, 2012: 56 516 294 150 202 104 320 2007: 51 477 358 118 218 172 361 number, 2012: 14,080 342,383 419,318 3,294 40,820 6,315 178,590 2007: 14,253 337,163 365,543 3,270 45,051 8,687 195,375 : Farms by inventory: : 1 to 9 ......................................... farms, 2012: 13 215 106 102 73 61 131 2007: 9 141 119 51 52 111 113 number, 2012: 23 976 401 412 291 202 609 2007: 39 584 547 217 196 441 552 10 to 19 ....................................... farms, 2012: 8 61 21 22 28 19 56 2007: 10 75 40 38 36 25 63 number, 2012: 87 762 258 279 402 274 794 2007: 141 1,000 512 547 457 329 776 20 to 49 ....................................... farms, 2012: 10 56 17 14 29 19 48 2007: 11 82 25 15 39 24 60 number, 2012: (D) 1,745 470 411 870 (D) 1,457 2007: 331 2,669 691 476 1,108 737 1,831 50 to 99 ....................................... farms, 2012: 10 51 11 7 18 3 10 2007: 4 43 12 9 27 3 19 number, 2012: 742 3,566 716 466 1,195 (D) 662 2007: 276 2,903 854 606 1,641 202 1,325 100 to 199 ..................................... farms, 2012: 3 16 6 2 12 1 16 2007: 3 35 6 2 18 3 23 number, 2012: 393 2,395 834 (D) 1,639 (D) 2,250 2007: 417 4,622 684 (D) 2,220 315 3,297 200 to 499 ..................................... farms, 2012: 2 47 22 2 18 - 18 2007: 3 30 20 2 23 5 25 number, 2012: (D) 13,965 6,912 (D) 5,078 - 4,777 2007: 1,093 8,888 6,250 (D) 7,055 (D) 9,079 500 or more .................................... farms, 2012: 10 70 111 1 24 1 41 2007: 11 71 136 1 23 1 58 number, 2012: 11,973 318,974 409,727 (D) 31,345 (D) 168,041 2007: 11,956 316,497 356,005 (D) 32,374 (D) 178,515 : Cows and heifers that calved ......................farms, 2012: 39 369 203 112 165 66 228 2007: 42 397 265 104 179 101 301 number, 2012: 9,178 161,255 173,768 2,148 22,947 4,063 80,634 2007: 9,906 157,007 170,906 2,195 22,219 5,449 95,670 : Beef cows ...................................... farms, 2012: 39 318 102 112 159 61 197 2007: 42 354 132 104 179 89 256 number, 2012: 9,165 30,427 5,274 2,145 22,899 (D) 12,865 2007: (D) 32,251 7,306 2,182 22,154 992 18,859 : 2012 farms by inventory: : 1 to 9 ........................................... farms: 9 157 68 80 63 46 115 number: 29 560 (D) 253 269 (D) 464 10 to 19 ......................................... farms: 5 36 14 11 17 6 18 number: 76 438 198 137 244 84 248 20 to 49 ......................................... farms: 4 41 8 13 18 8 19 number: 137 1,283 192 376 543 205 513 50 to 99 ......................................... farms: 7 30 5 5 21 - 17 number: 539 1,993 (D) 310 1,376 - 1,212 100 to 199 ....................................... farms: 3 18 5 1 11 1 11 number: 385 2,509 644 (D) 1,559 (D) 1,552 200 to 499 ....................................... farms: 3 20 - 1 18 - 14 number: 1,100 6,266 - (D) 5,837 - 4,013 500 or more ...................................... farms: 8 16 2 1 11 - 3 number: 6,899 17,378 (D) (D) 13,071 - 4,863 : Milk cows ...................................... farms, 2012: 3 63 111 3 11 9 37 2007: 2 52 140 7 21 13 56 number, 2012: 13 130,828 168,494 3 48 (D) 67,769 2007: (D) 124,756 163,600 13 65 4,457 76,811 : 2012 farms by inventory: : 1 to 9 ........................................... farms: 3 13 5 3 10 8 8 number: 13 (D) 11 3 (D) 18 31 10 to 19 ......................................... farms: - - - - - - - number: - - - - - - - 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: - 6 8 - - - 2 number: - 2,454 (D) - - - (D) 500 or more ...................................... farms: - 42 96 - - 1 27 number: - 128,302 165,623 - - (D) (D) : Other cattle (see text) .......................... farms, 2012: 41 420 249 110 180 78 280 2007: 48 384 309 84 193 132 280 number, 2012: 4,902 181,128 245,550 1,146 17,873 2,252 97,956 2007: 4,347 180,156 194,637 1,075 22,832 3,238 99,705 : 2012 farms by inventory: : 1 to 9 ............................................. farms: 12 204 103 89 101 51 146 number: 31 860 360 331 382 (D) 579 10 to 19 ........................................... farms: 7 43 8 10 10 14 29 number: (D) 503 111 125 141 173 409 20 to 49 ........................................... farms: 8 58 14 8 29 9 47 number: 228 1,776 355 221 794 193 1,360 50 to 99 ........................................... farms: 6 19 11 1 12 3 7 number: 412 1,241 758 (D) 755 216 466 100 to 199 ......................................... farms: 4 19 3 1 7 - 9 number: 528 2,440 405 (D) 900 - 1,146 200 to 499 ......................................... farms: 1 32 38 1 8 - 15 number: (D) 9,498 12,725 (D) 2,931 - 3,984 500 or more ........................................ farms: 3 45 72 - 13 1 27 number: 3,369 164,810 230,836 - 11,970 (D) 90,012 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 11. Cattle and Calves - Inventory and Sales: 2012 and 2007 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Marin : Mariposa : Mendocino : Merced : Modoc : Mono : Monterey ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- INVENTORY : : Cattle and calves ...................................farms, 2012: 155 209 354 619 198 17 349 2007: 121 168 305 686 232 38 345 number, 2012: 40,592 24,325 17,435 558,734 51,705 4,781 58,616 2007: 33,729 19,500 19,299 549,770 59,174 6,587 57,346 : Farms by inventory: : 1 to 9 ......................................... farms, 2012: 23 58 145 156 58 2 139 2007: 12 57 100 164 39 14 118 number, 2012: 77 248 633 668 317 (D) 801 2007: 61 319 417 767 179 49 568 10 to 19 ....................................... farms, 2012: 8 35 76 77 19 3 40 2007: 14 16 71 73 28 9 49 number, 2012: 103 486 966 1,022 250 30 543 2007: 185 231 945 992 360 111 619 20 to 49 ....................................... farms, 2012: 15 45 65 81 17 3 52 2007: 11 38 69 69 47 2 61 number, 2012: 547 1,348 2,045 2,409 532 112 1,597 2007: 373 1,159 1,877 2,131 1,419 (D) 1,986 50 to 99 ....................................... farms, 2012: 14 34 31 27 16 5 44 2007: 15 18 25 36 26 3 33 number, 2012: 1,106 2,651 2,163 1,975 1,142 374 3,071 2007: 1,183 1,196 1,811 2,530 1,725 229 2,272 100 to 199 ..................................... farms, 2012: 25 13 16 26 26 2 18 2007: 21 13 14 29 20 4 32 number, 2012: 3,650 1,775 2,165 3,701 3,859 (D) 2,607 2007: 3,032 1,710 2,184 3,884 2,885 515 4,035 200 to 499 ..................................... farms, 2012: 48 14 16 34 30 1 33 2007: 23 19 16 67 39 5 26 number, 2012: 17,676 4,218 5,192 11,140 9,951 (D) 10,770 2007: 8,129 6,193 5,244 24,944 13,142 (D) 8,950 500 or more .................................... farms, 2012: 22 10 5 218 32 1 23 2007: 25 7 10 248 33 1 26 number, 2012: 17,433 13,599 4,271 537,819 35,654 (D) 39,227 2007: 20,766 8,692 6,821 514,522 39,464 (D) 38,916 : Cows and heifers that calved ......................farms, 2012: 136 140 280 537 166 17 250 2007: 115 144 246 609 203 24 302 number, 2012: 20,451 8,877 9,925 310,256 30,355 (D) 18,484 2007: 19,152 8,312 11,430 303,703 34,291 3,666 26,829 : Beef cows ...................................... farms, 2012: 100 140 268 326 166 17 249 2007: 95 144 233 348 203 24 287 number, 2012: 9,314 (D) (D) 25,021 (D) (D) (D) 2007: 9,380 (D) 8,998 30,461 34,276 3,666 24,686 : 2012 farms by inventory: : 1 to 9 ........................................... farms: 20 57 128 175 39 5 121 number: 62 (D) 524 675 (D) 18 503 10 to 19 ......................................... farms: 10 23 40 45 16 - 25 number: 142 310 495 611 215 - (D) 20 to 49 ......................................... farms: 16 21 52 46 20 3 39 number: 474 615 1,586 1,367 634 73 1,191 50 to 99 ......................................... farms: 17 16 24 19 19 6 27 number: 1,315 1,047 1,619 1,377 1,396 442 1,953 100 to 199 ....................................... farms: 21 11 13 11 25 1 11 number: 2,631 1,466 1,869 1,463 3,426 (D) 1,460 200 to 499 ....................................... farms: 16 10 10 13 30 1 19 number: 4,690 2,870 2,629 4,064 9,839 (D) 5,451 500 or more ...................................... farms: - 2 1 17 17 1 7 number: - (D) (D) 15,464 14,702 (D) 6,605 : Milk cows ...................................... farms, 2012: 48 1 12 229 2 - 6 2007: 28 1 24 280 7 - 26 number, 2012: 11,137 (D) (D) 285,235 (D) - (D) 2007: 9,772 (D) 2,432 273,242 15 - 2,143 : 2012 farms by inventory: : 1 to 9 ........................................... farms: 4 1 11 2 1 - 5 number: (D) (D) 23 (D) (D) - 5 10 to 19 ......................................... farms: - - - 1 - - - number: - - - (D) - - - 20 to 49 ......................................... farms: 3 - - 1 1 - - number: 90 - - (D) (D) - - 50 to 99 ......................................... farms: 2 - - 11 - - - number: (D) - - 688 - - - 100 to 199 ....................................... farms: 10 - - 7 - - - number: 1,237 - - 1,133 - - - 200 to 499 ....................................... farms: 22 - - 42 - - - number: 5,816 - - 14,718 - - - 500 or more ...................................... farms: 7 - 1 165 - - 1 number: 3,800 - (D) 268,656 - - (D) : Other cattle (see text) .......................... farms, 2012: 136 180 276 520 181 16 289 2007: 100 131 230 570 198 26 259 number, 2012: 20,141 15,448 7,510 248,478 21,350 (D) 40,132 2007: 14,577 11,188 7,869 246,067 24,883 2,921 30,517 : 2012 farms by inventory: : 1 to 9 ............................................. farms: 29 76 155 166 67 9 131 number: 91 312 672 677 307 45 656 10 to 19 ........................................... farms: 11 22 53 45 20 3 46 number: 152 306 632 577 251 34 615 20 to 49 ........................................... farms: 14 35 42 64 29 3 32 number: 428 1,028 1,253 1,884 929 (D) 1,080 50 to 99 ........................................... farms: 20 28 9 22 16 - 30 number: 1,325 2,182 (D) 1,521 1,050 - 2,021 100 to 199 ......................................... farms: 20 4 10 14 20 - 8 number: 3,293 607 1,281 2,082 2,653 - 1,193 200 to 499 ......................................... farms: 33 7 6 75 17 - 28 number: 9,772 1,623 1,913 24,741 5,483 - 8,499 500 or more ........................................ farms: 9 8 1 134 12 1 14 number: 5,080 9,390 (D) 216,996 10,677 (D) 26,068 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 11. Cattle and Calves - Inventory and Sales: 2012 and 2007 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Napa : Nevada : Orange : Placer : Plumas : Riverside : Sacramento ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- INVENTORY : : Cattle and calves ...................................farms, 2012: 119 213 18 492 73 309 432 2007: 85 244 12 509 65 313 427 number, 2012: 9,727 4,778 311 12,873 17,022 76,871 56,213 2007: 6,952 5,615 706 16,996 13,350 106,382 71,205 : Farms by inventory: : 1 to 9 ......................................... farms, 2012: 66 132 8 298 17 193 222 2007: 23 139 - 262 24 158 193 number, 2012: 238 553 16 1,387 55 713 876 2007: 82 546 - 1,199 82 532 818 10 to 19 ....................................... farms, 2012: 10 30 3 81 13 41 49 2007: 15 41 1 119 12 47 57 number, 2012: 126 394 (D) 1,036 203 488 643 2007: 237 582 (D) 1,606 (D) (D) 756 20 to 49 ....................................... farms, 2012: 19 34 6 73 8 29 72 2007: 19 40 10 70 10 37 60 number, 2012: 623 1,081 205 2,153 206 (D) 2,063 2007: 628 1,296 (D) 1,989 313 979 1,665 50 to 99 ....................................... farms, 2012: 8 11 1 19 10 8 15 2007: 10 12 - 29 2 12 28 number, 2012: 589 784 (D) 1,235 719 544 1,003 2007: (D) 767 - 1,892 (D) 816 1,968 100 to 199 ..................................... farms, 2012: 10 3 - 9 12 4 24 2007: 8 7 - 11 4 12 20 number, 2012: 1,465 392 - 1,257 1,726 460 3,382 2007: 1,173 910 - 1,433 538 1,494 2,796 200 to 499 ..................................... farms, 2012: 3 2 - 7 7 2 18 2007: 8 5 1 11 9 1 26 number, 2012: 650 (D) - 2,049 2,069 (D) 6,233 2007: 2,514 1,514 (D) 3,190 2,918 (D) 8,353 500 or more .................................... farms, 2012: 3 1 - 5 6 32 32 2007: 2 - - 7 4 46 43 number, 2012: 6,036 (D) - 3,756 12,044 73,201 42,013 2007: (D) - - 5,687 9,176 101,695 54,849 : Cows and heifers that calved ......................farms, 2012: 92 168 11 406 51 195 325 2007: 76 186 7 434 48 203 354 number, 2012: 3,647 2,663 105 6,525 5,501 44,800 28,416 2007: 4,059 2,822 434 8,917 4,759 53,809 33,990 : Beef cows ...................................... farms, 2012: 91 155 11 403 51 164 290 2007: 75 178 7 433 48 164 301 number, 2012: (D) 2,605 105 (D) (D) 1,846 12,725 2007: (D) 2,801 434 (D) (D) 2,323 13,468 : 2012 farms by inventory: : 1 to 9 ........................................... farms: 43 107 8 307 14 138 192 number: 161 323 16 1,095 39 455 615 10 to 19 ......................................... farms: 9 18 1 47 8 7 27 number: (D) 236 (D) 623 (D) 78 357 20 to 49 ......................................... farms: 20 22 2 29 6 12 27 number: 535 674 (D) 885 199 319 762 50 to 99 ......................................... farms: 9 5 - 7 5 4 18 number: 616 357 - 443 330 276 1,248 100 to 199 ....................................... farms: 6 2 - 8 10 2 6 number: 794 (D) - 1,151 1,319 (D) 753 200 to 499 ....................................... farms: 4 - - 4 6 1 13 number: 1,306 - - 1,000 2,188 (D) 4,259 500 or more ...................................... farms: - 1 - 1 2 - 7 number: - (D) - (D) (D) - 4,731 : Milk cows ...................................... farms, 2012: 1 17 - 9 1 42 44 2007: 1 14 - 4 2 54 69 number, 2012: (D) 58 - (D) (D) 42,954 15,691 2007: (D) 21 - (D) (D) 51,486 20,522 : 2012 farms by inventory: : 1 to 9 ........................................... farms: - 16 - 8 1 6 14 number: - (D) - 8 (D) 8 (D) 10 to 19 ......................................... farms: - - - - - 3 1 number: - - - - - 34 (D) 20 to 49 ......................................... farms: - 1 - - - - - number: - (D) - - - - - 50 to 99 ......................................... farms: - - - - - 2 1 number: - - - - - (D) (D) 100 to 199 ....................................... farms: 1 - - - - - 10 number: (D) - - - - - 1,516 200 to 499 ....................................... farms: - - - - - 2 9 number: - - - - - (D) 3,039 500 or more ...................................... farms: - - - 1 - 29 9 number: - - - (D) - 42,037 11,050 : Other cattle (see text) .......................... farms, 2012: 91 163 8 375 64 222 311 2007: 64 180 10 386 54 243 318 number, 2012: 6,080 2,115 206 6,348 11,521 32,071 27,797 2007: 2,893 2,793 272 8,079 8,591 52,573 37,215 : 2012 farms by inventory: : 1 to 9 ............................................. farms: 60 100 - 256 15 135 161 number: (D) 326 - 969 41 405 570 10 to 19 ........................................... farms: 8 38 2 59 15 27 40 number: 99 464 (D) 790 229 320 537 20 to 49 ........................................... farms: 11 20 6 41 14 28 50 number: 251 629 (D) 1,285 417 793 1,346 50 to 99 ........................................... farms: 8 3 - 5 4 3 13 number: 500 (D) - (D) (D) 216 912 100 to 199 ......................................... farms: 1 - - 9 9 5 13 number: (D) - - 1,283 1,153 500 1,708 200 to 499 ......................................... farms: 1 2 - 4 4 4 15 number: (D) (D) - 1,097 1,297 1,168 4,877 500 or more ........................................ farms: 2 - - 1 3 20 19 number: (D) - - (D) (D) 28,669 17,847 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 11. Cattle and Calves - Inventory and Sales: 2012 and 2007 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : San Benito :San Bernardino : San Diego : San Francisco : San Joaquin :San Luis Obispo: San Mateo :Santa Barbara ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- INVENTORY : : Cattle and calves ...................................farms, 2012: 218 251 315 - 583 714 63 301 2007: 206 257 351 - 602 726 53 294 number, 2012: 37,933 150,894 15,441 - 242,619 58,095 (D) 43,767 2007: 32,444 204,906 17,066 - 244,996 56,830 2,419 38,961 : Farms by inventory: : 1 to 9 ......................................... farms, 2012: 78 108 210 - 263 319 23 84 2007: 67 101 203 - 204 255 9 85 number, 2012: 380 409 762 - 1,175 1,345 112 404 2007: 357 417 874 - 957 1,121 50 365 10 to 19 ....................................... farms, 2012: 26 36 53 - 66 101 15 60 2007: 16 26 66 - 79 126 7 53 number, 2012: 364 414 682 - 939 1,365 229 799 2007: 213 330 835 - 1,068 1,665 (D) 694 20 to 49 ....................................... farms, 2012: 36 17 18 - 72 126 13 42 2007: 52 24 42 - 101 157 23 52 number, 2012: 1,093 439 531 - 2,049 4,007 348 1,206 2007: 1,610 694 1,339 - 2,784 4,751 616 1,653 50 to 99 ....................................... farms, 2012: 17 4 15 - 43 60 6 29 2007: 20 6 15 - 30 70 5 39 number, 2012: 1,142 251 1,056 - 3,179 4,093 441 2,009 2007: 1,401 412 975 - 2,122 4,969 408 2,636 100 to 199 ..................................... farms, 2012: 24 11 6 - 18 52 4 34 2007: 19 6 11 - 36 56 8 22 number, 2012: 3,064 1,602 839 - 2,565 7,023 548 4,397 2007: 2,414 791 1,664 - 5,001 8,010 918 3,011 200 to 499 ..................................... farms, 2012: 17 14 4 - 26 31 2 29 2007: 17 7 7 - 44 42 1 21 number, 2012: 5,811 4,047 1,284 - 8,014 9,730 (D) 8,563 2007: 4,798 2,432 2,426 - 14,807 12,060 (D) 6,270 500 or more .................................... farms, 2012: 20 61 9 - 95 25 - 23 2007: 15 87 7 - 108 20 - 22 number, 2012: 26,079 143,732 10,287 - 224,698 30,532 - 26,389 2007: 21,651 199,830 8,953 - 218,257 24,254 - 24,332 : Cows and heifers that calved ......................farms, 2012: 149 178 199 - 430 547 53 208 2007: 186 199 260 - 491 595 44 213 number, 2012: 12,828 89,802 10,280 - 127,203 29,875 1,253 17,331 2007: 16,887 113,391 10,913 - 129,435 31,058 1,365 18,670 : Beef cows ...................................... farms, 2012: 148 117 191 - 330 533 53 205 2007: 182 116 252 - 374 587 44 205 number, 2012: (D) 3,661 3,580 - 17,520 29,616 1,243 (D) 2007: 14,759 3,301 5,775 - 20,099 (D) 1,362 15,541 : 2012 farms by inventory: : 1 to 9 ........................................... farms: 56 86 139 - 207 277 25 71 number: 232 246 505 - 700 1,091 88 (D) 10 to 19 ......................................... farms: 17 15 22 - 43 57 8 32 number: (D) 179 291 - 564 753 93 411 20 to 49 ......................................... farms: 27 8 14 - 34 84 12 30 number: 850 233 441 - 1,043 2,696 364 891 50 to 99 ......................................... farms: 16 2 8 - 19 53 5 32 number: 1,097 (D) 569 - 1,220 3,538 318 2,188 100 to 199 ....................................... farms: 19 4 3 - 12 29 3 15 number: 2,704 430 352 - 1,470 3,889 380 2,068 200 to 499 ....................................... farms: 9 1 5 - 11 23 - 19 number: 2,356 (D) 1,422 - 3,404 6,565 - 5,332 500 or more ...................................... farms: 4 1 - - 4 10 - 6 number: 4,860 (D) - - 9,119 11,084 - 3,761 : Milk cows ...................................... farms, 2012: 3 73 13 - 111 28 4 17 2007: 7 95 20 - 131 22 3 10 number, 2012: (D) 86,141 6,700 - 109,683 259 10 (D) 2007: 2,128 110,090 5,138 - 109,336 (D) 3 3,129 : 2012 farms by inventory: : 1 to 9 ........................................... farms: 2 8 6 - 11 27 4 14 number: (D) 14 15 - 56 (D) 10 25 10 to 19 ......................................... farms: - - - - - - - - number: - - - - - - - - 20 to 49 ......................................... farms: - - - - 3 - - 1 number: - - - - 66 - - (D) 50 to 99 ......................................... farms: - - - - 5 - - - number: - - - - 292 - - - 100 to 199 ....................................... farms: - 3 - - 9 - - - number: - 420 - - 1,243 - - - 200 to 499 ....................................... farms: - 11 3 - 10 1 - 1 number: - 3,676 860 - 3,728 (D) - (D) 500 or more ...................................... farms: 1 51 4 - 73 - - 1 number: (D) 82,031 5,825 - 104,298 - - (D) : Other cattle (see text) .......................... farms, 2012: 191 182 244 - 443 562 43 246 2007: 140 204 275 - 482 567 48 253 number, 2012: 25,105 61,092 5,161 - 115,416 28,220 (D) 26,436 2007: 15,557 91,515 6,153 - 115,561 25,772 1,054 20,291 : 2012 farms by inventory: : 1 to 9 ............................................. farms: 82 82 193 - 200 291 16 98 number: 345 320 627 - 769 1,064 80 375 10 to 19 ........................................... farms: 40 29 21 - 52 83 16 45 number: 551 393 241 - 714 1,048 228 589 20 to 49 ........................................... farms: 14 11 11 - 52 100 7 31 number: 429 335 325 - 1,501 2,915 249 834 50 to 99 ........................................... farms: 9 5 10 - 35 34 2 25 number: 562 302 737 - 2,670 2,313 (D) 1,727 100 to 199 ......................................... farms: 19 8 1 - 12 26 2 19 number: 2,144 1,185 (D) - 1,542 3,372 (D) 2,399 200 to 499 ......................................... farms: 13 16 6 - 24 14 - 13 number: 4,131 4,653 1,881 - 7,458 3,858 - 3,073 500 or more ........................................ farms: 14 31 2 - 68 14 - 15 number: 16,943 53,904 (D) - 100,762 13,650 - 17,439 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 11. Cattle and Calves - Inventory and Sales: 2012 and 2007 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Santa Clara : Santa Cruz : Shasta : Sierra : Siskiyou : Solano : Sonoma : Stanislaus ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- INVENTORY : : Cattle and calves ...................................farms, 2012: 227 54 688 29 418 213 689 1,101 2007: 203 33 651 28 361 182 557 1,169 number, 2012: 15,118 4,153 35,122 9,383 53,944 53,793 95,642 399,659 2007: 17,551 734 39,212 3,467 56,535 42,632 75,464 423,218 : Farms by inventory: : 1 to 9 ......................................... farms, 2012: 112 18 390 4 155 118 279 481 2007: 69 13 340 - 115 63 194 408 number, 2012: 464 (D) 1,639 (D) 673 454 1,096 2,047 2007: 280 61 1,613 - 548 278 822 1,855 10 to 19 ....................................... farms, 2012: 21 4 134 1 70 16 92 160 2007: 40 9 115 7 52 35 76 163 number, 2012: 250 (D) 1,770 (D) 907 212 1,197 2,143 2007: 463 106 1,551 115 696 478 990 2,148 20 to 49 ....................................... farms, 2012: 43 13 78 6 61 34 103 99 2007: 48 7 94 9 58 32 107 170 number, 2012: 1,344 356 2,332 170 1,723 1,121 3,140 2,958 2007: 1,483 188 2,839 (D) 1,822 932 3,226 4,963 50 to 99 ....................................... farms, 2012: 21 14 37 7 38 8 41 41 2007: 16 2 33 4 36 21 47 65 number, 2012: 1,316 835 2,482 506 2,667 582 2,856 2,656 2007: 1,086 (D) 2,151 330 2,600 1,452 3,136 4,243 100 to 199 ..................................... farms, 2012: 8 1 26 3 39 9 60 67 2007: 11 2 29 3 42 5 40 44 number, 2012: 1,152 (D) 3,357 529 5,882 1,129 8,670 8,803 2007: 1,547 (D) 4,000 429 5,849 629 5,261 6,015 200 to 499 ..................................... farms, 2012: 15 - 16 5 32 14 51 60 2007: 8 - 28 3 29 9 45 87 number, 2012: 4,684 - 4,480 1,682 10,576 4,286 16,761 18,431 2007: 2,481 - 8,042 1,136 10,036 2,798 14,614 28,954 500 or more .................................... farms, 2012: 7 4 7 3 23 14 63 193 2007: 11 - 12 2 29 17 48 232 number, 2012: 5,908 2,600 19,062 6,452 31,516 46,009 61,922 362,621 2007: 10,211 - 19,016 (D) 34,984 36,065 47,415 375,040 : Cows and heifers that calved ......................farms, 2012: 187 34 529 25 342 141 497 766 2007: 157 28 531 28 325 148 446 933 number, 2012: 7,301 661 13,856 5,207 28,960 21,721 46,359 205,255 2007: 8,739 385 18,294 2,141 31,307 19,533 41,151 228,394 : Beef cows ...................................... farms, 2012: 184 28 519 25 326 140 392 554 2007: 157 28 530 28 325 145 374 694 number, 2012: 7,291 409 13,664 (D) 27,990 17,421 11,150 25,638 2007: 8,689 385 18,256 2,141 30,207 (D) 11,486 36,665 : 2012 farms by inventory: : 1 to 9 ........................................... farms: 109 19 355 2 150 70 234 367 number: 371 98 1,285 (D) 599 223 752 1,271 10 to 19 ......................................... farms: 12 3 57 2 33 17 36 54 number: (D) (D) 707 (D) 438 231 (D) 695 20 to 49 ......................................... farms: 36 4 53 8 45 23 56 53 number: 1,107 115 1,598 286 1,500 686 1,762 1,567 50 to 99 ......................................... farms: 7 1 25 4 30 9 38 26 number: 487 (D) 1,604 349 2,048 588 2,724 1,761 100 to 199 ....................................... farms: 7 1 17 5 31 5 18 19 number: 911 (D) 2,359 761 4,001 769 2,389 2,426 200 to 499 ....................................... farms: 11 - 8 2 24 5 9 23 number: 3,072 - 2,104 (D) 6,784 1,532 2,424 7,372 500 or more ...................................... farms: 2 - 4 2 13 11 1 12 number: (D) - 4,007 (D) 12,620 13,392 (D) 10,546 : Milk cows ...................................... farms, 2012: 6 8 22 1 18 3 120 238 2007: 12 - 16 - 15 6 93 268 number, 2012: 10 252 192 (D) 970 4,300 35,209 179,617 2007: 50 - 38 - 1,100 (D) 29,665 191,729 : 2012 farms by inventory: : 1 to 9 ........................................... farms: 6 2 20 1 15 - 24 45 number: 10 (D) (D) (D) 29 - 50 92 10 to 19 ......................................... farms: - - - - - - 6 - number: - - - - - - 90 - 20 to 49 ......................................... farms: - 6 - - - - - - number: - (D) - - - - - - 50 to 99 ......................................... farms: - - 2 - - - 3 4 number: - - (D) - - - 174 270 100 to 199 ....................................... farms: - - - - 1 - 14 11 number: - - - - (D) - 2,216 1,530 200 to 499 ....................................... farms: - - - - 1 - 52 36 number: - - - - (D) - 16,308 11,985 500 or more ...................................... farms: - - - - 1 3 21 142 number: - - - - (D) 4,300 16,371 165,740 : Other cattle (see text) .......................... farms, 2012: 163 44 511 24 339 177 552 896 2007: 150 22 512 22 284 151 430 918 number, 2012: 7,817 3,492 21,266 4,176 24,984 32,072 49,283 194,404 2007: 8,812 349 20,918 1,326 25,228 23,099 34,313 194,824 : 2012 farms by inventory: : 1 to 9 ............................................. farms: 86 17 337 6 149 111 225 402 number: (D) (D) 1,239 37 610 343 855 1,566 10 to 19 ........................................... farms: 26 1 87 4 67 15 73 127 number: 400 (D) 1,129 (D) 883 214 954 1,631 20 to 49 ........................................... farms: 21 14 39 4 41 20 87 85 number: 555 353 1,170 135 1,244 550 2,632 2,456 50 to 99 ........................................... farms: 12 8 31 3 29 7 36 32 number: 848 440 2,041 225 1,871 472 2,427 2,091 100 to 199 ......................................... farms: 7 - 9 3 25 4 52 60 number: 1,084 - 1,130 396 3,578 453 7,266 7,911 200 to 499 ......................................... farms: 10 - 3 2 19 11 57 64 number: 3,202 - 736 (D) 5,623 3,148 18,229 18,763 500 or more ........................................ farms: 1 4 5 2 9 9 22 126 number: (D) 2,600 13,821 (D) 11,175 26,892 16,920 159,986 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 11. Cattle and Calves - Inventory and Sales: 2012 and 2007 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Sutter : Tehama : Trinity : Tulare : Tuolumne : Ventura : Yolo : Yuba ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- INVENTORY : : Cattle and calves ...................................farms, 2012: 141 733 106 862 182 125 109 262 2007: 135 670 87 940 195 135 137 257 number, 2012: 6,616 61,785 4,526 1,086,130 8,459 5,536 14,756 12,647 2007: 7,868 58,444 3,546 1,071,956 12,241 6,968 21,570 14,050 : Farms by inventory: : 1 to 9 ......................................... farms, 2012: 65 362 65 297 69 53 51 175 2007: 44 269 38 293 65 41 51 152 number, 2012: 347 1,586 (D) 1,289 286 202 178 793 2007: 212 1,319 200 1,323 322 140 169 804 10 to 19 ....................................... farms, 2012: 29 132 18 111 45 16 12 36 2007: 32 110 29 127 47 15 32 43 number, 2012: 398 1,725 250 1,440 583 229 160 529 2007: 469 1,477 365 1,693 670 230 416 (D) 20 to 49 ....................................... farms, 2012: 21 85 12 74 35 24 14 24 2007: 29 120 10 122 35 41 17 30 number, 2012: (D) 2,958 340 2,177 995 748 418 686 2007: 864 3,402 240 3,554 1,041 1,208 531 899 50 to 99 ....................................... farms, 2012: 10 55 6 46 13 16 14 11 2007: 13 63 2 28 19 15 14 14 number, 2012: 715 3,794 478 2,941 962 1,237 911 718 2007: 893 4,384 (D) 1,938 1,378 (D) 1,017 879 100 to 199 ..................................... farms, 2012: 9 32 1 33 7 9 4 6 2007: 10 46 4 22 17 16 8 2 number, 2012: 1,119 4,200 (D) 4,508 927 1,339 569 704 2007: 1,381 6,196 522 3,086 2,675 2,036 938 (D) 200 to 499 ..................................... farms, 2012: 6 40 1 31 10 7 5 3 2007: 3 36 2 51 8 6 6 10 number, 2012: 1,946 13,217 (D) 10,446 3,017 1,781 1,739 1,017 2007: 840 11,570 (D) 16,141 2,517 1,750 1,635 3,440 500 or more .................................... farms, 2012: 1 27 3 270 3 - 9 7 2007: 4 26 2 297 4 1 9 6 number, 2012: (D) 34,305 2,850 1,063,329 1,689 - 10,781 8,200 2007: 3,209 30,096 (D) 1,044,221 3,638 (D) 16,864 7,178 : Cows and heifers that calved ......................farms, 2012: 122 539 81 643 153 93 85 211 2007: 112 549 81 773 179 104 106 225 number, 2012: 3,519 29,186 2,861 513,818 4,674 3,297 9,260 7,706 2007: 4,231 27,470 2,618 502,326 6,889 4,128 10,157 8,390 : Beef cows ...................................... farms, 2012: 116 506 74 399 148 89 78 202 2007: 111 513 74 518 179 97 100 221 number, 2012: 3,513 23,445 2,848 24,382 4,659 3,277 (D) 4,987 2007: (D) 24,089 2,600 27,829 6,889 4,112 (D) 5,132 : 2012 farms by inventory: : 1 to 9 ........................................... farms: 70 287 45 234 81 37 35 148 number: 214 1,153 141 852 324 129 (D) 531 10 to 19 ......................................... farms: 11 62 15 50 27 13 15 20 number: (D) 747 200 627 341 179 189 271 20 to 49 ......................................... farms: 17 69 8 44 19 20 9 15 number: 478 2,154 278 1,349 549 604 271 (D) 50 to 99 ......................................... farms: 11 39 1 24 9 8 6 11 number: 782 2,612 (D) 1,476 651 570 349 642 100 to 199 ....................................... farms: 3 23 2 22 4 8 3 3 number: 460 3,198 (D) 3,028 478 1,134 360 415 200 to 499 ....................................... farms: 3 14 1 19 8 3 7 3 number: 886 3,997 (D) 5,730 2,316 661 1,961 1,021 500 or more ...................................... farms: 1 12 2 6 - - 3 2 number: (D) 9,584 (D) 11,320 - - 2,010 (D) : Milk cows ...................................... farms, 2012: 6 39 9 256 5 6 10 10 2007: 1 51 12 289 - 8 12 4 number, 2012: 6 5,741 13 489,436 15 20 (D) 2,719 2007: (D) 3,381 18 474,497 - 16 (D) 3,258 : 2012 farms by inventory: : 1 to 9 ........................................... farms: 6 25 9 12 5 6 6 7 number: 6 35 13 15 15 20 13 19 10 to 19 ......................................... farms: - 1 - - - - - - number: - (D) - - - - - - 20 to 49 ......................................... farms: - 1 - 7 - - - - number: - (D) - 195 - - - - 50 to 99 ......................................... farms: - - - 2 - - - - number: - - - (D) - - - - 100 to 199 ....................................... farms: - 5 - 1 - - 2 - number: - (D) - (D) - - (D) - 200 to 499 ....................................... farms: - 1 - 9 - - - 1 number: - (D) - 3,008 - - - (D) 500 or more ...................................... farms: - 6 - 225 - - 2 2 number: - 4,422 - 485,938 - - (D) (D) : Other cattle (see text) .......................... farms, 2012: 122 595 84 728 141 91 79 201 2007: 110 532 63 781 141 94 104 207 number, 2012: 3,097 32,599 1,665 572,312 3,785 2,239 5,496 4,941 2007: 3,637 30,974 928 569,630 5,352 2,840 11,413 5,660 : 2012 farms by inventory: : 1 to 9 ............................................. farms: 78 358 61 262 77 46 38 155 number: 388 1,354 (D) 956 303 (D) 116 592 10 to 19 ........................................... farms: 23 84 13 81 28 13 9 22 number: 282 1,007 169 984 373 172 113 302 20 to 49 ........................................... farms: 9 72 4 71 17 18 13 10 number: 289 2,413 124 1,995 540 535 396 241 50 to 99 ........................................... farms: 4 26 4 44 11 10 7 5 number: (D) 1,687 246 2,925 847 767 525 (D) 100 to 199 ......................................... farms: 7 23 1 27 5 3 3 3 number: 920 3,081 (D) 3,764 750 393 397 355 200 to 499 ......................................... farms: - 21 - 35 3 1 5 4 number: - 7,397 - 11,390 972 (D) 1,272 1,333 500 or more ........................................ farms: 1 11 1 208 - - 4 2 number: (D) 15,660 (D) 550,298 - - 2,677 (D) ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 11. Cattle and Calves - Inventory and Sales: 2012 and 2007 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : California : Alameda : Alpine : Amador : Butte : Calaveras : Colusa ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- INVENTORY - Con. : : Cattle and calves - Con. : : Cattle on feed (see text) ........................ farms, 2012: 97 - - 1 2 2 - 2007: 264 3 - 2 4 5 - number, 2012: 488,131 - - (D) (D) (D) - 2007: 571,541 230 - (D) 61 33 - : 2012 farms by inventory: : 1 to 19 ............................................ farms: 5 - - - - 2 - number: 67 - - - - (D) - 20 to 49 ........................................... farms: 11 - - - - - - number: 291 - - - - - - 50 to 99 ........................................... farms: 27 - - 1 2 - - number: 1,573 - - (D) (D) - - 100 to 199 ......................................... farms: 18 - - - - - - number: 2,343 - - - - - - 200 to 499 ......................................... farms: 16 - - - - - - number: 5,148 - - - - - - 500 or more ........................................ farms: 20 - - - - - - number: 478,709 - - - - - - : SALES : : Milk from cows (see text) .......................... farms, 2012: 1,554 - - - 5 - 2 2007: (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) $1,000, 2012: 6,945,102 - - - 987 - (D) 2007: (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) : Cattle and calves sold ............................. farms, 2012: 12,594 128 1 148 215 233 63 2007: 12,681 148 6 149 229 237 65 number, 2012: 3,671,078 9,421 (D) 8,243 6,943 8,458 6,542 2007: 3,553,530 10,252 392 7,999 7,579 13,126 8,649 $1,000, 2012: 3,259,325 (D) (D) 8,030 6,745 7,823 5,850 2007: 2,536,571 7,437 (D) 6,493 (D) 9,083 5,755 : 2012 farms by number sold: : 1 to 9 ............................................... farms: 5,363 49 - 64 131 118 26 number: 20,318 209 - 293 497 (D) 82 10 to 19 ............................................. farms: 1,622 22 - 27 30 35 9 number: 21,604 312 - 351 460 459 123 20 to 49 ............................................. farms: 1,733 23 - 24 29 44 6 number: 52,943 682 - 712 836 1,332 160 50 to 99 ............................................. farms: 977 15 - 18 8 16 7 number: 68,117 1,087 - (D) 552 1,289 457 100 to 199 ........................................... farms: 784 6 1 5 10 9 3 number: 108,889 914 (D) 655 1,245 1,283 406 200 to 499 ........................................... farms: 939 8 - 8 3 10 8 number: 290,442 2,511 - 2,511 853 3,092 2,495 500 or more .......................................... farms: 1,176 5 - 2 4 1 4 number: 3,108,765 3,706 - (D) 2,500 (D) 2,819 : Calves weighing less than 500 pounds, : sold ............................................ farms, 2012: 5,347 56 1 45 85 73 25 2007: 6,174 64 2 65 72 99 31 number, 2012: 1,252,820 2,117 (D) 400 1,016 1,422 958 2007: 1,353,352 1,543 (D) 719 1,308 1,483 2,556 : 2012 farms by number sold: : 1 to 9 ............................................. farms: 2,408 34 - 32 63 49 16 number: 8,168 119 - 124 208 215 (D) 10 to 19 ........................................... farms: 661 6 1 7 10 10 1 number: 8,586 (D) (D) 88 (D) 132 (D) 20 to 49 ........................................... farms: 698 6 - 6 7 7 3 number: 20,674 154 - 188 236 227 100 50 to 99 ........................................... farms: 377 2 - - 3 2 2 number: 25,337 (D) - - 204 (D) (D) 100 to 199 ......................................... farms: 311 4 - - 2 4 2 number: 40,842 628 - - (D) 455 (D) 200 to 499 ......................................... farms: 402 4 - - - 1 1 number: 123,832 980 - - - (D) (D) 500 or more ........................................ farms: 490 - - - - - - number: 1,025,381 - - - - - - : Cattle, including calves weighing 500 pounds : or more, sold ................................... farms, 2012: 11,228 113 1 143 179 226 52 2007: 11,122 123 5 130 206 217 57 number, 2012: 2,418,258 7,304 (D) 7,843 5,927 7,036 5,584 2007: 2,200,178 8,709 (D) 7,280 6,271 11,643 6,093 : 2012 farms by number sold: : 1 to 9 ..............................................farms: 5,020 42 - 70 113 127 18 number: 18,160 177 - 299 436 447 (D) 10 to 19 ........................................... farms: 1,455 22 - 23 22 31 9 number: 19,157 294 - (D) (D) 411 120 20 to 49 ............................................farms: 1,471 20 - 20 23 37 8 number: 45,070 627 - 657 671 1,075 240 50 to 99 ............................................farms: 854 16 - 15 9 13 5 number: 58,623 1,090 - 1,090 636 1,116 358 100 to 199 ..........................................farms: 769 3 1 5 7 9 1 number: 106,347 490 (D) 653 947 1,296 (D) 200 to 499 ..........................................farms: 857 6 - 8 1 9 7 number: 263,139 1,646 - 2,473 (D) 2,691 2,235 500 or more .........................................farms: 802 4 - 2 4 - 4 number: 1,907,762 2,980 - (D) 2,500 - 2,445 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 11. Cattle and Calves - Inventory and Sales: 2012 and 2007 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Contra Costa : Del Norte : El Dorado : Fresno : Glenn : Humboldt : Imperial ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- INVENTORY - Con. : : Cattle and calves - Con. : : Cattle on feed (see text) ........................ farms, 2012: - - - 3 - 3 20 2007: - - 8 10 7 - 22 number, 2012: - - - (D) - 93 341,778 2007: - - 28 (D) 382 - 399,651 : 2012 farms by inventory: : 1 to 19 ............................................ farms: - - - - - - - number: - - - - - - - 20 to 49 ........................................... farms: - - - - - 3 - number: - - - - - 93 - 50 to 99 ........................................... farms: - - - - - - 1 number: - - - - - - (D) 100 to 199 ......................................... farms: - - - 1 - - 4 number: - - - (D) - - 440 200 to 499 ......................................... farms: - - - - - - 2 number: - - - - - - (D) 500 or more ........................................ farms: - - - 2 - - 13 number: - - - (D) - - 340,548 : SALES : : Milk from cows (see text) .......................... farms, 2012: - 11 3 70 34 69 1 2007: (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) $1,000, 2012: - 17,214 (D) 422,335 73,317 73,264 (D) 2007: (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) : Cattle and calves sold ............................. farms, 2012: 82 52 189 510 249 341 48 2007: 98 44 117 597 271 379 51 number, 2012: 10,680 4,581 4,314 388,889 41,139 26,192 356,176 2007: 12,459 4,727 2,473 466,233 31,546 29,339 420,288 $1,000, 2012: 12,059 1,818 4,483 456,372 37,579 (D) 534,225 2007: 9,534 3,164 1,689 419,506 19,468 (D) 530,557 : 2012 farms by number sold: : 1 to 9 ............................................... farms: 28 30 141 221 87 112 10 number: 90 156 461 903 313 448 25 10 to 19 ............................................. farms: 23 6 18 66 45 47 5 number: 336 70 233 874 593 584 55 20 to 49 ............................................. farms: 10 5 17 59 41 61 1 number: 316 117 591 1,709 1,403 2,117 (D) 50 to 99 ............................................. farms: 5 4 4 39 20 36 4 number: 389 292 239 2,755 1,338 2,467 240 100 to 199 ........................................... farms: 7 3 6 29 20 47 4 number: 958 350 1,035 4,332 2,703 5,897 400 200 to 499 ........................................... farms: 3 2 1 37 20 28 2 number: 884 (D) (D) 11,493 5,985 7,622 (D) 500 or more .......................................... farms: 6 2 2 59 16 10 22 number: 7,707 (D) (D) 366,823 28,804 7,057 354,699 : Calves weighing less than 500 pounds, : sold ............................................ farms, 2012: 27 16 44 268 88 149 4 2007: 42 20 56 326 121 161 18 number, 2012: 564 2,723 345 52,680 8,079 6,607 (D) 2007: 1,179 2,414 501 71,883 11,086 8,662 10,366 : 2012 farms by number sold: : 1 to 9 ............................................. farms: 19 5 34 135 29 57 1 number: (D) 25 (D) 428 82 203 (D) 10 to 19 ........................................... farms: 1 4 2 33 16 25 - number: (D) 40 (D) 442 214 (D) - 20 to 49 ........................................... farms: 3 1 8 31 18 25 1 number: 82 (D) 218 879 527 798 (D) 50 to 99 ........................................... farms: 3 2 - 13 6 26 - number: 247 (D) - 930 350 1,607 - 100 to 199 ......................................... farms: 1 2 - 9 4 8 1 number: (D) (D) - 1,311 498 1,066 (D) 200 to 499 ......................................... farms: - 1 - 17 10 7 - number: - (D) - 5,890 3,000 2,104 - 500 or more ........................................ farms: - 1 - 30 5 1 1 number: - (D) - 42,800 3,408 (D) (D) : Cattle, including calves weighing 500 pounds : or more, sold ................................... farms, 2012: 74 47 179 437 228 309 47 2007: 81 35 99 505 230 346 50 number, 2012: 10,116 1,858 3,969 336,209 33,060 19,585 (D) 2007: 11,280 2,313 1,972 394,350 20,460 20,677 409,922 : 2012 farms by number sold: : 1 to 9 ..............................................farms: 27 31 137 191 92 109 9 number: (D) 146 416 726 349 460 24 10 to 19 ........................................... farms: 23 3 17 53 34 41 5 number: 295 (D) 209 691 444 505 55 20 to 49 ............................................farms: 7 4 15 56 41 66 1 number: 233 85 511 1,605 1,276 2,115 (D) 50 to 99 ............................................farms: 2 4 1 33 15 28 4 number: (D) 292 (D) 2,399 994 1,921 240 100 to 199 ..........................................farms: 6 3 6 25 20 37 4 number: 808 400 1,035 4,085 2,720 4,919 400 200 to 499 ..........................................farms: 3 1 1 40 16 25 3 number: 859 (D) (D) 12,683 4,722 6,662 1,120 500 or more .........................................farms: 6 1 2 39 10 3 21 number: 7,702 (D) (D) 314,020 22,555 3,003 353,152 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 11. Cattle and Calves - Inventory and Sales: 2012 and 2007 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Inyo : Kern : Kings : Lake : Lassen : Los Angeles : Madera ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- INVENTORY - Con. : : Cattle and calves - Con. : : Cattle on feed (see text) ........................ farms, 2012: - 3 1 1 2 - 4 2007: - 7 12 - 7 1 2 number, 2012: - (D) (D) (D) (D) - 112 2007: - (D) (D) - 275 (D) (D) : 2012 farms by inventory: : 1 to 19 ............................................ farms: - - - - - - - number: - - - - - - - 20 to 49 ........................................... farms: - - - - 1 - 4 number: - - - - (D) - 112 50 to 99 ........................................... farms: - 1 - 1 - - - number: - (D) - (D) - - - 100 to 199 ......................................... farms: - - - - - - - number: - - - - - - - 200 to 499 ......................................... farms: - - - - 1 - - number: - - - - (D) - - 500 or more ........................................ farms: - 2 1 - - - - number: - (D) (D) - - - - : SALES : : Milk from cows (see text) .......................... farms, 2012: - 54 122 - 1 1 29 2007: (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) $1,000, 2012: - 495,420 624,834 - (D) (D) 243,236 2007: (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) : Cattle and calves sold ............................. farms, 2012: 52 393 250 92 176 45 227 2007: 39 358 261 81 170 83 301 number, 2012: 9,753 230,893 348,481 1,345 24,082 1,834 110,012 2007: 10,744 180,177 266,505 1,271 24,549 2,992 115,505 $1,000, 2012: (D) 230,379 313,731 1,032 22,691 (D) 91,010 2007: (D) 132,073 124,776 804 17,487 1,700 69,203 : 2012 farms by number sold: : 1 to 9 ............................................... farms: 26 157 76 69 68 32 100 number: 66 620 329 (D) 225 (D) 453 10 to 19 ............................................. farms: 2 36 12 10 15 3 22 number: (D) 465 143 141 209 39 290 20 to 49 ............................................. farms: 4 64 12 9 37 3 31 number: 131 1,990 378 301 1,060 66 875 50 to 99 ............................................. farms: 6 33 7 3 13 2 24 number: 395 2,250 474 245 896 (D) 1,690 100 to 199 ........................................... farms: 2 14 5 - 7 4 6 number: (D) 1,904 679 - 786 (D) 891 200 to 499 ........................................... farms: 5 36 37 1 21 - 19 number: 1,737 13,209 13,241 (D) 5,781 - 4,668 500 or more .......................................... farms: 7 53 101 - 15 1 25 number: 7,148 210,455 333,237 - 15,125 (D) 101,145 : Calves weighing less than 500 pounds, : sold ............................................ farms, 2012: 16 166 142 40 61 20 92 2007: 20 196 156 41 78 42 169 number, 2012: 974 57,777 105,452 309 4,794 867 38,741 2007: 1,010 49,432 205,307 308 5,704 1,400 46,025 : 2012 farms by number sold: : 1 to 9 ............................................. farms: 5 67 29 26 17 14 39 number: 12 191 111 70 (D) 31 179 10 to 19 ........................................... farms: 2 9 7 10 14 - 19 number: (D) 117 (D) 117 179 - 248 20 to 49 ........................................... farms: 2 26 11 4 11 1 10 number: (D) 687 366 122 338 (D) 363 50 to 99 ........................................... farms: 3 8 2 - 9 3 5 number: 199 514 (D) - 690 (D) 269 100 to 199 ......................................... farms: 3 6 16 - 2 1 4 number: 390 790 2,132 - (D) (D) 510 200 to 499 ......................................... farms: 1 19 29 - 4 - 4 number: (D) 6,235 8,745 - 934 - 1,222 500 or more ........................................ farms: - 31 48 - 4 1 11 number: - 49,243 93,881 - 2,386 (D) 35,950 : Cattle, including calves weighing 500 pounds : or more, sold ................................... farms, 2012: 47 351 227 69 164 35 203 2007: 38 303 231 68 158 60 255 number, 2012: 8,779 173,116 243,029 1,036 19,288 967 71,271 2007: 9,734 130,745 61,198 963 18,845 1,592 69,480 : 2012 farms by number sold: : 1 to 9 ..............................................farms: 25 148 68 56 68 23 96 number: (D) 561 263 160 209 (D) 395 10 to 19 ........................................... farms: 2 30 9 5 15 4 24 number: (D) 387 109 (D) 213 51 322 20 to 49 ............................................farms: 3 53 9 4 35 4 20 number: 109 1,702 283 131 943 140 559 50 to 99 ............................................farms: 4 30 10 3 8 3 19 number: 275 2,042 683 231 498 239 1,261 100 to 199 ..........................................farms: 3 19 15 - 11 - 8 number: 345 2,643 2,271 - 1,452 - 1,228 200 to 499 ..........................................farms: 3 27 49 1 14 1 17 number: 1,142 8,566 17,109 (D) 3,789 (D) 4,264 500 or more .........................................farms: 7 44 67 - 13 - 19 number: 6,810 157,215 222,311 - 12,184 - 63,242 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 11. Cattle and Calves - Inventory and Sales: 2012 and 2007 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Marin : Mariposa : Mendocino : Merced : Modoc : Mono : Monterey ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- INVENTORY - Con. : : Cattle and calves - Con. : : Cattle on feed (see text) ........................ farms, 2012: - - 2 3 - - 2 2007: 1 2 1 1 4 - 2 number, 2012: - - (D) 192 - - (D) 2007: (D) (D) (D) (D) 165 - (D) : 2012 farms by inventory: : 1 to 19 ............................................ farms: - - 2 1 - - - number: - - (D) (D) - - - 20 to 49 ........................................... farms: - - - - - - - number: - - - - - - - 50 to 99 ........................................... farms: - - - 1 - - 1 number: - - - (D) - - (D) 100 to 199 ......................................... farms: - - - 1 - - - number: - - - (D) - - - 200 to 499 ......................................... farms: - - - - - - 1 number: - - - - - - (D) 500 or more ........................................ farms: - - - - - - - number: - - - - - - - : SALES : : Milk from cows (see text) .......................... farms, 2012: 44 - 1 230 1 - 1 2007: (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) $1,000, 2012: 61,264 - (D) 1,113,424 (D) - (D) 2007: (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) : Cattle and calves sold ............................. farms, 2012: 134 184 250 526 195 28 266 2007: 118 146 202 574 198 35 287 number, 2012: 15,790 17,566 8,549 302,103 36,697 13,427 31,606 2007: 14,866 11,571 8,881 238,414 39,070 5,177 36,386 $1,000, 2012: 14,693 19,369 (D) 170,910 30,891 (D) 34,200 2007: 10,742 8,057 (D) 137,186 26,106 3,346 27,784 : 2012 farms by number sold: : 1 to 9 ............................................... farms: 14 71 119 150 42 2 88 number: 71 253 (D) 661 164 (D) 414 10 to 19 ............................................. farms: 12 25 50 43 12 4 37 number: 169 336 648 633 165 (D) 492 20 to 49 ............................................. farms: 31 40 44 45 26 2 40 number: 956 1,250 1,439 1,265 780 (D) 1,222 50 to 99 ............................................. farms: 21 16 21 25 21 3 45 number: 1,599 1,174 1,474 1,614 1,528 193 3,065 100 to 199 ........................................... farms: 24 15 9 57 31 1 18 number: 3,146 2,230 1,332 8,377 4,790 (D) 2,768 200 to 499 ........................................... farms: 29 11 5 87 37 9 24 number: 7,964 3,349 1,670 29,179 12,302 2,428 7,328 500 or more .......................................... farms: 3 6 2 119 26 7 14 number: 1,885 8,974 (D) 260,374 16,968 10,500 16,317 : Calves weighing less than 500 pounds, : sold ............................................ farms, 2012: 52 68 100 308 99 23 113 2007: 56 60 89 372 77 9 138 number, 2012: 2,849 1,715 1,932 152,322 7,684 3,133 2,973 2007: 4,313 1,850 3,048 121,255 7,814 720 5,781 : 2012 farms by number sold: : 1 to 9 ............................................. farms: 10 31 61 60 29 1 43 number: 30 111 232 223 114 (D) (D) 10 to 19 ........................................... farms: 14 7 17 10 7 1 34 number: 159 (D) 209 142 (D) (D) 455 20 to 49 ........................................... farms: 8 26 13 43 22 3 20 number: 241 627 346 1,241 659 (D) 663 50 to 99 ........................................... farms: 10 3 5 20 20 5 10 number: 662 264 309 1,298 1,374 281 521 100 to 199 ......................................... farms: 6 - 2 48 7 6 2 number: 882 - (D) 5,982 940 714 (D) 200 to 499 ......................................... farms: 4 - 2 69 13 7 4 number: 875 - (D) 20,457 3,692 2,000 935 500 or more ........................................ farms: - 1 - 58 1 - - number: - (D) - 122,979 (D) - - : Cattle, including calves weighing 500 pounds : or more, sold ................................... farms, 2012: 129 167 228 478 170 25 243 2007: 105 137 172 511 187 32 249 number, 2012: 12,941 15,851 6,617 149,781 29,013 10,294 28,633 2007: 10,553 9,721 5,833 117,159 31,256 4,457 30,605 : 2012 farms by number sold: : 1 to 9 ..............................................farms: 15 68 121 141 33 3 96 number: (D) 188 457 544 112 11 391 10 to 19 ........................................... farms: 17 23 35 47 13 5 35 number: 220 293 (D) 668 182 58 457 20 to 49 ............................................farms: 30 36 42 46 26 1 38 number: 1,015 1,051 1,274 1,297 818 (D) 1,152 50 to 99 ............................................farms: 17 9 16 45 23 1 26 number: 1,283 680 1,183 3,013 1,591 (D) 1,941 100 to 199 ..........................................farms: 26 15 8 72 25 6 14 number: 3,208 2,248 1,035 10,316 3,293 714 2,223 200 to 499 ..........................................farms: 22 10 5 55 28 2 20 number: 6,123 3,111 1,314 18,196 9,481 (D) 6,164 500 or more .........................................farms: 2 6 1 72 22 7 14 number: (D) 8,280 (D) 115,747 13,536 8,700 16,305 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 11. Cattle and Calves - Inventory and Sales: 2012 and 2007 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Napa : Nevada : Orange : Placer : Plumas : Riverside : Sacramento ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- INVENTORY - Con. : : Cattle and calves - Con. : : Cattle on feed (see text) ........................ farms, 2012: - - - - - 2 - 2007: - 3 2 5 2 2 7 number, 2012: - - - - - (D) - 2007: - 10 (D) 779 (D) (D) 110 : 2012 farms by inventory: : 1 to 19 ............................................ farms: - - - - - - - number: - - - - - - - 20 to 49 ........................................... farms: - - - - - - - number: - - - - - - - 50 to 99 ........................................... farms: - - - - - - - number: - - - - - - - 100 to 199 ......................................... farms: - - - - - 2 - number: - - - - - (D) - 200 to 499 ......................................... farms: - - - - - - - number: - - - - - - - 500 or more ........................................ farms: - - - - - - - number: - - - - - - - : SALES : : Milk from cows (see text) .......................... farms, 2012: 1 2 - 1 1 35 32 2007: (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) $1,000, 2012: (D) (D) - (D) (D) 160,497 53,417 2007: (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) : Cattle and calves sold ............................. farms, 2012: 81 145 3 383 66 201 289 2007: 73 150 9 360 49 185 327 number, 2012: 11,470 1,692 (D) 8,972 16,790 35,910 28,637 2007: 3,878 2,678 305 9,945 9,359 62,406 27,771 $1,000, 2012: 10,621 1,760 (D) (D) 17,902 23,662 25,001 2007: 2,302 1,905 244 7,680 7,508 33,193 18,353 : 2012 farms by number sold: : 1 to 9 ............................................... farms: 39 103 1 247 4 109 136 number: 171 407 (D) 889 8 308 468 10 to 19 ............................................. farms: 9 23 - 66 10 18 26 number: 131 277 - 825 152 219 386 20 to 49 ............................................. farms: 11 15 - 46 21 21 49 number: 313 473 - 1,511 744 494 1,416 50 to 99 ............................................. farms: 14 2 1 10 5 3 21 number: (D) (D) (D) 554 (D) 254 1,428 100 to 199 ........................................... farms: 3 1 1 6 10 9 20 number: 457 (D) (D) 785 1,544 1,132 2,855 200 to 499 ........................................... farms: 3 1 - 5 13 18 20 number: 602 (D) - 1,806 3,653 5,053 5,950 500 or more .......................................... farms: 2 - - 3 3 23 17 number: (D) - - 2,602 (D) 28,450 16,134 : Calves weighing less than 500 pounds, : sold ............................................ farms, 2012: 29 57 1 111 33 102 125 2007: 28 59 2 138 18 114 155 number, 2012: 592 241 (D) 1,061 1,296 19,765 6,879 2007: 740 551 (D) 1,576 1,460 43,941 6,064 : 2012 farms by number sold: : 1 to 9 ............................................. farms: 6 50 1 88 7 47 59 number: 16 131 (D) 287 (D) 131 179 10 to 19 ........................................... farms: 11 5 - 14 5 11 16 number: 147 (D) - (D) 61 118 238 20 to 49 ........................................... farms: 8 2 - 8 10 7 23 number: 227 (D) - 204 430 170 695 50 to 99 ........................................... farms: 4 - - - 9 6 14 number: 202 - - - 573 342 1,003 100 to 199 ......................................... farms: - - - - 2 4 5 number: - - - - (D) 420 586 200 to 499 ......................................... farms: - - - 1 - 13 3 number: - - - (D) - 3,795 942 500 or more ........................................ farms: - - - - - 14 5 number: - - - - - 14,789 3,236 : Cattle, including calves weighing 500 pounds : or more, sold ................................... farms, 2012: 75 139 2 334 56 152 255 2007: 70 139 9 316 45 137 294 number, 2012: 10,878 1,451 (D) 7,911 15,494 16,145 21,758 2007: 3,138 2,127 (D) 8,369 7,899 18,465 21,707 : 2012 farms by number sold: : 1 to 9 ..............................................farms: 42 105 - 221 3 86 124 number: 180 367 - 802 12 277 385 10 to 19 ........................................... farms: 5 16 - 52 12 20 23 number: 73 (D) - 655 180 235 326 20 to 49 ............................................farms: 10 14 - 38 11 5 49 number: 292 381 - 1,205 349 128 1,479 50 to 99 ............................................farms: 10 2 1 9 5 9 16 number: 673 (D) (D) (D) 292 734 1,104 100 to 199 ..........................................farms: 6 1 1 6 11 4 11 number: (D) (D) (D) 779 (D) 594 1,534 200 to 499 ..........................................farms: - 1 - 6 11 18 21 number: - (D) - 1,985 3,092 5,143 6,512 500 or more .........................................farms: 2 - - 2 3 10 11 number: (D) - - (D) (D) 9,034 10,418 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 11. Cattle and Calves - Inventory and Sales: 2012 and 2007 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : San Benito :San Bernardino : San Diego : San Francisco : San Joaquin :San Luis Obispo: San Mateo :Santa Barbara ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- INVENTORY - Con. : : Cattle and calves - Con. : : Cattle on feed (see text) ........................ farms, 2012: - 4 - - - 3 1 - 2007: - 12 11 - 16 10 - 4 number, 2012: - 779 - - - 390 (D) - 2007: - 95 23 - 774 (D) - 14 : 2012 farms by inventory: : 1 to 19 ............................................ farms: - - - - - - - - number: - - - - - - - - 20 to 49 ........................................... farms: - - - - - - - - number: - - - - - - - - 50 to 99 ........................................... farms: - - - - - 1 1 - number: - - - - - (D) (D) - 100 to 199 ......................................... farms: - 1 - - - 1 - - number: - (D) - - - (D) - - 200 to 499 ......................................... farms: - 3 - - - 1 - - number: - (D) - - - (D) - - 500 or more ........................................ farms: - - - - - - - - number: - - - - - - - - : SALES : : Milk from cows (see text) .......................... farms, 2012: 1 79 7 - 105 1 - 3 2007: (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) $1,000, 2012: (D) 389,392 29,782 - 417,094 (D) - (D) 2007: (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) : Cattle and calves sold ............................. farms, 2012: 174 184 168 - 446 538 50 231 2007: 161 194 216 - 491 584 43 211 number, 2012: 23,381 103,342 7,278 - 118,225 32,942 1,646 37,001 2007: 25,722 140,228 7,318 - 110,058 40,566 2,151 31,027 $1,000, 2012: 24,355 81,516 5,152 - 99,176 31,779 1,064 34,317 2007: 17,454 69,369 (D) - 66,794 28,693 1,404 20,023 : 2012 farms by number sold: : 1 to 9 ............................................... farms: 51 55 108 - 182 229 19 56 number: 256 207 340 - 687 914 78 283 10 to 19 ............................................. farms: 27 20 22 - 58 93 4 37 number: 415 213 311 - 774 1,290 (D) 478 20 to 49 ............................................. farms: 25 23 14 - 47 100 13 33 number: 863 699 436 - 1,408 2,905 348 949 50 to 99 ............................................. farms: 25 3 11 - 28 50 10 39 number: 1,786 223 763 - 1,920 3,276 558 2,902 100 to 199 ........................................... farms: 25 11 3 - 19 32 3 27 number: 3,268 1,611 346 - 2,596 4,552 413 3,955 200 to 499 ........................................... farms: 13 20 5 - 42 23 1 19 number: 4,177 6,655 1,480 - 12,290 6,559 (D) 5,320 500 or more .......................................... farms: 8 52 5 - 70 11 - 20 number: 12,616 93,734 3,602 - 98,550 13,446 - 23,114 : Calves weighing less than 500 pounds, : sold ............................................ farms, 2012: 72 109 63 - 222 243 21 109 2007: 95 118 102 - 263 302 23 125 number, 2012: 2,187 53,440 3,079 - 40,480 4,048 282 7,211 2007: 3,928 88,722 3,211 - 40,621 8,404 694 9,796 : 2012 farms by number sold: : 1 to 9 ............................................. farms: 27 27 34 - 85 147 15 37 number: 113 92 103 - 312 515 76 132 10 to 19 ........................................... farms: 15 10 10 - 15 45 2 22 number: 202 130 125 - 190 604 (D) 320 20 to 49 ........................................... farms: 16 12 4 - 23 35 3 18 number: 438 306 90 - 616 1,084 80 511 50 to 99 ........................................... farms: 8 4 9 - 20 4 - 23 number: 550 290 601 - 1,461 (D) - 1,682 100 to 199 ......................................... farms: 6 7 2 - 24 11 1 3 number: 884 850 (D) - 2,950 1,324 (D) 367 200 to 499 ......................................... farms: - 13 1 - 32 1 - 3 number: - 3,874 (D) - 10,152 (D) - 1,262 500 or more ........................................ farms: - 36 3 - 23 - - 3 number: - 47,898 1,500 - 24,799 - - 2,937 : Cattle, including calves weighing 500 pounds : or more, sold ................................... farms, 2012: 152 152 155 - 393 473 41 205 2007: 144 162 174 - 440 506 34 185 number, 2012: 21,194 49,902 4,199 - 77,745 28,894 1,364 29,790 2007: 21,794 51,506 4,107 - 69,437 32,162 1,457 21,231 : 2012 farms by number sold: : 1 to 9 ..............................................farms: 49 41 112 - 169 217 14 72 number: 228 (D) 319 - 634 860 (D) 375 10 to 19 ........................................... farms: 18 25 18 - 46 89 9 23 number: 285 290 (D) - 613 1,217 158 264 20 to 49 ............................................farms: 25 11 10 - 36 73 5 27 number: 759 281 298 - 1,208 2,198 138 861 50 to 99 ............................................farms: 19 2 4 - 35 44 10 21 number: 1,220 (D) 257 - 2,366 3,028 555 1,386 100 to 199 ..........................................farms: 22 13 6 - 25 21 2 26 number: 2,643 1,940 872 - 3,230 3,087 (D) 3,478 200 to 499 ..........................................farms: 11 23 3 - 44 18 1 19 number: 3,443 8,644 886 - 13,760 5,158 (D) 5,265 500 or more .........................................farms: 8 37 2 - 38 11 - 17 number: 12,616 38,502 (D) - 55,934 13,346 - 18,161 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 11. Cattle and Calves - Inventory and Sales: 2012 and 2007 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Santa Clara : Santa Cruz : Shasta : Sierra : Siskiyou : Solano : Sonoma : Stanislaus ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- INVENTORY - Con. : : Cattle and calves - Con. : : Cattle on feed (see text) ........................ farms, 2012: - 6 - - 6 1 - 13 2007: - - 19 - 3 4 2 15 number, 2012: - 300 - - 1,415 (D) - 2,104 2007: - - 48 - (D) (D) (D) 1,745 : 2012 farms by inventory: : 1 to 19 ............................................ farms: - - - - - - - - number: - - - - - - - - 20 to 49 ........................................... farms: - - - - 2 - - - number: - - - - (D) - - - 50 to 99 ........................................... farms: - 6 - - 1 - - 4 number: - 300 - - (D) - - 240 100 to 199 ......................................... farms: - - - - - - - 5 number: - - - - - - - 726 200 to 499 ......................................... farms: - - - - 3 - - 4 number: - - - - 1,300 - - 1,138 500 or more ........................................ farms: - - - - - 1 - - number: - - - - - (D) - - : SALES : : Milk from cows (see text) .......................... farms, 2012: - 6 2 - 3 3 99 222 2007: (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) $1,000, 2012: - 934 (D) - 2,663 16,731 155,584 705,968 2007: (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) : Cattle and calves sold ............................. farms, 2012: 149 37 538 30 339 151 513 912 2007: 157 22 502 30 312 132 435 901 number, 2012: 10,091 856 23,904 5,453 28,525 35,998 34,753 208,058 2007: 10,994 840 24,885 2,056 33,683 29,765 32,328 227,810 $1,000, 2012: (D) (D) 25,751 5,250 28,184 38,873 29,082 157,779 2007: 7,969 620 15,541 1,416 23,160 22,041 21,167 141,809 : 2012 farms by number sold: : 1 to 9 ............................................... farms: 72 9 349 8 111 71 194 350 number: 313 42 1,145 (D) 370 223 627 1,350 10 to 19 ............................................. farms: 24 5 65 1 54 22 84 116 number: 318 53 818 (D) 713 283 1,150 1,581 20 to 49 ............................................. farms: 20 18 69 6 58 24 69 101 number: 563 447 2,096 180 1,711 791 2,090 3,083 50 to 99 ............................................. farms: 17 5 27 7 42 6 54 56 number: 1,248 314 1,860 433 3,004 444 3,918 3,801 100 to 199 ........................................... farms: 4 - 16 2 41 4 70 50 number: 528 - 2,139 (D) 5,544 581 9,449 7,145 200 to 499 ........................................... farms: 9 - 8 3 23 7 28 117 number: 2,710 - 2,443 900 6,711 1,820 9,130 37,517 500 or more .......................................... farms: 3 - 4 3 10 17 14 122 number: 4,411 - 13,403 3,521 10,472 31,856 8,389 153,581 : Calves weighing less than 500 pounds, : sold ............................................ farms, 2012: 72 14 177 7 107 43 168 440 2007: 72 5 185 9 136 38 150 480 number, 2012: 1,728 (D) 1,956 582 2,835 1,954 10,563 81,398 2007: 4,596 48 4,709 237 4,298 1,309 9,390 75,531 : 2012 farms by number sold: : 1 to 9 ............................................. farms: 37 5 125 1 46 23 78 186 number: 129 10 403 (D) 184 98 312 530 10 to 19 ........................................... farms: 15 2 21 1 21 6 10 49 number: 178 (D) 250 (D) (D) 79 (D) 601 20 to 49 ........................................... farms: 12 6 26 1 26 10 26 30 number: 397 120 836 (D) 764 300 864 867 50 to 99 ........................................... farms: 5 1 3 1 10 - 19 27 number: 292 (D) (D) (D) 618 - 1,285 1,824 100 to 199 ......................................... farms: 1 - 2 3 3 2 17 39 number: (D) - (D) 475 324 (D) 2,175 5,499 200 to 499 ......................................... farms: 2 - - - - 1 16 62 number: (D) - - - - (D) 4,562 19,591 500 or more ........................................ farms: - - - - 1 1 2 47 number: - - - - (D) (D) (D) 52,486 : Cattle, including calves weighing 500 pounds : or more, sold ................................... farms, 2012: 125 31 480 29 321 142 467 796 2007: 134 20 443 26 289 118 404 812 number, 2012: 8,363 (D) 21,948 4,871 25,690 34,044 24,190 126,660 2007: 6,398 792 20,176 1,819 29,385 28,456 22,938 152,279 : 2012 farms by number sold: : 1 to 9 ..............................................farms: 61 12 329 9 108 77 174 294 number: 242 52 1,016 65 355 228 (D) 1,114 10 to 19 ........................................... farms: 22 4 51 2 58 17 71 119 number: 281 (D) 670 (D) 753 224 937 1,615 20 to 49 ............................................farms: 18 11 57 4 45 15 78 90 number: 594 306 1,796 133 1,385 473 2,364 2,870 50 to 99 ............................................farms: 9 4 18 6 49 5 54 52 number: 639 228 1,270 355 3,341 377 3,619 3,537 100 to 199 ..........................................farms: 4 - 16 4 30 5 60 61 number: 503 - 2,253 599 3,934 693 8,259 8,593 200 to 499 ..........................................farms: 8 - 5 2 21 6 28 111 number: 2,187 - 1,540 (D) 6,173 1,571 7,415 33,376 500 or more .........................................farms: 3 - 4 2 10 17 2 69 number: 3,917 - 13,403 (D) 9,749 30,478 (D) 75,555 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 11. Cattle and Calves - Inventory and Sales: 2012 and 2007 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Sutter : Tehama : Trinity : Tulare : Tuolumne : Ventura : Yolo : Yuba ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- INVENTORY - Con. : : Cattle and calves - Con. : : Cattle on feed (see text) ........................ farms, 2012: - 2 - 9 - - 1 - 2007: 1 12 - 16 4 5 1 7 number, 2012: - (D) - 759 - - (D) - 2007: (D) 4,598 - 643 26 403 (D) 36 : 2012 farms by inventory: : 1 to 19 ............................................ farms: - - - - - - - - number: - - - - - - - - 20 to 49 ........................................... farms: - 1 - - - - - - number: - (D) - - - - - - 50 to 99 ........................................... farms: - - - 6 - - - - number: - - - 315 - - - - 100 to 199 ......................................... farms: - - - 3 - - - - number: - - - 444 - - - - 200 to 499 ......................................... farms: - - - - - - 1 - number: - - - - - - (D) - 500 or more ........................................ farms: - 1 - - - - - - number: - (D) - - - - - - : SALES : : Milk from cows (see text) .......................... farms, 2012: - 15 - 244 - - 4 9 2007: (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) $1,000, 2012: - 21,188 - 1,786,174 - - (D) 23,553 2007: (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) : Cattle and calves sold ............................. farms, 2012: 120 532 72 676 159 101 68 161 2007: 101 479 74 721 142 94 99 183 number, 2012: 4,525 47,768 2,241 779,050 4,399 3,798 16,481 13,799 2007: 4,183 29,635 2,377 679,612 6,129 6,407 10,221 8,023 $1,000, 2012: 4,068 41,968 (D) 454,901 (D) 2,483 17,741 14,222 2007: 2,888 20,953 1,527 365,126 (D) 4,161 10,391 4,420 : 2012 farms by number sold: : 1 to 9 ............................................... farms: 57 257 49 187 101 45 25 108 number: 191 980 155 758 385 134 138 422 10 to 19 ............................................. farms: 20 76 10 61 23 8 5 19 number: 249 981 139 774 319 130 (D) 225 20 to 49 ............................................. farms: 27 80 6 57 18 29 13 12 number: 792 2,630 169 1,686 552 994 419 368 50 to 99 ............................................. farms: 5 47 4 41 5 11 7 5 number: 355 3,081 247 2,941 344 777 494 337 100 to 199 ........................................... farms: 3 20 - 43 6 5 2 5 number: 445 2,821 - 5,482 908 607 (D) 680 200 to 499 ........................................... farms: 8 27 1 59 6 2 4 3 number: 2,493 7,645 (D) 18,223 1,891 (D) 1,125 767 500 or more .......................................... farms: - 25 2 228 - 1 12 9 number: - 29,630 (D) 749,186 - (D) 13,963 11,000 : Calves weighing less than 500 pounds, : sold ............................................ farms, 2012: 43 176 31 371 50 70 30 70 2007: 39 232 31 452 53 55 39 76 number, 2012: 860 7,864 528 533,337 469 1,562 3,007 3,796 2007: 739 7,304 657 459,243 1,015 1,926 2,170 2,732 : 2012 farms by number sold: : 1 to 9 ............................................. farms: 26 92 25 85 42 32 15 54 number: 66 348 75 349 141 103 50 147 10 to 19 ........................................... farms: 4 28 3 29 3 10 8 3 number: (D) 382 45 381 (D) (D) 119 40 20 to 49 ........................................... farms: 8 26 1 14 2 22 1 2 number: 256 692 (D) 419 (D) 705 (D) (D) 50 to 99 ........................................... farms: 3 12 1 23 3 4 1 1 number: 230 748 (D) 1,571 227 284 (D) (D) 100 to 199 ......................................... farms: 2 8 - 25 - 1 1 2 number: (D) 1,139 - 3,646 - (D) (D) (D) 200 to 499 ......................................... farms: - 4 1 42 - 1 2 7 number: - 955 (D) 14,222 - (D) (D) 2,650 500 or more ........................................ farms: - 6 - 153 - - 2 1 number: - 3,600 - 512,749 - - (D) (D) : Cattle, including calves weighing 500 pounds : or more, sold ................................... farms, 2012: 107 483 67 580 143 90 64 148 2007: 86 392 70 633 124 76 89 161 number, 2012: 3,665 39,904 1,713 245,713 3,930 2,236 13,474 10,003 2007: 3,444 22,331 1,720 220,369 5,114 4,481 8,051 5,291 : 2012 farms by number sold: : 1 to 9 ..............................................farms: 48 254 47 164 93 49 24 95 number: 150 935 130 635 311 150 111 302 10 to 19 ........................................... farms: 19 66 12 55 20 11 4 21 number: 240 862 167 706 269 142 56 (D) 20 to 49 ............................................farms: 30 61 2 45 14 18 12 12 number: 883 2,067 (D) 1,374 450 445 323 355 50 to 99 ............................................farms: 1 38 3 45 5 8 7 4 number: (D) 2,504 180 3,106 319 517 483 244 100 to 199 ..........................................farms: 2 20 - 48 5 2 3 5 number: (D) 2,946 - 6,318 693 (D) 394 647 200 to 499 ..........................................farms: 7 28 2 76 6 2 3 2 number: 1,990 7,446 (D) 24,926 1,888 (D) 772 (D) 500 or more .........................................farms: - 16 1 147 - - 11 9 number: - 23,144 (D) 208,648 - - 11,335 7,750 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 11. Cattle and Calves - Inventory and Sales: 2012 and 2007 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : California : Alameda : Alpine : Amador : Butte : Calaveras : Colusa ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- SALES - Con. : : Cattle and calves sold - Con. : Cattle, including calves weighing 500 pounds : or more, sold - Con. : : Cattle on feed sold (see text) ..................farms, 2012: 262 - - 6 2 5 - 2007: 711 8 1 3 10 17 - number, 2012: 712,651 - - 494 (D) 408 - 2007: 744,262 211 (D) (D) 74 178 - : 2012 farms by number sold: : 1 to 19 .......................................... farms: 43 - - - - 1 - number: 581 - - - - (D) - 20 to 49 ......................................... farms: 50 - - - 2 - - number: 1,607 - - - (D) - - 50 to 99 ......................................... farms: 31 - - 6 - 4 - number: 2,191 - - 494 - (D) - 100 to 199 ....................................... farms: 54 - - - - - - number: 7,433 - - - - - - 200 to 499 ....................................... farms: 47 - - - - - - number: 16,396 - - - - - - 500 or more ...................................... farms: 37 - - - - - - number: 684,443 - - - - - - ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Contra Costa : Del Norte : El Dorado : Fresno : Glenn : Humboldt : Imperial ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- SALES - Con. : : Cattle and calves sold - Con. : Cattle, including calves weighing 500 pounds : or more, sold - Con. : : Cattle on feed sold (see text) ..................farms, 2012: - - 5 16 5 4 20 2007: - 1 17 33 15 6 29 number, 2012: - - 900 (D) 305 244 (D) 2007: - (D) 54 (D) 444 6 (D) : 2012 farms by number sold: : 1 to 19 .......................................... farms: - - - 4 2 2 - number: - - - 60 (D) (D) - 20 to 49 ......................................... farms: - - - 3 1 1 - number: - - - 90 (D) (D) - 50 to 99 ......................................... farms: - - - 1 - - - number: - - - (D) - - - 100 to 199 ....................................... farms: - - 5 4 2 - 4 number: - - 900 477 (D) - 400 200 to 499 ....................................... farms: - - - 2 - 1 2 number: - - - (D) - (D) (D) 500 or more ...................................... farms: - - - 2 - - 14 number: - - - (D) - - (D) ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Inyo : Kern : Kings : Lake : Lassen : Los Angeles : Madera ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- SALES - Con. : : Cattle and calves sold - Con. : Cattle, including calves weighing 500 pounds : or more, sold - Con. : : Cattle on feed sold (see text) ..................farms, 2012: - 11 17 2 8 - 5 2007: - 18 17 6 14 11 14 number, 2012: - (D) 11,341 (D) 805 - 75 2007: - (D) 4,147 11 285 84 2,987 : 2012 farms by number sold: : 1 to 19 .......................................... farms: - - - 1 2 - 4 number: - - - (D) (D) - (D) 20 to 49 ......................................... farms: - 6 - - 3 - 1 number: - 235 - - 111 - (D) 50 to 99 ......................................... farms: - - - 1 - - - number: - - - (D) - - - 100 to 199 ....................................... farms: - 1 - - 1 - - number: - (D) - - (D) - - 200 to 499 ....................................... farms: - - 15 - 2 - - number: - - (D) - (D) - - 500 or more ...................................... farms: - 4 2 - - - - number: - (D) (D) - - - - ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 11. Cattle and Calves - Inventory and Sales: 2012 and 2007 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Marin : Mariposa : Mendocino : Merced : Modoc : Mono : Monterey ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- SALES - Con. : : Cattle and calves sold - Con. : Cattle, including calves weighing 500 pounds : or more, sold - Con. : : Cattle on feed sold (see text) ..................farms, 2012: 7 2 2 7 4 - 3 2007: 3 11 17 18 9 1 18 number, 2012: 269 (D) (D) 605 (D) - (D) 2007: 14 179 104 503 143 (D) 3,909 : 2012 farms by number sold: : 1 to 19 .......................................... farms: 2 - 1 - - - - number: (D) - (D) - - - - 20 to 49 ......................................... farms: 5 1 - 3 2 - 1 number: (D) (D) - 110 (D) - (D) 50 to 99 ......................................... farms: - - - 1 1 - - number: - - - (D) (D) - - 100 to 199 ....................................... farms: - 1 - 2 - - 1 number: - (D) - (D) - - (D) 200 to 499 ....................................... farms: - - 1 1 1 - - number: - - (D) (D) (D) - - 500 or more ...................................... farms: - - - - - - 1 number: - - - - - - (D) ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Napa : Nevada : Orange : Placer : Plumas : Riverside : Sacramento ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- SALES - Con. : : Cattle and calves sold - Con. : Cattle, including calves weighing 500 pounds : or more, sold - Con. : : Cattle on feed sold (see text) ..................farms, 2012: - - - 2 2 2 1 2007: 2 16 2 17 3 7 20 number, 2012: - - - (D) (D) (D) (D) 2007: (D) 62 (D) 852 (D) (D) 254 : 2012 farms by number sold: : 1 to 19 .......................................... farms: - - - 1 1 - - number: - - - (D) (D) - - 20 to 49 ......................................... farms: - - - - - - - number: - - - - - - - 50 to 99 ......................................... farms: - - - - 1 - - number: - - - - (D) - - 100 to 199 ....................................... farms: - - - 1 - - - number: - - - (D) - - - 200 to 499 ....................................... farms: - - - - - 2 1 number: - - - - - (D) (D) 500 or more ...................................... farms: - - - - - - - number: - - - - - - - ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : San Benito :San Bernardino : San Diego : San Francisco : San Joaquin :San Luis Obispo: San Mateo :Santa Barbara ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- SALES - Con. : : Cattle and calves sold - Con. : Cattle, including calves weighing 500 pounds : or more, sold - Con. : : Cattle on feed sold (see text) ..................farms, 2012: 8 8 4 - - 6 1 3 2007: 4 14 25 - 28 22 - 2 number, 2012: 285 1,078 431 - - 701 (D) 124 2007: (D) 98 62 - 1,083 519 - (D) : 2012 farms by number sold: : 1 to 19 .......................................... farms: 6 - 1 - - 1 - 1 number: (D) - (D) - - (D) - (D) 20 to 49 ......................................... farms: - 1 1 - - 1 1 - number: - (D) (D) - - (D) (D) - 50 to 99 ......................................... farms: 1 - - - - 3 - 2 number: (D) - - - - (D) - (D) 100 to 199 ....................................... farms: 1 7 2 - - - - - number: (D) (D) (D) - - - - - 200 to 499 ....................................... farms: - - - - - - - - number: - - - - - - - - 500 or more ...................................... farms: - - - - - 1 - - number: - - - - - (D) - - ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 11. Cattle and Calves - Inventory and Sales: 2012 and 2007 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Santa Clara : Santa Cruz : Shasta : Sierra : Siskiyou : Solano : Sonoma : Stanislaus ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- SALES - Con. : : Cattle and calves sold - Con. : Cattle, including calves weighing 500 pounds : or more, sold - Con. : : Cattle on feed sold (see text) ..................farms, 2012: - 7 6 1 9 4 13 22 2007: 3 - 47 3 21 9 13 45 number, 2012: - 133 116 (D) 4,329 (D) 1,245 7,502 2007: (D) - 238 18 822 510 347 2,142 : 2012 farms by number sold: : 1 to 19 .......................................... farms: - 1 5 - - - 2 - number: - (D) (D) - - - (D) - 20 to 49 ......................................... farms: - 6 1 - 2 2 2 - number: - (D) (D) - (D) (D) (D) - 50 to 99 ......................................... farms: - - - 1 2 - 2 1 number: - - - (D) (D) - (D) (D) 100 to 199 ....................................... farms: - - - - - - 7 6 number: - - - - - - 1,050 (D) 200 to 499 ....................................... farms: - - - - 1 - - 14 number: - - - - (D) - - 5,941 500 or more ...................................... farms: - - - - 4 2 - 1 number: - - - - 3,956 (D) - (D) ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Sutter : Tehama : Trinity : Tulare : Tuolumne : Ventura : Yolo : Yuba ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- SALES - Con. : : Cattle and calves sold - Con. : Cattle, including calves weighing 500 pounds : or more, sold - Con. : : Cattle on feed sold (see text) ..................farms, 2012: 1 6 1 19 1 1 2 1 2007: 9 27 2 27 6 9 10 21 number, 2012: (D) (D) (D) 11,377 (D) (D) (D) (D) 2007: 128 1,739 (D) 3,586 27 1,165 281 58 : 2012 farms by number sold: : 1 to 19 .......................................... farms: - 2 - 1 1 1 - - number: - (D) - (D) (D) (D) - - 20 to 49 ......................................... farms: 1 1 1 1 - - - - number: (D) (D) (D) (D) - - - - 50 to 99 ......................................... farms: - 1 - 2 - - 1 - number: - (D) - (D) - - (D) - 100 to 199 ....................................... farms: - 1 - 7 - - - 1 number: - (D) - 726 - - - (D) 200 to 499 ....................................... farms: - - - 4 - - - - number: - - - 1,176 - - - - 500 or more ...................................... farms: - 1 - 4 - - 1 - number: - (D) - 9,288 - - (D) - ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Table 12. Hogs and Pigs - Inventory and Sales: 2012 and 2007 [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : California : Alameda : Alpine : Amador : Butte : Calaveras : Colusa ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- INVENTORY : : Total hogs and pigs .................................farms, 2012: 1,437 8 - 9 45 19 13 2007: 1,389 3 - 16 61 14 9 number, 2012: 111,893 25 - 15 3,202 104 586 2007: 153,983 10 - 65 556 86 56 Farms by inventory: : 1 to 24 .........................................farms, 2012: 1,228 8 - 9 35 19 6 2007: 1,203 3 - 16 55 14 8 number, 2012: 6,370 25 - 15 199 104 (D) 2007: 5,600 10 - 65 230 86 (D) 25 to 49 ........................................farms, 2012: 95 - - - 7 - - 2007: 84 - - - 5 - 1 number, 2012: 3,117 - - - 223 - - 2007: 2,845 - - - (D) - (D) : 50 to 99 ........................................farms, 2012: 52 - - - - - 6 2007: 45 - - - - - - number, 2012: 3,446 - - - - - 425 2007: 3,190 - - - - - - 100 to 199 ......................................farms, 2012: 39 - - - - - 1 2007: 26 - - - 1 - - number, 2012: 5,041 - - - - - (D) 2007: 3,858 - - - (D) - - : 200 to 499 ......................................farms, 2012: 11 - - - - - - 2007: 14 - - - - - - number, 2012: 3,626 - - - - - - 2007: 3,790 - - - - - - 500 to 999 ......................................farms, 2012: 4 - - - 2 - - 2007: 6 - - - - - - number, 2012: 2,570 - - - (D) - - 2007: 3,570 - - - - - - : 1,000 or more ...................................farms, 2012: 8 - - - 1 - - 2007: 11 - - - - - - number, 2012: 87,723 - - - (D) - - 2007: 131,130 - - - - - - : Hogs and pigs used or to be used for : breeding .........................................farms, 2012: 732 1 - - 20 4 9 2007: 654 - - 2 27 2 6 number, 2012: 8,322 (D) - - 339 28 111 2007: 21,364 - - (D) 133 (D) 27 2012 farms by inventory: : 1 to 24 ..................................................: 671 1 - - 17 4 8 25 to 49 .................................................: 32 - - - 2 - 1 50 to 99 .................................................: 18 - - - - - - 100 or more ..............................................: 11 - - - 1 - - : Other hogs and pigs ...............................farms, 2012: 1,179 7 - 9 45 19 13 2007: 1,119 3 - 16 43 14 7 number, 2012: 103,571 (D) - 15 2,863 76 475 2007: 132,619 10 - (D) 423 (D) 29 : SALES : : Hogs and pigs sold ..................................farms, 2012: 1,163 6 - 5 35 22 8 2007: 1,267 10 - 16 47 14 4 number, 2012: 290,488 43 - 7 3,768 165 894 2007: 296,378 41 - 77 610 198 (D) $1,000, 2012: 51,526 6 - (D) 212 21 376 2007: 34,188 6 - 11 70 21 32 2012 farms by number sold: : 1 to 24 ...............................................farms: 918 5 - 5 26 18 2 number: 5,332 (D) - 7 (D) 45 (D) 25 to 49 ..............................................farms: 78 1 - - 3 4 - number: 2,651 (D) - - 104 120 - 50 to 99 ..............................................farms: 48 - - - 3 - 1 number: 3,376 - - - 188 - (D) 100 to 199 ............................................farms: 61 - - - - - 4 number: 7,695 - - - - - (D) : 200 to 499 ............................................farms: 28 - - - 2 - 1 number: 9,076 - - - (D) - (D) 500 to 999 ............................................farms: 16 - - - - - - number: 12,044 - - - - - - 1,000 or more .........................................farms: 14 - - - 1 - - number: 250,314 - - - (D) - - ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 12. Hogs and Pigs - Inventory and Sales: 2012 and 2007 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Contra Costa : Del Norte : El Dorado : Fresno : Glenn : Humboldt : Imperial ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- INVENTORY : : Total hogs and pigs .................................farms, 2012: 17 17 55 49 15 25 10 2007: 14 8 32 36 19 12 4 number, 2012: 56 85 300 2,910 308 440 (D) 2007: 71 38 233 7,831 818 100 8 Farms by inventory: : 1 to 24 .........................................farms, 2012: 17 16 54 38 9 18 8 2007: 13 8 28 24 12 10 4 number, 2012: 56 (D) (D) 313 64 (D) 8 2007: (D) 38 95 207 20 (D) 8 25 to 49 ........................................farms, 2012: - 1 1 5 6 5 - 2007: 1 - 4 2 1 2 - number, 2012: - (D) (D) (D) 244 143 - 2007: (D) - 138 (D) (D) (D) - : 50 to 99 ........................................farms, 2012: - - - 1 - - 1 2007: - - - 3 4 - - number, 2012: - - - (D) - - (D) 2007: - - - 219 328 - - 100 to 199 ......................................farms, 2012: - - - 3 - 2 1 2007: - - - 3 - - - number, 2012: - - - 428 - (D) (D) 2007: - - - (D) - - - : 200 to 499 ......................................farms, 2012: - - - 1 - - - 2007: - - - 3 2 - - number, 2012: - - - (D) - - - 2007: - - - (D) (D) - - 500 to 999 ......................................farms, 2012: - - - - - - - 2007: - - - - - - - number, 2012: - - - - - - - 2007: - - - - - - - : 1,000 or more ...................................farms, 2012: - - - 1 - - - 2007: - - - 1 - - - number, 2012: - - - (D) - - - 2007: - - - (D) - - - : Hogs and pigs used or to be used for : breeding .........................................farms, 2012: 6 14 27 36 10 6 2 2007: 6 2 14 28 6 7 - number, 2012: 12 36 72 844 61 46 (D) 2007: 36 (D) 72 1,191 177 28 - 2012 farms by inventory: : 1 to 24 ..................................................: 6 14 27 31 10 6 1 25 to 49 .................................................: - - - 3 - - 1 50 to 99 .................................................: - - - 1 - - - 100 or more ..............................................: - - - 1 - - - : Other hogs and pigs ...............................farms, 2012: 12 11 48 42 15 23 10 2007: 11 8 24 25 19 7 4 number, 2012: 44 49 228 2,066 247 394 (D) 2007: 35 (D) 161 6,640 641 72 8 : SALES : : Hogs and pigs sold ..................................farms, 2012: 17 5 44 43 15 20 2 2007: 8 6 34 33 17 17 - number, 2012: 92 46 253 18,791 555 115 (D) 2007: 94 55 158 27,612 1,150 194 - $1,000, 2012: 10 3 29 3,370 (D) 24 (D) 2007: 5 3 16 3,399 32 29 - 2012 farms by number sold: : 1 to 24 ...............................................farms: 17 5 44 28 9 20 - number: 92 46 253 167 (D) 115 - 25 to 49 ..............................................farms: - - - 3 2 - - number: - - - 108 (D) - - 50 to 99 ..............................................farms: - - - 2 - - - number: - - - (D) - - - 100 to 199 ............................................farms: - - - 3 4 - 1 number: - - - 330 440 - (D) : 200 to 499 ............................................farms: - - - 3 - - 1 number: - - - 994 - - (D) 500 to 999 ............................................farms: - - - 3 - - - number: - - - (D) - - - 1,000 or more .........................................farms: - - - 1 - - - number: - - - (D) - - - ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 12. Hogs and Pigs - Inventory and Sales: 2012 and 2007 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Inyo : Kern : Kings : Lake : Lassen : Los Angeles : Madera ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- INVENTORY : : Total hogs and pigs .................................farms, 2012: 5 52 17 23 22 36 14 2007: 1 37 22 18 16 67 23 number, 2012: 19 1,181 114 212 104 239 402 2007: (D) 1,038 576 694 167 453 313 Farms by inventory: : 1 to 24 .........................................farms, 2012: 5 35 17 18 22 35 9 2007: 1 27 17 16 14 66 17 number, 2012: 19 (D) 114 64 104 (D) (D) 2007: (D) (D) (D) (D) (D) (D) 71 25 to 49 ........................................farms, 2012: - 11 - 5 - - 3 2007: - 6 3 - - - 3 number, 2012: - 285 - 148 - - 90 2007: - 177 94 - - - 80 : 50 to 99 ........................................farms, 2012: - 5 - - - 1 - 2007: - - - - 2 1 3 number, 2012: - 360 - - - (D) - 2007: - - - - (D) (D) 162 100 to 199 ......................................farms, 2012: - - - - - - 2 2007: - 3 - - - - - number, 2012: - - - - - - (D) 2007: - 440 - - - - - : 200 to 499 ......................................farms, 2012: - 1 - - - - - 2007: - 1 2 2 - - - number, 2012: - (D) - - - - - 2007: - (D) (D) (D) - - - 500 to 999 ......................................farms, 2012: - - - - - - - 2007: - - - - - - - number, 2012: - - - - - - - 2007: - - - - - - - : 1,000 or more ...................................farms, 2012: - - - - - - - 2007: - - - - - - - number, 2012: - - - - - - - 2007: - - - - - - - : Hogs and pigs used or to be used for : breeding .........................................farms, 2012: 5 36 16 9 4 19 4 2007: 1 20 13 14 6 44 8 number, 2012: (D) 251 66 126 8 116 60 2007: (D) 345 176 89 28 181 116 2012 farms by inventory: : 1 to 24 ..................................................: 5 35 16 6 4 18 4 25 to 49 .................................................: - 1 - 3 - 1 - 50 to 99 .................................................: - - - - - - - 100 or more ..............................................: - - - - - - - : Other hogs and pigs ...............................farms, 2012: 2 43 11 16 22 25 14 2007: 1 31 19 14 13 43 23 number, 2012: (D) 930 48 86 96 123 342 2007: (D) 693 400 605 139 272 197 : SALES : : Hogs and pigs sold ..................................farms, 2012: 1 35 17 9 33 23 9 2007: 1 35 25 18 18 50 24 number, 2012: (D) 1,235 252 166 107 216 266 2007: (D) 1,632 1,978 510 177 443 443 $1,000, 2012: (D) 149 19 10 13 17 (D) 2007: (D) 156 99 60 19 28 47 2012 farms by number sold: : 1 to 24 ...............................................farms: - 26 15 7 33 22 6 number: - 254 (D) (D) 107 (D) 32 25 to 49 ..............................................farms: - 2 - - - - 1 number: - (D) - - - - (D) 50 to 99 ..............................................farms: - 2 2 2 - - - number: - (D) (D) (D) - - - 100 to 199 ............................................farms: 1 4 - - - 1 2 number: (D) 565 - - - (D) (D) : 200 to 499 ............................................farms: - 1 - - - - - number: - (D) - - - - - 500 to 999 ............................................farms: - - - - - - - number: - - - - - - - 1,000 or more .........................................farms: - - - - - - - number: - - - - - - - ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 12. Hogs and Pigs - Inventory and Sales: 2012 and 2007 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Marin : Mariposa : Mendocino : Merced : Modoc : Mono : Monterey ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- INVENTORY : : Total hogs and pigs .................................farms, 2012: 5 10 30 28 - 1 12 2007: 2 8 28 18 8 - 12 number, 2012: 155 46 762 586 - (D) 68 2007: (D) 59 343 (D) 35 - 197 Farms by inventory: : 1 to 24 .........................................farms, 2012: 3 10 23 23 - 1 12 2007: 2 8 24 16 8 - 11 number, 2012: (D) 46 128 (D) - (D) 68 2007: (D) 59 (D) 77 35 - (D) 25 to 49 ........................................farms, 2012: - - 2 - - - - 2007: - - 1 1 - - - number, 2012: - - (D) - - - - 2007: - - (D) (D) - - - : 50 to 99 ........................................farms, 2012: 2 - 4 3 - - - 2007: - - 3 - - - - number, 2012: (D) - 384 200 - - - 2007: - - 190 - - - - 100 to 199 ......................................farms, 2012: - - 1 2 - - - 2007: - - - - - - 1 number, 2012: - - (D) (D) - - - 2007: - - - - - - (D) : 200 to 499 ......................................farms, 2012: - - - - - - - 2007: - - - - - - - number, 2012: - - - - - - - 2007: - - - - - - - 500 to 999 ......................................farms, 2012: - - - - - - - 2007: - - - - - - - number, 2012: - - - - - - - 2007: - - - - - - - : 1,000 or more ...................................farms, 2012: - - - - - - - 2007: - - - 1 - - - number, 2012: - - - - - - - 2007: - - - (D) - - - : Hogs and pigs used or to be used for : breeding .........................................farms, 2012: 5 1 19 17 - 1 4 2007: 1 - 16 8 1 - 7 number, 2012: 49 (D) 190 384 - (D) 38 2007: (D) - 212 (D) (D) - 65 2012 farms by inventory: : 1 to 24 ..................................................: 5 1 17 14 - 1 4 25 to 49 .................................................: - - 2 1 - - - 50 to 99 .................................................: - - - - - - - 100 or more ..............................................: - - - 2 - - - : Other hogs and pigs ...............................farms, 2012: 5 10 22 19 - - 11 2007: 1 8 18 15 8 - 9 number, 2012: 106 (D) 572 202 - - 30 2007: (D) 59 131 (D) (D) - 132 : SALES : : Hogs and pigs sold ..................................farms, 2012: 5 6 13 19 2 1 5 2007: 1 6 24 17 10 2 12 number, 2012: 403 39 732 659 (D) (D) 128 2007: (D) 235 747 (D) 212 (D) 584 $1,000, 2012: 101 11 280 77 (D) (D) 16 2007: (D) 9 83 (D) 21 (D) 86 2012 farms by number sold: : 1 to 24 ...............................................farms: 3 5 4 14 2 1 3 number: (D) (D) (D) (D) (D) (D) (D) 25 to 49 ..............................................farms: - 1 2 - - - - number: - (D) (D) - - - - 50 to 99 ..............................................farms: - - 6 1 - - 2 number: - - 476 (D) - - (D) 100 to 199 ............................................farms: - - 1 4 - - - number: - - (D) 490 - - - : 200 to 499 ............................................farms: 2 - - - - - - number: (D) - - - - - - 500 to 999 ............................................farms: - - - - - - - number: - - - - - - - 1,000 or more .........................................farms: - - - - - - - number: - - - - - - - ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 12. Hogs and Pigs - Inventory and Sales: 2012 and 2007 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Napa : Nevada : Orange : Placer : Plumas : Riverside : Sacramento ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- INVENTORY : : Total hogs and pigs .................................farms, 2012: 9 23 3 52 4 76 45 2007: 8 37 2 48 5 90 43 number, 2012: 34 180 31 602 14 1,147 407 2007: 107 112 (D) 322 12 1,265 467 Farms by inventory: : 1 to 24 .........................................farms, 2012: 9 20 3 46 4 65 42 2007: 7 37 2 44 5 76 39 number, 2012: 34 93 31 179 14 253 255 2007: (D) 112 (D) 196 12 299 (D) 25 to 49 ........................................farms, 2012: - 3 - 2 - 3 1 2007: - - - 4 - 9 1 number, 2012: - 87 - (D) - 112 (D) 2007: - - - 126 - (D) (D) : 50 to 99 ........................................farms, 2012: - - - 2 - 4 2 2007: 1 - - - - 2 3 number, 2012: - - - (D) - 220 (D) 2007: (D) - - - - (D) 267 100 to 199 ......................................farms, 2012: - - - 2 - 4 - 2007: - - - - - 3 - number, 2012: - - - (D) - 562 - 2007: - - - - - 553 - : 200 to 499 ......................................farms, 2012: - - - - - - - 2007: - - - - - - - number, 2012: - - - - - - - 2007: - - - - - - - 500 to 999 ......................................farms, 2012: - - - - - - - 2007: - - - - - - - number, 2012: - - - - - - - 2007: - - - - - - - : 1,000 or more ...................................farms, 2012: - - - - - - - 2007: - - - - - - - number, 2012: - - - - - - - 2007: - - - - - - - : Hogs and pigs used or to be used for : breeding .........................................farms, 2012: 2 10 2 26 - 34 10 2007: 4 10 2 13 3 46 12 number, 2012: (D) 66 (D) 161 - 277 52 2007: 41 28 (D) 87 4 428 105 2012 farms by inventory: : 1 to 24 ..................................................: 2 10 2 24 - 30 10 25 to 49 .................................................: - - - 2 - 2 - 50 to 99 .................................................: - - - - - 2 - 100 or more ..............................................: - - - - - - - : Other hogs and pigs ...............................farms, 2012: 9 20 3 41 4 63 40 2007: 8 28 2 46 4 63 38 number, 2012: (D) 114 (D) 441 14 870 355 2007: 66 84 (D) 235 8 837 362 : SALES : : Hogs and pigs sold ..................................farms, 2012: 6 24 5 38 2 61 30 2007: 10 37 3 38 5 61 41 number, 2012: 26 367 138 814 (D) 45,755 5,405 2007: 189 212 65 456 9 3,075 5,006 $1,000, 2012: 16 (D) 25 64 (D) 9,236 1,070 2007: 18 32 8 31 2 529 (D) 2012 farms by number sold: : 1 to 24 ...............................................farms: 6 21 2 32 2 41 19 number: 26 133 (D) (D) (D) 213 (D) 25 to 49 ..............................................farms: - - 3 2 - 8 2 number: - - (D) (D) - 281 (D) 50 to 99 ..............................................farms: - 3 - - - 3 - number: - 234 - - - 171 - 100 to 199 ............................................farms: - - - 4 - 5 3 number: - - - 502 - 690 408 : 200 to 499 ............................................farms: - - - - - 2 - number: - - - - - (D) - 500 to 999 ............................................farms: - - - - - - 6 number: - - - - - - 4,800 1,000 or more .........................................farms: - - - - - 2 - number: - - - - - (D) - ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 12. Hogs and Pigs - Inventory and Sales: 2012 and 2007 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : San Benito :San Bernardino : San Diego : San Francisco : San Joaquin :San Luis Obispo: San Mateo :Santa Barbara ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- INVENTORY : : Total hogs and pigs .................................farms, 2012: 2 69 50 - 22 55 6 27 2007: 6 44 96 - 39 36 13 20 number, 2012: (D) 1,030 1,705 - (D) 426 17 672 2007: 19 (D) 2,456 - 2,328 271 168 254 Farms by inventory: : 1 to 24 .........................................farms, 2012: 1 57 42 - 14 50 6 19 2007: 6 34 86 - 28 34 11 17 number, 2012: (D) 322 (D) - 82 269 17 (D) 2007: 19 144 345 - 127 (D) (D) 79 25 to 49 ........................................farms, 2012: - 4 5 - 2 5 - 2 2007: - 3 6 - 4 1 - 1 number, 2012: - (D) (D) - (D) 157 - (D) 2007: - 118 220 - 151 (D) - (D) : 50 to 99 ........................................farms, 2012: 1 6 2 - 4 - - 3 2007: - 6 1 - 2 1 2 2 number, 2012: (D) 360 (D) - 225 - - 210 2007: - 460 (D) - (D) (D) (D) (D) 100 to 199 ......................................farms, 2012: - 2 - - - - - 3 2007: - - 2 - 4 - - - number, 2012: - (D) - - - - - 300 2007: - - (D) - (D) - - - : 200 to 499 ......................................farms, 2012: - - - - - - - - 2007: - - - - - - - - number, 2012: - - - - - - - - 2007: - - - - - - - - 500 to 999 ......................................farms, 2012: - - - - - - - - 2007: - - - - - - - - number, 2012: - - - - - - - - 2007: - - - - - - - - : 1,000 or more ...................................farms, 2012: - - 1 - 2 - - - 2007: - 1 1 - 1 - - - number, 2012: - - (D) - (D) - - - 2007: - (D) (D) - (D) - - - : Hogs and pigs used or to be used for : breeding .........................................farms, 2012: 2 37 29 - 16 27 1 14 2007: 6 23 55 - 14 10 4 11 number, 2012: (D) 165 405 - 108 147 (D) 258 2007: (D) (D) 541 - 229 34 11 103 2012 farms by inventory: : 1 to 24 ..................................................: 1 36 26 - 16 27 1 10 25 to 49 .................................................: 1 1 - - - - - 1 50 to 99 .................................................: - - 2 - - - - 3 100 or more ..............................................: - - 1 - - - - - : Other hogs and pigs ...............................farms, 2012: 1 69 33 - 19 40 6 19 2007: 2 42 61 - 38 32 9 13 number, 2012: (D) 865 1,300 - (D) 279 (D) 414 2007: (D) (D) 1,915 - 2,099 237 157 151 : SALES : : Hogs and pigs sold ..................................farms, 2012: 6 62 39 - 27 48 - 25 2007: 6 44 79 - 31 40 8 17 number, 2012: 147 1,682 4,264 - 10,230 1,012 - 1,434 2007: 42 (D) 4,407 - 11,188 959 159 585 $1,000, 2012: 17 186 (D) - (D) 119 - 177 2007: 1 (D) (D) - (D) 125 19 82 2012 farms by number sold: : 1 to 24 ...............................................farms: 5 49 33 - 17 43 - 21 number: (D) 306 285 - 85 (D) - (D) 25 to 49 ..............................................farms: - 10 - - - - - - number: - 376 - - - - - - 50 to 99 ..............................................farms: 1 - 3 - 5 1 - 1 number: (D) - 225 - (D) (D) - (D) 100 to 199 ............................................farms: - - - - 3 4 - - number: - - - - (D) 665 - - : 200 to 499 ............................................farms: - 3 2 - - - - 3 number: - 1,000 (D) - - - - 1,200 500 to 999 ............................................farms: - - - - - - - - number: - - - - - - - - 1,000 or more .........................................farms: - - 1 - 2 - - - number: - - (D) - (D) - - - ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 12. Hogs and Pigs - Inventory and Sales: 2012 and 2007 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Santa Clara : Santa Cruz : Shasta : Sierra : Siskiyou : Solano : Sonoma : Stanislaus ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- INVENTORY : : Total hogs and pigs .................................farms, 2012: 15 1 40 1 45 15 96 27 2007: 19 2 71 - 26 21 50 49 number, 2012: 60 (D) 231 (D) 918 179 1,001 (D) 2007: 122 (D) 766 - 104 254 549 29,017 Farms by inventory: : 1 to 24 .........................................farms, 2012: 15 - 39 1 42 12 89 20 2007: 19 2 61 - 26 19 43 31 number, 2012: 60 - (D) (D) 258 53 607 110 2007: 122 (D) 395 - 104 (D) 159 104 25 to 49 ........................................farms, 2012: - 1 1 - - 3 6 2 2007: - - 10 - - 1 4 2 number, 2012: - (D) (D) - - 126 (D) (D) 2007: - - 371 - - (D) 172 (D) : 50 to 99 ........................................farms, 2012: - - - - - - - - 2007: - - - - - - 3 - number, 2012: - - - - - - - - 2007: - - - - - - 218 - 100 to 199 ......................................farms, 2012: - - - - 2 - 1 - 2007: - - - - - 1 - 5 number, 2012: - - - - (D) - (D) - 2007: - - - - - (D) - (D) : 200 to 499 ......................................farms, 2012: - - - - 1 - - 2 2007: - - - - - - - 2 number, 2012: - - - - (D) - - (D) 2007: - - - - - - - (D) 500 to 999 ......................................farms, 2012: - - - - - - - 2 2007: - - - - - - - 6 number, 2012: - - - - - - - (D) 2007: - - - - - - - 3,570 : 1,000 or more ...................................farms, 2012: - - - - - - - 1 2007: - - - - - - - 3 number, 2012: - - - - - - - (D) 2007: - - - - - - - (D) : Hogs and pigs used or to be used for : breeding .........................................farms, 2012: 10 1 36 1 27 6 52 19 2007: 9 1 37 - 12 8 24 25 number, 2012: 43 (D) 115 (D) 223 24 355 495 2007: 33 (D) 208 - 38 27 143 4,277 2012 farms by inventory: : 1 to 24 ..................................................: 10 1 36 1 24 6 51 16 25 to 49 .................................................: - - - - 2 - 1 - 50 to 99 .................................................: - - - - - - - - 100 or more ..............................................: - - - - 1 - - 3 : Other hogs and pigs ...............................farms, 2012: 6 1 20 1 36 12 72 21 2007: 14 2 62 - 19 17 39 42 number, 2012: 17 (D) 116 (D) 695 155 646 (D) 2007: 89 (D) 558 - 66 227 406 24,740 : SALES : : Hogs and pigs sold ..................................farms, 2012: 19 1 27 1 30 16 73 28 2007: 14 2 71 - 17 17 48 54 number, 2012: 76 (D) 374 (D) 490 152 1,745 (D) 2007: 1,033 (D) 810 - 218 228 979 46,818 $1,000, 2012: 16 (D) 28 (D) 57 27 (D) 1,336 2007: 62 (D) 51 - 13 16 81 1,792 2012 farms by number sold: : 1 to 24 ...............................................farms: 19 - 21 1 22 13 56 19 number: 76 - (D) (D) (D) 56 (D) 102 25 to 49 ..............................................farms: - - 5 - 6 3 9 4 number: - - 159 - 152 96 342 118 50 to 99 ..............................................farms: - - - - - - - - number: - - - - - - - - 100 to 199 ............................................farms: - 1 1 - 2 - 6 - number: - (D) (D) - (D) - 706 - : 200 to 499 ............................................farms: - - - - - - 2 - number: - - - - - - (D) - 500 to 999 ............................................farms: - - - - - - - 2 number: - - - - - - - (D) 1,000 or more .........................................farms: - - - - - - - 3 number: - - - - - - - (D) ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 12. Hogs and Pigs - Inventory and Sales: 2012 and 2007 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Sutter : Tehama : Trinity : Tulare : Tuolumne : Ventura : Yolo : Yuba ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- INVENTORY : : Total hogs and pigs .................................farms, 2012: 23 43 33 39 26 13 16 24 2007: 19 54 13 23 19 17 10 21 number, 2012: 585 1,028 744 (D) 90 183 711 230 2007: 153 575 65 (D) 124 86 577 243 Farms by inventory: : 1 to 24 .........................................farms, 2012: 17 32 29 33 26 11 12 22 2007: 18 48 13 17 17 16 7 18 number, 2012: 87 252 116 173 90 (D) 60 (D) 2007: (D) (D) 65 132 (D) (D) 53 131 25 to 49 ........................................farms, 2012: 3 4 - - - - 1 1 2007: 1 1 - - 2 1 - 3 number, 2012: 118 (D) - - - - (D) (D) 2007: (D) (D) - - (D) (D) - 112 : 50 to 99 ........................................farms, 2012: 2 1 - - - 2 - - 2007: - 5 - - - - 1 - number, 2012: (D) (D) - - - (D) - - 2007: - 330 - - - - (D) - 100 to 199 ......................................farms, 2012: - 6 4 - - - 2 1 2007: - - - 2 - - 1 - number, 2012: - 600 628 - - - (D) (D) 2007: - - - (D) - - (D) - : 200 to 499 ......................................farms, 2012: 1 - - 4 - - 1 - 2007: - - - 1 - - 1 - number, 2012: (D) - - 1,449 - - (D) - 2007: - - - (D) - - (D) - 500 to 999 ......................................farms, 2012: - - - - - - - - 2007: - - - - - - - - number, 2012: - - - - - - - - 2007: - - - - - - - - : 1,000 or more ...................................farms, 2012: - - - 2 - - - - 2007: - - - 3 - - - - number, 2012: - - - (D) - - - - 2007: - - - (D) - - - - : Hogs and pigs used or to be used for : breeding .........................................farms, 2012: 13 28 13 21 2 4 9 5 2007: 6 27 8 16 4 5 7 13 number, 2012: 92 477 225 1,418 (D) 22 157 50 2007: 37 139 20 (D) 17 22 126 48 2012 farms by inventory: : 1 to 24 ..................................................: 13 22 9 16 2 4 6 4 25 to 49 .................................................: - - 4 - - - 2 1 50 to 99 .................................................: - 6 - 3 - - 1 - 100 or more ..............................................: - - - 2 - - - - : Other hogs and pigs ...............................farms, 2012: 20 33 33 31 24 13 14 21 2007: 19 48 11 19 18 13 8 18 number, 2012: 493 551 519 (D) (D) 161 554 180 2007: 116 436 45 (D) 107 64 451 195 : SALES : : Hogs and pigs sold ..................................farms, 2012: 21 47 30 32 22 9 17 17 2007: 19 48 13 23 19 13 11 29 number, 2012: 1,792 3,661 527 (D) 93 201 (D) (D) 2007: (D) 996 39 (D) 209 110 992 466 $1,000, 2012: 138 679 27 (D) 17 38 (D) (D) 2007: (D) 57 5 (D) 23 8 149 38 2012 farms by number sold: : 1 to 24 ...............................................farms: 17 29 26 25 22 7 15 15 number: 147 196 87 141 93 (D) 87 41 25 to 49 ..............................................farms: - 6 - - - - 1 - number: - 195 - - - - (D) - 50 to 99 ..............................................farms: 2 5 - - - 2 - 1 number: (D) 257 - - - (D) - (D) 100 to 199 ............................................farms: - 2 4 1 - - - - number: - (D) 440 (D) - - - - : 200 to 499 ............................................farms: 1 1 - 3 - - - 1 number: (D) (D) - 1,334 - - - (D) 500 to 999 ............................................farms: - 4 - - - - 1 - number: - 2,450 - - - - (D) - 1,000 or more .........................................farms: 1 - - 3 - - - - number: (D) - - (D) - - - - ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Table 13. Sheep and Lambs - Inventory, Wool Production, and Sales: 2012 and 2007 [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : California : Alameda : Alpine : Amador : Butte : Calaveras : Colusa ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Sheep and lambs inventory ...........................farms, 2012: 4,224 50 - 34 135 65 29 2007: 4,063 38 - 38 121 59 19 number, 2012: 668,517 1,199 - 656 3,923 1,572 1,890 2007: 596,163 1,337 - 1,466 5,074 2,196 5,767 2012 farms by inventory: : 1 to 24 ...............................................farms: 2,932 40 - 23 100 43 10 number: 25,398 390 - 220 752 249 136 25 to 99 ..............................................farms: 889 7 - 11 24 19 11 number: 40,489 447 - 436 1,031 855 592 100 to 299 ............................................farms: 253 3 - - 7 3 8 number: 39,733 362 - - 940 468 1,162 300 to 999 ............................................farms: 63 - - - 4 - - number: 32,549 - - - 1,200 - - 1,000 or more .........................................farms: 87 - - - - - - number: 530,348 - - - - - - : Ewes 1 year old or older ..........................farms, 2012: 3,222 38 - 24 102 39 25 2007: 3,413 24 - 37 98 51 19 number, 2012: 306,987 752 - 416 2,298 807 1,410 2007: 286,544 708 - 790 2,935 1,199 4,065 : Wool production .....................................farms, 2012: 3,362 36 - 30 96 44 19 2007: 1,841 17 - 25 50 28 15 pounds, 2012: 3,500,611 6,257 - 2,657 16,980 6,536 10,054 2007: 2,992,710 5,275 - 6,270 12,349 7,527 29,768 $1,000, 2012: 2,724 5 - 1 3 4 9 2007: (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) : Sheep and lambs sold ................................farms, 2012: 2,593 29 - 30 64 47 24 2007: 2,466 33 - 32 84 42 16 number, 2012: 440,092 723 - 607 2,062 1,098 828 2007: 380,852 879 - 644 2,887 809 3,841 $1,000, 2012: 84,816 103 - 89 387 230 191 2007: (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Contra Costa : Del Norte : El Dorado : Fresno : Glenn : Humboldt : Imperial ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Sheep and lambs inventory ...........................farms, 2012: 48 15 143 186 60 92 8 2007: 42 10 128 167 60 84 7 number, 2012: 571 223 1,257 67,212 3,219 4,281 56,723 2007: 909 126 1,341 57,953 3,582 3,370 88,890 2012 farms by inventory: : 1 to 24 ...............................................farms: 45 13 140 141 27 50 5 number: 426 (D) 1,171 1,202 188 281 23 25 to 99 ..............................................farms: 3 2 3 31 19 33 - number: 145 (D) 86 (D) 929 1,310 - 100 to 299 ............................................farms: - - - 1 14 5 - number: - - - (D) 2,102 930 - 300 to 999 ............................................farms: - - - 1 - 4 - number: - - - (D) - 1,760 - 1,000 or more .........................................farms: - - - 12 - - 3 number: - - - 64,312 - - 56,700 : Ewes 1 year old or older ..........................farms, 2012: 35 14 108 135 51 70 5 2007: 34 10 92 145 55 71 5 number, 2012: 360 109 607 26,145 1,919 2,195 10 2007: 564 82 741 26,950 2,269 1,976 19,607 : Wool production .....................................farms, 2012: 44 6 118 146 52 88 8 2007: 15 6 32 61 32 49 5 pounds, 2012: 2,516 (D) 4,868 281,026 23,177 24,209 255,431 2007: 4,109 370 3,946 250,143 13,104 17,068 357,822 $1,000, 2012: 2 (D) (Z) 79 8 6 317 2007: (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) : Sheep and lambs sold ................................farms, 2012: 18 7 52 115 42 70 11 2007: 17 8 60 117 33 59 5 number, 2012: 136 39 264 33,176 1,435 3,499 78,072 2007: 391 78 612 24,478 2,008 1,949 89,995 $1,000, 2012: 20 7 41 6,641 167 653 18,502 2007: (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 13. Sheep and Lambs - Inventory, Wool Production, and Sales: 2012 and 2007 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Inyo : Kern : Kings : Lake : Lassen : Los Angeles : Madera ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Sheep and lambs inventory ...........................farms, 2012: 18 94 31 57 52 87 55 2007: 10 102 27 63 52 97 72 number, 2012: 220 114,571 17,501 1,278 7,992 999 1,539 2007: 97 106,940 (D) 1,239 7,203 2,853 5,494 2012 farms by inventory: : 1 to 24 ...............................................farms: 12 59 21 44 25 78 36 number: 66 (D) (D) (D) 216 528 (D) 25 to 99 ..............................................farms: 6 16 8 11 21 9 18 number: 154 630 356 653 955 471 903 100 to 299 ............................................farms: - 5 - 2 4 - - number: - 626 - (D) (D) - - 300 to 999 ............................................farms: - 1 - - - - 1 number: - (D) - - - - (D) 1,000 or more .........................................farms: - 13 2 - 2 - - number: - 112,530 (D) - (D) - - : Ewes 1 year old or older ..........................farms, 2012: 18 75 15 52 44 44 44 2007: 10 95 22 54 52 73 60 number, 2012: 156 55,453 9,566 681 4,576 576 646 2007: 73 62,695 (D) 925 5,330 1,946 3,202 : Wool production .....................................farms, 2012: 14 85 24 36 50 65 26 2007: 1 42 12 25 36 36 19 pounds, 2012: 1,744 599,069 93,950 4,573 47,144 8,203 5,187 2007: (D) 680,500 (D) 2,592 48,565 9,174 (D) $1,000, 2012: - 588 9 1 (D) 1 (D) 2007: (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) : Sheep and lambs sold ................................farms, 2012: 6 79 29 27 39 41 34 2007: 6 87 17 38 44 37 44 number, 2012: 58 56,420 6,980 445 5,193 317 564 2007: 48 75,222 (D) 463 5,282 1,663 3,643 $1,000, 2012: 12 10,074 1,084 61 909 67 153 2007: (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Marin : Mariposa : Mendocino : Merced : Modoc : Mono : Monterey ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Sheep and lambs inventory ...........................farms, 2012: 40 33 175 72 37 6 79 2007: 48 28 120 81 32 8 60 number, 2012: 5,338 1,098 10,742 23,246 13,462 378 3,122 2007: 11,954 434 7,177 14,872 4,987 (D) (D) 2012 farms by inventory: : 1 to 24 ...............................................farms: 11 19 103 43 10 - 60 number: 66 (D) 1,198 (D) 154 - 547 25 to 99 ..............................................farms: 8 12 52 19 9 6 11 number: 388 600 2,561 817 424 378 (D) 100 to 299 ............................................farms: 17 2 12 4 14 - 6 number: 2,847 (D) 1,934 720 3,199 - 638 300 to 999 ............................................farms: 4 - 8 2 2 - 2 number: 2,037 - 5,049 (D) (D) - (D) 1,000 or more .........................................farms: - - - 4 2 - - number: - - - 19,901 (D) - - : Ewes 1 year old or older ..........................farms, 2012: 34 19 151 41 37 6 61 2007: 45 26 105 73 32 8 44 number, 2012: 3,018 294 6,059 10,754 7,831 54 2,246 2007: 6,312 266 4,755 12,206 3,308 (D) 5,264 : Wool production .....................................farms, 2012: 38 27 159 57 30 6 51 2007: 39 11 85 43 24 8 20 pounds, 2012: 26,860 6,902 57,904 130,432 67,700 2,400 11,538 2007: 72,374 577 39,052 112,793 28,578 (D) (D) $1,000, 2012: 9 (D) 52 101 82 4 1 2007: (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) : Sheep and lambs sold ................................farms, 2012: 40 18 125 38 33 6 34 2007: 32 13 71 48 25 8 42 number, 2012: 2,981 77 5,214 11,584 8,987 42 3,642 2007: 4,918 77 3,174 11,055 2,982 (D) 4,679 $1,000, 2012: 472 14 689 1,831 1,478 10 613 2007: (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 13. Sheep and Lambs - Inventory, Wool Production, and Sales: 2012 and 2007 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Napa : Nevada : Orange : Placer : Plumas : Riverside : Sacramento ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Sheep and lambs inventory ...........................farms, 2012: 38 116 4 149 17 141 113 2007: 44 86 4 164 14 133 120 number, 2012: 903 2,363 (D) 5,361 239 36,846 4,706 2007: 785 1,490 73 3,650 309 23,835 3,725 2012 farms by inventory: : 1 to 24 ...............................................farms: 29 94 2 101 13 121 90 number: 419 770 (D) 893 84 854 (D) 25 to 99 ..............................................farms: 9 14 2 28 4 6 11 number: 484 683 (D) 954 155 224 451 100 to 299 ............................................farms: - 8 - 20 - 4 11 number: - 910 - 3,514 - 640 1,486 300 to 999 ............................................farms: - - - - - 5 - number: - - - - - 3,108 - 1,000 or more .........................................farms: - - - - - 5 1 number: - - - - - 32,020 (D) : Ewes 1 year old or older ..........................farms, 2012: 31 89 2 132 12 94 100 2007: 40 67 3 152 13 112 101 number, 2012: 555 1,236 (D) 3,106 97 14,571 2,604 2007: 415 784 62 2,333 147 8,008 2,219 : Wool production .....................................farms, 2012: 30 78 4 110 15 128 89 2007: 17 21 3 93 5 45 54 pounds, 2012: 3,505 7,661 1,464 20,634 650 217,590 19,725 2007: 1,907 4,154 690 18,229 1,212 56,185 17,809 $1,000, 2012: - 7 - 13 (Z) 301 16 2007: (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) : Sheep and lambs sold ................................farms, 2012: 25 51 2 105 15 67 66 2007: 23 39 5 101 13 53 84 number, 2012: 613 1,197 (D) 3,920 121 50,883 2,208 2007: 372 732 34 1,924 (D) 21,640 2,040 $1,000, 2012: 117 277 (D) 404 19 9,268 386 2007: (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : San Benito :San Bernardino : San Diego : San Francisco : San Joaquin :San Luis Obispo: San Mateo :Santa Barbara ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Sheep and lambs inventory ...........................farms, 2012: 37 55 116 - 92 114 18 30 2007: 47 72 118 - 95 164 26 28 number, 2012: 1,347 673 2,857 - 21,256 13,276 185 543 2007: 1,502 1,214 2,170 - 13,750 8,810 403 923 2012 farms by inventory: : 1 to 24 ...............................................farms: 26 49 86 - 51 77 18 23 number: 336 396 535 - (D) (D) 185 (D) 25 to 99 ..............................................farms: 6 6 23 - 31 27 - 5 number: 279 277 1,049 - 1,387 1,413 - 178 100 to 299 ............................................farms: 5 - 7 - 5 8 - 2 number: 732 - 1,273 - 712 1,363 - (D) 300 to 999 ............................................farms: - - - - 2 - - - number: - - - - (D) - - - 1,000 or more .........................................farms: - - - - 3 2 - - number: - - - - 17,234 (D) - - : Ewes 1 year old or older ..........................farms, 2012: 27 40 79 - 71 87 10 13 2007: 38 62 85 - 80 135 17 23 number, 2012: 892 321 1,519 - 12,719 7,743 70 245 2007: 867 800 1,239 - 8,730 5,429 211 623 : Wool production .....................................farms, 2012: 43 34 104 - 78 81 15 27 2007: 27 25 42 - 46 72 15 21 pounds, 2012: 7,279 4,816 17,893 - 115,771 56,312 845 4,906 2007: 6,209 4,125 8,902 - 86,904 51,555 1,560 5,490 $1,000, 2012: 1 (D) 22 - 168 (D) - (D) 2007: (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) : Sheep and lambs sold ................................farms, 2012: 28 36 64 - 57 56 8 16 2007: 23 29 63 - 49 76 8 21 number, 2012: 487 248 1,300 - 12,629 8,258 55 264 2007: 449 671 1,121 - 8,144 5,404 110 981 $1,000, 2012: 55 48 272 - 2,908 1,622 10 62 2007: (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 13. Sheep and Lambs - Inventory, Wool Production, and Sales: 2012 and 2007 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Santa Clara : Santa Cruz : Shasta : Sierra : Siskiyou : Solano : Sonoma : Stanislaus ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Sheep and lambs inventory ...........................farms, 2012: 65 27 128 2 94 94 372 125 2007: 55 23 127 4 70 93 316 136 number, 2012: 1,234 3,208 1,689 (D) 3,494 58,338 28,224 3,825 2007: 899 200 2,355 104 2,254 44,926 19,125 4,200 2012 farms by inventory: : 1 to 24 ...............................................farms: 44 14 110 1 61 45 244 93 number: 330 (D) 978 (D) (D) 334 2,066 663 25 to 99 ..............................................farms: 21 11 16 1 27 23 81 24 number: 904 348 (D) (D) 1,244 1,086 4,491 1,263 100 to 299 ............................................farms: - - 2 - 5 10 27 5 number: - - (D) - 829 1,648 4,164 969 300 to 999 ............................................farms: - - - - 1 3 15 3 number: - - - - (D) 1,734 6,885 930 1,000 or more .........................................farms: - 2 - - - 13 5 - number: - (D) - - - 53,536 10,618 - : Ewes 1 year old or older ..........................farms, 2012: 45 17 92 2 78 85 291 82 2007: 42 20 92 4 59 84 277 112 number, 2012: 538 1,711 926 (D) 1,854 27,586 15,867 1,911 2007: 560 143 1,133 91 1,424 22,206 10,830 2,610 : Wool production .....................................farms, 2012: 53 27 87 2 67 82 333 98 2007: 22 10 40 2 41 62 175 61 pounds, 2012: 9,083 18,734 7,877 (D) 9,368 323,729 142,027 16,205 2007: 7,861 696 6,674 (D) 10,155 271,133 100,905 21,018 $1,000, 2012: (D) 1 2 (D) 5 284 62 (D) 2007: (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) : Sheep and lambs sold ................................farms, 2012: 49 10 68 2 57 62 230 80 2007: 36 10 87 1 49 66 185 91 number, 2012: 1,173 1,226 670 (D) 1,053 33,646 14,658 1,805 2007: 1,828 56 1,098 (D) 1,683 22,798 13,397 1,706 $1,000, 2012: 181 97 127 (D) 181 6,018 3,512 378 2007: (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Sutter : Tehama : Trinity : Tulare : Tuolumne : Ventura : Yolo : Yuba ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Sheep and lambs inventory ...........................farms, 2012: 38 156 34 106 43 45 79 75 2007: 46 144 21 91 31 58 81 79 number, 2012: 9,555 6,238 404 93,479 979 1,068 15,113 6,766 2007: 10,001 5,457 239 68,780 585 974 9,290 2,001 2012 farms by inventory: : 1 to 24 ...............................................farms: 17 101 29 76 33 29 45 52 number: 170 1,041 279 723 390 (D) 547 (D) 25 to 99 ..............................................farms: 15 48 5 21 6 15 17 17 number: 845 2,001 125 820 189 699 925 587 100 to 299 ............................................farms: 4 5 - 3 4 1 8 2 number: (D) (D) - 336 400 (D) 1,306 (D) 300 to 999 ............................................farms: - - - - - - 3 2 number: - - - - - - 1,900 (D) 1,000 or more .........................................farms: 2 2 - 6 - - 6 2 number: (D) (D) - 91,600 - - 10,435 (D) : Ewes 1 year old or older ..........................farms, 2012: 28 132 28 67 29 37 69 66 2007: 44 128 21 47 24 45 71 75 number, 2012: 5,342 3,717 240 51,000 485 627 5,868 4,596 2007: 4,900 3,005 (D) 25,079 320 589 4,822 1,136 : Wool production .....................................farms, 2012: 36 91 36 80 31 41 54 53 2007: 17 62 9 24 14 13 40 27 pounds, 2012: 44,746 23,583 4,095 607,019 4,818 5,835 82,491 23,961 2007: (D) 18,685 1,427 294,298 2,580 2,726 51,027 5,239 $1,000, 2012: (D) 13 1 299 6 - 50 8 2007: (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) : Sheep and lambs sold ................................farms, 2012: 37 98 29 57 26 30 52 52 2007: 23 106 17 37 17 39 44 53 number, 2012: 4,493 2,465 115 57,745 500 577 10,915 2,313 2007: 4,391 2,640 71 29,578 309 457 4,929 971 $1,000, 2012: 829 326 19 10,982 105 113 1,502 482 2007: (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Table 14. All Goats - Inventory and Sales: 2012 and 2007 [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ : Inventory : Sales :------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : : : : : Value Geographic area : Farms : Number : Farms : Number : ($1,000) ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ State Total : : California..........................2012: 4,474 140,042 2,133 62,844 8,539 2007: 4,985 130,823 1,898 42,270 (NA) : Counties, 2012 : : Alameda.................................: 36 229 14 166 17 Amador..................................: 46 1,778 37 3,267 686 Butte...................................: 110 1,430 42 460 60 Calaveras...............................: 102 2,422 56 1,048 152 Colusa..................................: 40 665 16 170 11 Contra Costa............................: 48 (D) 23 328 50 Del Norte...............................: 25 194 10 45 8 El Dorado...............................: 174 3,309 98 1,188 144 Fresno..................................: 156 7,109 82 2,343 279 Glenn...................................: 37 1,119 19 366 37 : Humboldt................................: 74 2,980 30 545 74 Imperial................................: 18 304 8 482 79 Kern....................................: 129 2,841 63 913 114 Kings...................................: 41 6,004 37 1,968 340 Lake....................................: 72 1,757 31 992 275 Lassen..................................: 38 (D) 14 451 68 Los Angeles.............................: 109 1,277 32 346 50 Madera..................................: 77 966 40 602 74 Marin...................................: 26 3,185 9 768 157 Mariposa................................: 32 1,109 10 542 63 : Mendocino...............................: 67 1,660 37 623 114 Merced..................................: 112 5,276 55 1,603 257 Modoc...................................: 30 2,016 23 2,312 415 Mono....................................: 3 60 3 12 2 Monterey................................: 52 637 24 222 25 Napa....................................: 38 1,319 16 313 28 Nevada..................................: 129 1,452 46 794 109 Orange..................................: - - 2 (D) (D) Placer..................................: 176 3,360 87 1,102 110 Plumas..................................: 10 46 4 (D) (D) : Riverside...............................: 229 5,090 88 1,634 295 Sacramento..............................: 171 7,594 77 2,972 338 San Benito..............................: 33 1,087 17 547 42 San Bernardino..........................: 107 1,962 59 653 87 San Diego...............................: 180 2,345 79 1,057 123 San Joaquin.............................: 104 2,843 66 2,235 251 San Luis Obispo.........................: 139 1,301 61 620 77 San Mateo...............................: 23 99 7 40 3 Santa Barbara...........................: 52 882 20 1,358 100 Santa Clara.............................: 53 638 26 378 72 : Santa Cruz..............................: 36 3,556 18 1,408 203 Shasta..................................: 188 3,220 106 1,266 158 Siskiyou................................: 60 969 24 266 29 Solano..................................: 61 3,753 19 2,441 254 Sonoma..................................: 209 9,747 93 2,785 589 Stanislaus..............................: 234 20,939 115 11,249 1,310 Sutter..................................: 28 848 19 497 66 Tehama..................................: 181 6,221 107 5,130 446 Trinity.................................: 35 (D) 17 137 18 Tulare..................................: 101 1,204 31 436 45 : Tuolumne................................: 39 1,213 19 250 28 Ventura.................................: 39 322 16 145 22 Yolo....................................: 72 1,017 35 520 97 Yuba....................................: 93 1,600 46 807 84 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Table 15. Milk Goats - Inventory and Sales: 2012 and 2007 [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ : Inventory : Sales :------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : : : : : Value Geographic area : Farms : Number : Farms : Number : ($1,000) ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ State Total : : California..........................2012: 1,416 43,252 643 14,134 2,571 2007: 1,402 39,198 494 7,255 (NA) : Counties, 2012 : : Alameda.................................: 13 52 - - - Amador..................................: 12 172 8 108 15 Butte...................................: 25 433 13 111 24 Calaveras...............................: 31 410 18 (D) 82 Contra Costa............................: 13 (D) 3 (D) (D) Del Norte...............................: 16 120 9 (D) (D) El Dorado...............................: 48 569 28 104 18 Fresno..................................: 35 3,863 21 304 56 Glenn...................................: 6 (D) - - - Humboldt................................: 47 2,137 20 346 48 : Kern....................................: 29 539 14 215 20 Kings...................................: 15 5,081 13 1,123 219 Lake....................................: 30 892 14 571 228 Lassen..................................: 22 50 - - - Los Angeles.............................: 36 285 7 97 17 Madera..................................: 25 (D) 17 (D) (D) Marin...................................: 18 2,955 4 703 151 Mariposa................................: 6 (D) - - - Mendocino...............................: 30 888 18 (D) 63 Merced..................................: 28 3,482 13 712 140 : Modoc...................................: 15 (D) 9 1,801 351 Monterey................................: 25 174 7 (D) (D) Napa....................................: 13 (D) 4 (D) (D) Nevada..................................: 42 571 22 401 61 Placer..................................: 55 350 22 66 14 Plumas..................................: 7 28 2 (D) (D) Riverside...............................: 81 1,024 27 (D) (D) Sacramento..............................: 35 480 23 213 32 San Benito..............................: 11 475 6 22 4 San Bernardino..........................: 52 (D) 29 (D) (D) : San Diego...............................: 48 389 25 (D) (D) San Joaquin.............................: 14 72 5 16 2 San Luis Obispo.........................: 69 557 33 444 58 San Mateo...............................: 8 19 - - - Santa Barbara...........................: 16 68 4 42 8 Santa Clara.............................: 20 72 10 51 8 Santa Cruz..............................: 13 839 10 552 118 Shasta..................................: 45 308 19 118 17 Siskiyou................................: 29 162 10 58 11 Solano..................................: 15 36 - - - : Sonoma..................................: 65 3,740 31 615 140 Stanislaus..............................: 67 (D) 40 2,185 297 Sutter..................................: 11 (D) 6 41 7 Tehama..................................: 54 797 20 (D) (D) Trinity.................................: 24 (D) 11 85 12 Tulare..................................: 26 257 7 42 5 Tuolumne................................: 3 (D) 2 (D) (D) Ventura.................................: 18 (D) 10 106 (D) Yolo....................................: 30 384 18 286 65 Yuba....................................: 20 192 11 69 8 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Table 16. Angora Goats - Inventory and Sales: 2012 and 2007 [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ : Angora goats : Mohair :------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : Inventory : Sales : Production 1/ : :------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------: : : : : : Value : : : Value Geographic area : Farms : Number : Farms : Number : ($1,000) : Farms : Pounds : ($1,000) ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ State Total : : California..........................2012: 314 3,219 60 3,100 689 103 7,106 9 2007: 262 3,400 78 641 (NA) 119 19,567 (NA) : Counties, 2012 : : Alameda.................................: 9 46 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) - Amador..................................: - - 7 2,639 604 2 (D) - Butte...................................: 11 38 - - - 3 51 (Z) Calaveras...............................: 13 (D) 4 (D) 9 7 (D) - Colusa..................................: 3 6 - - - 1 (D) - Contra Costa............................: 7 (D) 1 (D) (D) - - - El Dorado...............................: 6 12 - - - 6 33 (Z) Glenn...................................: 2 (D) - - - - - - Humboldt................................: 5 5 - - - - - - Kern....................................: 10 10 - - - 2 (D) - : Kings...................................: 2 (D) - - - - - - Lassen..................................: 1 (D) - - - - - - Los Angeles.............................: 12 41 3 24 5 1 (D) (D) Madera..................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) (D) - - - Mariposa................................: 1 (D) - - - - - - Mendocino...............................: 5 (D) 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) (D) Merced..................................: 3 7 3 3 1 - - - Modoc...................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) - Monterey................................: 6 16 2 (D) (D) - - - Napa....................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) (D) - - - : Nevada..................................: 13 49 6 6 1 6 64 - Placer..................................: 14 138 6 16 2 1 (D) - Riverside...............................: 19 174 2 (D) (D) 10 657 (D) Sacramento..............................: 25 185 3 21 3 14 485 1 San Bernardino..........................: 1 (D) 1 (D) (D) - - - San Diego...............................: 27 105 2 (D) (D) 6 310 (D) San Joaquin.............................: 4 8 - - - 2 (D) - San Luis Obispo.........................: 10 23 - - - 4 35 (Z) San Mateo...............................: 4 33 - - - 1 (D) - Santa Barbara...........................: 9 23 - - - 4 60 - : Santa Clara.............................: 5 15 - - - - - - Santa Cruz..............................: 3 6 - - - 3 18 (Z) Shasta..................................: 15 177 4 36 4 7 800 (Z) Siskiyou................................: 3 3 - - - - - - Solano..................................: 3 13 - - - - - - Sonoma..................................: 11 146 - - - 3 540 (Z) Stanislaus..............................: 2 (D) - - - - - - Sutter..................................: 2 (D) - - - 2 (D) (D) Tehama..................................: 13 325 2 (D) (D) 7 610 2 Trinity.................................: 4 40 - - - 4 80 - : Tulare..................................: 7 21 - - - - - (Z) Tuolumne................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) - Ventura.................................: 1 (D) - - - - - - Yolo....................................: 6 6 - - - - - - Yuba....................................: 9 153 3 9 1 - - - ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 1/Data are for farms with production, not necessarily sold. Table 17. Meat Goats - Inventory and Sales: 2012 and 2007 [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ : Inventory : Sales :------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : : : : : Value Geographic area : Farms : Number : Farms : Number : ($1,000) ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ State Total : : California..........................2012: 3,330 93,571 1,611 45,610 5,279 2007: 4,016 88,225 1,531 34,374 (NA) : Counties, 2012 : : Alameda.................................: 22 131 12 (D) (D) Amador..................................: 40 1,606 27 520 67 Butte...................................: 89 959 35 349 36 Calaveras...............................: 77 (D) 47 588 61 Colusa..................................: 39 659 16 170 11 Contra Costa............................: 32 (D) 20 256 33 Del Norte...............................: 9 74 1 (D) (D) El Dorado...............................: 137 2,728 73 1,084 125 Fresno..................................: 130 3,246 63 2,039 224 Glenn...................................: 37 1,095 19 366 37 : Humboldt................................: 44 838 17 199 27 Imperial................................: 18 304 8 482 79 Kern....................................: 105 2,292 52 698 95 Kings...................................: 30 (D) 29 845 120 Lake....................................: 47 865 25 421 47 Lassen..................................: 21 511 14 451 68 Los Angeles.............................: 86 951 25 225 27 Madera..................................: 58 (D) 26 373 39 Marin...................................: 10 230 5 65 6 Mariposa................................: 28 1,082 10 542 63 : Mendocino...............................: 41 (D) 18 321 (D) Merced..................................: 86 1,787 41 888 116 Modoc...................................: 19 1,044 14 (D) (D) Mono....................................: 3 60 3 12 2 Monterey................................: 43 447 15 175 19 Napa....................................: 25 1,203 12 281 24 Nevada..................................: 97 832 24 387 47 Orange..................................: - - 2 (D) (D) Placer..................................: 142 2,872 66 1,020 94 Plumas..................................: 5 18 4 (D) (D) : Riverside...............................: 172 3,892 68 1,104 194 Sacramento..............................: 128 6,929 58 2,738 303 San Benito..............................: 25 612 13 525 38 San Bernardino..........................: 67 1,367 36 372 51 San Diego...............................: 132 1,851 59 763 86 San Joaquin.............................: 95 2,763 63 2,219 250 San Luis Obispo.........................: 82 721 31 176 19 San Mateo...............................: 11 47 7 40 3 Santa Barbara...........................: 37 791 17 1,316 92 Santa Clara.............................: 39 551 26 327 64 : Santa Cruz..............................: 20 2,711 8 856 86 Shasta..................................: 153 2,735 91 1,112 137 Siskiyou................................: 36 804 18 208 18 Solano..................................: 43 3,704 19 2,441 254 Sonoma..................................: 148 5,861 64 2,170 449 Stanislaus..............................: 188 13,222 85 9,064 1,012 Sutter..................................: 19 756 16 456 58 Tehama..................................: 145 5,099 91 4,628 400 Trinity.................................: 16 99 9 52 5 Tulare..................................: 78 926 29 394 40 : Tuolumne................................: 35 1,122 15 208 23 Ventura.................................: 23 199 6 39 (D) Yolo....................................: 43 627 21 234 32 Yuba....................................: 75 1,255 38 729 76 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Table 18. Equine - Inventory and Sales: 2012 and 2007 [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : Inventory : Sales :----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : Total : Owned : Total : Owned :----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : : : : : : : Value : : : Value Geographic area : Farms : Number : Farms : Number : Farms : Number : ($1,000) : Farms : Number : ($1,000) ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- HORSES AND PONIES : : State Total : : California..........................2012: 14,932 142,555 14,353 107,774 (NA) (NA) (NA) 2,959 10,452 62,000 2007: 20,270 180,723 18,008 133,872 (NA) (NA) (NA) 3,787 13,644 (NA) : Counties, 2012 : : Alameda.................................: 149 955 142 780 (NA) (NA) (NA) 10 37 53 Alpine..................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) (NA) (NA) (NA) - - - Amador..................................: 129 788 121 616 (NA) (NA) (NA) 19 49 347 Butte...................................: 269 1,958 264 1,700 (NA) (NA) (NA) 44 59 136 Calaveras...............................: 216 1,323 207 1,060 (NA) (NA) (NA) 30 177 658 Colusa..................................: 86 501 85 480 (NA) (NA) (NA) 24 72 226 Contra Costa............................: 195 2,658 192 2,375 (NA) (NA) (NA) 52 387 1,354 Del Norte...............................: 32 142 27 103 (NA) (NA) (NA) 3 9 15 El Dorado...............................: 351 2,826 348 2,254 (NA) (NA) (NA) 60 179 1,054 Fresno..................................: 561 5,027 547 3,893 (NA) (NA) (NA) 112 387 2,972 : Glenn...................................: 191 1,166 169 1,048 (NA) (NA) (NA) 29 96 248 Humboldt................................: 219 1,732 203 1,447 (NA) (NA) (NA) 39 164 289 Imperial................................: 26 156 25 132 (NA) (NA) (NA) 3 3 1 Inyo....................................: 54 1,108 50 754 (NA) (NA) (NA) 16 57 115 Kern....................................: 443 3,512 435 2,975 (NA) (NA) (NA) 102 212 761 Kings...................................: 138 1,116 138 927 (NA) (NA) (NA) 34 125 1,209 Lake....................................: 171 948 161 808 (NA) (NA) (NA) 26 40 132 Lassen..................................: 211 1,498 202 1,331 (NA) (NA) (NA) 41 159 441 Los Angeles.............................: 435 6,018 428 3,520 (NA) (NA) (NA) 95 286 1,037 Madera..................................: 224 1,807 211 1,304 (NA) (NA) (NA) 42 78 275 : Marin...................................: 72 601 69 288 (NA) (NA) (NA) 10 15 36 Mariposa................................: 162 1,197 159 1,134 (NA) (NA) (NA) 28 139 193 Mendocino...............................: 309 1,975 296 1,613 (NA) (NA) (NA) 43 131 418 Merced..................................: 293 1,978 277 1,641 (NA) (NA) (NA) 56 277 547 Modoc...................................: 169 1,271 158 969 (NA) (NA) (NA) 28 163 257 Mono....................................: 29 183 29 165 (NA) (NA) (NA) 8 45 53 Monterey................................: 258 1,981 248 1,833 (NA) (NA) (NA) 32 120 1,685 Napa....................................: 125 739 120 628 (NA) (NA) (NA) 11 16 72 Nevada..................................: 231 1,552 217 1,213 (NA) (NA) (NA) 55 94 460 Orange..................................: 73 1,852 71 556 (NA) (NA) (NA) 24 37 1,179 : Placer..................................: 389 2,600 366 2,045 (NA) (NA) (NA) 102 175 1,132 Plumas..................................: 56 359 54 302 (NA) (NA) (NA) 14 60 83 Riverside...............................: 806 12,685 775 9,538 (NA) (NA) (NA) 209 982 6,408 Sacramento..............................: 394 5,837 390 3,729 (NA) (NA) (NA) 131 443 3,590 San Benito..............................: 219 1,585 209 1,276 (NA) (NA) (NA) 37 71 719 San Bernardino..........................: 337 4,452 331 3,220 (NA) (NA) (NA) 74 359 3,466 San Diego...............................: 663 8,447 652 5,895 (NA) (NA) (NA) 138 432 4,583 San Francisco...........................: 2 (D) 2 (D) (NA) (NA) (NA) - - - San Joaquin.............................: 410 3,402 384 2,773 (NA) (NA) (NA) 81 234 1,261 San Luis Obispo.........................: 682 6,283 659 4,715 (NA) (NA) (NA) 113 443 4,505 : San Mateo...............................: 93 2,678 91 1,319 (NA) (NA) (NA) 20 71 1,558 Santa Barbara...........................: 384 6,453 353 3,794 (NA) (NA) (NA) 88 312 3,536 Santa Clara.............................: 193 2,177 183 1,400 (NA) (NA) (NA) 38 137 736 Santa Cruz..............................: 81 592 81 420 (NA) (NA) (NA) 10 27 162 Shasta..................................: 509 4,385 494 3,964 (NA) (NA) (NA) 89 397 798 Sierra..................................: 20 244 20 212 (NA) (NA) (NA) 5 16 39 Siskiyou................................: 358 1,956 347 1,786 (NA) (NA) (NA) 48 136 234 Solano..................................: 206 1,437 204 1,189 (NA) (NA) (NA) 48 95 830 Sonoma..................................: 535 4,439 504 3,284 (NA) (NA) (NA) 75 258 2,747 Stanislaus..............................: 749 5,455 721 3,960 (NA) (NA) (NA) 133 509 1,590 : Sutter..................................: 118 809 114 640 (NA) (NA) (NA) 28 53 357 Tehama..................................: 459 4,123 443 3,948 (NA) (NA) (NA) 84 488 1,953 Trinity.................................: 111 475 105 413 (NA) (NA) (NA) 5 7 10 Tulare..................................: 560 4,510 523 3,295 (NA) (NA) (NA) 113 286 1,794 Tuolumne................................: 152 879 144 763 (NA) (NA) (NA) 26 47 89 Ventura.................................: 263 3,256 249 2,285 (NA) (NA) (NA) 79 482 2,956 Yolo....................................: 162 1,500 158 1,134 (NA) (NA) (NA) 29 90 141 Yuba....................................: 198 2,919 196 2,882 (NA) (NA) (NA) 66 229 500 : MULES, BURROS, AND DONKEYS : : State Total : : California..........................2012: 2,102 6,698 (NA) (NA) 150 461 241 (NA) (NA) (NA) 2007: 2,528 7,151 (NA) (NA) 239 764 (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) : Counties, 2012 : : Alameda.................................: 9 11 (NA) (NA) - - - (NA) (NA) (NA) Amador..................................: 11 21 (NA) (NA) 3 4 2 (NA) (NA) (NA) Butte...................................: 51 124 (NA) (NA) 5 21 8 (NA) (NA) (NA) Calaveras...............................: 25 144 (NA) (NA) 1 (D) (D) (NA) (NA) (NA) Colusa..................................: 18 46 (NA) (NA) 1 (D) (D) (NA) (NA) (NA) Contra Costa............................: 26 65 (NA) (NA) 4 (D) 1 (NA) (NA) (NA) Del Norte...............................: 1 (D) (NA) (NA) - - - (NA) (NA) (NA) El Dorado...............................: 61 185 (NA) (NA) 1 (D) (D) (NA) (NA) (NA) Fresno..................................: 88 338 (NA) (NA) 5 23 9 (NA) (NA) (NA) Glenn...................................: 19 36 (NA) (NA) - - - (NA) (NA) (NA) : Humboldt................................: 18 72 (NA) (NA) - - - (NA) (NA) (NA) Imperial................................: 5 10 (NA) (NA) - - - (NA) (NA) (NA) Inyo....................................: 12 79 (NA) (NA) 1 (D) (D) (NA) (NA) (NA) Kern....................................: 76 312 (NA) (NA) 7 58 39 (NA) (NA) (NA) Kings...................................: 20 72 (NA) (NA) - - - (NA) (NA) (NA) Lake....................................: 38 101 (NA) (NA) - - - (NA) (NA) (NA) Lassen..................................: 16 23 (NA) (NA) - - - (NA) (NA) (NA) ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 18. Equine - Inventory and Sales: 2012 and 2007 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : Inventory : Sales :----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : Total : Owned : Total : Owned :----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : : : : : : : Value : : : Value Geographic area : Farms : Number : Farms : Number : Farms : Number : ($1,000) : Farms : Number : ($1,000) ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- MULES, BURROS, AND : DONKEYS - Con. : : Counties, 2012 - Con. : : Los Angeles.............................: 88 344 (NA) (NA) 2 (D) (D) (NA) (NA) (NA) Madera..................................: 26 73 (NA) (NA) 2 (D) (D) (NA) (NA) (NA) Marin...................................: 9 14 (NA) (NA) - - - (NA) (NA) (NA) Mariposa................................: 26 68 (NA) (NA) 2 (D) (D) (NA) (NA) (NA) Mendocino...............................: 37 63 (NA) (NA) 3 9 4 (NA) (NA) (NA) Merced..................................: 25 68 (NA) (NA) - - - (NA) (NA) (NA) Modoc...................................: 21 43 (NA) (NA) 1 (D) (D) (NA) (NA) (NA) Mono....................................: 5 55 (NA) (NA) 3 7 3 (NA) (NA) (NA) Monterey................................: 40 73 (NA) (NA) 2 (D) (D) (NA) (NA) (NA) Napa....................................: 16 32 (NA) (NA) - - - (NA) (NA) (NA) : Nevada..................................: 49 119 (NA) (NA) 10 36 25 (NA) (NA) (NA) Orange..................................: 1 (D) (NA) (NA) - - - (NA) (NA) (NA) Placer..................................: 59 239 (NA) (NA) 4 42 17 (NA) (NA) (NA) Plumas..................................: 5 19 (NA) (NA) - - - (NA) (NA) (NA) Riverside...............................: 80 148 (NA) (NA) 10 16 14 (NA) (NA) (NA) Sacramento..............................: 48 141 (NA) (NA) - - - (NA) (NA) (NA) San Benito..............................: 22 43 (NA) (NA) - - - (NA) (NA) (NA) San Bernardino..........................: 40 88 (NA) (NA) 3 9 4 (NA) (NA) (NA) San Diego...............................: 81 233 (NA) (NA) 10 (D) 5 (NA) (NA) (NA) San Joaquin.............................: 35 92 (NA) (NA) 3 (D) 1 (NA) (NA) (NA) : San Luis Obispo.........................: 108 366 (NA) (NA) 6 19 11 (NA) (NA) (NA) San Mateo...............................: 11 15 (NA) (NA) - - - (NA) (NA) (NA) Santa Barbara...........................: 52 116 (NA) (NA) 4 7 2 (NA) (NA) (NA) Santa Clara.............................: 26 83 (NA) (NA) 2 (D) (D) (NA) (NA) (NA) Santa Cruz..............................: 12 33 (NA) (NA) 2 (D) (D) (NA) (NA) (NA) Shasta..................................: 89 445 (NA) (NA) 5 50 34 (NA) (NA) (NA) Sierra..................................: 1 (D) (NA) (NA) - - - (NA) (NA) (NA) Siskiyou................................: 63 354 (NA) (NA) 2 (D) (D) (NA) (NA) (NA) Solano..................................: 25 59 (NA) (NA) 2 (D) (D) (NA) (NA) (NA) Sonoma..................................: 83 232 (NA) (NA) 5 (D) 1 (NA) (NA) (NA) : Stanislaus..............................: 81 217 (NA) (NA) 8 15 7 (NA) (NA) (NA) Sutter..................................: 6 12 (NA) (NA) - - - (NA) (NA) (NA) Tehama..................................: 76 368 (NA) (NA) 5 13 9 (NA) (NA) (NA) Trinity.................................: 22 44 (NA) (NA) - - - (NA) (NA) (NA) Tulare..................................: 96 345 (NA) (NA) 8 14 6 (NA) (NA) (NA) Tuolumne................................: 27 154 (NA) (NA) 11 17 7 (NA) (NA) (NA) Ventura.................................: 35 74 (NA) (NA) 1 (D) (D) (NA) (NA) (NA) Yolo....................................: 48 110 (NA) (NA) 6 7 3 (NA) (NA) (NA) Yuba....................................: 34 70 (NA) (NA) - - - (NA) (NA) (NA) ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Table 19. Poultry - Inventory and Sales: 2012 and 2007 [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : California : Alameda : Alpine : Amador : Butte : Calaveras : Colusa ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- INVENTORY : : Any poultry .........................................farms, 2012: 7,536 59 1 58 189 114 26 2007: 5,959 50 - 47 147 78 30 : Layers (see text) .................................farms, 2012: 6,744 55 1 57 166 105 23 2007: 5,098 47 - 44 120 74 27 number, 2012: 19,000,779 798 (D) 3,806 4,963 2,504 250 2007: 21,091,629 2,686 - 5,273 6,042 1,761 778 2012 farms by inventory: : 1 to 49 ..................................................: 6,069 53 1 51 149 93 23 50 to 99 .................................................: 339 2 - 2 4 11 - 100 to 399 ...............................................: 245 - - 1 13 1 - 400 to 3,199 .............................................: 39 - - 3 - - - 3,200 to 9,999 ...........................................: 4 - - - - - - 10,000 to 19,999 .........................................: 4 - - - - - - 20,000 to 49,999 .........................................: 5 - - - - - - 50,000 to 99,999 .........................................: 8 - - - - - - 100,000 or more ..........................................: 31 - - - - - - : Pullets for laying flock replacement ..............farms, 2012: 873 6 - 13 14 5 1 2007: 724 2 - 6 10 8 - number, 2012: 4,633,558 36 - 295 195 109 (D) 2007: 4,613,085 (D) - 770 140 80 - : Broilers and other meat-type chickens .............farms, 2012: 829 8 - 1 32 11 1 2007: 374 - - 3 14 5 - number, 2012: 42,268,482 128 - (D) 1,576 (D) (D) 2007: 44,384,231 - - 600 416 26 - : Turkeys (see text) ................................farms, 2012: 682 - - 1 18 13 2 2007: 469 1 - - 5 9 2 number, 2012: 4,532,307 - - (D) 173 58,154 (D) 2007: 6,703,230 (D) - - 30 (D) (D) : Ducks, geese, and other miscellaneous poultry : (see text) .......................................farms, 2012: 1,727 13 - 19 45 32 8 2007: 2,160 14 - 12 65 32 15 : SALES : : Any poultry sold (see text) .........................farms, 2012: 3,758 27 1 39 98 56 8 2007: 4,114 34 - 30 108 49 21 : Layers sold (see text) ............................farms, 2012: 831 6 - 3 21 16 2 2007: 667 6 - 9 27 10 - number, 2012: 8,195,242 154 - 1,110 1,586 958 (D) 2007: 8,786,250 (D) - 356 2,229 148 - : Pullets for laying flock replacement sold .........farms, 2012: 86 - - - 3 1 - 2007: 84 2 - - 6 - - number, 2012: 3,508,788 - - - (D) (D) - 2007: 3,855,640 (D) - - 150 - - : Broilers and other meat-type chickens sold ........farms, 2012: 421 4 - 6 18 6 - 2007: 229 - - - 1 4 - number, 2012: 273,277,272 60 - 620 6,428 (D) - 2007: 280,512,754 - - - (D) (D) - 2012 farms by number sold: : 1 to 1,999 ...............................................: 336 4 - 6 17 5 - 2,000 to 59,999 ..........................................: 26 - - - 1 1 - 60,000 to 99,999 .........................................: - - - - - - - 100,000 to 199,999 .......................................: 18 - - - - - - 200,000 to 499,999 .......................................: 14 - - - - - - 500,000 or more ..........................................: 27 - - - - - - : Turkeys sold (see text) ...........................farms, 2012: 302 - - 1 12 6 - 2007: 218 - - - 1 6 - number, 2012: 15,384,675 - - (D) 129 160,016 - 2007: 16,151,754 - - - (D) (D) - : Ducks, geese, and other miscellaneous poultry : sold (see text) ..................................farms, 2012: 505 6 - 5 23 5 2 2007: 540 2 - 4 26 9 1 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 19. Poultry - Inventory and Sales: 2012 and 2007 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Contra Costa : Del Norte : El Dorado : Fresno : Glenn : Humboldt : Imperial ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- INVENTORY : : Any poultry .........................................farms, 2012: 59 55 297 258 76 155 12 2007: 57 22 188 205 55 97 5 : Layers (see text) .................................farms, 2012: 53 54 261 199 73 151 12 2007: 49 17 174 130 50 87 5 number, 2012: 3,256 1,141 5,506 6,261 1,531 3,069 196 2007: 1,067 372 2,989 2,463 837 1,800 75 2012 farms by inventory: : 1 to 49 ..................................................: 48 49 249 171 66 137 12 50 to 99 .................................................: 3 4 2 11 6 10 - 100 to 399 ...............................................: - 1 10 15 1 4 - 400 to 3,199 .............................................: 2 - - 2 - - - 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, 2012: 3 4 33 25 13 13 - 2007: 24 5 13 25 10 16 - number, 2012: 120 80 655 17,157 278 197 - 2007: 433 55 102 8,121 82 428 - : Broilers and other meat-type chickens .............farms, 2012: 11 7 29 45 7 19 - 2007: 5 2 5 35 4 8 - number, 2012: 129 327 488 12,377,741 284 557 - 2007: 156 (D) 91 13,970,920 80 916 - : Turkeys (see text) ................................farms, 2012: 9 9 28 26 7 13 - 2007: 3 - 9 34 2 6 - number, 2012: 24 109 180 972,869 15 148 - 2007: 12 - 33 1,404,896 (D) 83 - : Ducks, geese, and other miscellaneous poultry : (see text) .......................................farms, 2012: 23 17 68 84 12 21 - 2007: 28 13 68 95 14 28 2 : SALES : : Any poultry sold (see text) .........................farms, 2012: 24 26 146 110 32 79 8 2007: 38 14 123 150 38 65 2 : Layers sold (see text) ............................farms, 2012: 9 13 17 19 8 22 4 2007: 7 - 27 26 2 5 2 number, 2012: 316 2,007 234 5,277 392 493 20 2007: 113 - 820 8,101 (D) 19 (D) : Pullets for laying flock replacement sold .........farms, 2012: - - 2 2 - 3 - 2007: - - - 9 2 - - number, 2012: - - (D) (D) - 60 - 2007: - - - 4,512 (D) - - : Broilers and other meat-type chickens sold ........farms, 2012: 1 1 12 19 4 11 - 2007: - - 3 28 - 3 - number, 2012: (D) (D) 380 92,538,427 300 3,450 - 2007: - - 81 89,860,417 - 1,050 - 2012 farms by number sold: : 1 to 1,999 ...............................................: 1 1 12 3 4 11 - 2,000 to 59,999 ..........................................: - - - 5 - - - 60,000 to 99,999 .........................................: - - - - - - - 100,000 to 199,999 .......................................: - - - 1 - - - 200,000 to 499,999 .......................................: - - - - - - - 500,000 or more ..........................................: - - - 10 - - - : Turkeys sold (see text) ...........................farms, 2012: 3 2 8 18 - 15 - 2007: - 1 3 25 2 10 - number, 2012: 6 (D) (D) 3,399,914 - 193 - 2007: - (D) 12 3,765,399 (D) 90 - : Ducks, geese, and other miscellaneous poultry : sold (see text) ..................................farms, 2012: 5 2 10 25 7 5 - 2007: 2 - 9 18 1 8 - ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 19. Poultry - Inventory and Sales: 2012 and 2007 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Inyo : Kern : Kings : Lake : Lassen : Los Angeles : Madera ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- INVENTORY : : Any poultry .........................................farms, 2012: 15 168 55 127 74 194 94 2007: 6 158 43 101 77 237 92 : Layers (see text) .................................farms, 2012: 15 149 44 125 71 163 70 2007: 6 141 36 85 63 192 68 number, 2012: 292 (D) (D) 4,229 1,191 3,579 1,277 2007: 84 (D) (D) 4,474 817 (D) 3,259 2012 farms by inventory: : 1 to 49 ..................................................: 14 132 38 117 69 154 67 50 to 99 .................................................: 1 12 2 5 2 4 2 100 to 399 ...............................................: - 4 3 2 - 5 1 400 to 3,199 .............................................: - - - 1 - - - 3,200 to 9,999 ...........................................: - - - - - - - 10,000 to 19,999 .........................................: - - - - - - - 20,000 to 49,999 .........................................: - - - - - - - 50,000 to 99,999 .........................................: - - 1 - - - - 100,000 or more ..........................................: - 1 - - - - - : Pullets for laying flock replacement ..............farms, 2012: 1 10 4 16 10 34 3 2007: - 23 3 7 7 30 13 number, 2012: (D) (D) 318 1,797 100 2,423 125 2007: - (D) (D) (D) 45 2,420 832 : Broilers and other meat-type chickens .............farms, 2012: - 15 2 9 3 29 16 2007: - 8 3 3 8 1 5 number, 2012: - 563 (D) (D) 41 456 620,174 2007: - 70 (D) 24 29 (D) 555,400 : Turkeys (see text) ................................farms, 2012: - 7 8 5 8 20 11 2007: 3 16 6 8 6 21 8 number, 2012: - 38 362,340 74 36 203 (D) 2007: 6 57 507,533 24 78 352 486,893 : Ducks, geese, and other miscellaneous poultry : (see text) .......................................farms, 2012: 1 42 13 25 15 59 32 2007: 3 60 11 45 34 110 27 : SALES : : Any poultry sold (see text) .........................farms, 2012: 6 102 27 66 36 104 47 2007: 3 104 30 83 52 145 52 : Layers sold (see text) ............................farms, 2012: - 23 10 12 13 32 9 2007: - 17 3 7 4 35 8 number, 2012: - (D) (D) 832 155 (D) 131 2007: - (D) (D) 103 44 786 866 : Pullets for laying flock replacement sold .........farms, 2012: - 3 - - 4 - 1 2007: - 4 - - - - - number, 2012: - (D) - - 224 - (D) 2007: - 40 - - - - - : Broilers and other meat-type chickens sold ........farms, 2012: - 8 5 6 4 10 15 2007: - 5 1 4 7 1 5 number, 2012: - 2,454 (D) (D) 116 498 2,270,099 2007: - 80 (D) 38 114 (D) 2,992,000 2012 farms by number sold: : 1 to 1,999 ...............................................: - 8 3 5 4 10 8 2,000 to 59,999 ..........................................: - - - 1 - - - 60,000 to 99,999 .........................................: - - - - - - - 100,000 to 199,999 .......................................: - - - - - - 5 200,000 to 499,999 .......................................: - - 1 - - - 1 500,000 or more ..........................................: - - 1 - - - 1 : Turkeys sold (see text) ...........................farms, 2012: - 5 7 - 6 12 3 2007: - 3 6 - 7 9 7 number, 2012: - 31 1,368,600 - 176 (D) (D) 2007: - 9 1,618,769 - 13 51 1,101,960 : Ducks, geese, and other miscellaneous poultry : sold (see text) ..................................farms, 2012: - 12 3 12 3 23 9 2007: - 11 5 9 8 26 6 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 19. Poultry - Inventory and Sales: 2012 and 2007 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Marin : Mariposa : Mendocino : Merced : Modoc : Mono : Monterey ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- INVENTORY : : Any poultry .........................................farms, 2012: 47 42 171 101 47 4 100 2007: 25 24 119 80 44 - 111 : Layers (see text) .................................farms, 2012: 46 35 159 72 42 4 96 2007: 25 22 113 54 39 - 105 number, 2012: 11,467 1,032 4,149 3,411,016 923 72 3,303 2007: 556 411 8,973 3,625,350 835 - 3,936 2012 farms by inventory: : 1 to 49 ..................................................: 38 33 147 60 40 4 86 50 to 99 .................................................: 1 - 6 3 1 - 5 100 to 399 ...............................................: 6 2 6 - 1 - 4 400 to 3,199 .............................................: - - - 1 - - 1 3,200 to 9,999 ...........................................: 1 - - - - - - 10,000 to 19,999 .........................................: - - - 1 - - - 20,000 to 49,999 .........................................: - - - - - - - 50,000 to 99,999 .........................................: - - - 1 - - - 100,000 or more ..........................................: - - - 6 - - - : Pullets for laying flock replacement ..............farms, 2012: 6 3 32 8 9 1 20 2007: 6 2 15 9 6 - 10 number, 2012: 2,408 152 597 753,612 85 (D) 470 2007: 129 (D) 209 570,248 97 - 395 : Broilers and other meat-type chickens .............farms, 2012: 5 9 30 20 5 1 3 2007: 5 - - 7 1 - 6 number, 2012: 612 1,145 633 (D) 122 (D) (D) 2007: 15 - - (D) (D) - 49 : Turkeys (see text) ................................farms, 2012: 2 2 8 11 6 - 11 2007: 1 1 2 19 3 - 6 number, 2012: (D) (D) 13 1,626,256 6 - 456 2007: (D) (D) (D) 1,639,018 6 - 73 : Ducks, geese, and other miscellaneous poultry : (see text) .......................................farms, 2012: 4 6 49 15 9 - 26 2007: 2 9 37 16 9 - 33 : SALES : : Any poultry sold (see text) .........................farms, 2012: 24 23 87 52 25 2 39 2007: 18 20 106 68 34 2 84 : Layers sold (see text) ............................farms, 2012: 3 7 14 11 11 1 6 2007: 3 4 12 6 1 - 24 number, 2012: 260 42 675 2,169,012 210 (D) (D) 2007: (D) 52 (D) 1,485,313 (D) - (D) : Pullets for laying flock replacement sold .........farms, 2012: 1 2 3 3 - - 1 2007: 1 - - 5 - - 2 number, 2012: (D) (D) (D) (D) - - (D) 2007: (D) - - 2,061,111 - - (D) : Broilers and other meat-type chickens sold ........farms, 2012: 5 4 4 8 2 - 4 2007: 1 - 4 8 1 - 5 number, 2012: 508 1,020 120 (D) (D) - 175 2007: (D) - 485 (D) (D) - 84 2012 farms by number sold: : 1 to 1,999 ...............................................: 5 4 4 - 2 - 4 2,000 to 59,999 ..........................................: - - - - - - - 60,000 to 99,999 .........................................: - - - - - - - 100,000 to 199,999 .......................................: - - - 4 - - - 200,000 to 499,999 .......................................: - - - 1 - - - 500,000 or more ..........................................: - - - 3 - - - : Turkeys sold (see text) ...........................farms, 2012: 1 - - 8 - - 6 2007: 1 1 - 12 - 2 4 number, 2012: (D) - - 4,660,112 - - 427 2007: (D) (D) - 2,747,660 - (D) 96 : Ducks, geese, and other miscellaneous poultry : sold (see text) ..................................farms, 2012: 1 4 9 3 3 - 8 2007: 1 - 6 2 6 - 10 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 19. Poultry - Inventory and Sales: 2012 and 2007 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Napa : Nevada : Orange : Placer : Plumas : Riverside : Sacramento ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- INVENTORY : : Any poultry .........................................farms, 2012: 101 202 23 255 26 287 235 2007: 66 166 18 190 25 276 199 : Layers (see text) .................................farms, 2012: 96 186 19 243 26 256 199 2007: 63 144 15 163 25 232 168 number, 2012: 2,123 5,156 440 4,925 733 4,127,452 3,484 2007: (D) 3,274 (D) 2,861 496 2,300,179 4,280 2012 farms by inventory: : 1 to 49 ..................................................: 87 166 18 229 21 226 183 50 to 99 .................................................: 6 11 - 10 5 16 15 100 to 399 ...............................................: 3 8 1 3 - 9 1 400 to 3,199 .............................................: - 1 - 1 - - - 3,200 to 9,999 ...........................................: - - - - - - - 10,000 to 19,999 .........................................: - - - - - - - 20,000 to 49,999 .........................................: - - - - - - - 50,000 to 99,999 .........................................: - - - - - - - 100,000 or more ..........................................: - - - - - 5 - : Pullets for laying flock replacement ..............farms, 2012: 21 18 2 37 3 39 29 2007: 8 26 6 33 2 42 35 number, 2012: 287 510 (D) 852 15 905,970 681 2007: 377 424 (D) 460 (D) 714,202 615 : Broilers and other meat-type chickens .............farms, 2012: 14 14 - 18 - 37 16 2007: - 3 1 15 1 21 16 number, 2012: 793 (D) - (D) - 700 (D) 2007: - (D) (D) (D) (D) 222 736,043 : Turkeys (see text) ................................farms, 2012: 14 13 1 10 14 47 22 2007: 10 10 - 18 5 19 18 number, 2012: 292 76 (D) 78 72 217 (D) 2007: 165 50 - 224 23 163 (D) : Ducks, geese, and other miscellaneous poultry : (see text) .......................................farms, 2012: 15 43 9 46 12 67 77 2007: 22 58 5 74 13 106 74 : SALES : : Any poultry sold (see text) .........................farms, 2012: 54 111 18 137 19 129 124 2007: 52 121 11 138 17 191 141 : Layers sold (see text) ............................farms, 2012: 5 21 3 29 4 37 24 2007: 7 18 2 20 - 26 36 number, 2012: 84 555 1,620 618 40 653,011 1,873 2007: (D) 229 (D) (D) - (D) 1,833 : Pullets for laying flock replacement sold .........farms, 2012: 2 3 - 10 - 3 4 2007: 1 4 - 1 - 2 11 number, 2012: (D) (D) - 80 - (D) 400 2007: (D) 810 - (D) - (D) 525 : Broilers and other meat-type chickens sold ........farms, 2012: 4 11 - 10 6 23 14 2007: - 2 - 8 - 13 17 number, 2012: 62 (D) - (D) 98 743 (D) 2007: - (D) - (D) - 223 3,540,642 2012 farms by number sold: : 1 to 1,999 ...............................................: 4 10 - 9 6 23 11 2,000 to 59,999 ..........................................: - 1 - - - - - 60,000 to 99,999 .........................................: - - - - - - - 100,000 to 199,999 .......................................: - - - 1 - - 2 200,000 to 499,999 .......................................: - - - - - - - 500,000 or more ..........................................: - - - - - - 1 : Turkeys sold (see text) ...........................farms, 2012: 4 1 - 4 9 21 18 2007: 3 3 - 9 1 11 11 number, 2012: 54 (D) - (D) 90 963 (D) 2007: 51 23 - 147 (D) 237 (D) : Ducks, geese, and other miscellaneous poultry : sold (see text) ..................................farms, 2012: 7 13 4 10 5 23 24 2007: 6 16 - 20 1 25 30 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 19. Poultry - Inventory and Sales: 2012 and 2007 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : San Benito :San Bernardino : San Diego : San Francisco : San Joaquin :San Luis Obispo: San Mateo :Santa Barbara ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- INVENTORY : : Any poultry .........................................farms, 2012: 55 190 378 - 186 351 45 85 2007: 39 189 361 - 142 277 39 79 : Layers (see text) .................................farms, 2012: 54 172 331 - 160 323 38 81 2007: 32 150 310 - 107 248 39 73 number, 2012: 1,502 1,454,595 2,268,366 - 1,851,643 6,848 1,907 3,289 2007: 490 4,276,147 2,398,504 - 2,163,234 3,993 1,008 984 2012 farms by inventory: : 1 to 49 ..................................................: 50 141 286 - 147 294 31 65 50 to 99 .................................................: 2 9 26 - 3 20 2 3 100 to 399 ...............................................: 1 12 10 - 2 9 4 12 400 to 3,199 .............................................: 1 3 3 - 1 - 1 1 3,200 to 9,999 ...........................................: - - 1 - - - - - 10,000 to 19,999 .........................................: - 1 - - - - - - 20,000 to 49,999 .........................................: - 1 2 - - - - - 50,000 to 99,999 .........................................: - 1 - - 3 - - - 100,000 or more ..........................................: - 4 3 - 4 - - - : Pullets for laying flock replacement ..............farms, 2012: 3 36 27 - 17 53 3 10 2007: 5 21 35 - 14 30 4 2 number, 2012: 45 320,219 (D) - 138,461 709 280 1,035 2007: 85 718,866 707,099 - 778,592 1,022 (D) (D) : Broilers and other meat-type chickens .............farms, 2012: 11 21 41 - 32 32 2 8 2007: 3 16 10 - 14 11 1 3 number, 2012: (D) 1,397 105,091 - 327,902 529 (D) 1,850 2007: (D) 169 (D) - 529,035 82 (D) 600 : Turkeys (see text) ................................farms, 2012: 3 34 34 - 12 40 - 10 2007: 8 23 27 - 9 21 - 11 number, 2012: (D) 494 319 - 119 175 - 90 2007: (D) (D) 95 - (D) 61 - 94 : Ducks, geese, and other miscellaneous poultry : (see text) .......................................farms, 2012: 5 47 92 - 37 82 6 3 2007: 18 82 123 - 47 83 7 17 : SALES : : Any poultry sold (see text) .........................farms, 2012: 24 105 174 - 81 185 22 31 2007: 26 135 221 - 92 167 21 63 : Layers sold (see text) ............................farms, 2012: 7 21 23 - 35 39 4 9 2007: 3 32 47 - 14 18 7 3 number, 2012: 490 603,624 915,634 - 1,011,597 1,065 170 (D) 2007: 60 (D) 969,842 - (D) (D) 1,680 (D) : Pullets for laying flock replacement sold .........farms, 2012: - 1 1 - 10 5 - 3 2007: - 4 6 - 4 2 - 2 number, 2012: - (D) (D) - 185,944 196 - 600 2007: - (D) 406,015 - (D) (D) - (D) : Broilers and other meat-type chickens sold ........farms, 2012: 5 5 13 - 18 15 - 5 2007: - 10 1 - 10 4 1 3 number, 2012: (D) 328 314,300 - 1,878,384 581 - (D) 2007: - 109 (D) - 2,788,110 1,312 (D) (D) 2012 farms by number sold: : 1 to 1,999 ...............................................: 5 5 11 - 9 15 - 4 2,000 to 59,999 ..........................................: - - - - 3 - - 1 60,000 to 99,999 .........................................: - - - - - - - - 100,000 to 199,999 .......................................: - - 2 - - - - - 200,000 to 499,999 .......................................: - - - - 6 - - - 500,000 or more ..........................................: - - - - - - - - : Turkeys sold (see text) ...........................farms, 2012: 3 18 11 - 5 14 - 1 2007: 5 11 2 - 9 7 - 7 number, 2012: (D) (D) 215 - 52 79 - (D) 2007: (D) 500,739 (D) - (D) 122 - 648 : Ducks, geese, and other miscellaneous poultry : sold (see text) ..................................farms, 2012: 2 7 21 - 17 18 3 - 2007: 2 20 28 - 19 19 1 4 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 19. Poultry - Inventory and Sales: 2012 and 2007 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Santa Clara : Santa Cruz : Shasta : Sierra : Siskiyou : Solano : Sonoma : Stanislaus ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- INVENTORY : : Any poultry .........................................farms, 2012: 106 68 289 4 165 121 489 306 2007: 83 45 263 1 77 94 257 274 : Layers (see text) .................................farms, 2012: 98 65 260 4 153 110 473 218 2007: 72 44 250 1 70 81 228 197 number, 2012: 2,378 (D) 6,453 166 3,672 (D) (D) 2,549,818 2007: 1,329 (D) 4,701 (D) 1,319 25,110 1,254,759 2,256,513 2012 farms by inventory: : 1 to 49 ..................................................: 81 59 246 3 141 103 397 194 50 to 99 .................................................: 12 - 5 - 5 4 38 3 100 to 399 ...............................................: 5 2 8 1 7 2 29 12 400 to 3,199 .............................................: - 3 1 - - - 5 - 3,200 to 9,999 ...........................................: - - - - - - - 2 10,000 to 19,999 .........................................: - - - - - - - 1 20,000 to 49,999 .........................................: - - - - - 1 - 1 50,000 to 99,999 .........................................: - - - - - - 1 1 100,000 or more ..........................................: - 1 - - - - 3 4 : Pullets for laying flock replacement ..............farms, 2012: 13 11 32 1 18 9 68 19 2007: 4 1 33 - 12 16 30 18 number, 2012: 265 388 385 (D) 287 (D) (D) 1,126,056 2007: 27 (D) 353 - 100 (D) (D) (D) : Broilers and other meat-type chickens .............farms, 2012: 17 2 23 1 17 12 34 35 2007: 3 - 19 - 6 10 12 26 number, 2012: 540 (D) 961 (D) 2,254 12,192 (D) 8,783,156 2007: 54,000 - 1,283 - 220 (D) (D) 9,749,332 : Turkeys (see text) ................................farms, 2012: 6 1 17 1 30 15 52 14 2007: 6 - 19 - 3 4 12 14 number, 2012: 30 (D) 85 (D) 207 64 (D) 983,890 2007: 30 - 111 - 28 74 243 1,069,482 : Ducks, geese, and other miscellaneous poultry : (see text) .......................................farms, 2012: 28 19 51 - 32 18 68 116 2007: 17 5 66 1 30 29 87 128 : SALES : : Any poultry sold (see text) .........................farms, 2012: 49 35 137 1 70 49 266 154 2007: 40 30 172 1 47 60 179 210 : Layers sold (see text) ............................farms, 2012: 7 7 37 - 8 8 66 34 2007: 4 4 30 - 2 19 28 39 number, 2012: 406 (D) 953 - 111 (D) (D) 1,544,754 2007: 271 (D) 4,406 - (D) 10,213 (D) (D) : Pullets for laying flock replacement sold .........farms, 2012: - - - - - - 6 - 2007: - - - - - 4 3 1 number, 2012: - - - - - - (D) - 2007: - - - - - 130 35 (D) : Broilers and other meat-type chickens sold ........farms, 2012: 1 2 10 1 9 6 22 16 2007: 3 - 6 - 4 8 7 23 number, 2012: (D) (D) 678 (D) 1,064 40,040 (D) 62,715,078 2007: 270,000 - 897 - 3,870 (D) (D) (D) 2012 farms by number sold: : 1 to 1,999 ...............................................: 1 - 10 1 9 2 19 1 2,000 to 59,999 ..........................................: - 2 - - - 4 1 2 60,000 to 99,999 .........................................: - - - - - - - - 100,000 to 199,999 .......................................: - - - - - - - 3 200,000 to 499,999 .......................................: - - - - - - 1 4 500,000 or more ..........................................: - - - - - - 1 6 : Turkeys sold (see text) ...........................farms, 2012: 6 - 3 - 11 1 23 12 2007: - - 3 - - 2 8 10 number, 2012: 30 - 4 - 87 (D) (D) 3,146,174 2007: - - 21 - - (D) (D) 2,297,443 : Ducks, geese, and other miscellaneous poultry : sold (see text) ..................................farms, 2012: 3 1 11 - 5 15 13 57 2007: 4 1 10 - - 8 22 69 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 19. Poultry - Inventory and Sales: 2012 and 2007 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Sutter : Tehama : Trinity : Tulare : Tuolumne : Ventura : Yolo : Yuba ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- INVENTORY : : Any poultry .........................................farms, 2012: 57 229 86 173 58 122 115 131 2007: 43 171 35 145 44 101 67 95 : Layers (see text) .................................farms, 2012: 51 203 77 160 47 118 95 127 2007: 39 144 34 124 39 89 56 88 number, 2012: 968 5,131 1,466 19,044 976 4,720 9,162 2,879 2007: 794 2,525 719 18,347 519 2,911 1,241 2,204 2012 farms by inventory: : 1 to 49 ..................................................: 48 189 74 144 46 108 76 115 50 to 99 .................................................: 1 13 3 11 - 4 4 9 100 to 399 ...............................................: 2 - - 3 1 5 10 3 400 to 3,199 .............................................: - 1 - 1 - 1 5 - 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 ..........................................: - - - - - - - - : Pullets for laying flock replacement ..............farms, 2012: 7 28 24 14 9 8 8 19 2007: 4 18 6 22 5 13 9 20 number, 2012: 55 451 384 (D) 90 578 (D) 292 2007: 40 392 44 (D) 34 160 255 1,129 : Broilers and other meat-type chickens .............farms, 2012: 9 40 15 22 11 6 9 12 2007: 5 18 2 19 2 2 3 4 number, 2012: 72 7,015 3,027 (D) (D) 377 3,282 602 2007: 664 361 (D) (D) (D) (D) 32 110 : Turkeys (see text) ................................farms, 2012: 2 12 9 12 6 6 18 2 2007: 6 13 2 11 9 14 3 3 number, 2012: (D) 220 20 (D) (D) 42 24,109 (D) 2007: 89 108 (D) (D) (D) 143 40 7 : Ducks, geese, and other miscellaneous poultry : (see text) .......................................farms, 2012: 15 34 24 36 18 20 46 23 2007: 12 59 21 57 17 46 31 43 : SALES : : Any poultry sold (see text) .........................farms, 2012: 39 99 42 61 31 61 71 85 2007: 33 107 34 104 21 68 54 85 : Layers sold (see text) ............................farms, 2012: 10 18 6 12 8 11 15 31 2007: 7 8 3 10 3 12 5 15 number, 2012: 1,135 658 855 (D) 108 693 1,237 381 2007: 72 220 46 (D) 12 (D) 247 786 : Pullets for laying flock replacement sold .........farms, 2012: - - - 3 - 1 2 3 2007: - - - 4 - 1 - 3 number, 2012: - - - (D) - (D) (D) 100 2007: - - - (D) - (D) - 15 : Broilers and other meat-type chickens sold ........farms, 2012: 5 18 8 11 7 4 10 5 2007: 4 11 1 6 - - 2 4 number, 2012: 640 (D) 3,400 (D) (D) 2,450 5,562 410 2007: 644 256 (D) 14,308,963 - - (D) 96 2012 farms by number sold: : 1 to 1,999 ...............................................: 5 17 8 6 6 4 9 5 2,000 to 59,999 ..........................................: - 1 - 2 - - 1 - 60,000 to 99,999 .........................................: - - - - - - - - 100,000 to 199,999 .......................................: - - - - - - - - 200,000 to 499,999 .......................................: - - - - - - - - 500,000 or more ..........................................: - - - 3 1 - - - : Turkeys sold (see text) ...........................farms, 2012: 1 3 - 4 3 - 8 5 2007: 2 1 3 4 4 - 2 - number, 2012: (D) (D) - (D) (D) - 25,831 24 2007: (D) (D) 20 (D) (D) - (D) - : Ducks, geese, and other miscellaneous poultry : sold (see text) ..................................farms, 2012: 6 9 5 9 - 5 18 9 2007: 6 5 2 11 1 15 12 13 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Table 20. Miscellaneous Poultry - Inventory and Sales: 2012 and 2007 [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ : Inventory : Sales :------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Geographic area : Farms : Number : Farms : Number ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ CHUKARS : : State Total : : California..........................2012: 30 98,146 27 264,422 2007: (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) : Counties, 2012 : : Alameda.................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) Butte...................................: 5 17,276 3 30,841 Fresno..................................: 4 6,952 4 18,928 Kern....................................: 1 (D) - - Lassen..................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) Plumas..................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) Riverside...............................: 2 (D) 2 (D) San Diego...............................: 1 (D) 1 (D) San Joaquin.............................: 2 (D) 2 (D) Shasta..................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) : Solano..................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) Stanislaus..............................: 2 (D) 2 (D) Sutter..................................: 4 2,400 4 1,808 Tehama..................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) : DUCKS : : State Total : : California..........................2012: 599 1,399,187 129 3,468,262 2007: 850 802,076 160 6,222,352 : Counties, 2012 : : Alameda.................................: 2 (D) - - Amador..................................: 6 (D) 1 (D) Butte...................................: 7 82 4 48 Calaveras...............................: 7 175 3 100 Contra Costa............................: 15 111 1 (D) Del Norte...............................: 12 216 2 (D) El Dorado...............................: 33 248 4 4 Fresno..................................: 27 (D) 6 (D) Humboldt................................: 10 65 1 (D) Kern....................................: 14 167 2 (D) : Kings...................................: 8 40 - - Lake....................................: 1 (D) - - Lassen..................................: 6 19 2 (D) Los Angeles.............................: 24 259 4 (D) Madera..................................: 9 (D) 1 (D) Marin...................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) Mariposa................................: 2 (D) - - Mendocino...............................: 17 94 3 36 Merced..................................: 7 53 - - Monterey................................: 11 13,133 6 12,019 : Napa....................................: 6 87 3 12 Nevada..................................: 20 211 4 26 Placer..................................: 22 130 6 25 Plumas..................................: 5 18 3 3 Riverside...............................: 30 15,588 9 15,520 Sacramento..............................: 36 845 12 461 San Bernardino..........................: 22 (D) 2 (D) San Diego...............................: 18 5,181 8 3,439 San Joaquin.............................: 12 (D) 5 (D) San Luis Obispo.........................: 25 282 1 (D) : San Mateo...............................: 6 58 2 (D) Santa Clara.............................: 8 36 - - Santa Cruz..............................: 10 52 - - Shasta..................................: 10 35 1 (D) Siskiyou................................: 12 376 1 (D) Solano..................................: 6 26 2 (D) Sonoma..................................: 34 (D) 8 (D) Stanislaus..............................: 20 295 1 (D) Sutter..................................: 1 (D) - - Tehama..................................: 18 224 7 (D) : Trinity.................................: 10 51 2 (D) Tulare..................................: 9 228 1 (D) Tuolumne................................: 5 35 - - Ventura.................................: 16 135 3 25 Yolo....................................: 16 837 7 430 Yuba....................................: 3 36 - - : EMUS : : State Total : : California..........................2012: 141 1,670 8 76 2007: 243 1,770 40 410 : Counties, 2012 : : Butte...................................: 4 20 - - Calaveras...............................: 3 12 - - Colusa..................................: 2 (D) - - Contra Costa............................: 6 (D) - - El Dorado...............................: 9 67 4 14 Fresno..................................: 2 (D) - - Glenn...................................: 2 (D) - - Humboldt................................: 2 (D) - - Kern....................................: 4 74 2 (D) ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ --continued Table 20. Miscellaneous Poultry - Inventory and Sales: 2012 and 2007 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ : Inventory : Sales :------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Geographic area : Farms : Number : Farms : Number ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ EMUS - Con. : : Counties, 2012 - Con. : : Kings...................................: 1 (D) - - Los Angeles.............................: 9 52 - - Madera..................................: 8 20 - - Mariposa................................: 2 (D) - - Mendocino...............................: 6 39 - - Modoc...................................: 2 (D) - - Monterey................................: 2 (D) 1 (D) Nevada..................................: 14 94 - - Placer..................................: 4 64 - - Riverside...............................: 5 13 - - : San Bernardino..........................: 7 14 - - San Diego...............................: 14 837 - - San Joaquin.............................: 3 19 - - San Luis Obispo.........................: 7 14 - - Santa Clara.............................: 5 15 - - Shasta..................................: 2 (D) - - Solano..................................: 6 22 1 (D) Sonoma..................................: 3 9 - - Tehama..................................: 2 (D) - - Tulare..................................: 1 (D) - - : Yolo....................................: 3 24 - - Yuba....................................: 1 (D) - - : GEESE : : State Total : : California..........................2012: 355 7,079 71 (D) 2007: 672 8,084 76 1,844 : Counties, 2012 : : Alameda.................................: 6 22 3 3 Butte...................................: 6 32 1 (D) Calaveras...............................: 6 26 2 (D) Colusa..................................: 4 78 - - Contra Costa............................: 16 62 3 6 Del Norte...............................: 1 (D) - - El Dorado...............................: 9 46 2 (D) Fresno..................................: 20 169 - - Humboldt................................: 6 207 3 42 Inyo....................................: 1 (D) - - : Kern....................................: 5 14 - - Lake....................................: 4 16 2 (D) Lassen..................................: 3 17 2 (D) Los Angeles.............................: 14 103 5 17 Madera..................................: 11 57 5 5 Mariposa................................: 2 (D) - - Mendocino...............................: 14 36 3 12 Merced..................................: 4 32 - - Modoc...................................: 2 (D) - - Monterey................................: 8 4,012 5 (D) : Napa....................................: 3 7 - - Nevada..................................: 6 42 3 4 Placer..................................: 10 63 - - Plumas..................................: 7 36 - - Riverside...............................: 5 53 3 (D) Sacramento..............................: 31 339 8 99 San Bernardino..........................: 12 60 - - San Diego...............................: 21 416 4 223 San Joaquin.............................: 9 165 1 (D) San Luis Obispo.........................: 18 91 - - : San Mateo...............................: 1 (D) - - Santa Clara.............................: 1 (D) - - Shasta..................................: 5 34 - - Siskiyou................................: 4 (D) 1 (D) Solano..................................: 3 9 - - Sonoma..................................: 12 180 5 74 Stanislaus..............................: 17 117 4 12 Sutter..................................: 4 32 - - Tehama..................................: 14 128 - - Trinity.................................: 5 30 - - : Tulare..................................: 6 20 - - Ventura.................................: 10 27 - - Yolo....................................: 6 120 3 20 Yuba....................................: 3 18 3 24 : GUINEAS : : State Total : : California..........................2012: 221 3,085 45 1,418 2007: (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) : Counties, 2012 : : Alameda.................................: 1 (D) - - Amador..................................: 7 106 - - Butte...................................: 10 90 3 42 Calaveras...............................: 8 44 2 (D) Contra Costa............................: 6 18 - - Del Norte...............................: 1 (D) - - El Dorado...............................: 4 12 - - ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ --continued Table 20. Miscellaneous Poultry - Inventory and Sales: 2012 and 2007 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ : Inventory : Sales :------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Geographic area : Farms : Number : Farms : Number ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ GUINEAS - Con. : : Counties, 2012 - Con. : : Fresno..................................: 11 30 - - Humboldt................................: 3 9 - - Kern....................................: 5 69 - - Kings...................................: 3 34 1 (D) Lake....................................: 3 (D) 1 (D) Lassen..................................: 1 (D) - - Madera..................................: 6 20 - - Marin...................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) Mariposa................................: 2 (D) - - Mendocino...............................: 6 36 - - : Modoc...................................: 2 (D) - - Monterey................................: 5 221 3 224 Napa....................................: 4 112 2 (D) Nevada..................................: 6 71 3 46 Plumas..................................: 2 (D) - - Riverside...............................: 2 (D) 1 (D) Sacramento..............................: 2 (D) - - San Bernardino..........................: 7 30 - - San Diego...............................: 15 120 3 36 San Joaquin.............................: 8 176 1 (D) : San Luis Obispo.........................: 15 116 4 (D) San Mateo...............................: 1 (D) 1 (D) Santa Clara.............................: 1 (D) 1 (D) Santa Cruz..............................: 1 (D) - - Shasta..................................: 6 105 1 (D) Siskiyou................................: 4 60 2 (D) Solano..................................: 5 88 3 24 Sonoma..................................: 7 27 - - Stanislaus..............................: 3 13 - - Sutter..................................: 3 7 - - : Tehama..................................: 11 45 - - Trinity.................................: 7 11 3 30 Tulare..................................: 7 44 4 36 Ventura.................................: 6 18 1 (D) Yolo....................................: 4 33 1 (D) Yuba....................................: 9 154 3 50 : OSTRICHES : : State Total : : California..........................2012: 23 142 2 (D) 2007: 74 1,860 13 569 : Counties, 2012 : : Butte...................................: 2 (D) - - Contra Costa............................: 1 (D) 1 (D) Kern....................................: 3 30 - - Nevada..................................: 2 (D) - - San Bernardino..........................: 4 12 - - San Diego...............................: 7 25 - - San Joaquin.............................: 1 (D) - - Santa Clara.............................: 1 (D) - - Santa Cruz..............................: 1 (D) 1 (D) Yuba....................................: 1 (D) - - : PEACOCKS OR PEAHENS : : State Total : : California..........................2012: 179 1,422 29 181 2007: (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) : Counties, 2012 : : Alameda.................................: 5 11 - - Butte...................................: 4 20 6 36 Calaveras...............................: 8 42 - - El Dorado...............................: 5 24 - - Fresno..................................: 3 37 - - Humboldt................................: 9 75 - - Kern....................................: 4 14 - - Kings...................................: 4 14 - - Lake....................................: 2 (D) - - Lassen..................................: 5 11 - - : Los Angeles.............................: 9 128 - - Mendocino...............................: 2 (D) - - Merced..................................: 1 (D) - - Modoc...................................: 2 (D) - - Monterey................................: 5 26 2 (D) Napa....................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) Nevada..................................: 4 38 2 (D) Orange..................................: 2 (D) - - Plumas..................................: 5 90 - - Riverside...............................: 18 120 5 28 : Sacramento..............................: 6 64 4 20 San Bernardino..........................: 5 20 - - San Diego...............................: 18 72 3 21 San Joaquin.............................: 6 30 - - San Luis Obispo.........................: 7 104 - - Santa Clara.............................: 7 65 - - Shasta..................................: 2 (D) - - Siskiyou................................: 2 (D) - - ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ --continued Table 20. Miscellaneous Poultry - Inventory and Sales: 2012 and 2007 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ : Inventory : Sales :------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Geographic area : Farms : Number : Farms : Number ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ PEACOCKS OR PEAHENS - Con. : : Counties, 2012 - Con. : : Solano..................................: 3 6 3 6 Sonoma..................................: 5 110 - - Stanislaus..............................: 5 53 1 (D) Sutter..................................: 1 (D) - - Tehama..................................: 3 27 - - Tulare..................................: 1 (D) - - Ventura.................................: 4 10 1 (D) Yuba....................................: 5 7 - - : PHEASANTS : : State Total : : California..........................2012: 94 255,694 49 432,478 2007: 183 217,584 74 532,765 : Counties, 2012 : : Amador..................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) Butte...................................: 10 91,097 8 187,746 Contra Costa............................: 6 48 - - Fresno..................................: 6 (D) 6 (D) Glenn...................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) Kern....................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) Kings...................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) Lake....................................: 1 (D) - - Lassen..................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) Los Angeles.............................: 6 44 2 (D) : Monterey................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) Napa....................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) Plumas..................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) Riverside...............................: 10 79 1 (D) Sacramento..............................: 1 (D) - - San Bernardino..........................: 1 (D) 1 (D) San Diego...............................: 8 49 - - San Joaquin.............................: 2 (D) 2 (D) San Luis Obispo.........................: 1 (D) 1 (D) Santa Clara.............................: 2 (D) - - : Shasta..................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) Solano..................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) Sonoma..................................: 2 (D) - - Stanislaus..............................: 8 40,092 2 (D) Sutter..................................: 6 16,280 6 13,020 Tehama..................................: 1 (D) - - Yolo....................................: 9 70,026 6 77,654 : PIGEONS OR SQUAB : : State Total : : California..........................2012: 177 170,461 90 523,461 2007: 326 170,473 126 657,592 : Counties, 2012 : : Alameda.................................: 2 (D) - - Butte...................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) Calaveras...............................: 2 (D) - - Colusa..................................: 2 (D) - - Contra Costa............................: 8 108 - - Fresno..................................: 1 (D) - - Kern....................................: 2 (D) - - Lake....................................: 5 229 3 110 Los Angeles.............................: 14 1,651 5 2,306 Mendocino...............................: 2 (D) 2 (D) : Merced..................................: 3 4,920 3 15,777 Napa....................................: 1 (D) - - Nevada..................................: 3 60 - - Orange..................................: 4 520 4 32 Placer..................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) Plumas..................................: 5 5 - - Riverside...............................: 10 1,056 5 450 Sacramento..............................: 8 7,150 8 4,235 San Bernardino..........................: 4 24 - - San Diego...............................: 8 (D) 1 (D) : San Joaquin.............................: 11 8,908 4 24,566 San Luis Obispo.........................: 7 166 3 30 Shasta..................................: 4 216 - - Siskiyou................................: 6 (D) 1 (D) Sonoma..................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) Stanislaus..............................: 50 112,978 43 436,763 Tehama..................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) Tulare..................................: 4 96 - - Tuolumne................................: 3 45 - - Ventura.................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) Yolo....................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) : QUAIL : : State Total : : California..........................2012: 117 392,894 54 576,039 2007: 152 261,032 44 531,423 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ --continued Table 20. Miscellaneous Poultry - Inventory and Sales: 2012 and 2007 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ : Inventory : Sales :------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Geographic area : Farms : Number : Farms : Number ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ QUAIL - Con. : : Counties, 2012 : : Alameda.................................: 2 (D) - - Amador..................................: 3 950 3 710 Butte...................................: 7 22,746 5 18,322 Colusa..................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) El Dorado...............................: 4 36 - - Fresno..................................: 6 1,234 5 2,492 Kern....................................: 8 1,640 5 1,300 Lassen..................................: 4 8 - - Los Angeles.............................: 6 120 - - Madera..................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) : Riverside...............................: 12 4,083 7 13,050 San Bernardino..........................: 3 (D) 1 (D) San Diego...............................: 10 66,070 4 20,700 San Joaquin.............................: 9 11,946 5 9,650 San Luis Obispo.........................: 8 624 - - Santa Clara.............................: 2 (D) - - Siskiyou................................: 5 106 1 (D) Solano..................................: 4 (D) 4 (D) Stanislaus..............................: 4 65,002 3 32,858 Sutter..................................: 6 84 2 (D) Yolo....................................: 10 284 5 8,050 : RHEAS : : State Total : : California..........................2012: 9 40 5 22 2007: (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) : Counties, 2012 : : Modoc...................................: 3 6 3 (D) Riverside...............................: 2 (D) 2 (D) San Bernardino..........................: 4 (D) - - : ROOSTERS : : State Total : : California..........................2012: 344 12,461 65 9,321 2007: (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) : Counties, 2012 : : Alameda.................................: 2 (D) 1 (D) Amador..................................: 2 (D) - - Butte...................................: 6 (D) 3 6 Calaveras...............................: 8 24 - - Contra Costa............................: 2 (D) - - Del Norte...............................: 5 15 1 (D) El Dorado...............................: 12 75 - - Fresno..................................: 25 1,887 9 4,000 Glenn...................................: 9 377 6 190 Humboldt................................: 1 (D) - - : Kern....................................: 5 33 - - Kings...................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) Lake....................................: 13 19 3 6 Lassen..................................: 4 10 - - Los Angeles.............................: 19 368 5 505 Madera..................................: 2 (D) - - Marin...................................: 3 6 - - Mariposa................................: 4 42 4 30 Mendocino...............................: 2 (D) - - Merced..................................: 2 (D) - - : Modoc...................................: 1 (D) - - Monterey................................: 11 22 - - Napa....................................: 4 125 2 (D) Nevada..................................: 1 (D) - - Orange..................................: 3 9 - - Placer..................................: 16 67 - - Riverside...............................: 20 174 4 12 Sacramento..............................: 6 16 2 (D) San Benito..............................: 5 572 2 (D) San Bernardino..........................: 8 12 - - : San Diego...............................: 13 1,044 4 802 San Luis Obispo.........................: 10 90 6 112 San Mateo...............................: 1 (D) - - Santa Barbara...........................: 2 (D) - - Santa Clara.............................: 10 36 2 (D) Santa Cruz..............................: 7 40 - - Shasta..................................: 16 44 - - Siskiyou................................: 5 26 2 (D) Solano..................................: 4 (D) 1 (D) Sonoma..................................: 22 70 4 19 : Stanislaus..............................: 17 (D) 2 (D) Sutter..................................: 1 (D) - - Tehama..................................: 8 28 - - Trinity.................................: 2 (D) - - Tulare..................................: 6 (D) 1 (D) Tuolumne................................: 10 40 - - Ventura.................................: 1 (D) - - Yolo....................................: 6 12 - - Yuba....................................: 1 (D) - - ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ --continued Table 20. Miscellaneous Poultry - Inventory and Sales: 2012 and 2007 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ : Inventory : Sales :------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Geographic area : Farms : Number : Farms : Number ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ OTHER POULTRY (SEE TEXT) : : State Total : : California..........................2012: 102 47,293 33 (D) 2007: 969 149,888 187 401,313 : Counties, 2012 : : Alameda.................................: 2 (D) - - Amador..................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) Butte...................................: - - 2 (D) Colusa..................................: 1 (D) - - El Dorado...............................: 2 (D) - - Fresno..................................: 10 99 1 (D) Kern....................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) Kings...................................: 3 37 1 (D) Los Angeles.............................: 11 645 2 (D) Madera..................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) : Mendocino...............................: 7 122 4 60 Napa....................................: 2 (D) 1 (D) Placer..................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) Plumas..................................: 5 70 - - Riverside...............................: 8 151 2 (D) Sacramento..............................: 7 36 - - San Bernardino..........................: 4 (D) 4 900 San Diego...............................: 11 (D) 4 2,042 San Joaquin.............................: 2 (D) - - Shasta..................................: 11 173 5 200 : Siskiyou................................: 2 (D) - - Stanislaus..............................: 4 16 - - Ventura.................................: 2 (D) - - Yolo....................................: 2 (D) 1 (D) : POULTRY HATCHED (SEE TEXT) : : State Total : : California..........................2012: (X) (X) 1,146 291,277,897 2007: (X) (X) 853 357,300,976 : Counties, 2012 : : Alameda.................................: (X) (X) 5 74 Amador..................................: (X) (X) 23 2,566 Butte...................................: (X) (X) 38 249,436 Calaveras...............................: (X) (X) 20 1,107 Colusa..................................: (X) (X) 3 288,010 Contra Costa............................: (X) (X) 9 94 Del Norte...............................: (X) (X) 9 162 El Dorado...............................: (X) (X) 49 1,172 Fresno..................................: (X) (X) 43 (D) Glenn...................................: (X) (X) 4 76 : Humboldt................................: (X) (X) 13 276 Kern....................................: (X) (X) 21 697 Kings...................................: (X) (X) 3 (D) Lake....................................: (X) (X) 20 567 Lassen..................................: (X) (X) 10 536 Los Angeles.............................: (X) (X) 36 (D) Madera..................................: (X) (X) 17 (D) Marin...................................: (X) (X) 3 (D) Mariposa................................: (X) (X) 4 38 Mendocino...............................: (X) (X) 30 2,845 : Merced..................................: (X) (X) 9 (D) Modoc...................................: (X) (X) 12 337 Monterey................................: (X) (X) 11 1,000,286 Napa....................................: (X) (X) 20 702 Nevada..................................: (X) (X) 25 1,952 Orange..................................: (X) (X) 4 108 Placer..................................: (X) (X) 25 509 Plumas..................................: (X) (X) 14 511 Riverside...............................: (X) (X) 68 19,559 Sacramento..............................: (X) (X) 41 8,362 : San Bernardino..........................: (X) (X) 21 1,306,452 San Diego...............................: (X) (X) 56 777,249 San Joaquin.............................: (X) (X) 26 1,185,733 San Luis Obispo.........................: (X) (X) 45 1,095 San Mateo...............................: (X) (X) 6 217 Santa Barbara...........................: (X) (X) 15 371 Santa Clara.............................: (X) (X) 19 426 Santa Cruz..............................: (X) (X) 8 (D) Shasta..................................: (X) (X) 24 823 Siskiyou................................: (X) (X) 19 1,574 : Solano..................................: (X) (X) 17 (D) Sonoma..................................: (X) (X) 60 (D) Stanislaus..............................: (X) (X) 61 (D) Sutter..................................: (X) (X) 17 15,311 Tehama..................................: (X) (X) 33 1,248 Trinity.................................: (X) (X) 27 1,344 Tulare..................................: (X) (X) 34 (D) Tuolumne................................: (X) (X) 9 46 Ventura.................................: (X) (X) 15 208 Yolo....................................: (X) (X) 30 42,400 Yuba....................................: (X) (X) 15 1,317 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Table 21. Colonies of Bees - Inventory and Honey Sales: 2012 and 2007 [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 : : California..........................2012: 1,890 945,589 991 12,088,653 719 20,485 2007: 1,155 655,817 573 15,059,214 (NA) (NA) : Counties, 2012 : : Alameda.................................: 28 110,586 13 17,450 13 66 Alpine..................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) Amador..................................: 17 29 9 5,088 9 9 Butte...................................: 57 24,423 24 236,300 18 425 Calaveras...............................: 11 58 9 1,505 7 2 Colusa..................................: 13 4,855 3 (D) 1 (D) Contra Costa............................: 33 229 18 4,760 9 8 Del Norte...............................: 5 40 2 (D) 2 (D) El Dorado...............................: 80 533 21 12,309 17 20 Fresno..................................: 68 57,324 36 617,139 32 1,013 : Glenn...................................: 24 51,140 3 11,210 2 (D) Humboldt................................: 38 213 20 22,096 9 44 Imperial................................: 18 33,126 15 745,871 15 1,253 Inyo....................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) Kern....................................: 41 129,731 16 986,076 16 1,787 Kings...................................: 15 17,049 8 478,772 8 330 Lake....................................: 23 165 9 8,308 7 16 Los Angeles.............................: 50 9,441 33 398,544 26 766 Madera..................................: 32 66,088 13 488,531 13 686 Marin...................................: 50 204 42 6,407 27 9 : Mariposa................................: 5 24 2 (D) 2 (D) Mendocino...............................: 46 381 24 (D) 5 (D) Merced..................................: 75 67,350 45 1,451,008 42 2,416 Modoc...................................: 3 605 3 15,840 3 22 Mono....................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) Monterey................................: 28 1,007 18 52,546 17 107 Napa....................................: 54 615 31 41,430 10 (D) Nevada..................................: 26 2,212 16 19,394 8 23 Orange..................................: 5 (D) 5 22,200 5 73 Placer..................................: 33 14,533 24 54,093 19 27 : Riverside...............................: 64 23,486 27 186,189 18 313 Sacramento..............................: 52 24,510 30 105,860 19 150 San Benito..............................: 6 (D) 2 (D) 1 (D) San Bernardino..........................: 29 54,673 20 904,780 18 1,448 San Diego...............................: 114 43,711 53 639,559 32 1,069 San Francisco...........................: 1 (D) 2 (D) 2 (D) San Joaquin.............................: 27 10,597 9 265,662 11 483 San Luis Obispo.........................: 51 643 18 20,362 12 26 San Mateo...............................: 18 332 13 15,245 11 35 Santa Barbara...........................: 40 (D) 17 (D) 11 (D) : Santa Clara.............................: 20 233 12 9,128 8 15 Santa Cruz..............................: 36 1,666 21 50,792 20 86 Shasta..................................: 30 36,305 19 367,542 17 511 Sierra..................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Siskiyou................................: 22 1,519 11 60,050 11 119 Solano..................................: 17 6,992 13 86,008 8 154 Sonoma..................................: 183 2,956 106 46,928 63 78 Stanislaus..............................: 70 25,673 29 375,005 22 503 Sutter..................................: 16 16,176 2 (D) 2 (D) Tehama..................................: 13 14,427 3 14,131 3 28 : Trinity.................................: 19 76 9 1,652 7 5 Tulare..................................: 59 47,855 38 2,412,383 28 4,816 Tuolumne................................: 19 265 19 7,979 6 5 Ventura.................................: 45 7,886 24 169,472 16 301 Yolo....................................: 42 23,261 21 230,372 21 449 Yuba....................................: 15 1,828 7 1,706 7 3 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1/ Data are for farms with production, not necessarily sold. Table 22. Aquaculture Sales: 2012 and 2007 [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : Farms with : :: : Farms with : : aquaculture : Value :: : aquaculture : Value Geographic area : sold : ($1,000) :: Geographic area : sold : ($1,000) --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- CATFISH : :: CRUSTACEANS : : :: : State Total : :: State Total : : :: : California....................................2012: 60 10,593 :: California....................................2012: 1 (D) 2007: 58 12,529 :: 2007: 4 (D) : :: : Counties, 2012 : :: Counties, 2012 : : :: : Fresno............................................: 3 (D) :: Sacramento........................................: 1 (D) Imperial..........................................: 2 (D) :: : Inyo..............................................: 4 10 :: MOLLUSKS : Kern..............................................: 6 1,513 :: : Los Angeles.......................................: 2 (D) :: State Total : Madera............................................: 2 (D) :: : Merced............................................: 4 626 :: California....................................2012: 27 17,369 Modoc.............................................: 1 (D) :: 2007: 23 11,724 Riverside.........................................: 1 (D) :: : Sacramento........................................: 5 (D) :: Counties, 2012 : : :: : San Joaquin.......................................: 2 (D) :: Alameda...........................................: 2 (D) Santa Clara.......................................: 1 (D) :: Humboldt..........................................: 7 2,660 Shasta............................................: 2 (D) :: Marin.............................................: 5 4,998 Stanislaus........................................: 11 1,568 :: Monterey..........................................: 1 (D) Sutter............................................: 1 (D) :: Sacramento........................................: 1 (D) Tehama............................................: 7 784 :: San Diego.........................................: 1 (D) Tulare............................................: 2 (D) :: San Luis Obispo...................................: 7 6,919 Yolo..............................................: 2 (D) :: Santa Barbara.....................................: 3 573 Yuba..............................................: 2 (D) :: : : :: ORNAMENTAL FISH : TROUT : :: : : :: State Total : State Total : :: : : :: California....................................2012: 46 5,302 California....................................2012: 49 17,749 :: 2007: 55 13,415 2007: 43 17,913 :: : : :: Counties, 2012 : Counties, 2012 : :: : : :: Fresno............................................: 1 (D) Amador............................................: 2 (D) :: Glenn.............................................: 2 (D) Butte.............................................: 2 (D) :: Humboldt..........................................: 1 (D) El Dorado.........................................: 2 (D) :: Inyo..............................................: 4 60 Fresno............................................: 1 (D) :: Los Angeles.......................................: 5 100 Humboldt..........................................: 2 (D) :: Madera............................................: 6 (D) Inyo..............................................: 5 (D) :: Mendocino.........................................: 1 (D) Kern..............................................: 1 (D) :: Orange............................................: 2 (D) Lassen............................................: 2 (D) :: Riverside.........................................: 10 121 Merced............................................: 1 (D) :: Sacramento........................................: 2 (D) Mono..............................................: 3 (D) :: : : :: San Diego.........................................: 5 137 Napa..............................................: 1 (D) :: Santa Cruz........................................: 2 (D) Plumas............................................: 4 51 :: Sonoma............................................: 1 (D) Sacramento........................................: 1 (D) :: Stanislaus........................................: 3 1 San Bernardino....................................: 3 988 :: Ventura...........................................: 1 (D) San Joaquin.......................................: 2 (D) :: : Shasta............................................: 5 3,181 :: SPORT OR GAME FISH : Siskiyou..........................................: 3 (D) :: : Sonoma............................................: 3 265 :: State Total : Tehama............................................: 1 (D) :: : Trinity...........................................: 1 (D) :: California....................................2012: 8 4,937 : :: 2007: 27 3,871 Tuolumne..........................................: 3 (D) :: : Ventura...........................................: 1 (D) :: Counties, 2012 : : :: : OTHER FOOD FISH (SEE TEXT) : :: Merced............................................: 1 (D) : :: Sacramento........................................: 2 (D) State Total : :: San Joaquin.......................................: 2 (D) : :: Shasta............................................: 2 (D) California....................................2012: 49 28,218 :: Sonoma............................................: 1 (D) 2007: 32 20,200 :: : : :: OTHER AQUACULTURE PRODUCTS (SEE TEXT) : Counties, 2012 : :: : : :: State Total : Butte.............................................: 4 436 :: : Fresno............................................: 2 (D) :: California....................................2012: 36 18,709 Imperial..........................................: 1 (D) :: 2007: 20 13,835 Marin.............................................: 2 (D) :: : Merced............................................: 3 285 :: Counties, 2012 : Modoc.............................................: 1 (D) :: : Monterey..........................................: 2 (D) :: Alameda...........................................: 1 (D) Riverside.........................................: 16 5,684 :: Butte.............................................: 2 (D) Sacramento........................................: 5 10,461 :: Contra Costa......................................: 3 (Z) Santa Clara.......................................: 1 (D) :: Fresno............................................: 1 (D) : :: Humboldt..........................................: 1 (D) Santa Cruz........................................: 1 (D) :: Imperial..........................................: 6 9,605 Shasta............................................: 2 (D) :: Inyo..............................................: 1 (D) Siskiyou..........................................: 2 (D) :: Plumas............................................: 4 38 Stanislaus........................................: 5 1,400 :: Riverside.........................................: 4 175 Sutter............................................: 1 (D) :: San Diego.........................................: 1 (D) Trinity...........................................: 1 (D) :: : : :: San Luis Obispo...................................: 2 (D) BAITFISH : :: Santa Cruz........................................: 2 (D) : :: Stanislaus........................................: 5 501 State Total : :: Sutter............................................: 2 (D) : :: Ventura...........................................: 1 (D) California....................................2012: 6 (D) :: : 2007: 10 (D) :: : : :: : Counties, 2012 : :: : : :: : Lake..............................................: 5 (Z) :: : Shasta............................................: 1 (D) :: : --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Table 23. Miscellaneous Livestock and Animal Specialties - Inventory and Sales: 2012 and 2007 [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : Inventory : Sales :--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : : : : : Value Geographic area : Farms : Number : Farms : Number : ($1,000) -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- ALPACAS : : State Total : : California..........................2012: 468 7,229 110 588 1,147 2007: 466 7,801 126 638 (NA) : Counties, 2012 : : Amador..................................: 5 23 - - - Butte...................................: 10 145 5 56 92 Calaveras...............................: 6 196 4 52 58 Colusa..................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) (D) Contra Costa............................: 1 (D) - - - El Dorado...............................: 22 282 2 (D) (D) Fresno..................................: 12 256 3 10 25 Glenn...................................: 2 (D) - - - Humboldt................................: 6 98 4 8 20 Kern....................................: 11 112 4 40 100 : Lake....................................: 3 96 1 (D) (D) Lassen..................................: 4 55 - - - Los Angeles.............................: 26 417 8 23 48 Madera..................................: 6 136 - - - Marin...................................: 2 (D) - - - Mariposa................................: 2 (D) - - - Mendocino...............................: 3 12 - - - Merced..................................: 6 (D) 2 (D) (D) Monterey................................: 15 187 1 (D) (D) Napa....................................: 2 (D) - - - : Nevada..................................: 20 405 3 11 31 Placer..................................: 28 307 6 28 36 Plumas..................................: 4 32 - - - Riverside...............................: 31 408 12 55 110 Sacramento..............................: 7 103 - - - San Benito..............................: 2 (D) 2 (D) (D) San Bernardino..........................: 5 86 2 (D) (D) San Diego...............................: 16 143 8 36 54 San Joaquin.............................: 12 129 2 (D) (D) San Luis Obispo.........................: 23 331 5 23 40 : San Mateo...............................: 10 43 - - - Santa Barbara...........................: 15 244 1 (D) (D) Santa Clara.............................: 8 181 1 (D) (D) Santa Cruz..............................: 11 170 - - - Shasta..................................: 4 110 4 16 23 Siskiyou................................: 8 170 1 (D) (D) Solano..................................: 11 138 1 (D) (D) Sonoma..................................: 10 120 3 17 29 Stanislaus..............................: 14 228 6 47 128 Sutter..................................: 5 121 4 8 14 : Tehama..................................: 17 151 4 18 45 Trinity.................................: 6 64 - - - Tulare..................................: 5 43 - - - Tuolumne................................: 13 171 1 (D) (D) Ventura.................................: 19 591 6 44 121 Yolo....................................: 11 316 3 20 40 Yuba....................................: 8 35 - - - : BISON : : State Total : : California..........................2012: 87 1,465 18 195 466 2007: 168 2,441 38 433 (NA) : Counties, 2012 : : Calaveras...............................: 1 (D) - - - Colusa..................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) (D) Del Norte...............................: 1 (D) - - - El Dorado...............................: 5 15 - - - Fresno..................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) (D) Glenn...................................: 2 (D) 1 (D) (D) Humboldt................................: 1 (D) - - - Kern....................................: 3 13 - - - Lassen..................................: 2 (D) 1 (D) (D) Madera..................................: 7 17 - - - : Mariposa................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) (D) Mendocino...............................: 2 (D) - - - Modoc...................................: 2 (D) - - - Mono....................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) (D) Monterey................................: 3 8 - - - Napa....................................: 2 (D) - - - Nevada..................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) (D) Placer..................................: 1 (D) - - - Plumas..................................: 1 (D) - - - Riverside...............................: 1 (D) - - - : Sacramento..............................: 2 (D) - - - San Benito..............................: 4 270 - - - San Bernardino..........................: 5 (D) 1 (D) (D) San Diego...............................: 5 66 3 25 34 San Luis Obispo.........................: 4 8 - - - Santa Barbara...........................: 1 (D) 1 (D) (D) Santa Clara.............................: 1 (D) 1 (D) (D) Shasta..................................: 1 (D) - - - Siskiyou................................: 2 (D) 1 (D) (D) -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 23. Miscellaneous Livestock and Animal Specialties - Inventory and Sales: 2012 and 2007 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : Inventory : Sales :--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : : : : : Value Geographic area : Farms : Number : Farms : Number : ($1,000) -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- BISON - Con. : : Counties, 2012 - Con. : : Solano..................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) (D) Sonoma..................................: 4 14 - - - Tehama..................................: 5 (D) 2 (D) (D) Tulare..................................: 6 30 - - - Ventura.................................: 3 7 - - - Yuba....................................: 3 (D) - - - : DEER IN CAPTIVITY : : State Total : : California..........................2012: 25 663 6 66 47 2007: 27 1,339 15 324 (NA) : Counties, 2012 : : Butte...................................: 1 (D) - - - Contra Costa............................: 6 36 - - - Fresno..................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) (D) Los Angeles.............................: 2 (D) - - - Nevada..................................: 2 (D) - - - San Luis Obispo.........................: 3 99 1 (D) (D) Shasta..................................: 4 36 - - - Tehama..................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) (D) Tulare..................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) (D) Ventura.................................: 4 208 2 (D) (D) : LLAMAS : : State Total : : California..........................2012: 763 3,824 57 223 184 2007: 1,386 6,868 154 557 (NA) : Counties, 2012 : : Alameda.................................: 10 23 - - - Amador..................................: 11 18 - - - Butte...................................: 24 151 2 (D) (D) Calaveras...............................: 16 105 - - - Colusa..................................: 11 22 - - - Contra Costa............................: 16 40 - - - El Dorado...............................: 35 215 4 9 6 Fresno..................................: 20 105 - - - Glenn...................................: 7 16 - - - Humboldt................................: 14 48 - - - : Inyo....................................: 3 13 2 (D) (D) Kern....................................: 7 25 - - - Lake....................................: 4 10 1 (D) (D) Lassen..................................: 5 15 - - - Los Angeles.............................: 29 78 2 (D) (D) Madera..................................: 21 172 1 (D) (D) Marin...................................: 1 (D) - - - Mariposa................................: 6 23 - - - Mendocino...............................: 16 70 1 (D) (D) Merced..................................: 1 (D) - - - : Modoc...................................: 11 51 - - - Monterey................................: 11 18 - - - Napa....................................: 6 10 - - - Nevada..................................: 33 260 4 21 (D) Orange..................................: 2 (D) - - - Placer..................................: 42 291 5 24 24 Plumas..................................: 11 (D) - - - Riverside...............................: 48 288 7 39 25 Sacramento..............................: 34 86 - - - San Bernardino..........................: 11 20 - - - : San Diego...............................: 22 185 4 20 15 San Joaquin.............................: 18 65 3 (D) 3 San Luis Obispo.........................: 37 177 1 (D) (D) San Mateo...............................: 8 18 - - - Santa Barbara...........................: 7 65 2 (D) (D) Santa Clara.............................: 4 18 - - - Santa Cruz..............................: 3 30 - - - Shasta..................................: 12 121 2 (D) (D) Siskiyou................................: 14 60 2 (D) (D) Solano..................................: 35 239 7 25 16 : Sonoma..................................: 38 222 3 10 6 Stanislaus..............................: 25 71 - - - Tehama..................................: 21 34 - - - Trinity.................................: 8 41 - - - Tulare..................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) (D) Tuolumne................................: 11 121 1 (D) (D) Ventura.................................: 13 34 - - - Yolo....................................: 10 28 - - - Yuba....................................: 9 34 1 (D) (D) : RABBITS, LIVE (SEE TEXT) : : State Total : : California..........................2012: 378 20,869 149 20,777 414 2007: (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 23. Miscellaneous Livestock and Animal Specialties - Inventory and Sales: 2012 and 2007 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : Inventory : Sales :--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : : : : : Value Geographic area : Farms : Number : Farms : Number : ($1,000) -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- RABBITS, LIVE (SEE TEXT) - Con. : : Counties, 2012 : : Alameda.................................: 4 20 4 48 (Z) Amador..................................: 7 145 2 (D) (D) Butte...................................: 14 324 11 86 1 Calaveras...............................: 6 40 1 (D) (D) Colusa..................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) (D) Contra Costa............................: 9 230 1 (D) (D) Del Norte...............................: 2 (D) 1 (D) (D) El Dorado...............................: 8 136 - - - Fresno..................................: 9 274 2 (D) (D) Glenn...................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) (D) : Humboldt................................: 3 23 2 (D) (D) Kern....................................: 14 49 1 (D) (D) Kings...................................: 4 10 - - - Lake....................................: 8 (D) 7 (D) (D) Lassen..................................: 5 23 2 (D) (D) Los Angeles.............................: 15 134 6 176 3 Madera..................................: 16 207 - - - Marin...................................: 3 280 1 (D) (D) Mendocino...............................: 14 476 10 630 10 Merced..................................: 11 124 4 920 9 : Monterey................................: 5 126 2 (D) (D) Napa....................................: 5 (D) - - - Nevada..................................: 6 238 3 80 2 Placer..................................: 5 19 3 30 (Z) Plumas..................................: 5 265 5 1,200 9 Riverside...............................: 21 (D) 8 (D) (D) Sacramento..............................: 20 428 7 570 6 San Benito..............................: 3 80 3 563 5 San Bernardino..........................: 14 (D) 2 (D) (D) San Diego...............................: 14 171 5 170 3 : San Joaquin.............................: 10 1,801 13 5,523 63 San Luis Obispo.........................: 19 61 3 30 (Z) San Mateo...............................: 1 (D) - - - Santa Barbara...........................: 7 7 - - - Santa Clara.............................: 4 493 4 (D) (D) Santa Cruz..............................: 1 (D) 1 (D) (D) Shasta..................................: 5 37 2 (D) (D) Siskiyou................................: 3 89 1 (D) (D) Solano..................................: 6 73 3 12 (Z) Sonoma..................................: 17 514 9 261 6 : Stanislaus..............................: 27 1,116 8 (D) (D) Tehama..................................: 7 (D) 3 (D) (D) Trinity.................................: 6 52 2 (D) (D) Tulare..................................: 3 80 1 (D) (D) Tuolumne................................: 1 (D) - - - Ventura.................................: 2 (D) 1 (D) (D) Yolo....................................: 4 15 1 (D) (D) Yuba....................................: 1 (D) - - - : OTHER LIVESTOCK (SEE TEXT) : : State Total : : California..........................2012: 151 (X) 71 (X) 29,275 2007: 598 (X) 167 (X) (NA) : Counties, 2012 : : Alameda.................................: - (X) 1 (X) (D) Butte...................................: 5 (X) 4 (X) (D) Contra Costa............................: 2 (X) - (X) - El Dorado...............................: 5 (X) 2 (X) (D) Fresno..................................: 2 (X) 1 (X) (D) Glenn...................................: 2 (X) 3 (X) 16,427 Kern....................................: 3 (X) 1 (X) (D) Lake....................................: 1 (X) 1 (X) (D) Los Angeles.............................: 2 (X) 3 (X) 2 Madera..................................: 12 (X) - (X) - : Marin...................................: 3 (X) - (X) - Mendocino...............................: 2 (X) - (X) - Merced..................................: 1 (X) 1 (X) (D) Modoc...................................: 2 (X) - (X) - Monterey................................: 1 (X) - (X) - Napa....................................: 2 (X) - (X) - Nevada..................................: 3 (X) - (X) - Orange..................................: 2 (X) 2 (X) (D) Placer..................................: 8 (X) 2 (X) (D) Riverside...............................: 14 (X) 7 (X) 122 : Sacramento..............................: 1 (X) - (X) - San Benito..............................: 1 (X) 1 (X) (D) San Bernardino..........................: 14 (X) 12 (X) 4 San Diego...............................: 8 (X) 6 (X) (D) San Joaquin.............................: 2 (X) 3 (X) (D) San Luis Obispo.........................: 3 (X) 1 (X) (D) Santa Barbara...........................: 3 (X) 3 (X) (D) Santa Clara.............................: 4 (X) 3 (X) (Z) Shasta..................................: 3 (X) 2 (X) (D) Siskiyou................................: 4 (X) - (X) - : Solano..................................: 2 (X) 2 (X) (D) Sonoma..................................: 10 (X) 2 (X) (D) -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 23. Miscellaneous Livestock and Animal Specialties - Inventory and Sales: 2012 and 2007 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : Inventory : Sales :--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : : : : : Value Geographic area : Farms : Number : Farms : Number : ($1,000) -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- OTHER LIVESTOCK (SEE : TEXT) - Con. : : Counties, 2012 - Con. : : Stanislaus..............................: 11 (X) 1 (X) (D) Tehama..................................: 6 (X) - (X) - Trinity.................................: 2 (X) - (X) - Tulare..................................: - (X) 2 (X) (D) Tuolumne................................: 3 (X) 3 (X) (D) Ventura.................................: 1 (X) 2 (X) (D) Yuba....................................: 1 (X) - (X) - : OTHER LIVESTOCK PRODUCTS (SEE TEXT) 1/ : : State Total : : California..........................2012: (NA) (NA) 702 (X) 15,290 2007: (NA) (NA) 368 (X) (NA) : Counties, 2012 : : Alameda.................................: (NA) (NA) 3 (X) (D) Amador..................................: (NA) (NA) 5 (X) 2 Butte...................................: (NA) (NA) 10 (X) 369 Calaveras...............................: (NA) (NA) 7 (X) 314 Contra Costa............................: (NA) (NA) 14 (X) 101 Del Norte...............................: (NA) (NA) 3 (X) 5 El Dorado...............................: (NA) (NA) 17 (X) 114 Fresno..................................: (NA) (NA) 17 (X) 302 Glenn...................................: (NA) (NA) 4 (X) 8 Humboldt................................: (NA) (NA) 9 (X) 10 : Kern....................................: (NA) (NA) 19 (X) 501 Kings...................................: (NA) (NA) 5 (X) 7 Lake....................................: (NA) (NA) 2 (X) (D) Lassen..................................: (NA) (NA) 2 (X) (D) Los Angeles.............................: (NA) (NA) 25 (X) 883 Madera..................................: (NA) (NA) 14 (X) 22 Marin...................................: (NA) (NA) 2 (X) (D) Mariposa................................: (NA) (NA) 8 (X) 19 Mendocino...............................: (NA) (NA) 13 (X) 215 Merced..................................: (NA) (NA) 9 (X) 31 : Modoc...................................: (NA) (NA) 8 (X) 4 Monterey................................: (NA) (NA) 12 (X) 38 Napa....................................: (NA) (NA) 12 (X) (D) Nevada..................................: (NA) (NA) 21 (X) 246 Orange..................................: (NA) (NA) 3 (X) 45 Placer..................................: (NA) (NA) 36 (X) 112 Plumas..................................: (NA) (NA) 4 (X) 3 Riverside...............................: (NA) (NA) 49 (X) (D) Sacramento..............................: (NA) (NA) 38 (X) 1,728 San Benito..............................: (NA) (NA) 6 (X) 17 : San Bernardino..........................: (NA) (NA) 28 (X) 61 San Diego...............................: (NA) (NA) 38 (X) 895 San Joaquin.............................: (NA) (NA) 23 (X) 167 San Luis Obispo.........................: (NA) (NA) 23 (X) 743 San Mateo...............................: (NA) (NA) 4 (X) 31 Santa Barbara...........................: (NA) (NA) 18 (X) 690 Santa Clara.............................: (NA) (NA) 7 (X) 18 Santa Cruz..............................: (NA) (NA) 3 (X) (Z) Shasta..................................: (NA) (NA) 11 (X) 35 Sierra..................................: (NA) (NA) 1 (X) (D) : Siskiyou................................: (NA) (NA) 16 (X) (D) Solano..................................: (NA) (NA) 17 (X) 44 Sonoma..................................: (NA) (NA) 26 (X) 217 Stanislaus..............................: (NA) (NA) 23 (X) 333 Sutter..................................: (NA) (NA) 11 (X) (D) Tehama..................................: (NA) (NA) 20 (X) 165 Trinity.................................: (NA) (NA) 9 (X) 5 Tulare..................................: (NA) (NA) 18 (X) 25 Tuolumne................................: (NA) (NA) 3 (X) (D) Ventura.................................: (NA) (NA) 13 (X) 228 : Yolo....................................: (NA) (NA) 5 (X) 7 Yuba....................................: (NA) (NA) 8 (X) 44 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1/Data are for farms with production, not necessarily sold. Table 24. Selected Crops Harvested: 2012 [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : California : Alameda : Alpine : Amador : Butte : Calaveras : Colusa ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Harvested cropland ........................................farms: 53,372 194 3 217 1,510 235 654 acres: 8,007,461 9,901 (D) 8,521 203,573 4,165 263,675 Irrigated ...............................................farms: 47,972 149 3 173 1,391 166 629 acres: 7,371,411 7,635 (D) 6,719 193,721 2,356 252,047 : Barley for grain ..........................................farms: 264 1 - - 1 - 1 acres: 81,954 (D) - - (D) - (D) bushels: 5,312,595 (D) - - (D) - (D) Irrigated ...............................................farms: 144 1 - - 1 - 1 acres: 44,819 (D) - - (D) - (D) Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..............................................: 60 1 - - 1 - - 25 to 99 acres .............................................: 59 - - - - - - 100 to 249 acres ...........................................: 68 - - - - - 1 250 to 499 acres ...........................................: 30 - - - - - - 500 to 999 acres ...........................................: 26 - - - - - - 1,000 acres or more ........................................: 21 - - - - - - : Corn for grain ............................................farms: 733 - - 1 4 - 27 acres: 180,672 - - (D) 499 - 5,799 bushels: 31,922,610 - - (D) 107,291 - 1,173,253 Irrigated ...............................................farms: 733 - - 1 4 - 27 acres: 175,863 - - (D) 499 - 5,799 Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..............................................: 163 - - - - - - 25 to 99 acres .............................................: 211 - - 1 1 - 11 100 to 249 acres ...........................................: 152 - - - 3 - 6 250 to 499 acres ...........................................: 103 - - - - - 7 500 to 999 acres ...........................................: 63 - - - - - 3 1,000 acres or more ........................................: 41 - - - - - - : Corn for silage or greenchop ..............................farms: 1,895 - - 1 5 - - acres: 487,570 - - (D) 300 - - tons: 12,575,973 - - (D) 5,635 - - Irrigated ...............................................farms: 1,802 - - 1 4 - - acres: 461,898 - - (D) (D) - - Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..............................................: 249 - - 1 - - - 25 to 99 acres .............................................: 538 - - - 4 - - 100 to 249 acres ...........................................: 512 - - - 1 - - 250 to 499 acres ...........................................: 329 - - - - - - 500 to 999 acres ...........................................: 180 - - - - - - 1,000 acres or more ........................................: 87 - - - - - - : Cotton, all ...............................................farms: 630 - - - - - 3 acres: 367,766 - - - - - (D) bales: 1,201,860 - - - - - (D) Irrigated ...............................................farms: 630 - - - - - 3 acres: 367,766 - - - - - (D) Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..............................................: 31 - - - - - - 25 to 99 acres .............................................: 102 - - - - - 1 100 to 249 acres ...........................................: 180 - - - - - 1 250 to 499 acres ...........................................: 153 - - - - - 1 500 to 999 acres ...........................................: 90 - - - - - - 1,000 acres or more ........................................: 74 - - - - - - : Dry edible beans, excluding limas .........................farms: 308 - - - 8 - 10 acres: 39,511 - - - 745 - 3,148 cwt: 955,995 - - - 15,085 - 47,898 Irrigated ...............................................farms: 269 - - - 7 - 10 acres: 36,866 - - - (D) - 3,148 Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..............................................: 95 - - - 3 - 2 25 to 99 acres .............................................: 93 - - - - - 2 100 to 249 acres ...........................................: 69 - - - 5 - 2 250 to 499 acres ...........................................: 38 - - - - - 3 500 to 999 acres ...........................................: 11 - - - - - - 1,000 acres or more ........................................: 2 - - - - - 1 : Forage - land used for all hay and : all haylage, grass silage, and : greenchop (see text) .....................................farms: 7,903 40 3 25 138 30 68 acres: 1,670,027 3,296 240 4,248 5,931 787 11,724 tons, dry equivalent: 9,363,421 5,738 540 11,474 19,704 2,043 67,380 Irrigated ...............................................farms: 5,498 8 2 12 89 7 47 acres: 1,346,666 1,302 (D) 3,295 3,160 101 9,088 Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..............................................: 2,621 18 - 11 73 18 17 25 to 99 acres .............................................: 2,274 15 3 8 47 10 16 100 to 249 acres ...........................................: 1,435 2 - 2 15 2 24 250 to 499 acres ...........................................: 728 3 - 1 3 - 5 500 to 999 acres ...........................................: 487 2 - 2 - - 5 1,000 acres or more ........................................: 358 - - 1 - - 1 : Oats for grain ............................................farms: 240 - - - 1 - 1 acres: 25,065 - - - (D) - (D) bushels: 2,246,420 - - - (D) - (D) Irrigated ...............................................farms: 145 - - - - - - acres: 15,901 - - - - - - Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..............................................: 86 - - - - - - 25 to 99 acres .............................................: 75 - - - - - 1 100 to 249 acres ...........................................: 54 - - - 1 - - 250 to 499 acres ...........................................: 16 - - - - - - 500 to 999 acres ...........................................: 7 - - - - - - 1,000 acres or more ........................................: 2 - - - - - - : Peanuts for nuts ..........................................farms: 15 - - - - - - acres: 27 - - - - - - pounds: 84,093 - - - - - - Irrigated ...............................................farms: 15 - - - - - - acres: 27 - - - - - - ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 24. Selected Crops Harvested: 2012 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Contra Costa : Del Norte : El Dorado : Fresno : Glenn : Humboldt : Imperial ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Harvested cropland ........................................farms: 330 53 769 4,480 999 547 337 acres: 33,420 6,321 5,898 992,479 244,761 12,253 466,877 Irrigated ...............................................farms: 263 45 665 4,274 926 370 330 acres: 26,476 5,455 4,351 960,075 227,439 6,016 450,186 : Barley for grain ..........................................farms: 2 - - 25 7 2 4 acres: (D) - - 7,319 762 (D) (D) bushels: (D) - - 478,338 51,457 (D) (D) Irrigated ...............................................farms: 2 - - 16 5 2 3 acres: (D) - - 3,264 (D) (D) (D) Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..............................................: - - - - - 2 2 25 to 99 acres .............................................: - - - 2 3 - 1 100 to 249 acres ...........................................: - - - 16 4 - - 250 to 499 acres ...........................................: - - - 5 - - 1 500 to 999 acres ...........................................: 2 - - - - - - 1,000 acres or more ........................................: - - - 2 - - - : Corn for grain ............................................farms: 4 - 10 29 43 9 4 acres: 1,851 - 18 4,183 7,264 9 580 bushels: 271,181 - 648 816,638 1,570,387 296 95,496 Irrigated ...............................................farms: 4 - 10 29 43 9 4 acres: 1,851 - 18 4,183 7,236 9 580 Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..............................................: - - 10 6 3 9 - 25 to 99 acres .............................................: - - - 11 14 - 3 100 to 249 acres ...........................................: 1 - - 7 16 - - 250 to 499 acres ...........................................: 1 - - 3 9 - 1 500 to 999 acres ...........................................: 2 - - 2 1 - - 1,000 acres or more ........................................: - - - - - - - : Corn for silage or greenchop ..............................farms: 5 - 2 130 42 7 2 acres: 1,342 - (D) 32,438 7,152 227 (D) tons: 28,481 - (D) 795,828 193,219 4,546 (D) Irrigated ...............................................farms: 4 - 2 127 40 2 2 acres: (D) - (D) 31,346 (D) (D) (D) Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..............................................: - - 2 16 6 5 - 25 to 99 acres .............................................: 1 - - 35 14 2 - 100 to 249 acres ...........................................: 2 - - 36 13 - - 250 to 499 acres ...........................................: 2 - - 27 4 - 1 500 to 999 acres ...........................................: - - - 12 5 - - 1,000 acres or more ........................................: - - - 4 - - 1 : Cotton, all ...............................................farms: - - - 226 9 - 5 acres: - - - 106,400 1,610 - 3,073 bales: - - - 372,116 5,230 - 10,239 Irrigated ...............................................farms: - - - 226 9 - 5 acres: - - - 106,400 1,610 - 3,073 Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..............................................: - - - 6 - - - 25 to 99 acres .............................................: - - - 21 4 - 1 100 to 249 acres ...........................................: - - - 64 3 - 1 250 to 499 acres ...........................................: - - - 69 2 - - 500 to 999 acres ...........................................: - - - 41 - - 2 1,000 acres or more ........................................: - - - 25 - - 1 : Dry edible beans, excluding limas .........................farms: - - 4 29 7 13 2 acres: - - 4 5,657 1,455 29 (D) cwt: - - 64 153,176 47,319 485 (D) Irrigated ...............................................farms: - - 4 29 7 3 2 acres: - - 4 5,657 1,455 3 (D) Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..............................................: - - 4 4 - 13 - 25 to 99 acres .............................................: - - - 8 3 - 1 100 to 249 acres ...........................................: - - - 11 1 - 1 250 to 499 acres ...........................................: - - - 4 3 - - 500 to 999 acres ...........................................: - - - 1 - - - 1,000 acres or more ........................................: - - - 1 - - - : Forage - land used for all hay and : all haylage, grass silage, and : greenchop (see text) .....................................farms: 63 25 14 400 208 228 251 acres: 8,879 5,915 327 90,491 27,086 10,455 246,400 tons, dry equivalent: 33,416 32,279 572 610,191 133,383 37,706 1,689,634 Irrigated ...............................................farms: 27 13 8 336 132 78 244 acres: 7,116 5,072 169 84,863 17,740 4,735 233,013 Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..............................................: 28 11 11 109 80 133 22 25 to 99 acres .............................................: 12 6 2 107 64 64 49 100 to 249 acres ...........................................: 16 4 1 91 29 26 27 250 to 499 acres ...........................................: 4 - - 47 20 4 25 500 to 999 acres ...........................................: 1 3 - 33 11 1 47 1,000 acres or more ........................................: 2 1 - 13 4 - 81 : Oats for grain ............................................farms: - - - 13 10 2 1 acres: - - - 1,624 1,200 (D) (D) bushels: - - - 197,099 78,084 (D) (D) Irrigated ...............................................farms: - - - 10 1 2 1 acres: - - - 1,279 (D) (D) (D) Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..............................................: - - - 1 5 2 - 25 to 99 acres .............................................: - - - 5 - - 1 100 to 249 acres ...........................................: - - - 6 4 - - 250 to 499 acres ...........................................: - - - - - - - 500 to 999 acres ...........................................: - - - 1 1 - - 1,000 acres or more ........................................: - - - - - - - : Peanuts for nuts ..........................................farms: - - - 10 - - - acres: - - - 20 - - - pounds: - - - 62,290 - - - Irrigated ...............................................farms: - - - 10 - - - acres: - - - 20 - - - ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 24. Selected Crops Harvested: 2012 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Inyo : Kern : Kings : Lake : Lassen : Los Angeles : Madera ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Harvested cropland ........................................farms: 37 1,115 767 641 199 718 1,066 acres: (D) 740,061 415,706 24,175 40,182 40,796 289,693 Irrigated ...............................................farms: 34 1,059 738 386 182 642 1,004 acres: (D) 719,971 404,943 13,304 34,270 39,424 282,728 : Barley for grain ..........................................farms: - 11 8 - 2 5 5 acres: - 3,851 7,484 - (D) 7,416 614 bushels: - 211,070 413,044 - (D) 800,647 66,216 Irrigated ...............................................farms: - 9 7 - - 3 4 acres: - (D) (D) - - (D) (D) Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..............................................: - - 1 - - 3 2 25 to 99 acres .............................................: - 4 - - - - 1 100 to 249 acres ...........................................: - 2 1 - 2 - 1 250 to 499 acres ...........................................: - 1 - - - - 1 500 to 999 acres ...........................................: - 4 - - - - - 1,000 acres or more ........................................: - - 6 - - 2 - : Corn for grain ............................................farms: - 16 56 - - 2 11 acres: - 4,598 8,486 - - (D) 2,104 bushels: - 675,548 1,454,127 - - (D) 424,109 Irrigated ...............................................farms: - 16 56 - - 2 11 acres: - 4,598 8,486 - - (D) 2,104 Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..............................................: - - 7 - - 2 - 25 to 99 acres .............................................: - 6 21 - - - 1 100 to 249 acres ...........................................: - 5 20 - - - 5 250 to 499 acres ...........................................: - 2 4 - - - 5 500 to 999 acres ...........................................: - 2 3 - - - - 1,000 acres or more ........................................: - 1 1 - - - - : Corn for silage or greenchop ..............................farms: - 87 197 5 1 1 46 acres: - 27,855 60,904 10 (D) (D) 22,266 tons: - 657,491 1,547,443 5 (D) (D) 566,363 Irrigated ...............................................farms: - 81 185 5 1 1 45 acres: - 25,377 59,450 10 (D) (D) (D) Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..............................................: - 2 14 5 - 1 4 25 to 99 acres .............................................: - 22 59 - 1 - 10 100 to 249 acres ...........................................: - 24 61 - - - 11 250 to 499 acres ...........................................: - 22 32 - - - 7 500 to 999 acres ...........................................: - 11 20 - - - 6 1,000 acres or more ........................................: - 6 11 - - - 8 : Cotton, all ...............................................farms: - 121 87 - - - 10 acres: - 55,547 109,923 - - - 2,091 bales: - 181,331 317,609 - - - 7,170 Irrigated ...............................................farms: - 121 87 - - - 10 acres: - 55,547 109,923 - - - 2,091 Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..............................................: - 4 2 - - - - 25 to 99 acres .............................................: - 29 15 - - - 3 100 to 249 acres ...........................................: - 35 21 - - - 4 250 to 499 acres ...........................................: - 33 20 - - - 3 500 to 999 acres ...........................................: - 10 17 - - - - 1,000 acres or more ........................................: - 10 12 - - - - : Dry edible beans, excluding limas .........................farms: - 18 9 - - - 5 acres: - 2,096 3,765 - - - 330 cwt: - 69,919 111,740 - - - 10,030 Irrigated ...............................................farms: - 18 9 - - - 5 acres: - 2,096 3,765 - - - 330 Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..............................................: - - 2 - - - 1 25 to 99 acres .............................................: - 11 - - - - 3 100 to 249 acres ...........................................: - 6 1 - - - 1 250 to 499 acres ...........................................: - 1 1 - - - - 500 to 999 acres ...........................................: - - 5 - - - - 1,000 acres or more ........................................: - - - - - - - : Forage - land used for all hay and : all haylage, grass silage, and : greenchop (see text) .....................................farms: 13 267 315 81 173 37 130 acres: 5,667 76,305 81,345 2,810 35,117 12,193 35,554 tons, dry equivalent: 31,306 535,236 574,460 6,021 107,464 75,218 227,821 Irrigated ...............................................farms: 13 239 296 19 157 27 89 acres: 5,667 70,880 77,808 404 29,939 11,219 30,049 Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..............................................: - 28 70 52 46 13 24 25 to 99 acres .............................................: 5 67 92 21 53 8 44 100 to 249 acres ...........................................: 3 78 72 6 40 8 30 250 to 499 acres ...........................................: - 44 47 2 13 1 17 500 to 999 acres ...........................................: - 36 21 - 16 3 6 1,000 acres or more ........................................: 5 14 13 - 5 4 9 : Oats for grain ............................................farms: - 5 4 1 2 1 11 acres: - 1,837 404 (D) (D) (D) 993 bushels: - 116,876 50,217 (D) (D) (D) 105,126 Irrigated ...............................................farms: - 4 4 - 1 1 5 acres: - (D) 404 - (D) (D) 679 Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..............................................: - - - - 1 1 3 25 to 99 acres .............................................: - 3 3 - 1 - 5 100 to 249 acres ...........................................: - - - 1 - - 2 250 to 499 acres ...........................................: - 1 1 - - - 1 500 to 999 acres ...........................................: - - - - - - - 1,000 acres or more ........................................: - 1 - - - - - : Peanuts for nuts ..........................................farms: - 3 2 - - - - acres: - (D) (D) - - - - pounds: - (D) (D) - - - - Irrigated ...............................................farms: - 3 2 - - - - acres: - (D) (D) - - - - ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 24. Selected Crops Harvested: 2012 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Marin : Mariposa : Mendocino : Merced : Modoc : Mono : Monterey ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Harvested cropland ........................................farms: 135 66 758 1,903 257 30 694 acres: 7,868 835 31,411 480,103 123,008 10,591 282,694 Irrigated ...............................................farms: 92 49 604 1,769 222 29 585 acres: 2,217 512 23,305 449,569 99,580 10,480 263,118 : Barley for grain ..........................................farms: - - 1 6 17 - 18 acres: - - (D) 3,561 3,791 - 4,147 bushels: - - (D) 162,512 311,147 - 207,525 Irrigated ...............................................farms: - - 1 5 13 - 3 acres: - - (D) (D) 2,348 - 430 Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..............................................: - - - - 1 - 4 25 to 99 acres .............................................: - - - 2 4 - 3 100 to 249 acres ...........................................: - - 1 1 7 - 4 250 to 499 acres ...........................................: - - - 1 3 - 4 500 to 999 acres ...........................................: - - - - 2 - 2 1,000 acres or more ........................................: - - - 2 - - 1 : Corn for grain ............................................farms: - - 1 74 2 - 3 acres: - - (D) 19,555 (D) - (D) bushels: - - (D) 3,793,985 (D) - (D) Irrigated ...............................................farms: - - 1 74 2 - 3 acres: - - (D) 19,255 (D) - (D) Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..............................................: - - 1 11 2 - 1 25 to 99 acres .............................................: - - - 24 - - 1 100 to 249 acres ...........................................: - - - 16 - - - 250 to 499 acres ...........................................: - - - 10 - - 1 500 to 999 acres ...........................................: - - - 9 - - - 1,000 acres or more ........................................: - - - 4 - - - : Corn for silage or greenchop ..............................farms: - - 1 321 - - 8 acres: - - (D) 91,880 - - 706 tons: - - (D) 2,392,000 - - 19,900 Irrigated ...............................................farms: - - 1 311 - - 6 acres: - - (D) 88,076 - - (D) Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..............................................: - - - 44 - - 6 25 to 99 acres .............................................: - - 1 84 - - - 100 to 249 acres ...........................................: - - - 77 - - - 250 to 499 acres ...........................................: - - - 63 - - 2 500 to 999 acres ...........................................: - - - 35 - - - 1,000 acres or more ........................................: - - - 18 - - - : Cotton, all ...............................................farms: - - - 93 - - - acres: - - - 48,522 - - - bales: - - - 165,680 - - - Irrigated ...............................................farms: - - - 93 - - - acres: - - - 48,522 - - - Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..............................................: - - - 14 - - - 25 to 99 acres .............................................: - - - 17 - - - 100 to 249 acres ...........................................: - - - 20 - - - 250 to 499 acres ...........................................: - - - 13 - - - 500 to 999 acres ...........................................: - - - 16 - - - 1,000 acres or more ........................................: - - - 13 - - - : Dry edible beans, excluding limas .........................farms: - - - 6 - - 12 acres: - - - 892 - - 1,183 cwt: - - - 27,671 - - 27,021 Irrigated ...............................................farms: - - - 6 - - 6 acres: - - - 892 - - 860 Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..............................................: - - - - - - 4 25 to 99 acres .............................................: - - - 3 - - 1 100 to 249 acres ...........................................: - - - 1 - - 6 250 to 499 acres ...........................................: - - - 2 - - 1 500 to 999 acres ...........................................: - - - - - - - 1,000 acres or more ........................................: - - - - - - - : Forage - land used for all hay and : all haylage, grass silage, and : greenchop (see text) .....................................farms: 35 10 156 568 238 25 82 acres: 6,758 296 9,249 129,575 96,740 10,516 11,060 tons, dry equivalent: 15,976 679 18,675 837,830 275,875 53,599 17,044 Irrigated ...............................................farms: 7 4 62 478 204 24 21 acres: 1,520 24 2,415 111,766 75,663 (D) 2,546 Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..............................................: 7 4 76 142 37 3 26 25 to 99 acres .............................................: 6 6 52 168 68 3 34 100 to 249 acres ...........................................: 15 - 24 104 52 7 14 250 to 499 acres ...........................................: 3 - 3 79 40 2 3 500 to 999 acres ...........................................: 3 - 1 49 19 8 2 1,000 acres or more ........................................: 1 - - 26 22 2 3 : Oats for grain ............................................farms: 1 - - 39 2 - - acres: (D) - - 6,511 (D) - - bushels: (D) - - 592,383 (D) - - Irrigated ...............................................farms: - - - 33 - - - acres: - - - 5,033 - - - Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..............................................: - - - 15 - - - 25 to 99 acres .............................................: 1 - - 5 1 - - 100 to 249 acres ...........................................: - - - 10 1 - - 250 to 499 acres ...........................................: - - - 6 - - - 500 to 999 acres ...........................................: - - - 2 - - - 1,000 acres or more ........................................: - - - 1 - - - : Peanuts for nuts ..........................................farms: - - - - - - - acres: - - - - - - - pounds: - - - - - - - Irrigated ...............................................farms: - - - - - - - acres: - - - - - - - ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 24. Selected Crops Harvested: 2012 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Napa : Nevada : Orange : Placer : Plumas : Riverside : Sacramento ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Harvested cropland ........................................farms: 1,521 312 217 508 62 1,962 660 acres: 52,180 1,555 10,058 19,535 11,767 156,469 92,090 Irrigated ...............................................farms: 1,347 286 207 439 48 1,842 592 acres: (D) 1,226 (D) 14,031 10,105 142,249 77,557 : Barley for grain ..........................................farms: - - 2 1 - 3 6 acres: - - (D) (D) - 1,602 700 bushels: - - (D) (D) - 67,279 29,167 Irrigated ...............................................farms: - - - 1 - 3 - acres: - - - (D) - 1,602 - Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..............................................: - - - - - 1 - 25 to 99 acres .............................................: - - - - - - 5 100 to 249 acres ...........................................: - - - - - - - 250 to 499 acres ...........................................: - - 2 1 - - - 500 to 999 acres ...........................................: - - - - - 2 1 1,000 acres or more ........................................: - - - - - - - : Corn for grain ............................................farms: 4 4 8 5 - 10 52 acres: 4 4 370 (D) - (D) 16,082 bushels: 363 272 10,126 (D) - 910 2,416,394 Irrigated ...............................................farms: 4 4 8 5 - 10 52 acres: 4 4 370 (D) - (D) 15,372 Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..............................................: 4 4 - 2 - 9 6 25 to 99 acres .............................................: - - 7 2 - - 16 100 to 249 acres ...........................................: - - 1 - - 1 9 250 to 499 acres ...........................................: - - - 1 - - 9 500 to 999 acres ...........................................: - - - - - - 8 1,000 acres or more ........................................: - - - - - - 4 : Corn for silage or greenchop ..............................farms: - - - 1 - 6 32 acres: - - - (D) - (D) 5,726 tons: - - - (D) - (D) 126,045 Irrigated ...............................................farms: - - - 1 - 2 29 acres: - - - (D) - (D) 4,999 Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..............................................: - - - - - 2 10 25 to 99 acres .............................................: - - - - - 2 8 100 to 249 acres ...........................................: - - - 1 - - 5 250 to 499 acres ...........................................: - - - - - 1 6 500 to 999 acres ...........................................: - - - - - 1 2 1,000 acres or more ........................................: - - - - - - 1 : Cotton, all ...............................................farms: - - - - - 15 - acres: - - - - - 13,073 - bales: - - - - - 54,128 - Irrigated ...............................................farms: - - - - - 15 - acres: - - - - - 13,073 - Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..............................................: - - - - - - - 25 to 99 acres .............................................: - - - - - 2 - 100 to 249 acres ...........................................: - - - - - 3 - 250 to 499 acres ...........................................: - - - - - 2 - 500 to 999 acres ...........................................: - - - - - 2 - 1,000 acres or more ........................................: - - - - - 6 - : Dry edible beans, excluding limas .........................farms: - 3 2 1 - - 6 acres: - 3 (D) (D) - - (D) cwt: - 43 (D) (D) - - (D) Irrigated ...............................................farms: - 3 - - - - 6 acres: - 3 - - - - (D) Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..............................................: - 3 - - - - 5 25 to 99 acres .............................................: - - 2 1 - - - 100 to 249 acres ...........................................: - - - - - - - 250 to 499 acres ...........................................: - - - - - - 1 500 to 999 acres ...........................................: - - - - - - - 1,000 acres or more ........................................: - - - - - - - : Forage - land used for all hay and : all haylage, grass silage, and : greenchop (see text) .....................................farms: 21 26 4 46 40 139 220 acres: 945 476 (D) 6,070 11,684 54,969 27,107 tons, dry equivalent: 2,170 676 (D) 14,612 27,787 399,687 99,345 Irrigated ...............................................farms: 8 22 - 27 32 124 133 acres: 683 303 - 1,649 10,065 45,426 15,998 Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..............................................: 14 17 2 16 9 51 62 25 to 99 acres .............................................: 4 9 - 20 13 22 87 100 to 249 acres ...........................................: 2 - 2 5 6 29 44 250 to 499 acres ...........................................: 1 - - 4 5 12 13 500 to 999 acres ...........................................: - - - - 2 9 10 1,000 acres or more ........................................: - - - 1 5 16 4 : Oats for grain ............................................farms: - - - - - 2 1 acres: - - - - - (D) (D) bushels: - - - - - (D) (D) Irrigated ...............................................farms: - - - - - 2 - acres: - - - - - (D) - Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..............................................: - - - - - - - 25 to 99 acres .............................................: - - - - - - - 100 to 249 acres ...........................................: - - - - - 1 - 250 to 499 acres ...........................................: - - - - - 1 1 500 to 999 acres ...........................................: - - - - - - - 1,000 acres or more ........................................: - - - - - - - : Peanuts for nuts ..........................................farms: - - - - - - - acres: - - - - - - - pounds: - - - - - - - Irrigated ...............................................farms: - - - - - - - acres: - - - - - - - ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 24. Selected Crops Harvested: 2012 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : San Benito :San Bernardino : San Diego : San Francisco : San Joaquin :San Luis Obispo: San Mateo :Santa Barbara ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Harvested cropland ........................................farms: 355 691 4,933 3 2,875 1,664 202 1,165 acres: 24,016 22,699 51,097 (D) 484,804 113,141 4,033 98,772 Irrigated ...............................................farms: 254 638 4,574 - 2,735 1,262 160 1,049 acres: 17,193 20,615 43,614 - 460,727 77,716 2,341 93,334 : Barley for grain ..........................................farms: 4 3 - - 8 49 - 7 acres: 145 (D) - - 716 15,782 - (D) bushels: 7,162 (D) - - 57,500 705,362 - (D) Irrigated ...............................................farms: - 2 - - 8 15 - 2 acres: - (D) - - 716 1,573 - (D) Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..............................................: 1 1 - - 2 16 - 3 25 to 99 acres .............................................: 3 - - - 4 11 - 3 100 to 249 acres ...........................................: - 1 - - 1 11 - - 250 to 499 acres ...........................................: - - - - 1 1 - - 500 to 999 acres ...........................................: - 1 - - - 7 - - 1,000 acres or more ........................................: - - - - - 3 - 1 : Corn for grain ............................................farms: 6 5 8 - 87 9 1 1 acres: 12 16 492 - 49,930 264 (D) (D) bushels: 216 (D) 58,536 - 7,996,212 34,431 (D) (D) Irrigated ...............................................farms: 6 5 8 - 87 9 1 1 acres: 12 16 492 - 49,930 264 (D) (D) Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..............................................: 6 5 1 - 2 7 1 1 25 to 99 acres .............................................: - - 7 - 25 - - - 100 to 249 acres ...........................................: - - - - 15 2 - - 250 to 499 acres ...........................................: - - - - 15 - - - 500 to 999 acres ...........................................: - - - - 13 - - - 1,000 acres or more ........................................: - - - - 17 - - - : Corn for silage or greenchop ..............................farms: - 13 - - 186 1 6 2 acres: - 2,017 - - 47,640 (D) 6 (D) tons: - 51,717 - - 1,274,778 (D) 90 (D) Irrigated ...............................................farms: - 13 - - 172 - 6 2 acres: - 1,737 - - 45,001 - 6 (D) Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..............................................: - 6 - - 17 1 6 - 25 to 99 acres .............................................: - 3 - - 59 - - - 100 to 249 acres ...........................................: - - - - 48 - - 1 250 to 499 acres ...........................................: - 3 - - 35 - - 1 500 to 999 acres ...........................................: - 1 - - 19 - - - 1,000 acres or more ........................................: - - - - 8 - - - : Cotton, all ...............................................farms: - - - - - - - - acres: - - - - - - - - bales: - - - - - - - - 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 ........................................: - - - - - - - - : Dry edible beans, excluding limas .........................farms: 1 4 - - 40 6 2 8 acres: (D) (D) - - 3,742 196 (D) 949 cwt: (D) (D) - - 85,903 3,699 (D) 19,931 Irrigated ...............................................farms: 1 4 - - 34 1 2 8 acres: (D) (D) - - 3,550 (D) (D) 949 Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..............................................: - 3 - - 8 3 2 3 25 to 99 acres .............................................: - 1 - - 17 2 - 2 100 to 249 acres ...........................................: 1 - - - 14 1 - 2 250 to 499 acres ...........................................: - - - - 1 - - 1 500 to 999 acres ...........................................: - - - - - - - - 1,000 acres or more ........................................: - - - - - - - - : Forage - land used for all hay and : all haylage, grass silage, and : greenchop (see text) .....................................farms: 104 56 40 1 474 256 30 95 acres: 6,207 10,961 5,006 (D) 83,664 24,178 1,380 5,780 tons, dry equivalent: 8,781 79,069 19,664 (D) 504,092 66,129 2,509 16,156 Irrigated ...............................................farms: 17 50 9 - 374 77 5 31 acres: 653 10,046 989 - 68,566 8,262 86 2,286 Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..............................................: 54 14 23 1 148 109 15 41 25 to 99 acres .............................................: 31 17 9 - 133 88 11 33 100 to 249 acres ...........................................: 14 14 3 - 87 33 3 17 250 to 499 acres ...........................................: 4 4 - - 59 14 1 4 500 to 999 acres ...........................................: 1 5 3 - 30 10 - - 1,000 acres or more ........................................: - 2 2 - 17 2 - - : Oats for grain ............................................farms: 1 - 1 - 20 10 3 3 acres: (D) - (D) - 1,890 355 90 166 bushels: (D) - (D) - 133,637 29,928 11,070 18,580 Irrigated ...............................................farms: - - 1 - 16 5 - 2 acres: - - (D) - 1,410 98 - (D) Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..............................................: - - - - 5 4 - 1 25 to 99 acres .............................................: - - 1 - 5 5 3 1 100 to 249 acres ...........................................: 1 - - - 10 1 - 1 250 to 499 acres ...........................................: - - - - - - - - 500 to 999 acres ...........................................: - - - - - - - - 1,000 acres or more ........................................: - - - - - - - - : Peanuts for nuts ..........................................farms: - - - - - - - - acres: - - - - - - - - pounds: - - - - - - - - Irrigated ...............................................farms: - - - - - - - - acres: - - - - - - - - ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 24. Selected Crops Harvested: 2012 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Santa Clara : Santa Cruz : Shasta : Sierra : Siskiyou : Solano : Sonoma : Stanislaus ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Harvested cropland ........................................farms: 691 522 626 21 435 499 2,507 2,921 acres: 23,128 29,900 24,254 (D) 128,647 133,171 91,307 319,190 Irrigated ...............................................farms: 549 423 525 16 358 405 2,086 2,763 acres: 17,208 28,389 18,324 1,867 103,638 97,890 69,207 299,331 : Barley for grain ..........................................farms: - - 4 - 24 6 1 7 acres: - - (D) - 4,167 2,984 (D) 415 bushels: - - (D) - 320,417 166,556 (D) 18,234 Irrigated ...............................................farms: - - 3 - 15 - - 6 acres: - - (D) - 2,640 - - (D) Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..............................................: - - 3 - 6 - - 3 25 to 99 acres .............................................: - - - - 6 - - 2 100 to 249 acres ...........................................: - - - - 5 2 - 2 250 to 499 acres ...........................................: - - - - 4 2 1 - 500 to 999 acres ...........................................: - - 1 - 2 2 - - 1,000 acres or more ........................................: - - - - 1 - - - : Corn for grain ............................................farms: 3 - 6 - - 28 12 27 acres: 3 - 60 - - 9,289 12 4,911 bushels: 150 - 858 - - 1,734,533 432 907,307 Irrigated ...............................................farms: 3 - 6 - - 28 12 27 acres: 3 - 60 - - 9,005 12 2,392 Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..............................................: 3 - 6 - - - 12 16 25 to 99 acres .............................................: - - - - - 6 - 4 100 to 249 acres ...........................................: - - - - - 7 - 3 250 to 499 acres ...........................................: - - - - - 9 - 3 500 to 999 acres ...........................................: - - - - - 4 - - 1,000 acres or more ........................................: - - - - - 2 - 1 : Corn for silage or greenchop ..............................farms: 3 - 1 - - 3 11 401 acres: 17 - (D) - - 1,196 789 61,794 tons: 290 - (D) - - 33,032 22,098 1,618,793 Irrigated ...............................................farms: 3 - 1 - - 3 10 401 acres: 17 - (D) - - 1,196 (D) 60,579 Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..............................................: 3 - 1 - - - 4 64 25 to 99 acres .............................................: - - - - - 1 3 148 100 to 249 acres ...........................................: - - - - - - 4 124 250 to 499 acres ...........................................: - - - - - - - 44 500 to 999 acres ...........................................: - - - - - 2 - 16 1,000 acres or more ........................................: - - - - - - - 5 : Cotton, all ...............................................farms: - - - - - - - - acres: - - - - - - - - bales: - - - - - - - - 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 ........................................: - - - - - - - - : Dry edible beans, excluding limas .........................farms: 4 1 - - - 6 8 28 acres: (D) (D) - - - 700 11 1,647 cwt: (D) (D) - - - 14,050 274 32,801 Irrigated ...............................................farms: 4 1 - - - 6 6 28 acres: (D) (D) - - - 700 (D) 1,647 Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..............................................: 3 1 - - - - 8 12 25 to 99 acres .............................................: - - - - - 4 - 13 100 to 249 acres ...........................................: - - - - - 1 - 2 250 to 499 acres ...........................................: 1 - - - - 1 - 1 500 to 999 acres ...........................................: - - - - - - - - 1,000 acres or more ........................................: - - - - - - - - : Forage - land used for all hay and : all haylage, grass silage, and : greenchop (see text) .....................................farms: 69 5 223 20 343 156 140 622 acres: 6,084 (D) 13,696 2,676 90,042 53,277 21,100 69,986 tons, dry equivalent: 18,008 (D) 47,230 6,538 327,922 253,829 82,518 419,431 Irrigated ...............................................farms: 12 - 174 16 270 98 42 542 acres: 1,980 - 9,386 1,862 69,391 40,257 5,222 57,532 Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..............................................: 34 5 146 1 101 44 47 240 25 to 99 acres .............................................: 13 - 49 8 95 49 37 177 100 to 249 acres ...........................................: 16 - 15 9 59 20 36 127 250 to 499 acres ...........................................: 3 - 8 2 36 12 9 57 500 to 999 acres ...........................................: 2 - 4 - 28 15 6 15 1,000 acres or more ........................................: 1 - 1 - 24 16 5 6 : Oats for grain ............................................farms: - - - - 2 2 6 44 acres: - - - - (D) (D) 574 4,385 bushels: - - - - (D) (D) 25,376 457,806 Irrigated ...............................................farms: - - - - 2 1 2 32 acres: - - - - (D) (D) (D) 4,111 Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..............................................: - - - - - - 3 15 25 to 99 acres .............................................: - - - - - 1 1 18 100 to 249 acres ...........................................: - - - - 2 - 1 6 250 to 499 acres ...........................................: - - - - - 1 1 2 500 to 999 acres ...........................................: - - - - - - - 3 1,000 acres or more ........................................: - - - - - - - - : Peanuts for nuts ..........................................farms: - - - - - - - - acres: - - - - - - - - pounds: - - - - - - - - Irrigated ...............................................farms: - - - - - - - - acres: - - - - - - - - ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 24. Selected Crops Harvested: 2012 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Sutter : Tehama : Trinity : Tulare : Tuolumne : Ventura : Yolo : Yuba ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Harvested cropland ........................................farms: 1,165 877 113 4,013 99 1,880 731 428 acres: 262,556 72,847 862 609,270 921 89,321 263,697 68,297 Irrigated ...............................................farms: 1,089 743 113 3,792 82 1,769 629 418 acres: 240,003 59,900 751 548,400 (D) 86,667 223,046 66,695 : Barley for grain ..........................................farms: - 2 - 11 - 2 8 - acres: - (D) - 1,030 - (D) 2,948 - bushels: - (D) - 47,407 - (D) 160,560 - Irrigated ...............................................farms: - - - 7 - 2 4 - acres: - - - 324 - (D) 1,558 - Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..............................................: - - - 2 - 2 3 - 25 to 99 acres .............................................: - - - 5 - - - - 100 to 249 acres ...........................................: - 1 - 2 - - 3 - 250 to 499 acres ...........................................: - - - 2 - - - - 500 to 999 acres ...........................................: - - - - - - - - 1,000 acres or more ........................................: - 1 - - - - 2 - : Corn for grain ............................................farms: 32 6 - 69 5 - 48 1 acres: 11,478 719 - 15,873 5 - 15,084 (D) bushels: 2,254,762 (D) - 3,105,707 535 - 2,688,902 (D) Irrigated ...............................................farms: 32 6 - 69 5 - 48 1 acres: 11,254 719 - 15,873 5 - 14,454 (D) Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..............................................: 1 3 - 17 5 - - - 25 to 99 acres .............................................: 10 1 - 20 - - 18 1 100 to 249 acres ...........................................: 9 1 - 16 - - 9 - 250 to 499 acres ...........................................: 5 - - 8 - - 10 - 500 to 999 acres ...........................................: 4 1 - 3 - - 8 - 1,000 acres or more ........................................: 3 - - 5 - - 3 - : Corn for silage or greenchop ..............................farms: 2 15 - 331 3 1 4 12 acres: (D) 1,760 - 113,645 3 (D) 1,601 954 tons: (D) 45,689 - 2,953,108 15 (D) 41,000 26,368 Irrigated ...............................................farms: - 12 - 311 3 - 4 11 acres: - 1,085 - 105,448 3 - 1,601 (D) Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..............................................: - 2 - 23 3 1 - - 25 to 99 acres .............................................: 2 6 - 64 - - - 9 100 to 249 acres ...........................................: - 5 - 95 - - 1 3 250 to 499 acres ...........................................: - 2 - 75 - - 2 - 500 to 999 acres ...........................................: - - - 49 - - 1 - 1,000 acres or more ........................................: - - - 25 - - - - : Cotton, all ...............................................farms: 2 - - 59 - - - - acres: (D) - - 26,672 - - - - bales: (D) - - 85,744 - - - - Irrigated ...............................................farms: 2 - - 59 - - - - acres: (D) - - 26,672 - - - - Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..............................................: - - - 5 - - - - 25 to 99 acres .............................................: - - - 9 - - - - 100 to 249 acres ...........................................: 2 - - 26 - - - - 250 to 499 acres ...........................................: - - - 10 - - - - 500 to 999 acres ...........................................: - - - 2 - - - - 1,000 acres or more ........................................: - - - 7 - - - - : Dry edible beans, excluding limas .........................farms: 27 1 - 20 5 2 8 2 acres: 7,073 (D) - 2,262 5 (D) 2,203 (D) cwt: 138,493 (D) - 75,727 110 (D) 41,841 (D) Irrigated ...............................................farms: 22 1 - 20 5 2 7 2 acres: 5,913 (D) - 2,262 5 (D) (D) (D) Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..............................................: - 1 - - 5 2 1 2 25 to 99 acres .............................................: 4 - - 14 - - 1 - 100 to 249 acres ...........................................: 8 - - 3 - - 2 - 250 to 499 acres ...........................................: 12 - - 2 - - 3 - 500 to 999 acres ...........................................: 3 - - 1 - - 1 - 1,000 acres or more ........................................: - - - - - - - - : Forage - land used for all hay and : all haylage, grass silage, and : greenchop (see text) .....................................farms: 72 234 17 539 13 34 206 35 acres: 9,831 17,640 464 163,358 410 2,062 48,452 3,162 tons, dry equivalent: 51,543 52,208 601 1,165,959 1,317 4,920 254,732 13,680 Irrigated ...............................................farms: 52 124 17 454 6 9 112 18 acres: 7,194 10,141 392 137,399 8 407 38,262 2,101 Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..............................................: 21 110 9 130 7 14 59 18 25 to 99 acres .............................................: 22 80 8 153 5 10 52 9 100 to 249 acres ...........................................: 17 26 - 94 1 9 48 7 250 to 499 acres ...........................................: 8 13 - 75 - 1 17 - 500 to 999 acres ...........................................: 4 4 - 49 - - 21 - 1,000 acres or more ........................................: - 1 - 38 - - 9 1 : Oats for grain ............................................farms: 3 8 - 25 - 2 8 5 acres: 284 259 - 1,116 - (D) 527 21 bushels: (D) 21,791 - 93,128 - (D) 72,334 1,125 Irrigated ...............................................farms: 2 1 - 13 - - 4 - acres: (D) (D) - 782 - - 335 - Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..............................................: 1 5 - 14 - 1 4 5 25 to 99 acres .............................................: - 3 - 8 - 1 2 - 100 to 249 acres ...........................................: 2 - - 2 - - 2 - 250 to 499 acres ...........................................: - - - 1 - - - - 500 to 999 acres ...........................................: - - - - - - - - 1,000 acres or more ........................................: - - - - - - - - : Peanuts for nuts ..........................................farms: - - - - - - - - acres: - - - - - - - - pounds: - - - - - - - - Irrigated ...............................................farms: - - - - - - - - acres: - - - - - - - - ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 24. Selected Crops Harvested: 2012 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : California : Alameda : Alpine : Amador : Butte : Calaveras : Colusa ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Peanuts for nuts - Con. : : Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..............................................: 15 - - - - - - 25 to 99 acres .............................................: - - - - - - - 100 to 249 acres ...........................................: - - - - - - - 250 to 499 acres ...........................................: - - - - - - - 500 to 999 acres ...........................................: - - - - - - - 1,000 acres or more ........................................: - - - - - - - : Rice ......................................................farms: 1,392 - - - 199 - 365 acres: 561,968 - - - 94,546 - 153,224 cwt: 46,692,580 - - - 8,282,242 - 12,787,320 Irrigated ...............................................farms: 1,392 - - - 199 - 365 acres: 561,968 - - - 94,546 - 153,224 Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..............................................: 49 - - - 11 - 13 25 to 99 acres .............................................: 232 - - - 25 - 61 100 to 249 acres ...........................................: 385 - - - 59 - 94 250 to 499 acres ...........................................: 366 - - - 48 - 102 500 to 999 acres ...........................................: 257 - - - 36 - 63 1,000 acres or more ........................................: 103 - - - 20 - 32 : Sorghum for grain .........................................farms: 74 - - - - - - acres: 13,908 - - - - - - bushels: 1,263,924 - - - - - - Irrigated ...............................................farms: 62 - - - - - - acres: 10,997 - - - - - - Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..............................................: 17 - - - - - - 25 to 99 acres .............................................: 18 - - - - - - 100 to 249 acres ...........................................: 19 - - - - - - 250 to 499 acres ...........................................: 13 - - - - - - 500 to 999 acres ...........................................: 7 - - - - - - 1,000 acres or more ........................................: - - - - - - - : Soybeans for beans ........................................farms: 2 - - - - - - acres: (D) - - - - - - bushels: (D) - - - - - - Irrigated ...............................................farms: 1 - - - - - - acres: (D) - - - - - - Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..............................................: 1 - - - - - - 25 to 99 acres .............................................: - - - - - - - 100 to 249 acres ...........................................: 1 - - - - - - 250 to 499 acres ...........................................: - - - - - - - 500 to 999 acres ...........................................: - - - - - - - 1,000 acres or more ........................................: - - - - - - - : Sugarbeets for sugar ......................................farms: 58 - - - - - - acres: 27,193 - - - - - - tons: 1,179,753 - - - - - - Irrigated ...............................................farms: 58 - - - - - - acres: 26,567 - - - - - - Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..............................................: 3 - - - - - - 25 to 99 acres .............................................: 6 - - - - - - 100 to 249 acres ...........................................: 7 - - - - - - 250 to 499 acres ...........................................: 12 - - - - - - 500 to 999 acres ...........................................: 27 - - - - - - 1,000 acres or more ........................................: 3 - - - - - - : Sunflower seed, all .......................................farms: 197 - - - 7 - 19 acres: 49,749 - - - (D) - 6,267 pounds: 68,792,639 - - - (D) - 8,292,300 Irrigated ...............................................farms: 152 - - - 7 - 15 acres: 34,815 - - - (D) - 4,360 Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..............................................: 42 - - - 4 - 2 25 to 99 acres .............................................: 52 - - - 2 - 5 100 to 249 acres ...........................................: 43 - - - - - 5 250 to 499 acres ...........................................: 31 - - - 1 - 2 500 to 999 acres ...........................................: 18 - - - - - 4 1,000 acres or more ........................................: 11 - - - - - 1 : Wheat for grain, all ......................................farms: 1,503 1 - - 17 - 57 acres: 491,846 (D) - - 1,782 - 16,555 bushels: 42,955,324 (D) - - 136,176 - 1,080,820 Irrigated ...............................................farms: 1,123 - - - 7 - 35 acres: 382,958 - - - 752 - 7,753 Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..............................................: 164 - - - 2 - 1 25 to 99 acres .............................................: 427 1 - - 8 - 17 100 to 249 acres ...........................................: 430 - - - 5 - 20 250 to 499 acres ...........................................: 220 - - - 2 - 9 500 to 999 acres ...........................................: 152 - - - - - 7 1,000 acres or more ........................................: 110 - - - - - 3 : Vegetables harvested for : sale (see text) ..........................................farms: 6,055 38 - 34 99 35 19 acres: 1,175,249 116 - 33 566 57 14,773 Farms by acres harvested: : 0.1 to 4.9 acres ...........................................: 3,610 33 - 33 84 30 - 5.0 to 24.9 acres ..........................................: 986 4 - 1 11 5 5 25.0 to 99.9 acres .........................................: 402 1 - - 2 - 3 100.0 to 249.9 acres .......................................: 288 - - - 2 - 4 250.0 to 499.9 acres .......................................: 238 - - - - - - 500.0 acres or more ........................................: 531 - - - - - 7 500.0 to 749.9 acres .....................................: 129 - - - - - 1 750.0 to 999.9 acres .....................................: 96 - - - - - 1 1,000.0 acres or more ....................................: 306 - - - - - 5 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 24. Selected Crops Harvested: 2012 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Contra Costa : Del Norte : El Dorado : Fresno : Glenn : Humboldt : Imperial ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Peanuts for nuts - Con. : : Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..............................................: - - - 10 - - - 25 to 99 acres .............................................: - - - - - - - 100 to 249 acres ...........................................: - - - - - - - 250 to 499 acres ...........................................: - - - - - - - 500 to 999 acres ...........................................: - - - - - - - 1,000 acres or more ........................................: - - - - - - - : Rice ......................................................farms: 1 - - 8 275 - - acres: (D) - - 4,430 94,330 - - cwt: (D) - - 314,492 8,155,826 - - Irrigated ...............................................farms: 1 - - 8 275 - - acres: (D) - - 4,430 94,330 - - Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..............................................: - - - - 15 - - 25 to 99 acres .............................................: - - - - 66 - - 100 to 249 acres ...........................................: 1 - - 1 71 - - 250 to 499 acres ...........................................: - - - 4 58 - - 500 to 999 acres ...........................................: - - - 1 52 - - 1,000 acres or more ........................................: - - - 2 13 - - : Sorghum for grain .........................................farms: - - - 3 2 - - acres: - - - (D) (D) - - bushels: - - - (D) (D) - - Irrigated ...............................................farms: - - - 2 2 - - acres: - - - (D) (D) - - Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..............................................: - - - 1 - - - 25 to 99 acres .............................................: - - - - 2 - - 100 to 249 acres ...........................................: - - - - - - - 250 to 499 acres ...........................................: - - - 1 - - - 500 to 999 acres ...........................................: - - - 1 - - - 1,000 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 to 999 acres ...........................................: - - - - - - - 1,000 acres or more ........................................: - - - - - - - : Sugarbeets for sugar ......................................farms: - - - 1 - - 55 acres: - - - (D) - - (D) tons: - - - (D) - - 1,169,409 Irrigated ...............................................farms: - - - 1 - - 55 acres: - - - (D) - - (D) Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..............................................: - - - 1 - - 2 25 to 99 acres .............................................: - - - - - - 6 100 to 249 acres ...........................................: - - - - - - 5 250 to 499 acres ...........................................: - - - - - - 12 500 to 999 acres ...........................................: - - - - - - 27 1,000 acres or more ........................................: - - - - - - 3 : Sunflower seed, all .......................................farms: - - - - 38 6 1 acres: - - - - 3,797 6 (D) pounds: - - - - 4,847,154 3,708 (D) Irrigated ...............................................farms: - - - - 31 - - acres: - - - - (D) - - Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..............................................: - - - - 7 6 1 25 to 99 acres .............................................: - - - - 22 - - 100 to 249 acres ...........................................: - - - - 6 - - 250 to 499 acres ...........................................: - - - - 1 - - 500 to 999 acres ...........................................: - - - - 2 - - 1,000 acres or more ........................................: - - - - - - - : Wheat for grain, all ......................................farms: 6 - - 166 42 3 160 acres: 4,439 - - 63,910 6,615 (D) 86,635 bushels: 664,281 - - 5,833,793 382,004 (D) 8,880,319 Irrigated ...............................................farms: 4 - - 150 23 3 159 acres: (D) - - 49,844 1,729 (D) (D) Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..............................................: - - - 1 10 3 5 25 to 99 acres .............................................: 3 - - 42 11 - 22 100 to 249 acres ...........................................: 1 - - 54 15 - 47 250 to 499 acres ...........................................: - - - 32 4 - 24 500 to 999 acres ...........................................: - - - 21 - - 35 1,000 acres or more ........................................: 2 - - 16 2 - 27 : Vegetables harvested for : sale (see text) ..........................................farms: 66 25 147 564 31 177 105 acres: 5,254 54 229 176,589 3,403 598 126,153 Farms by acres harvested: : 0.1 to 4.9 acres ...........................................: 54 17 130 139 20 145 15 5.0 to 24.9 acres ..........................................: 3 8 17 158 4 26 2 25.0 to 99.9 acres .........................................: 3 - - 69 3 6 10 100.0 to 249.9 acres .......................................: - - - 52 1 - 13 250.0 to 499.9 acres .......................................: 1 - - 70 - - 9 500.0 acres or more ........................................: 5 - - 76 3 - 56 500.0 to 749.9 acres .....................................: 2 - - 22 - - 11 750.0 to 999.9 acres .....................................: 2 - - 24 2 - 7 1,000.0 acres or more ....................................: 1 - - 30 1 - 38 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 24. Selected Crops Harvested: 2012 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Inyo : Kern : Kings : Lake : Lassen : Los Angeles : Madera ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Peanuts for nuts - Con. : : Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..............................................: - 3 2 - - - - 25 to 99 acres .............................................: - - - - - - - 100 to 249 acres ...........................................: - - - - - - - 250 to 499 acres ...........................................: - - - - - - - 500 to 999 acres ...........................................: - - - - - - - 1,000 acres or more ........................................: - - - - - - - : Rice ......................................................farms: - - - - 2 - 2 acres: - - - - (D) - (D) cwt: - - - - (D) - (D) Irrigated ...............................................farms: - - - - 2 - 2 acres: - - - - (D) - (D) Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..............................................: - - - - - - - 25 to 99 acres .............................................: - - - - 2 - - 100 to 249 acres ...........................................: - - - - - - 1 250 to 499 acres ...........................................: - - - - - - 1 500 to 999 acres ...........................................: - - - - - - - 1,000 acres or more ........................................: - - - - - - - : Sorghum for grain .........................................farms: - 5 13 - - - - acres: - 1,447 5,107 - - - - bushels: - 94,448 485,718 - - - - Irrigated ...............................................farms: - 4 13 - - - - acres: - (D) 5,090 - - - - Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..............................................: - - 1 - - - - 25 to 99 acres .............................................: - - 1 - - - - 100 to 249 acres ...........................................: - 3 4 - - - - 250 to 499 acres ...........................................: - 1 3 - - - - 500 to 999 acres ...........................................: - 1 4 - - - - 1,000 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 to 999 acres ...........................................: - - - - - - - 1,000 acres or more ........................................: - - - - - - - : Sugarbeets for sugar ......................................farms: - - - - - - - acres: - - - - - - - tons: - - - - - - - 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 ........................................: - - - - - - - : 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: - 127 116 7 14 - 23 acres: - 42,149 52,138 12 901 - 3,609 bushels: - 3,452,162 4,950,017 231 62,109 - 313,134 Irrigated ...............................................farms: - 105 105 - 13 - 20 acres: - 31,776 50,827 - (D) - 3,337 Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..............................................: - 2 12 7 4 - 3 25 to 99 acres .............................................: - 38 28 - 7 - 7 100 to 249 acres ...........................................: - 35 31 - 3 - 10 250 to 499 acres ...........................................: - 32 22 - - - 2 500 to 999 acres ...........................................: - 14 16 - - - 1 1,000 acres or more ........................................: - 6 7 - - - - : Vegetables harvested for : sale (see text) ..........................................farms: 15 167 44 71 4 171 43 acres: (D) 88,634 27,267 108 630 17,447 6,913 Farms by acres harvested: : 0.1 to 4.9 acres ...........................................: 15 49 9 64 - 144 22 5.0 to 24.9 acres ..........................................: - 7 2 7 2 16 6 25.0 to 99.9 acres .........................................: - 19 1 - - 2 3 100.0 to 249.9 acres .......................................: - 26 10 - - 3 3 250.0 to 499.9 acres .......................................: - 17 12 - 2 1 3 500.0 acres or more ........................................: - 49 10 - - 5 6 500.0 to 749.9 acres .....................................: - 16 4 - - - 3 750.0 to 999.9 acres .....................................: - 13 - - - 1 1 1,000.0 acres or more ....................................: - 20 6 - - 4 2 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 24. Selected Crops Harvested: 2012 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Marin : Mariposa : Mendocino : Merced : Modoc : Mono : Monterey ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Peanuts for nuts - Con. : : 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 ........................................: - - - - - - - : Rice ......................................................farms: - - 2 8 3 - 1 acres: - - (D) 3,462 (D) - (D) cwt: - - (D) 248,198 (D) - (D) Irrigated ...............................................farms: - - 2 8 3 - 1 acres: - - (D) 3,462 (D) - (D) Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..............................................: - - - - - - - 25 to 99 acres .............................................: - - - 2 2 - - 100 to 249 acres ...........................................: - - - - - - 1 250 to 499 acres ...........................................: - - 2 3 - - - 500 to 999 acres ...........................................: - - - 3 1 - - 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: - - - - - - - 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: - - - - - - - acres: - - - - - - - tons: - - - - - - - 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 ........................................: - - - - - - - : 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: 3 - 2 63 20 - 6 acres: 3 - (D) 23,888 12,102 - 1,004 bushels: 99 - (D) 2,453,710 981,004 - 69,696 Irrigated ...............................................farms: - - - 54 19 - 1 acres: - - - 21,814 (D) - (D) Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..............................................: 3 - 1 4 2 - - 25 to 99 acres .............................................: - - 1 22 5 - 1 100 to 249 acres ...........................................: - - - 18 6 - 3 250 to 499 acres ...........................................: - - - 6 1 - 2 500 to 999 acres ...........................................: - - - 7 2 - - 1,000 acres or more ........................................: - - - 6 4 - - : Vegetables harvested for : sale (see text) ..........................................farms: 39 3 141 223 18 1 210 acres: 230 1 369 59,815 4,386 (D) 261,546 Farms by acres harvested: : 0.1 to 4.9 acres ...........................................: 32 3 130 45 6 - 54 5.0 to 24.9 acres ..........................................: 5 - 10 68 - - 26 25.0 to 99.9 acres .........................................: 2 - 1 27 7 1 19 100.0 to 249.9 acres .......................................: - - - 32 2 - 16 250.0 to 499.9 acres .......................................: - - - 26 - - 11 500.0 acres or more ........................................: - - - 25 3 - 84 500.0 to 749.9 acres .....................................: - - - 5 1 - 12 750.0 to 999.9 acres .....................................: - - - 8 - - 11 1,000.0 acres or more ....................................: - - - 12 2 - 61 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 24. Selected Crops Harvested: 2012 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Napa : Nevada : Orange : Placer : Plumas : Riverside : Sacramento ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Peanuts for nuts - Con. : : 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 ........................................: - - - - - - - : Rice ......................................................farms: 1 - - 30 - - 10 acres: (D) - - 9,373 - - 2,040 cwt: (D) - - 722,254 - - 168,609 Irrigated ...............................................farms: 1 - - 30 - - 10 acres: (D) - - 9,373 - - 2,040 Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..............................................: - - - - - - - 25 to 99 acres .............................................: - - - 3 - - 1 100 to 249 acres ...........................................: - - - 10 - - 6 250 to 499 acres ...........................................: 1 - - 11 - - 3 500 to 999 acres ...........................................: - - - 6 - - - 1,000 acres or more ........................................: - - - - - - - : Sorghum for grain .........................................farms: - - - - - 7 1 acres: - - - - - 13 (D) bushels: - - - - - 1,431 (D) Irrigated ...............................................farms: - - - - - 7 1 acres: - - - - - 13 (D) Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..............................................: - - - - - 7 - 25 to 99 acres .............................................: - - - - - - - 100 to 249 acres ...........................................: - - - - - - 1 250 to 499 acres ...........................................: - - - - - - - 500 to 999 acres ...........................................: - - - - - - - 1,000 acres or more ........................................: - - - - - - - : Soybeans for beans ........................................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 ...........................................: - - - 1 - - - 250 to 499 acres ...........................................: - - - - - - - 500 to 999 acres ...........................................: - - - - - - - 1,000 acres or more ........................................: - - - - - - - : Sugarbeets for sugar ......................................farms: - - - - - 2 - acres: - - - - - (D) - tons: - - - - - (D) - Irrigated ...............................................farms: - - - - - 2 - acres: - - - - - (D) - Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..............................................: - - - - - - - 25 to 99 acres .............................................: - - - - - - - 100 to 249 acres ...........................................: - - - - - 2 - 250 to 499 acres ...........................................: - - - - - - - 500 to 999 acres ...........................................: - - - - - - - 1,000 acres or more ........................................: - - - - - - - : Sunflower seed, all .......................................farms: - - - - - - 5 acres: - - - - - - 1,350 pounds: - - - - - - 1,392,000 Irrigated ...............................................farms: - - - - - - 5 acres: - - - - - - 1,350 Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..............................................: - - - - - - - 25 to 99 acres .............................................: - - - - - - - 100 to 249 acres ...........................................: - - - - - - 2 250 to 499 acres ...........................................: - - - - - - 3 500 to 999 acres ...........................................: - - - - - - - 1,000 acres or more ........................................: - - - - - - - : Wheat for grain, all ......................................farms: - - 1 3 - 31 26 acres: - - (D) 290 - 4,425 2,864 bushels: - - (D) 21,850 - 288,435 246,193 Irrigated ...............................................farms: - - 1 2 - 22 15 acres: - - (D) (D) - 3,601 1,996 Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..............................................: - - - - - 8 7 25 to 99 acres .............................................: - - 1 1 - 6 6 100 to 249 acres ...........................................: - - - 2 - 13 9 250 to 499 acres ...........................................: - - - - - 3 4 500 to 999 acres ...........................................: - - - - - - - 1,000 acres or more ........................................: - - - - - 1 - : Vegetables harvested for : sale (see text) ..........................................farms: 57 133 45 119 15 155 174 acres: 72 212 1,548 185 (D) 36,314 3,720 Farms by acres harvested: : 0.1 to 4.9 acres ...........................................: 56 127 33 113 13 78 121 5.0 to 24.9 acres ..........................................: 1 6 8 6 2 42 37 25.0 to 99.9 acres .........................................: - - 1 - - 9 7 100.0 to 249.9 acres .......................................: - - 2 - - 10 4 250.0 to 499.9 acres .......................................: - - - - - 1 3 500.0 acres or more ........................................: - - 1 - - 15 2 500.0 to 749.9 acres .....................................: - - - - - 1 2 750.0 to 999.9 acres .....................................: - - 1 - - 2 - 1,000.0 acres or more ....................................: - - - - - 12 - ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 24. Selected Crops Harvested: 2012 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : San Benito :San Bernardino : San Diego : San Francisco : San Joaquin :San Luis Obispo: San Mateo :Santa Barbara ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Peanuts for nuts - Con. : : 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 ........................................: - - - - - - - - : Rice ......................................................farms: - - - - 16 - - - acres: - - - - 4,211 - - - cwt: - - - - 354,712 - - - Irrigated ...............................................farms: - - - - 16 - - - acres: - - - - 4,211 - - - Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..............................................: - - - - - - - - 25 to 99 acres .............................................: - - - - 5 - - - 100 to 249 acres ...........................................: - - - - 5 - - - 250 to 499 acres ...........................................: - - - - 4 - - - 500 to 999 acres ...........................................: - - - - 1 - - - 1,000 acres or more ........................................: - - - - 1 - - - : Sorghum for grain .........................................farms: - - - - 3 - - - acres: - - - - 242 - - - bushels: - - - - 17,406 - - - Irrigated ...............................................farms: - - - - 3 - - - acres: - - - - 242 - - - Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..............................................: - - - - - - - - 25 to 99 acres .............................................: - - - - 1 - - - 100 to 249 acres ...........................................: - - - - 2 - - - 250 to 499 acres ...........................................: - - - - - - - - 500 to 999 acres ...........................................: - - - - - - - - 1,000 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 to 999 acres ...........................................: - - - - - - - - 1,000 acres or more ........................................: - - - - - - - - : Sugarbeets for sugar ......................................farms: - - - - - - - - acres: - - - - - - - - tons: - - - - - - - - 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 ........................................: - - - - - - - - : Sunflower seed, all .......................................farms: - - 9 - 2 - - - acres: - - 96 - (D) - - - pounds: - - 114,000 - (D) - - - Irrigated ...............................................farms: - - 9 - 2 - - - acres: - - 96 - (D) - - - Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..............................................: - - 6 - - - - - 25 to 99 acres .............................................: - - 3 - - - - - 100 to 249 acres ...........................................: - - - - - - - - 250 to 499 acres ...........................................: - - - - - - - - 500 to 999 acres ...........................................: - - - - 1 - - - 1,000 acres or more ........................................: - - - - 1 - - - : Wheat for grain, all ......................................farms: 8 3 - - 121 4 - 6 acres: 432 180 - - 27,752 (D) - 175 bushels: 27,744 4,668 - - 2,182,113 (D) - (D) Irrigated ...............................................farms: 2 - - - 87 3 - 4 acres: (D) - - - 17,309 (D) - (D) Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..............................................: 5 1 - - 20 2 - 5 25 to 99 acres .............................................: 2 2 - - 37 - - - 100 to 249 acres ...........................................: 1 - - - 36 2 - 1 250 to 499 acres ...........................................: - - - - 11 - - - 500 to 999 acres ...........................................: - - - - 12 - - - 1,000 acres or more ........................................: - - - - 5 - - - : Vegetables harvested for : sale (see text) ..........................................farms: 64 112 335 - 193 298 61 222 acres: 10,461 1,032 1,968 - 57,903 25,441 1,312 64,393 Farms by acres harvested: : 0.1 to 4.9 acres ...........................................: 29 87 277 - 24 185 29 92 5.0 to 24.9 acres ..........................................: 6 16 40 - 64 48 23 58 25.0 to 99.9 acres .........................................: 11 6 15 - 20 40 6 32 100.0 to 249.9 acres .......................................: 9 2 3 - 22 6 2 8 250.0 to 499.9 acres .......................................: 2 1 - - 26 4 1 6 500.0 acres or more ........................................: 7 - - - 37 15 - 26 500.0 to 749.9 acres .....................................: 3 - - - 14 4 - 3 750.0 to 999.9 acres .....................................: 1 - - - 6 3 - 2 1,000.0 acres or more ....................................: 3 - - - 17 8 - 21 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 24. Selected Crops Harvested: 2012 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Santa Clara : Santa Cruz : Shasta : Sierra : Siskiyou : Solano : Sonoma : Stanislaus ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Peanuts for nuts - Con. : : 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 ........................................: - - - - - - - - : Rice ......................................................farms: - - - - 1 1 - 4 acres: - - - - (D) (D) - 219 cwt: - - - - (D) (D) - 19,466 Irrigated ...............................................farms: - - - - 1 1 - 4 acres: - - - - (D) (D) - 219 Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..............................................: - - - - - - - 1 25 to 99 acres .............................................: - - - - 1 - - 2 100 to 249 acres ...........................................: - - - - - 1 - 1 250 to 499 acres ...........................................: - - - - - - - - 500 to 999 acres ...........................................: - - - - - - - - 1,000 acres or more ........................................: - - - - - - - - : Sorghum for grain .........................................farms: - - 1 - - 3 - 4 acres: - - (D) - - 356 - 930 bushels: - - (D) - - 29,355 - 80,764 Irrigated ...............................................farms: - - 1 - - 3 - 1 acres: - - (D) - - 356 - (D) Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..............................................: - - 1 - - - - - 25 to 99 acres .............................................: - - - - - 2 - - 100 to 249 acres ...........................................: - - - - - 1 - 2 250 to 499 acres ...........................................: - - - - - - - 2 500 to 999 acres ...........................................: - - - - - - - - 1,000 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 to 999 acres ...........................................: - - - - - - - - 1,000 acres or more ........................................: - - - - - - - - : Sugarbeets for sugar ......................................farms: - - - - - - - - acres: - - - - - - - - tons: - - - - - - - - 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 ........................................: - - - - - - - - : Sunflower seed, all .......................................farms: - - 3 - - 18 - - acres: - - 3 - - 8,378 - - pounds: - - 5,100 - - 11,753,130 - - Irrigated ...............................................farms: - - - - - 13 - - acres: - - - - - 3,561 - - Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..............................................: - - 3 - - - - - 25 to 99 acres .............................................: - - - - - 4 - - 100 to 249 acres ...........................................: - - - - - 3 - - 250 to 499 acres ...........................................: - - - - - 5 - - 500 to 999 acres ...........................................: - - - - - 3 - - 1,000 acres or more ........................................: - - - - - 3 - - : Wheat for grain, all ......................................farms: 1 2 8 - 40 47 7 35 acres: (D) (D) 557 - 22,209 23,066 (D) 4,516 bushels: (D) (D) 21,851 - 2,143,408 1,390,326 (D) 345,745 Irrigated ...............................................farms: - 2 5 - 28 23 4 35 acres: - (D) (D) - 20,985 9,259 (D) 3,604 Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..............................................: - 2 - - 5 1 6 8 25 to 99 acres .............................................: - - 6 - 15 6 - 16 100 to 249 acres ...........................................: 1 - 2 - 11 14 - 7 250 to 499 acres ...........................................: - - - - 3 12 1 2 500 to 999 acres ...........................................: - - - - 1 6 - 1 1,000 acres or more ........................................: - - - - 5 8 - 1 : Vegetables harvested for : sale (see text) ..........................................farms: 200 91 97 - 58 67 330 124 acres: 11,234 17,898 134 - 9,129 13,277 1,121 19,050 Farms by acres harvested: : 0.1 to 4.9 acres ...........................................: 111 54 94 - 46 27 289 55 5.0 to 24.9 acres ..........................................: 69 15 3 - 3 16 33 21 25.0 to 99.9 acres .........................................: 7 9 - - - 5 8 15 100.0 to 249.9 acres .......................................: 4 2 - - 2 4 - 16 250.0 to 499.9 acres .......................................: 3 7 - - - 2 - 10 500.0 acres or more ........................................: 6 4 - - 7 13 - 7 500.0 to 749.9 acres .....................................: 1 - - - 3 5 - 1 750.0 to 999.9 acres .....................................: - - - - 1 3 - 1 1,000.0 acres or more ....................................: 5 4 - - 3 5 - 5 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 24. Selected Crops Harvested: 2012 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Sutter : Tehama : Trinity : Tulare : Tuolumne : Ventura : Yolo : Yuba ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Peanuts for nuts - Con. : : 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 ........................................: - - - - - - - - : Rice ......................................................farms: 269 8 - - - - 69 117 acres: 121,035 1,551 - - - - 36,341 34,303 cwt: 9,666,540 120,079 - - - - 2,963,648 2,670,523 Irrigated ...............................................farms: 269 8 - - - - 69 117 acres: 121,035 1,551 - - - - 36,341 34,303 Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..............................................: 7 - - - - - 1 1 25 to 99 acres .............................................: 33 3 - - - - 5 21 100 to 249 acres ...........................................: 67 3 - - - - 18 46 250 to 499 acres ...........................................: 83 2 - - - - 14 30 500 to 999 acres ...........................................: 54 - - - - - 25 15 1,000 acres or more ........................................: 25 - - - - - 6 4 : Sorghum for grain .........................................farms: 6 - - 12 - - 14 - acres: 996 - - 2,395 - - 1,041 - bushels: 112,390 - - 237,558 - - 86,769 - Irrigated ...............................................farms: 6 - - 7 - - 12 - acres: 994 - - 795 - - (D) - Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..............................................: - - - 1 - - 6 - 25 to 99 acres .............................................: 4 - - 3 - - 5 - 100 to 249 acres ...........................................: - - - 4 - - 2 - 250 to 499 acres ...........................................: 2 - - 3 - - 1 - 500 to 999 acres ...........................................: - - - 1 - - - - 1,000 acres or more ........................................: - - - - - - - - : Soybeans for beans ........................................farms: - - - - - - 1 - acres: - - - - - - (D) - bushels: - - - - - - (D) - Irrigated ...............................................farms: - - - - - - 1 - acres: - - - - - - (D) - Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..............................................: - - - - - - 1 - 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: - - - - - - - - acres: - - - - - - - - tons: - - - - - - - - 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 ........................................: - - - - - - - - : Sunflower seed, all .......................................farms: 33 - - - - 3 53 - acres: 9,047 - - - - 6 18,075 - pounds: 12,222,577 - - - - 9,000 25,593,055 - Irrigated ...............................................farms: 25 - - - - - 45 - acres: 5,872 - - - - - 13,674 - Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..............................................: - - - - - 3 10 - 25 to 99 acres .............................................: 12 - - - - - 4 - 100 to 249 acres ...........................................: 10 - - - - - 17 - 250 to 499 acres ...........................................: 7 - - - - - 12 - 500 to 999 acres ...........................................: 2 - - - - - 6 - 1,000 acres or more ........................................: 2 - - - - - 4 - : Wheat for grain, all ......................................farms: 68 10 - 107 5 - 123 14 acres: 10,230 1,567 - 40,460 5 - 35,091 1,395 bushels: 733,262 136,840 - 3,246,350 165 - 2,715,803 94,603 Irrigated ...............................................farms: 29 1 - 75 - - 83 4 acres: 3,830 (D) - 26,122 - - 26,961 939 Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..............................................: 4 - - 10 5 - 13 2 25 to 99 acres .............................................: 32 5 - 27 - - 43 9 100 to 249 acres ...........................................: 19 2 - 35 - - 26 1 250 to 499 acres ...........................................: 10 3 - 14 - - 19 2 500 to 999 acres ...........................................: 3 - - 13 - - 13 - 1,000 acres or more ........................................: - - - 8 - - 9 - : Vegetables harvested for : sale (see text) ..........................................farms: 56 75 66 134 17 106 114 47 acres: 18,934 83 67 3,611 (D) 35,714 45,059 86 Farms by acres harvested: : 0.1 to 4.9 acres ...........................................: 23 70 64 87 17 47 43 46 5.0 to 24.9 acres ..........................................: 8 5 2 35 - 12 13 1 25.0 to 99.9 acres .........................................: 3 - - 3 - 11 15 - 100.0 to 249.9 acres .......................................: 7 - - 3 - 7 11 - 250.0 to 499.9 acres .......................................: 3 - - 4 - 6 7 - 500.0 acres or more ........................................: 12 - - 2 - 23 25 - 500.0 to 749.9 acres .....................................: 2 - - 2 - 4 7 - 750.0 to 999.9 acres .....................................: 1 - - - - 3 2 - 1,000.0 acres or more ....................................: 9 - - - - 16 16 - ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 24. Selected Crops Harvested: 2012 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : California : Alameda : Alpine : Amador : Butte : Calaveras : Colusa ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Land in orchards ..........................................farms: 38,098 113 1 161 1,162 153 306 acres: 3,138,943 6,228 (D) 3,849 93,629 3,068 59,424 Irrigated ...............................................farms: 34,580 96 1 130 1,073 111 294 acres: 3,072,245 6,063 (D) 3,160 91,648 2,019 58,306 Farms by bearing and nonbearing acres: : 0.1 to 4.9 acres ...........................................: 13,263 58 1 48 324 76 30 5.0 to 24.9 acres ..........................................: 12,094 35 - 67 411 48 95 25.0 to 99.9 acres .........................................: 7,356 12 - 40 233 21 79 100.0 to 249.9 acres .......................................: 2,969 5 - 3 114 5 52 250.0 to 499.9 acres .......................................: 1,271 1 - 3 46 3 22 500.0 acres or more ........................................: 1,145 2 - - 34 - 28 500.0 to 749.9 acres .....................................: 439 - - - 13 - 13 750.0 to 999.9 acres .....................................: 217 - - - 14 - 6 1,000.0 acres or more ....................................: 489 2 - - 7 - 9 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Contra Costa : Del Norte : El Dorado : Fresno : Glenn : Humboldt : Imperial ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Land in orchards ..........................................farms: 211 1 580 3,753 622 148 41 acres: 6,771 (D) 3,926 529,516 94,701 428 6,354 Irrigated ...............................................farms: 170 - 494 3,585 597 79 33 acres: 6,232 - 3,370 519,372 93,129 224 6,323 Farms by bearing and nonbearing acres: : 0.1 to 4.9 acres ...........................................: 95 1 376 399 116 120 12 5.0 to 24.9 acres ..........................................: 68 - 170 1,243 200 25 6 25.0 to 99.9 acres .........................................: 35 - 32 1,196 166 3 5 100.0 to 249.9 acres .......................................: 4 - 2 471 74 - 9 250.0 to 499.9 acres .......................................: 6 - - 226 31 - 5 500.0 acres or more ........................................: 3 - - 218 35 - 4 500.0 to 749.9 acres .....................................: 2 - - 89 11 - 2 750.0 to 999.9 acres .....................................: 1 - - 46 8 - 2 1,000.0 acres or more ....................................: - - - 83 16 - - ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Inyo : Kern : Kings : Lake : Lassen : Los Angeles : Madera ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Land in orchards ..........................................farms: 6 823 413 533 18 298 928 acres: (D) 450,716 77,038 15,410 87 1,826 222,444 Irrigated ...............................................farms: 2 797 399 319 17 243 911 acres: (D) 450,229 76,638 12,502 (D) 1,765 222,192 Farms by bearing and nonbearing acres: : 0.1 to 4.9 acres ...........................................: 5 95 76 179 14 219 51 5.0 to 24.9 acres ..........................................: - 106 121 236 3 65 195 25.0 to 99.9 acres .........................................: 1 170 103 87 1 12 338 100.0 to 249.9 acres .......................................: - 199 57 19 - 2 158 250.0 to 499.9 acres .......................................: - 107 30 9 - - 84 500.0 acres or more ........................................: - 146 26 3 - - 102 500.0 to 749.9 acres .....................................: - 43 9 1 - - 39 750.0 to 999.9 acres .....................................: - 19 5 1 - - 19 1,000.0 acres or more ....................................: - 84 12 1 - - 44 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Marin : Mariposa : Mendocino : Merced : Modoc : Mono : Monterey ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Land in orchards ..........................................farms: 65 46 510 1,197 3 2 273 acres: 794 518 20,853 160,612 (D) (D) 60,056 Irrigated ...............................................farms: 48 33 419 1,119 3 2 233 acres: 429 467 19,590 155,365 (D) (D) 59,766 Farms by bearing and nonbearing acres: : 0.1 to 4.9 acres ...........................................: 39 23 183 92 1 2 94 5.0 to 24.9 acres ..........................................: 17 21 180 389 2 - 72 25.0 to 99.9 acres .........................................: 6 1 87 435 - - 41 100.0 to 249.9 acres .......................................: 3 1 47 165 - - 23 250.0 to 499.9 acres .......................................: - - 9 54 - - 13 500.0 acres or more ........................................: - - 4 62 - - 30 500.0 to 749.9 acres .....................................: - - 1 21 - - 6 750.0 to 999.9 acres .....................................: - - - 9 - - 11 1,000.0 acres or more ....................................: - - 3 32 - - 13 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Napa : Nevada : Orange : Placer : Plumas : Riverside : Sacramento ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Land in orchards ..........................................farms: 1,454 158 102 329 - 1,540 232 acres: 50,527 559 2,846 1,752 - 44,894 28,362 Irrigated ...............................................farms: 1,284 121 102 277 - 1,449 232 acres: 47,820 498 2,846 1,501 - 43,875 28,348 Farms by bearing and nonbearing acres: : 0.1 to 4.9 acres ...........................................: 617 133 78 243 - 810 106 5.0 to 24.9 acres ..........................................: 528 21 10 72 - 549 42 25.0 to 99.9 acres .........................................: 222 4 11 12 - 115 34 100.0 to 249.9 acres .......................................: 55 - - 2 - 44 14 250.0 to 499.9 acres .......................................: 15 - 2 - - 11 23 500.0 acres or more ........................................: 17 - 1 - - 11 13 500.0 to 749.9 acres .....................................: 9 - - - - 4 5 750.0 to 999.9 acres .....................................: 1 - - - - - 2 1,000.0 acres or more ....................................: 7 - 1 - - 7 6 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 24. Selected Crops Harvested: 2012 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : San Benito :San Bernardino : San Diego : San Francisco : San Joaquin :San Luis Obispo: San Mateo :Santa Barbara ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Land in orchards ..........................................farms: 192 460 4,124 2 2,327 1,108 56 735 acres: 7,215 5,855 32,887 (D) 238,036 52,739 217 33,541 Irrigated ...............................................farms: 169 414 3,749 - 2,254 860 41 670 acres: 6,949 5,180 30,497 - 237,113 48,687 139 32,220 Farms by bearing and nonbearing acres: : 0.1 to 4.9 acres ...........................................: 83 284 3,046 2 388 368 40 366 5.0 to 24.9 acres ..........................................: 60 143 861 - 839 443 15 195 25.0 to 99.9 acres .........................................: 32 24 161 - 600 202 1 112 100.0 to 249.9 acres .......................................: 7 6 35 - 296 51 - 37 250.0 to 499.9 acres .......................................: 7 1 20 - 107 18 - 16 500.0 acres or more ........................................: 3 2 1 - 97 26 - 9 500.0 to 749.9 acres .....................................: 3 2 1 - 47 12 - 1 750.0 to 999.9 acres .....................................: - - - - 19 6 - 2 1,000.0 acres or more ....................................: - - - - 31 8 - 6 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Santa Clara : Santa Cruz : Shasta : Sierra : Siskiyou : Solano : Sonoma : Stanislaus ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Land in orchards ..........................................farms: 366 271 298 1 23 318 2,029 2,293 acres: 3,598 4,274 1,911 (D) 166 19,869 66,107 186,029 Irrigated ...............................................farms: 280 193 232 1 21 276 1,667 2,169 acres: 2,938 3,256 1,463 (D) (D) 19,568 61,381 182,466 Farms by bearing and nonbearing acres: : 0.1 to 4.9 acres ...........................................: 217 153 215 1 17 96 881 375 5.0 to 24.9 acres ..........................................: 120 72 65 - 4 103 752 924 25.0 to 99.9 acres .........................................: 23 36 18 - 2 74 288 613 100.0 to 249.9 acres .......................................: 6 8 - - - 27 68 223 250.0 to 499.9 acres .......................................: - 2 - - - 13 22 100 500.0 acres or more ........................................: - - - - - 5 18 58 500.0 to 749.9 acres .....................................: - - - - - 3 4 21 750.0 to 999.9 acres .....................................: - - - - - 1 - 16 1,000.0 acres or more ....................................: - - - - - 1 14 21 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Sutter : Tehama : Trinity : Tulare : Tuolumne : Ventura : Yolo : Yuba ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Land in orchards ..........................................farms: 839 614 62 3,448 65 1,622 401 262 acres: 75,020 47,806 271 294,735 404 42,998 49,418 28,572 Irrigated ...............................................farms: 783 568 46 3,282 54 1,527 389 262 acres: 71,855 46,096 230 287,863 370 42,027 49,383 28,572 Farms by bearing and nonbearing acres: : 0.1 to 4.9 acres ...........................................: 141 167 46 725 48 705 80 103 5.0 to 24.9 acres ..........................................: 274 245 13 1,181 15 575 137 61 25.0 to 99.9 acres .........................................: 255 121 3 902 1 248 94 44 100.0 to 249.9 acres .......................................: 104 43 - 395 1 73 38 23 250.0 to 499.9 acres .......................................: 37 15 - 156 - 16 28 13 500.0 acres or more ........................................: 28 23 - 89 - 5 24 18 500.0 to 749.9 acres .....................................: 15 9 - 34 - 1 11 7 750.0 to 999.9 acres .....................................: 1 6 - 15 - 1 2 4 1,000.0 acres or more ....................................: 12 8 - 40 - 3 11 7 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Table 25. Field Crops: 2012 and 2007 [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : 2012 : 2007 :------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : Harvested : Irrigated : Harvested : Irrigated :------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Geographic area : Farms : Acres : Quantity : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Quantity : Farms : Acres ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- BARLEY FOR GRAIN (BUSHELS) : : State Total : : California........................................: 264 81,954 5,312,595 144 44,819 161 44,125 2,872,476 111 23,999 : Counties : : Alameda...........................................: 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) - - - - - Butte.............................................: 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) - - - - - Colusa............................................: 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) - - - - - Contra Costa......................................: 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) - - - - - Fresno............................................: 25 7,319 478,338 16 3,264 19 6,516 351,675 16 4,222 Glenn.............................................: 7 762 51,457 5 (D) 6 547 56,443 5 523 Humboldt..........................................: 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) - - - - - Imperial..........................................: 4 (D) (D) 3 (D) 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) Kern..............................................: 11 3,851 211,070 9 (D) 10 2,376 225,883 9 2,076 Kings.............................................: 8 7,484 413,044 7 (D) 4 1,595 154,009 4 1,595 : Lassen............................................: 2 (D) (D) - - 7 838 126,165 6 808 Los Angeles.......................................: 5 7,416 800,647 3 (D) - - - - - Madera............................................: 5 614 66,216 4 (D) 3 171 11,817 3 171 Marin.............................................: - - - - - 1 (D) (D) - - Mendocino.........................................: 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) (D) - - Merced............................................: 6 3,561 162,512 5 (D) 6 1,224 (D) 4 (D) Modoc.............................................: 17 3,791 311,147 13 2,348 15 2,724 273,815 15 2,724 Mono..............................................: - - - - - 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) Monterey..........................................: 18 4,147 207,525 3 430 7 2,068 191,728 6 1,805 Orange............................................: 2 (D) (D) - - - - - - - : Placer............................................: 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) - - - - - Riverside.........................................: 3 1,602 67,279 3 1,602 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) Sacramento........................................: 6 700 29,167 - - 3 425 33,718 - - San Benito........................................: 4 145 7,162 - - 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) San Bernardino....................................: 3 (D) (D) 2 (D) 3 128 7,584 3 128 San Diego.........................................: - - - - - 2 (D) (D) - - San Joaquin.......................................: 8 716 57,500 8 716 6 350 18,518 1 (D) San Luis Obispo...................................: 49 15,782 705,362 15 1,573 16 11,228 322,913 3 (D) Santa Barbara.....................................: 7 (D) (D) 2 (D) 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) Shasta............................................: 4 (D) (D) 3 (D) 2 (D) (D) 1 (D) : Siskiyou..........................................: 24 4,167 320,417 15 2,640 16 4,317 346,850 13 3,267 Solano............................................: 6 2,984 166,556 - - 3 (D) 24,127 1 (D) Sonoma............................................: 1 (D) (D) - - 1 (D) (D) - - Stanislaus........................................: 7 415 18,234 6 (D) 6 293 27,649 4 142 Tehama............................................: 2 (D) (D) - - 4 1,790 73,339 2 (D) Tulare............................................: 11 1,030 47,407 7 324 3 292 31,336 3 292 Ventura...........................................: 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) Yolo..............................................: 8 2,948 160,560 4 1,558 8 2,641 114,549 3 (D) : BUCKWHEAT (BUSHELS) : : State Total : : California........................................: 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) - - - - - : Counties : : Humboldt..........................................: 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) - - - - - : CANOLA (POUNDS) : : State Total : : California........................................: 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) 4 16 24,200 4 16 : Counties : : Imperial..........................................: 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) 4 16 24,200 4 16 Lassen............................................: 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) - - - - - : CORN FOR GRAIN (BUSHELS) : : State Total : : California........................................: 733 180,672 31,922,610 733 175,863 606 189,965 34,602,626 606 189,965 : Counties : : Amador............................................: 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) Butte.............................................: 4 499 107,291 4 499 6 1,317 164,576 6 1,317 Colusa............................................: 27 5,799 1,173,253 27 5,799 23 5,796 1,115,415 23 5,796 Contra Costa......................................: 4 1,851 271,181 4 1,851 5 1,780 201,433 5 1,780 El Dorado.........................................: 10 18 648 10 18 - - - - - Fresno............................................: 29 4,183 816,638 29 4,183 56 11,180 1,959,370 56 11,180 Glenn.............................................: 43 7,264 1,570,387 43 7,236 47 17,292 3,538,728 47 17,292 Humboldt..........................................: 9 9 296 9 9 - - - - - Imperial..........................................: 4 580 95,496 4 580 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) Kern..............................................: 16 4,598 675,548 16 4,598 24 6,342 1,155,941 24 6,342 : Kings.............................................: 56 8,486 1,454,127 56 8,486 34 9,723 1,843,363 34 9,723 Lake..............................................: - - - - - 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) Los Angeles.......................................: 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) - - - - - Madera............................................: 11 2,104 424,109 11 2,104 11 1,938 316,325 11 1,938 Mendocino.........................................: 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) - - - - - Merced............................................: 74 19,555 3,793,985 74 19,255 62 16,754 2,957,786 62 16,754 Modoc.............................................: 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) - - - - - Monterey..........................................: 3 (D) (D) 3 (D) 4 12 502 4 12 Napa..............................................: 4 4 363 4 4 3 3 450 3 3 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 25. Field Crops: 2012 and 2007 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : 2012 : 2007 :------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : Harvested : Irrigated : Harvested : Irrigated :------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Geographic area : Farms : Acres : Quantity : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Quantity : Farms : Acres ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- CORN FOR GRAIN (BUSHELS) - Con. : : Counties - Con. : : Nevada............................................: 4 4 272 4 4 - - - - - Orange............................................: 8 370 10,126 8 370 - - - - - Placer............................................: 5 (D) (D) 5 (D) 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) Riverside.........................................: 10 (D) 910 10 (D) 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) Sacramento........................................: 52 16,082 2,416,394 52 15,372 64 22,433 3,948,508 64 22,433 San Benito........................................: 6 12 216 6 12 - - - - - San Bernardino....................................: 5 16 (D) 5 16 - - - - - San Diego.........................................: 8 492 58,536 8 492 - - - - - San Joaquin.......................................: 87 49,930 7,996,212 87 49,930 90 48,684 8,129,558 90 48,684 San Luis Obispo...................................: 9 264 34,431 9 264 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) : San Mateo.........................................: 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) Santa Barbara.....................................: 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) Santa Clara.......................................: 3 3 150 3 3 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) Shasta............................................: 6 60 858 6 60 - - - - - Solano............................................: 28 9,289 1,734,533 28 9,005 29 9,109 1,750,522 29 9,109 Sonoma............................................: 12 12 432 12 12 4 (D) (D) 4 (D) Stanislaus........................................: 27 4,911 907,307 27 2,392 21 2,635 458,177 21 2,635 Sutter............................................: 32 11,478 2,254,762 32 11,254 18 10,169 2,080,287 18 10,169 Tehama............................................: 6 719 (D) 6 719 8 602 118,987 8 602 Tulare............................................: 69 15,873 3,105,707 69 15,873 47 11,394 2,160,728 47 11,394 : Tuolumne..........................................: 5 5 535 5 5 - - - - - Yolo..............................................: 48 15,084 2,688,902 48 14,454 38 11,348 2,441,796 38 11,348 Yuba..............................................: 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) : COTTON, ALL (BALES) : : State Total : : California........................................: 630 367,766 1,201,860 630 367,766 855 471,378 1,418,751 855 471,378 : Counties : : Colusa............................................: 3 (D) (D) 3 (D) 6 849 2,842 6 849 Fresno............................................: 226 106,400 372,116 226 106,400 327 139,655 415,884 327 139,655 Glenn.............................................: 9 1,610 5,230 9 1,610 12 3,730 11,440 12 3,730 Imperial..........................................: 5 3,073 10,239 5 3,073 10 5,076 18,007 10 5,076 Kern..............................................: 121 55,547 181,331 121 55,547 148 89,543 268,167 148 89,543 Kings.............................................: 87 109,923 317,609 87 109,923 119 130,398 375,760 119 130,398 Madera............................................: 10 2,091 7,170 10 2,091 23 6,649 20,758 23 6,649 Merced............................................: 93 48,522 165,680 93 48,522 102 57,425 179,368 102 57,425 Riverside.........................................: 15 13,073 54,128 15 13,073 25 12,900 47,626 25 12,900 Santa Clara.......................................: - - - - - 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) : Stanislaus........................................: - - - - - 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) Sutter............................................: 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) 3 (D) (D) 3 (D) Tulare............................................: 59 26,672 85,744 59 26,672 78 23,570 73,728 78 23,570 : UPLAND COTTON (BALES) : : State Total : : California........................................: 404 142,094 499,302 404 142,094 588 211,990 677,794 588 211,990 : Counties : : Colusa............................................: 3 (D) (D) 3 (D) 6 849 2,842 6 849 Fresno............................................: 96 32,645 113,489 96 32,645 153 45,996 144,860 153 45,996 Glenn.............................................: 9 1,610 5,230 9 1,610 12 3,730 11,440 12 3,730 Imperial..........................................: 5 3,073 10,239 5 3,073 9 (D) (D) 9 (D) Kern..............................................: 79 19,725 68,808 79 19,725 113 38,185 118,861 113 38,185 Kings.............................................: 47 12,741 44,069 47 12,741 77 24,215 77,849 77 24,215 Madera............................................: 10 2,091 7,170 10 2,091 22 (D) (D) 22 (D) Merced............................................: 83 37,866 131,988 83 37,866 94 53,022 167,528 94 53,022 Riverside.........................................: 15 13,073 54,128 15 13,073 25 12,900 47,626 25 12,900 Santa Clara.......................................: - - - - - 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) : Stanislaus........................................: - - - - - 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) Sutter............................................: 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) 3 (D) (D) 3 (D) Tulare............................................: 55 18,415 61,568 55 18,415 72 (D) (D) 72 (D) : PIMA COTTON (BALES) : : State Total : : California........................................: 341 225,672 702,558 341 225,672 424 259,388 740,957 424 259,388 : Counties : : Fresno............................................: 165 73,755 258,627 165 73,755 224 93,659 271,024 224 93,659 Imperial..........................................: - - - - - 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) Kern..............................................: 75 35,822 112,523 75 35,822 86 51,358 149,306 86 51,358 Kings.............................................: 62 97,182 273,540 62 97,182 75 106,183 297,911 75 106,183 Madera............................................: - - - - - 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) Merced............................................: 30 10,656 33,692 30 10,656 23 4,403 11,840 23 4,403 Tulare............................................: 9 8,257 24,176 9 8,257 14 (D) (D) 14 (D) : DRY EDIBLE BEANS, : EXCLUDING LIMAS (CWT) : : State Total : : California........................................: 308 39,511 955,995 269 36,866 239 34,002 709,841 237 30,134 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 25. Field Crops: 2012 and 2007 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : 2012 : 2007 :------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : Harvested : Irrigated : Harvested : Irrigated :------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Geographic area : Farms : Acres : Quantity : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Quantity : Farms : Acres ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- DRY EDIBLE BEANS, : EXCLUDING LIMAS (CWT) - Con. : : Counties : : Butte.............................................: 8 745 15,085 7 (D) 9 563 11,172 9 442 Colusa............................................: 10 3,148 47,898 10 3,148 18 4,523 100,916 18 4,503 El Dorado.........................................: 4 4 64 4 4 - - - - - Fresno............................................: 29 5,657 153,176 29 5,657 23 2,364 44,056 23 2,364 Glenn.............................................: 7 1,455 47,319 7 1,455 11 804 17,769 11 804 Humboldt..........................................: 13 29 485 3 3 1 (D) (D) - - Imperial..........................................: 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) - - - - - Kern..............................................: 18 2,096 69,919 18 2,096 15 4,099 111,247 15 3,599 Kings.............................................: 9 3,765 111,740 9 3,765 7 1,403 26,500 7 1,403 Madera............................................: 5 330 10,030 5 330 7 609 15,670 7 609 : Merced............................................: 6 892 27,671 6 892 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) Monterey..........................................: 12 1,183 27,021 6 860 5 633 14,694 5 633 Napa..............................................: - - - - - 4 10 112 4 10 Nevada............................................: 3 3 43 3 3 - - - - - Orange............................................: 2 (D) (D) - - - - - - - Placer............................................: 1 (D) (D) - - - - - - - Sacramento........................................: 6 (D) (D) 6 (D) 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) San Benito........................................: 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) San Bernardino....................................: 4 (D) (D) 4 (D) - - - - - San Diego.........................................: - - - - - 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) : San Joaquin.......................................: 40 3,742 85,903 34 3,550 23 2,794 62,419 23 2,779 San Luis Obispo...................................: 6 196 3,699 1 (D) 12 259 3,448 11 256 San Mateo.........................................: 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) 4 128 (D) 4 128 Santa Barbara.....................................: 8 949 19,931 8 949 12 770 15,658 12 770 Santa Clara.......................................: 4 (D) (D) 4 (D) 5 (D) (D) 5 217 Santa Cruz........................................: 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) Solano............................................: 6 700 14,050 6 700 12 3,669 70,499 12 1,426 Sonoma............................................: 8 11 274 6 (D) 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) Stanislaus........................................: 28 1,647 32,801 28 1,647 9 683 13,576 9 683 Sutter............................................: 27 7,073 138,493 22 5,913 20 5,912 105,519 20 5,131 : Tehama............................................: 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) Tulare............................................: 20 2,262 75,727 20 2,262 22 1,964 45,114 22 1,964 Tuolumne..........................................: 5 5 110 5 5 - - - - - Ventura...........................................: 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) Yolo..............................................: 8 2,203 41,841 7 (D) 10 1,628 25,080 10 1,628 Yuba..............................................: 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) - - - - - : DRY LIMA BEANS (CWT) : : State Total : : California........................................: 89 17,556 425,493 79 16,622 139 28,786 673,392 139 28,213 : Counties : : Butte.............................................: - - - - - 3 372 8,640 3 372 Colusa............................................: 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) 11 2,761 52,702 11 2,761 Fresno............................................: 4 (D) (D) 2 (D) 4 967 23,819 4 967 Glenn.............................................: 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) 15 1,772 43,563 15 1,772 Kern..............................................: - - - - - 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) Madera............................................: - - - - - 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) Merced............................................: 8 807 20,448 8 807 8 854 21,558 8 854 Monterey..........................................: 3 101 3,359 2 (D) 3 116 2,987 3 116 Napa..............................................: 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) Nevada............................................: 2 (D) (D) - - - - - - - : Orange............................................: 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) Placer............................................: - - - - - 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) Sacramento........................................: - - - - - 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) San Joaquin.......................................: 12 3,290 79,694 12 3,290 23 5,364 114,948 23 5,364 San Luis Obispo...................................: - - - - - 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) San Mateo.........................................: - - - - - 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) Santa Barbara.....................................: 5 534 8,982 5 394 8 660 10,790 8 580 Santa Clara.......................................: 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) Solano............................................: 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) 4 386 8,903 4 386 Sonoma............................................: 5 9 202 5 9 - - - - - : Stanislaus........................................: 24 6,626 160,710 21 6,476 32 10,144 251,991 32 10,144 Sutter............................................: 10 1,790 40,954 10 1,479 12 3,511 86,542 12 3,018 Tehama............................................: 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) Tulare............................................: - - - - - 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) Ventura...........................................: 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) Yolo..............................................: 6 399 5,926 4 (D) 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) : DRY EDIBLE PEAS (CWT) : : State Total : : California........................................: 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) : Counties : : Glenn.............................................: 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) - - - - - Modoc.............................................: 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) : FLAXSEED (BUSHELS) : : State Total : : California........................................: 4 4 28 2 (D) - - - - - ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 25. Field Crops: 2012 and 2007 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : 2012 : 2007 :------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : Harvested : Irrigated : Harvested : Irrigated :------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Geographic area : Farms : Acres : Quantity : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Quantity : Farms : Acres ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- FLAXSEED (BUSHELS) - Con. : : Counties : : Humboldt..........................................: 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) - - - - - Sonoma............................................: 2 (D) (D) - - - - - - - : MUSTARD SEED (POUNDS) : : State Total : : California........................................: - - - - - 9 (D) (D) 8 (D) : Counties : : Fresno............................................: - - - - - 8 (D) (D) 8 (D) Yolo..............................................: - - - - - 1 (D) (D) - - : OATS FOR GRAIN (BUSHELS) : : State Total : : California........................................: 240 25,065 2,246,420 145 15,901 299 25,993 2,595,144 198 18,141 : Counties : : Butte.............................................: 1 (D) (D) - - - - - - - Colusa............................................: 1 (D) (D) - - 1 (D) (D) - - Fresno............................................: 13 1,624 197,099 10 1,279 20 2,411 257,742 18 1,757 Glenn.............................................: 10 1,200 78,084 1 (D) 7 604 52,686 4 349 Humboldt..........................................: 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) - - - - - Imperial..........................................: 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) 10 1,026 127,527 10 1,026 Kern..............................................: 5 1,837 116,876 4 (D) 5 420 47,083 5 420 Kings.............................................: 4 404 50,217 4 404 14 625 70,105 14 625 Lake..............................................: 1 (D) (D) - - 5 108 2,565 - - Lassen............................................: 2 (D) (D) 1 (D) 3 77 (D) 1 (D) : Los Angeles.......................................: 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) - - - - - Madera............................................: 11 993 105,126 5 679 11 1,842 191,176 6 670 Marin.............................................: 1 (D) (D) - - 1 (D) (D) - - Merced............................................: 39 6,511 592,383 33 5,033 55 7,530 782,099 43 6,792 Modoc.............................................: 2 (D) (D) - - 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) Monterey..........................................: - - - - - 5 203 19,809 1 (D) Riverside.........................................: 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) Sacramento........................................: 1 (D) (D) - - 4 200 12,975 2 (D) San Benito........................................: 1 (D) (D) - - 4 250 16,244 - - San Bernardino....................................: - - - - - 4 278 15,625 4 278 : San Diego.........................................: 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) San Joaquin.......................................: 20 1,890 133,637 16 1,410 26 1,615 192,898 18 1,446 San Luis Obispo...................................: 10 355 29,928 5 98 14 555 21,721 5 89 San Mateo.........................................: 3 90 11,070 - - 2 (D) (D) - - Santa Barbara.....................................: 3 166 18,580 2 (D) 3 (D) (D) 1 (D) Santa Clara.......................................: - - - - - 1 (D) (D) - - Siskiyou..........................................: 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) Solano............................................: 2 (D) (D) 1 (D) 4 198 (D) 2 (D) Sonoma............................................: 6 574 25,376 2 (D) 10 1,968 133,663 1 (D) Stanislaus........................................: 44 4,385 457,806 32 4,111 43 2,521 275,708 34 2,265 : Sutter............................................: 3 284 (D) 2 (D) 5 421 27,001 2 (D) Tehama............................................: 8 259 21,791 1 (D) 6 149 10,313 3 100 Tulare............................................: 25 1,116 93,128 13 782 17 823 96,984 9 497 Ventura...........................................: 2 (D) (D) - - 3 507 32,047 - - Yolo..............................................: 8 527 72,334 4 335 9 769 89,952 9 769 Yuba..............................................: 5 21 1,125 - - 1 (D) (D) - - : PEANUTS FOR NUTS (POUNDS) : : State Total : : California........................................: 15 27 84,093 15 27 11 14 28,000 11 14 : Counties : : Fresno............................................: 10 20 62,290 10 20 9 (D) (D) 9 (D) Kern..............................................: 3 (D) (D) 3 (D) - - - - - Kings.............................................: 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) - - - - - Tulare............................................: - - - - - 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) : POPCORN (POUNDS, SHELLED) : : State Total : : California........................................: 10 (D) 1,933,604 8 (D) 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) : Counties : : Fresno............................................: 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) - - - - - Sonoma............................................: 7 7 4,700 5 (D) - - - - - Sutter............................................: 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) Tulare............................................: 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) - - - - - : PROSO MILLET (BUSHELS) : : State Total : : California........................................: 2 (D) (D) 1 (D) - - - - - ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 25. Field Crops: 2012 and 2007 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : 2012 : 2007 :------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : Harvested : Irrigated : Harvested : Irrigated :------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Geographic area : Farms : Acres : Quantity : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Quantity : Farms : Acres ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- PROSO MILLET (BUSHELS) - Con. : : Counties : : Lassen............................................: 1 (D) (D) - - - - - - - Solano............................................: 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) - - - - - : RAPESEED (POUNDS) : : State Total : : California........................................: 4 (D) (D) - - - - - - - : Counties : : Fresno............................................: 4 (D) (D) - - - - - - - : RICE (CWT) : : State Total : : California........................................: 1,392 561,968 46,692,580 1,392 561,968 1,304 531,075 43,018,947 1,304 531,075 : Counties : : Butte.............................................: 199 94,546 8,282,242 199 94,546 217 97,845 8,463,505 217 97,845 Colusa............................................: 365 153,224 12,787,320 365 153,224 365 147,817 11,962,438 365 147,817 Contra Costa......................................: 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) - - - - - Fresno............................................: 8 4,430 314,492 8 4,430 7 5,036 265,236 7 5,036 Glenn.............................................: 275 94,330 8,155,826 275 94,330 249 93,817 8,200,565 249 93,817 Lassen............................................: 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) - - - - - Madera............................................: 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) Mendocino.........................................: 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) - - - - - Merced............................................: 8 3,462 248,198 8 3,462 5 2,958 230,727 5 2,958 Modoc.............................................: 3 (D) (D) 3 (D) - - - - - : Monterey..........................................: 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) - - - - - Napa..............................................: 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) Placer............................................: 30 9,373 722,254 30 9,373 26 9,313 646,857 26 9,313 Sacramento........................................: 10 2,040 168,609 10 2,040 15 5,114 411,546 15 5,114 San Joaquin.......................................: 16 4,211 354,712 16 4,211 12 4,323 318,832 12 4,323 Siskiyou..........................................: 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) - - - - - Solano............................................: 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) Stanislaus........................................: 4 219 19,466 4 219 6 372 29,443 6 372 Sutter............................................: 269 121,035 9,666,540 269 121,035 222 99,284 7,683,736 222 99,284 Tehama............................................: 8 1,551 120,079 8 1,551 6 915 59,107 6 915 : Yolo..............................................: 69 36,341 2,963,648 69 36,341 69 29,675 2,223,143 69 29,675 Yuba..............................................: 117 34,303 2,670,523 117 34,303 102 33,399 2,433,126 102 33,399 : RYE FOR GRAIN (BUSHELS) : : State Total : : California........................................: 19 1,794 46,991 4 (D) 14 427 13,992 1 (D) : Counties : : Humboldt..........................................: 3 (D) (D) 2 (D) - - - - - Lassen............................................: 1 (D) (D) - - 1 (D) (D) - - Merced............................................: 4 227 7,100 - - 6 264 8,396 - - San Benito........................................: - - - - - 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) San Joaquin.......................................: 3 (D) (D) 2 (D) - - - - - Siskiyou..........................................: 3 228 2,736 - - 4 75 1,951 - - Solano............................................: 1 (D) (D) - - - - - - - Sonoma............................................: 4 20 302 - - 2 (D) (D) - - : SAFFLOWER (POUNDS) : : State Total : : California........................................: 138 50,265 98,801,370 63 29,411 255 47,550 112,031,287 159 29,892 : Counties : : Butte.............................................: 6 584 476,004 2 (D) 4 220 (D) - - Colusa............................................: 4 546 642,288 1 (D) 27 5,063 10,948,431 13 3,106 Contra Costa......................................: 4 2,690 1,384,000 4 2,690 - - - - - Fresno............................................: 6 497 543,580 5 (D) 20 3,886 11,809,867 19 3,846 Glenn.............................................: 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) 6 772 1,520,000 3 446 Imperial..........................................: - - - - - 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) Kern..............................................: 3 (D) (D) 3 (D) 7 1,440 3,761,162 7 1,375 Kings.............................................: 6 (D) (D) 4 (D) 21 4,204 9,836,268 19 3,868 Lassen............................................: - - - - - 1 (D) (D) - - Madera............................................: 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) : Merced............................................: - - - - - 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) Placer............................................: - - - - - 1 (D) (D) - - Sacramento........................................: 9 1,348 2,041,600 6 518 34 5,537 13,829,189 19 3,526 San Benito........................................: 2 (D) (D) - - - - - - - San Joaquin.......................................: 23 3,386 9,087,452 16 (D) 35 5,315 12,397,241 27 3,965 San Luis Obispo...................................: 5 676 1,332,234 3 (D) 5 533 620,000 - - Santa Clara.......................................: - - - - - 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) Siskiyou..........................................: - - - - - 1 (D) (D) - - Solano............................................: 11 2,915 6,205,168 4 422 12 3,696 8,270,608 5 1,044 Sutter............................................: 15 2,698 5,437,878 3 (D) 27 5,705 11,480,896 13 2,622 : Tehama............................................: 1 (D) (D) - - 3 300 247,754 1 (D) Tulare............................................: 2 (D) (D) - - - - - - - ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 25. Field Crops: 2012 and 2007 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : 2012 : 2007 :------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : Harvested : Irrigated : Harvested : Irrigated :------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Geographic area : Farms : Acres : Quantity : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Quantity : Farms : Acres ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- SAFFLOWER (POUNDS) - Con. : : Counties - Con. : : Yolo..............................................: 38 9,749 18,132,584 9 1,517 45 10,388 25,974,796 28 5,730 Yuba..............................................: - - - - - 1 (D) (D) - - : SORGHUM FOR GRAIN : (BUSHELS) : : State Total : : California........................................: 74 13,908 1,263,924 62 10,997 58 10,909 909,160 53 9,705 : Counties : : Butte.............................................: - - - - - 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) Colusa............................................: - - - - - 7 916 70,440 7 916 Fresno............................................: 3 (D) (D) 2 (D) 9 856 79,179 7 832 Glenn.............................................: 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) 5 577 68,510 5 577 Imperial..........................................: - - - - - 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) Kern..............................................: 5 1,447 94,448 4 (D) 2 (D) (D) 1 (D) Kings.............................................: 13 5,107 485,718 13 5,090 3 260 21,989 3 260 Merced............................................: - - - - - 3 270 9,720 3 270 Riverside.........................................: 7 13 1,431 7 13 - - - - - Sacramento........................................: 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) 8 1,460 78,758 6 1,280 : San Joaquin.......................................: 3 242 17,406 3 242 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) Shasta............................................: 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) - - - - - Solano............................................: 3 356 29,355 3 356 - - - - - Stanislaus........................................: 4 930 80,764 1 (D) 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) Sutter............................................: 6 996 112,390 6 994 6 960 99,878 6 960 Tulare............................................: 12 2,395 237,558 7 795 4 (D) (D) 4 (D) Yolo..............................................: 14 1,041 86,769 12 (D) 5 841 55,768 5 841 : SOYBEANS FOR BEANS : (BUSHELS) : : State Total : : California........................................: 2 (D) (D) 1 (D) - - - - - : Counties : : Placer............................................: 1 (D) (D) - - - - - - - Yolo..............................................: 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) - - - - - : SUGARBEETS FOR SUGAR : (TONS) : : State Total : : California........................................: 58 27,193 1,179,753 58 26,567 155 42,984 1,539,394 155 42,984 : Counties : : Fresno............................................: 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) 48 10,683 359,531 48 10,683 Imperial..........................................: 55 (D) 1,169,409 55 (D) 63 25,532 970,282 63 25,532 Kern..............................................: - - - - - 11 1,895 64,956 11 1,895 Kings.............................................: - - - - - 7 1,643 42,229 7 1,643 Madera............................................: - - - - - 3 426 12,291 3 426 Merced............................................: - - - - - 14 1,878 60,484 14 1,878 Riverside.........................................: 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) - - - - - San Joaquin.......................................: - - - - - 3 625 19,375 3 625 Tulare............................................: - - - - - 5 (D) (D) 5 (D) Yolo..............................................: - - - - - 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) : SUNFLOWER SEED, ALL : (POUNDS) : : State Total : : California........................................: 197 49,749 68,792,639 152 34,815 111 27,913 29,776,645 98 23,937 : Counties : : Butte.............................................: 7 (D) (D) 7 (D) 5 (D) 301,200 3 (D) Colusa............................................: 19 6,267 8,292,300 15 4,360 10 1,730 1,534,141 9 982 Fresno............................................: - - - - - 3 (D) 93,300 2 (D) Glenn.............................................: 38 3,797 4,847,154 31 (D) 25 2,790 3,229,457 24 2,582 Humboldt..........................................: 6 6 3,708 - - - - - - - Imperial..........................................: 1 (D) (D) - - - - - - - Sacramento........................................: 5 1,350 1,392,000 5 1,350 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) San Diego.........................................: 9 96 114,000 9 96 - - - - - San Joaquin.......................................: 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) Shasta............................................: 3 3 5,100 - - - - - - - : Solano............................................: 18 8,378 11,753,130 13 3,561 18 5,863 5,301,353 18 5,863 Sutter............................................: 33 9,047 12,222,577 25 5,872 10 2,471 2,240,968 6 1,674 Ventura...........................................: 3 6 9,000 - - - - - - - Yolo..............................................: 53 18,075 25,593,055 45 13,674 37 12,397 14,929,501 33 10,269 : SUNFLOWER SEED, OIL VARIETIES : (POUNDS) : : State Total : : California........................................: 163 46,521 64,652,781 127 33,303 76 24,481 25,580,856 67 21,023 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 25. Field Crops: 2012 and 2007 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : 2012 : 2007 :------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : Harvested : Irrigated : Harvested : Irrigated :------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Geographic area : Farms : Acres : Quantity : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Quantity : Farms : Acres ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- SUNFLOWER SEED, OIL VARIETIES : (POUNDS) - Con. : : Counties : : Butte.............................................: 7 (D) (D) 7 (D) 4 (D) (D) 2 (D) Colusa............................................: 17 5,790 7,728,400 13 (D) 6 (D) (D) 5 892 Glenn.............................................: 32 3,550 4,591,554 29 3,092 20 2,542 3,005,109 19 2,334 Humboldt..........................................: 6 6 3,708 - - - - - - - Imperial..........................................: 1 (D) (D) - - - - - - - Sacramento........................................: 5 1,350 1,392,000 5 1,350 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) San Joaquin.......................................: 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) Solano............................................: 16 7,758 11,020,730 11 (D) 11 4,698 3,742,051 11 4,698 Sutter............................................: 31 8,193 11,143,292 23 5,728 6 1,834 1,393,233 5 (D) Yolo..............................................: 46 17,150 24,212,482 37 (D) 26 11,343 13,640,098 22 9,235 : SUNFLOWER SEED, NON-OIL : VARIETIES (POUNDS) : : State Total : : California........................................: 47 3,228 4,139,858 30 1,512 40 3,432 4,195,789 35 2,914 : Counties : : Butte.............................................: - - - - - 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) Colusa............................................: 3 477 563,900 2 (D) 4 (D) (D) 4 90 Fresno............................................: - - - - - 3 (D) 93,300 2 (D) Glenn.............................................: 8 247 255,600 3 (D) 6 248 224,348 6 248 San Diego.........................................: 9 96 114,000 9 96 - - - - - Shasta............................................: 3 3 5,100 - - - - - - - Solano............................................: 4 620 732,400 3 (D) 7 1,165 1,559,302 7 1,165 Sutter............................................: 6 854 1,079,285 3 144 4 637 847,735 1 (D) Ventura...........................................: 3 6 9,000 - - - - - - - Yolo..............................................: 11 925 1,380,573 10 (D) 15 1,054 1,289,403 14 1,034 : TRITICALE (BUSHELS) : : State Total : : California........................................: 69 14,677 1,597,963 54 9,743 20 3,960 374,765 10 2,594 : Counties : : Amador............................................: 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) - - - - - Colusa............................................: - - - - - 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) Contra Costa......................................: 3 145 17,428 3 145 - - - - - Fresno............................................: 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) 2 (D) (D) 1 (D) Kern..............................................: 1 (D) (D) - - 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) Kings.............................................: 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) 3 1,045 100,237 3 1,045 Lake..............................................: 2 (D) (D) 1 (D) - - - - - Lassen............................................: 3 (D) (D) 2 (D) 2 (D) (D) - - Madera............................................: 2 (D) (D) 1 (D) - - - - - Merced............................................: 3 694 53,521 1 (D) - - - - - : Modoc.............................................: 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) - - - - - Sacramento........................................: 6 1,596 173,173 6 1,198 1 (D) (D) - - San Joaquin.......................................: 25 5,787 697,447 24 (D) - - - - - Siskiyou..........................................: - - - - - 1 (D) (D) - - Solano............................................: 12 2,813 282,581 7 597 6 692 60,501 2 (D) Stanislaus........................................: 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) - - - - - Sutter............................................: - - - - - 1 (D) (D) - - Tulare............................................: 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) - - - - - Yolo..............................................: 3 541 49,956 - - 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) : WILD RICE (CWT) : : State Total : : California........................................: 40 12,010 221,642 40 12,010 61 20,873 322,694 61 20,873 : Counties : : Butte.............................................: 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) 6 1,050 17,181 6 1,050 Colusa............................................: - - - - - 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) Lassen............................................: 5 437 8,240 5 437 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) Modoc.............................................: 6 4,698 86,528 6 4,698 8 3,921 60,642 8 3,921 Shasta............................................: 19 5,157 102,616 19 5,157 16 5,097 71,179 16 5,097 Sutter............................................: 5 263 3,535 5 263 12 3,750 62,528 12 3,750 Yolo..............................................: 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) 12 4,243 65,812 12 4,243 Yuba..............................................: 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) 3 1,428 22,796 3 1,428 : WHEAT FOR GRAIN, ALL : (BUSHELS) : : State Total : : California........................................: 1,503 491,846 42,955,324 1,123 382,958 1,191 354,165 30,224,394 1,000 300,284 : Counties : : Alameda...........................................: 1 (D) (D) - - - - - - - Amador............................................: - - - - - 1 (D) (D) - - Butte.............................................: 17 1,782 136,176 7 752 15 2,499 175,201 8 1,237 Colusa............................................: 57 16,555 1,080,820 35 7,753 69 18,598 1,546,749 59 15,049 Contra Costa......................................: 6 4,439 664,281 4 (D) 5 880 51,942 4 724 El Dorado.........................................: - - - - - 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) Fresno............................................: 166 63,910 5,833,793 150 49,844 113 33,006 3,045,130 111 31,086 Glenn.............................................: 42 6,615 382,004 23 1,729 38 6,455 611,514 32 4,827 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 25. Field Crops: 2012 and 2007 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : 2012 : 2007 :------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : Harvested : Irrigated : Harvested : Irrigated :------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Geographic area : Farms : Acres : Quantity : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Quantity : Farms : Acres ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- WHEAT FOR GRAIN, ALL : (BUSHELS) - Con. : : Counties - Con. : : Humboldt..........................................: 3 (D) (D) 3 (D) - - - - - Imperial..........................................: 160 86,635 8,880,319 159 (D) 114 41,085 4,366,550 114 41,085 Kern..............................................: 127 42,149 3,452,162 105 31,776 117 40,593 3,681,204 102 36,900 Kings.............................................: 116 52,138 4,950,017 105 50,827 85 45,917 3,591,592 85 45,917 Lake..............................................: 7 12 231 - - - - - - - Lassen............................................: 14 901 62,109 13 (D) 11 750 35,747 9 520 Los Angeles.......................................: - - - - - 2 (D) (D) - - Madera............................................: 23 3,609 313,134 20 3,337 22 4,292 377,522 17 3,930 Marin.............................................: 3 3 99 - - - - - - - Mendocino.........................................: 2 (D) (D) - - 1 (D) (D) - - : Merced............................................: 63 23,888 2,453,710 54 21,814 35 7,979 679,844 23 6,293 Modoc.............................................: 20 12,102 981,004 19 (D) 25 4,502 445,385 23 4,481 Monterey..........................................: 6 1,004 69,696 1 (D) 2 (D) (D) 1 (D) Orange............................................: 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) - - - - - Placer............................................: 3 290 21,850 2 (D) 2 (D) (D) 1 (D) Riverside.........................................: 31 4,425 288,435 22 3,601 17 6,759 337,879 16 2,759 Sacramento........................................: 26 2,864 246,193 15 1,996 38 8,009 676,115 28 5,164 San Benito........................................: 8 432 27,744 2 (D) 1 (D) (D) - - San Bernardino....................................: 3 180 4,668 - - 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) San Diego.........................................: - - - - - 1 (D) (D) - - : San Joaquin.......................................: 121 27,752 2,182,113 87 17,309 77 15,007 1,347,612 67 13,325 San Luis Obispo...................................: 4 (D) (D) 3 (D) 8 952 71,989 2 (D) Santa Barbara.....................................: 6 175 (D) 4 (D) 6 3,358 329,966 4 (D) Santa Clara.......................................: 1 (D) (D) - - 4 (D) (D) 3 (D) Santa Cruz........................................: 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) - - - - - Shasta............................................: 8 557 21,851 5 (D) 2 (D) (D) - - Siskiyou..........................................: 40 22,209 2,143,408 28 20,985 40 13,956 1,262,205 30 11,984 Solano............................................: 47 23,066 1,390,326 23 9,259 48 21,378 1,411,064 28 9,464 Sonoma............................................: 7 (D) (D) 4 (D) 1 (D) (D) - - Stanislaus........................................: 35 4,516 345,745 35 3,604 11 1,083 79,567 10 566 : Sutter............................................: 68 10,230 733,262 29 3,830 72 15,202 1,261,588 53 10,956 Tehama............................................: 10 1,567 136,840 1 (D) 6 852 89,365 4 772 Tulare............................................: 107 40,460 3,246,350 75 26,122 81 22,213 1,763,757 66 19,473 Tuolumne..........................................: 5 5 165 - - - - - - - Yolo..............................................: 123 35,091 2,715,803 83 26,961 114 35,612 2,758,271 94 29,358 Yuba..............................................: 14 1,395 94,603 4 939 3 (D) (D) 2 (D) : WINTER WHEAT FOR GRAIN : (BUSHELS) : : State Total : : California........................................: 1,020 316,109 26,032,499 694 214,880 879 249,704 20,157,552 686 196,420 : Counties : : Alameda...........................................: 1 (D) (D) - - - - - - - Amador............................................: - - - - - 1 (D) (D) - - Butte.............................................: 16 (D) (D) 7 752 14 (D) (D) 7 (D) Colusa............................................: 53 16,094 1,053,551 32 (D) 67 18,218 1,514,751 57 14,669 Contra Costa......................................: 4 (D) (D) 2 (D) 5 880 51,942 4 724 El Dorado.........................................: - - - - - 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) Fresno............................................: 94 36,912 3,145,778 79 (D) 73 21,352 1,970,660 70 19,432 Glenn.............................................: 36 (D) (D) 23 1,729 33 5,886 545,707 27 4,258 Humboldt..........................................: 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) - - - - - Imperial..........................................: 10 (D) (D) 9 (D) 4 (D) (D) 4 (D) : Kern..............................................: 100 34,087 2,800,888 80 25,034 84 27,473 2,518,860 69 23,780 Kings.............................................: 77 42,012 4,020,781 70 41,203 65 34,623 2,627,226 65 34,623 Lake..............................................: 2 (D) (D) - - - - - - - Lassen............................................: 8 777 48,059 7 (D) 11 673 32,881 9 443 Los Angeles.......................................: - - - - - 2 (D) (D) - - Madera............................................: 17 2,818 238,995 13 2,546 18 3,219 265,507 13 2,857 Mendocino.........................................: 2 (D) (D) - - 1 (D) (D) - - Merced............................................: 41 19,239 2,020,190 31 17,165 26 6,264 530,940 14 4,578 Modoc.............................................: 13 8,314 715,576 13 7,535 14 2,161 209,208 12 2,140 Monterey..........................................: 6 1,004 69,696 1 (D) 2 (D) (D) 1 (D) : Placer............................................: 1 (D) (D) - - 2 (D) (D) 1 (D) Riverside.........................................: 17 (D) (D) 10 (D) 8 5,204 179,366 7 1,204 Sacramento........................................: 25 (D) (D) 14 (D) 37 (D) (D) 27 (D) San Benito........................................: 7 (D) (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) (D) - - San Bernardino....................................: 3 180 4,668 - - 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) San Diego.........................................: - - - - - 1 (D) (D) - - San Joaquin.......................................: 110 24,904 1,948,091 75 14,511 61 12,914 1,183,366 49 11,232 San Luis Obispo...................................: 2 (D) (D) 1 (D) 8 952 71,989 2 (D) Santa Barbara.....................................: 3 (D) (D) 1 (D) 4 (D) (D) 2 (D) Santa Clara.......................................: 1 (D) (D) - - 4 (D) (D) 3 (D) : Shasta............................................: 8 (D) (D) 5 (D) 2 (D) (D) - - Siskiyou..........................................: 21 (D) (D) 13 (D) 27 (D) (D) 17 (D) Solano............................................: 38 20,263 1,177,293 20 7,562 44 20,716 1,348,936 24 8,802 Sonoma............................................: 4 14 268 2 (D) 1 (D) (D) - - Stanislaus........................................: 23 3,741 285,709 23 2,829 8 (D) (D) 8 (D) Sutter............................................: 61 8,522 602,420 22 2,594 65 14,234 1,177,194 46 9,988 Tehama............................................: 10 (D) (D) 1 (D) 4 (D) (D) 2 (D) Tulare............................................: 89 37,699 3,000,727 58 23,476 64 18,733 1,464,870 49 15,993 Yolo..............................................: 105 31,346 2,450,301 77 25,361 111 34,848 2,704,756 91 28,594 Yuba..............................................: 10 1,242 (D) 2 (D) 3 (D) (D) 2 (D) ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 25. Field Crops: 2012 and 2007 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : 2012 : 2007 :------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : Harvested : Irrigated : Harvested : Irrigated :------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Geographic area : Farms : Acres : Quantity : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Quantity : Farms : Acres ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- DURUM WHEAT FOR GRAIN : (BUSHELS) : : State Total : : California........................................: 375 135,540 13,529,651 375 134,899 239 (D) 7,821,257 239 (D) : Counties : : Colusa............................................: - - - - - 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) Fresno............................................: 83 25,368 2,558,568 83 24,788 40 10,398 990,444 40 10,398 Imperial..........................................: 150 84,625 8,738,126 150 84,625 110 39,809 4,219,954 110 39,809 Kern..............................................: 19 2,885 293,763 19 2,885 25 8,669 766,050 25 8,669 Kings.............................................: 39 7,979 721,174 39 7,979 21 10,775 923,893 21 10,775 Madera............................................: 4 201 16,661 4 201 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) Merced............................................: 21 4,100 368,906 21 4,100 6 1,409 121,211 6 1,409 Orange............................................: 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) - - - - - Riverside.........................................: 12 (D) 192,171 12 (D) 9 1,555 158,513 9 1,555 San Joaquin.......................................: 10 (D) 160,325 10 (D) 9 615 56,789 9 615 : Santa Barbara.....................................: 3 (D) 567 3 (D) 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) Santa Cruz........................................: 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) - - - - - Siskiyou..........................................: 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) Solano............................................: 3 (D) 93,161 3 (D) - - - - - Stanislaus........................................: 9 505 (D) 9 505 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) Sutter............................................: 3 (D) 47,730 3 (D) 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) Tulare............................................: 6 (D) 99,996 6 (D) 8 2,213 200,287 8 2,213 Yolo..............................................: 6 1,289 112,322 6 1,228 3 (D) (D) 3 (D) Yuba..............................................: 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) - - - - - : OTHER SPRING WHEAT FOR GRAIN : (BUSHELS) : : State Total : : California........................................: 179 40,197 3,393,174 114 33,179 114 (D) 2,245,585 111 (D) : Counties : : Butte.............................................: 1 (D) (D) - - 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) Colusa............................................: 4 461 27,269 3 (D) 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) Contra Costa......................................: 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) - - - - - Fresno............................................: 7 1,630 129,447 6 (D) 7 1,256 84,026 7 1,256 Glenn.............................................: 6 (D) (D) - - 5 569 65,807 5 569 Humboldt..........................................: 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) - - - - - Imperial..........................................: 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) Kern..............................................: 15 5,177 357,511 12 3,857 12 4,451 396,294 12 4,451 Kings.............................................: 10 2,147 208,062 6 1,645 4 519 40,473 4 519 Lake..............................................: 5 (D) (D) - - - - - - - : Lassen............................................: 7 124 14,050 6 (D) 4 77 2,866 4 77 Madera............................................: 3 590 57,478 3 590 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) Marin.............................................: 3 3 99 - - - - - - - Merced............................................: 5 549 64,614 5 549 4 306 27,693 4 306 Modoc.............................................: 11 3,788 265,428 10 (D) 13 2,341 236,177 13 2,341 Placer............................................: 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) - - - - - Riverside.........................................: 2 (D) (D) - - - - - - - Sacramento........................................: 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) San Benito........................................: 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) - - - - - San Bernardino....................................: - - - - - 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) : San Joaquin.......................................: 7 (D) 73,697 6 (D) 9 1,478 107,457 9 1,478 San Luis Obispo...................................: 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) - - - - - Santa Barbara.....................................: - - - - - 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) Shasta............................................: 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) - - - - - Siskiyou..........................................: 24 15,964 1,500,697 20 15,764 18 7,716 734,376 16 7,636 Solano............................................: 7 (D) 119,872 1 (D) 4 662 62,128 4 662 Sonoma............................................: 5 (D) (D) 2 (D) - - - - - Stanislaus........................................: 3 270 (D) 3 270 3 (D) (D) 2 (D) Sutter............................................: 5 (D) 83,112 4 (D) 7 (D) (D) 7 (D) Tehama............................................: 1 (D) (D) - - 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) : Tulare............................................: 12 (D) 145,627 11 (D) 9 1,267 98,600 9 1,267 Tuolumne..........................................: 5 5 165 - - - - - - - Yolo..............................................: 17 2,456 153,180 4 372 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) Yuba..............................................: 2 (D) (D) - - - - - - - ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Table 26. Field Seeds, Grass Seeds, Hay, Forage, and Silage: 2012 and 2007 [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : 2012 : 2007 :------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ : Harvested : Irrigated : Harvested : Irrigated :------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Geographic area : Farms : Acres : Quantity : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Quantity : Farms : Acres ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- FIELD AND GRASS SEED CROPS, ALL : (SEE TEXT) : : State Total : : California......................................: 209 71,921 (X) 202 71,053 176 68,948 (X) 167 68,197 : Counties : : El Dorado.......................................: 1 (D) (X) 1 (D) - - (X) - - Fresno..........................................: 32 6,763 (X) 32 6,763 20 3,287 (X) 20 3,287 Glenn...........................................: 1 (D) (X) 1 (D) 4 367 (X) 4 367 Humboldt........................................: - - (X) - - 1 (D) (X) 1 (D) Imperial........................................: 96 55,560 (X) 96 55,560 104 54,293 (X) 104 54,013 Kern............................................: 4 (D) (X) 4 (D) 7 367 (X) 7 367 Kings...........................................: 4 1,623 (X) 4 1,623 5 5,779 (X) 5 5,779 Lassen..........................................: 2 (D) (X) 2 (D) 4 377 (X) 4 377 Madera..........................................: 1 (D) (X) 1 (D) 2 (D) (X) 2 (D) Marin...........................................: 1 (D) (X) - - 1 (D) (X) - - : Merced..........................................: 4 760 (X) 4 760 - - (X) - - Modoc...........................................: 2 (D) (X) 2 (D) 5 65 (X) 5 65 Monterey........................................: 1 (D) (X) 1 (D) - - (X) - - Napa............................................: - - (X) - - 1 (D) (X) - - Nevada..........................................: 2 (D) (X) 2 (D) - - (X) - - Riverside.......................................: 4 22 (X) 4 22 2 (D) (X) 2 (D) Sacramento......................................: 9 2,195 (X) 9 2,195 7 2,880 (X) 7 2,880 San Bernardino..................................: 7 1,120 (X) 7 1,120 - - (X) - - San Diego.......................................: 2 (D) (X) 2 (D) - - (X) - - San Joaquin.....................................: 4 (D) (X) 4 (D) 1 (D) (X) - - : San Luis Obispo.................................: 3 100 (X) 1 (D) 1 (D) (X) - - Santa Barbara...................................: 1 (D) (X) 1 (D) - - (X) - - Shasta..........................................: 1 (D) (X) 1 (D) - - (X) - - Siskiyou........................................: 1 (D) (X) 1 (D) - - (X) - - Solano..........................................: 3 340 (X) 3 340 1 (D) (X) 1 (D) Stanislaus......................................: 7 94 (X) 7 94 - - (X) - - Sutter..........................................: 5 988 (X) 1 (D) 4 305 (X) - - Tehama..........................................: 1 (D) (X) 1 (D) - - (X) - - Tulare..........................................: 5 400 (X) 5 400 - - (X) - - Ventura.........................................: 1 (D) (X) 1 (D) - - (X) - - : Yolo............................................: 4 520 (X) 4 520 5 465 (X) 4 445 Yuba............................................: - - (X) - - 1 (D) (X) 1 (D) : ALFALFA SEED (POUNDS) : : State Total : : California......................................: 144 39,927 24,688,177 144 39,927 114 36,625 19,083,458 114 36,625 : Counties : : El Dorado.......................................: 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) - - - - - Fresno..........................................: 30 (D) 5,830,993 30 (D) 20 3,287 2,603,178 20 3,287 Glenn...........................................: 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) - - - - - Humboldt........................................: - - - - - 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) Imperial........................................: 61 27,893 15,793,291 61 27,893 64 25,848 11,411,921 64 25,848 Kern............................................: 3 (D) (D) 3 (D) 7 367 253,000 7 367 Kings...........................................: 4 1,623 555,621 4 1,623 5 5,779 4,295,319 5 5,779 Lassen..........................................: 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) 4 377 190,000 4 377 Madera..........................................: 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) Merced..........................................: 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) - - - - - : Modoc...........................................: 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) 5 65 41,000 5 65 Nevada..........................................: 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) - - - - - Riverside.......................................: - - - - - 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) Sacramento......................................: 5 200 50,000 5 200 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) San Bernardino..................................: 6 (D) 483,150 6 (D) - - - - - San Diego.......................................: 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) - - - - - San Joaquin.....................................: 4 (D) (D) 4 (D) - - - - - San Luis Obispo.................................: 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) - - - - - Santa Barbara...................................: 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) - - - - - Shasta..........................................: 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) - - - - - : Siskiyou........................................: 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) - - - - - Solano..........................................: 3 340 100,238 3 340 - - - - - Tehama..........................................: 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) - - - - - Tulare..........................................: 5 400 (D) 5 400 - - - - - Ventura.........................................: 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) - - - - - Yolo............................................: 4 520 275,080 4 520 3 (D) 86,240 3 (D) : BERMUDA GRASS SEED : (POUNDS) : : State Total : : California......................................: 68 (D) 12,835,788 68 (D) 73 28,321 12,693,167 73 28,041 : Counties : : Imperial........................................: 59 (D) (D) 59 (D) 72 (D) (D) 72 (D) Merced..........................................: 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) - - - - - Monterey........................................: 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) - - - - - Riverside.......................................: 3 (D) 4,809 3 (D) 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) Stanislaus......................................: 4 49 11,158 4 49 - - - - - ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 26. Field Seeds, Grass Seeds, Hay, Forage, and Silage: 2012 and 2007 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : 2012 : 2007 :------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ : Harvested : Irrigated : Harvested : Irrigated :------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Geographic area : Farms : Acres : Quantity : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Quantity : Farms : Acres ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- BIRDSFOOT TREFOIL SEED : (POUNDS) : : State Total : : California......................................: - - - - - 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) : Counties : : Yolo............................................: - - - - - 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) : BROMEGRASS SEED : (POUNDS) : : State Total : : California......................................: 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) - - - - - : Counties : : Fresno..........................................: 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) - - - - - : FESCUE SEED : (POUNDS) : : State Total : : California......................................: - - - - - 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) : Counties : : Imperial........................................: - - - - - 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) : LADINO CLOVER SEED : (POUNDS) : : State Total : : California......................................: 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) : Counties : : Sacramento......................................: 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) : RYEGRASS SEED (POUNDS) : : State Total : : California......................................: - - - - - 1 (D) (D) - - : Counties : : San Joaquin.....................................: - - - - - 1 (D) (D) - - : SUDANGRASS SEED : (POUNDS) : : State Total : : California......................................: 20 3,732 8,240,683 20 3,732 9 (D) 6,201,664 9 (D) : Counties : : Fresno..........................................: 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) - - - - - Glenn...........................................: - - - - - 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) Imperial........................................: 8 (D) 4,233,804 8 (D) 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) Kern............................................: 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) - - - - - Merced..........................................: 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) - - - - - Riverside.......................................: 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) - - - - - Sacramento......................................: 4 (D) 2,520,395 4 (D) 5 (D) 5,109,508 5 (D) San Bernardino..................................: 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) - - - - - Solano..........................................: - - - - - 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) Stanislaus......................................: 3 45 94,500 3 45 - - - - - : VETCH SEED (POUNDS) : : State Total : : California......................................: 8 (D) 307,190 1 (D) 8 (D) 187,835 - - : Counties : : Marin...........................................: 1 (D) (D) - - 1 (D) (D) - - Napa............................................: - - - - - 1 (D) (D) - - San Luis Obispo.................................: 2 (D) (D) - - 1 (D) (D) - - Sutter..........................................: 5 988 290,190 1 (D) 4 305 151,118 - - Yolo............................................: - - - - - 1 (D) (D) - - : OTHER FIELD AND GRASS SEED : CROPS (POUNDS) (SEE TEXT) : : State Total : : California......................................: - - - - - 3 (D) (D) 3 (D) : Counties : : Glenn...........................................: - - - - - 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) Yuba............................................: - - - - - 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 26. Field Seeds, Grass Seeds, Hay, Forage, and Silage: 2012 and 2007 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : 2012 : 2007 :------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ : Harvested : Irrigated : Harvested : Irrigated :------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Geographic area : Farms : Acres : Quantity : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Quantity : Farms : Acres ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- FORAGE - LAND USED FOR ALL HAY : AND ALL HAYLAGE, GRASS SILAGE, : AND GREENCHOP (TONS, DRY : EQUIVALENT) (SEE TEXT) : : State Total : : California......................................: 7,903 1,670,027 9,363,421 5,498 1,346,666 7,411 1,723,147 10,642,531 5,954 1,554,197 : Counties : : Alameda.........................................: 40 3,296 5,738 8 1,302 34 5,926 10,846 15 3,810 Alpine..........................................: 3 240 540 2 (D) 4 490 (D) 3 (D) Amador..........................................: 25 4,248 11,474 12 3,295 15 2,930 13,056 6 2,526 Butte...........................................: 138 5,931 19,704 89 3,160 105 5,957 26,904 80 3,368 Calaveras.......................................: 30 787 2,043 7 101 21 786 1,448 7 425 Colusa..........................................: 68 11,724 67,380 47 9,088 66 17,295 115,845 59 16,613 Contra Costa....................................: 63 8,879 33,416 27 7,116 42 6,761 31,855 25 6,253 Del Norte.......................................: 25 5,915 32,279 13 5,072 12 2,835 17,521 5 2,450 El Dorado.......................................: 14 327 572 8 169 14 697 1,206 13 622 Fresno..........................................: 400 90,491 610,191 336 84,863 356 96,152 681,030 322 92,154 : Glenn...........................................: 208 27,086 133,383 132 17,740 208 22,702 124,779 190 20,114 Humboldt........................................: 228 10,455 37,706 78 4,735 178 10,566 32,969 69 4,884 Imperial........................................: 251 246,400 1,689,634 244 233,013 261 229,569 1,588,341 261 228,839 Inyo............................................: 13 5,667 31,306 13 5,667 14 3,630 17,808 14 3,630 Kern............................................: 267 76,305 535,236 239 70,880 319 118,340 930,129 313 113,013 Kings...........................................: 315 81,345 574,460 296 77,808 345 102,327 702,912 341 100,554 Lake............................................: 81 2,810 6,021 19 404 73 3,400 7,368 34 1,454 Lassen..........................................: 173 35,117 107,464 157 29,939 176 41,661 132,635 154 33,126 Los Angeles.....................................: 37 12,193 75,218 27 11,219 37 8,770 62,499 32 8,658 Madera..........................................: 130 35,554 227,821 89 30,049 121 43,842 302,290 105 41,451 : Marin...........................................: 35 6,758 15,976 7 1,520 22 3,382 14,453 4 641 Mariposa........................................: 10 296 679 4 24 3 (D) 121 1 (D) Mendocino.......................................: 156 9,249 18,675 62 2,415 152 10,548 28,650 75 5,894 Merced..........................................: 568 129,575 837,830 478 111,766 589 141,744 971,106 544 135,279 Modoc...........................................: 238 96,740 275,875 204 75,663 231 86,967 309,604 208 78,663 Mono............................................: 25 10,516 53,599 24 (D) 24 8,041 41,881 24 8,041 Monterey........................................: 82 11,060 17,044 21 2,546 58 5,183 12,087 21 3,309 Napa............................................: 21 945 2,170 8 683 20 890 1,815 9 577 Nevada..........................................: 26 476 676 22 303 28 1,787 5,217 25 1,762 Orange..........................................: 4 (D) (D) - - 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) : Placer..........................................: 46 6,070 14,612 27 1,649 54 8,853 25,764 48 3,157 Plumas..........................................: 40 11,684 27,787 32 10,065 22 7,654 20,731 21 6,706 Riverside.......................................: 139 54,969 399,687 124 45,426 121 57,424 489,067 116 57,299 Sacramento......................................: 220 27,107 99,345 133 15,998 231 27,809 131,652 177 20,637 San Benito......................................: 104 6,207 8,781 17 653 51 7,090 21,447 28 4,696 San Bernardino..................................: 56 10,961 79,069 50 10,046 69 15,240 95,043 68 14,495 San Diego.......................................: 40 5,006 19,664 9 989 74 2,689 7,541 25 282 San Francisco...................................: 1 (D) (D) - - - - - - - San Joaquin.....................................: 474 83,664 504,092 374 68,566 461 92,750 591,206 398 81,834 San Luis Obispo.................................: 256 24,178 66,129 77 8,262 201 17,883 51,823 68 9,971 : San Mateo.......................................: 30 1,380 2,509 5 86 29 1,418 3,642 4 83 Santa Barbara...................................: 95 5,780 16,156 31 2,286 75 6,510 17,725 43 4,120 Santa Clara.....................................: 69 6,084 18,008 12 1,980 92 5,806 14,869 35 2,126 Santa Cruz......................................: 5 (D) (D) - - 6 119 357 2 (D) Shasta..........................................: 223 13,696 47,230 174 9,386 191 13,509 46,304 173 10,807 Sierra..........................................: 20 2,676 6,538 16 1,862 19 2,406 5,866 12 1,563 Siskiyou........................................: 343 90,042 327,922 270 69,391 300 74,532 305,880 253 65,549 Solano..........................................: 156 53,277 253,829 98 40,257 164 47,279 249,981 114 40,758 Sonoma..........................................: 140 21,100 82,518 42 5,222 130 18,430 74,470 53 11,123 Stanislaus......................................: 622 69,986 419,431 542 57,532 579 73,812 484,326 527 65,635 : Sutter..........................................: 72 9,831 51,543 52 7,194 75 9,581 49,247 49 7,393 Tehama..........................................: 234 17,640 52,208 124 10,141 163 17,552 59,150 114 11,999 Trinity.........................................: 17 464 601 17 392 22 654 1,859 15 493 Tulare..........................................: 539 163,358 1,165,959 454 137,399 487 155,283 1,236,163 460 145,678 Tuolumne........................................: 13 410 1,317 6 8 10 321 (D) 6 226 Ventura.........................................: 34 2,062 4,920 9 407 28 1,722 9,925 16 1,380 Yolo............................................: 206 48,452 254,732 112 38,262 197 70,636 445,948 149 65,369 Yuba............................................: 35 3,162 13,680 18 2,101 31 2,824 13,664 20 2,151 : HAY - ALL HAY INCLUDING ALFALFA, : OTHER TAME, SMALL GRAIN, AND : WILD (TONS, DRY) (SEE TEXT) : : State Total : : California......................................: 7,228 1,502,200 7,749,069 4,944 1,208,516 6,723 1,528,198 8,850,559 5,369 1,385,186 : Counties : : Alameda.........................................: 40 3,407 5,738 8 1,413 32 5,131 9,289 15 3,810 Alpine..........................................: 3 240 540 2 (D) 4 537 (D) 3 (D) Amador..........................................: 25 4,114 11,438 12 3,295 15 2,930 13,056 6 2,526 Butte...........................................: 137 5,797 19,233 83 3,010 95 5,683 25,360 70 3,134 Calaveras.......................................: 29 747 1,911 7 101 20 706 (D) 6 345 Colusa..........................................: 67 12,597 67,271 47 9,088 65 18,983 (D) 59 18,309 Contra Costa....................................: 63 9,446 33,408 27 7,740 41 7,040 (D) 25 6,552 Del Norte.......................................: 13 2,581 9,384 7 2,037 9 750 1,733 3 500 El Dorado.......................................: 12 293 558 6 135 14 697 1,206 13 622 Fresno..........................................: 376 81,213 501,531 312 76,283 338 83,211 572,633 305 81,116 : Glenn...........................................: 188 24,194 104,494 121 15,274 194 19,545 104,201 178 17,137 Humboldt........................................: 181 6,709 22,296 45 2,462 144 7,234 21,209 51 3,209 Imperial........................................: 250 250,612 1,676,514 243 235,687 259 232,616 1,557,825 259 232,616 Inyo............................................: 13 5,667 31,306 13 5,667 14 3,830 17,808 14 3,830 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 26. Field Seeds, Grass Seeds, Hay, Forage, and Silage: 2012 and 2007 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : 2012 : 2007 :------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ : Harvested : Irrigated : Harvested : Irrigated :------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Geographic area : Farms : Acres : Quantity : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Quantity : Farms : Acres ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- HAY - ALL HAY INCLUDING ALFALFA, : OTHER TAME, SMALL GRAIN, AND : WILD (TONS, DRY) (SEE TEXT) - Con. : : Counties - Con. : : Kern............................................: 253 67,496 463,312 226 61,935 310 100,186 742,263 304 97,991 Kings...........................................: 270 67,694 430,722 252 65,486 289 85,256 546,127 285 84,281 Lake............................................: 81 2,792 5,949 19 400 72 3,380 (D) 33 1,434 Lassen..........................................: 173 35,156 107,306 157 30,713 173 41,369 126,622 152 32,195 Los Angeles.....................................: 37 12,153 75,030 27 11,165 34 8,793 62,497 29 8,655 Madera..........................................: 119 29,085 164,762 78 24,091 111 39,992 252,872 96 36,919 Marin...........................................: 25 5,383 8,281 3 1,120 17 1,843 4,166 3 (D) Mariposa........................................: 10 296 679 4 24 3 (D) 121 1 (D) Mendocino.......................................: 138 8,466 15,911 57 2,394 135 9,957 23,601 62 5,589 Merced..........................................: 474 101,332 567,424 395 89,184 482 112,081 738,798 445 107,928 : Modoc...........................................: 232 94,619 274,028 196 78,076 226 84,347 305,106 205 75,608 Mono............................................: 25 10,516 53,599 24 (D) 24 8,131 41,881 24 8,131 Monterey........................................: 81 10,967 15,830 20 2,530 57 5,124 (D) 21 3,329 Napa............................................: 21 945 2,170 8 683 20 910 1,815 9 597 Nevada..........................................: 23 431 649 18 258 28 1,742 5,165 25 1,723 Orange..........................................: 2 (D) (D) - - 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) Placer..........................................: 45 6,034 14,434 26 1,613 52 8,315 (D) 48 3,237 Plumas..........................................: 40 11,684 27,787 32 10,270 22 7,654 20,731 21 6,706 Riverside.......................................: 131 49,026 373,233 114 39,518 114 55,153 (D) 109 54,970 Sacramento......................................: 203 25,732 92,296 121 14,584 212 25,015 111,708 162 17,806 : San Benito......................................: 101 6,205 8,778 14 644 46 6,475 20,629 27 4,676 San Bernardino..................................: 48 10,072 68,826 43 9,010 57 13,277 74,636 56 12,597 San Diego.......................................: 32 4,225 17,994 7 532 70 2,631 7,283 23 274 San Francisco...................................: 1 (D) (D) - - - - - - - San Joaquin.....................................: 416 69,965 382,301 336 59,236 404 77,835 455,346 348 70,234 San Luis Obispo.................................: 253 25,294 63,963 75 8,625 197 17,078 46,881 66 9,311 San Mateo.......................................: 30 1,380 2,509 5 86 29 1,418 3,642 4 83 Santa Barbara...................................: 93 5,304 14,062 29 1,827 74 6,499 (D) 42 4,081 Santa Clara.....................................: 68 6,083 (D) 11 2,129 89 6,041 (D) 33 2,362 Santa Cruz......................................: 5 (D) (D) - - 6 120 (D) 2 (D) : Shasta..........................................: 204 12,622 44,738 156 8,383 168 13,869 45,541 150 10,605 Sierra..........................................: 19 2,644 6,522 15 1,830 19 2,406 5,866 12 1,563 Siskiyou........................................: 334 90,553 322,701 263 69,347 294 75,101 305,562 247 65,701 Solano..........................................: 155 53,193 245,528 97 40,762 164 49,005 245,507 114 39,654 Sonoma..........................................: 113 14,578 40,875 28 3,290 113 12,154 30,803 46 7,797 Stanislaus......................................: 526 55,809 283,201 458 46,166 461 49,377 304,789 426 45,912 Sutter..........................................: 71 10,830 51,488 51 7,164 74 9,505 (D) 48 7,243 Tehama..........................................: 211 16,620 47,798 109 9,782 151 16,258 54,920 106 10,952 Trinity.........................................: 15 448 596 14 (D) 22 654 1,859 15 493 Tulare..........................................: 471 113,337 682,603 381 91,997 397 105,142 732,949 375 101,102 : Tuolumne........................................: 13 410 1,317 6 8 10 181 228 5 86 Ventura.........................................: 32 2,056 4,912 9 407 28 2,084 9,925 16 1,742 Yolo............................................: 204 50,430 253,890 110 38,596 197 70,886 (D) 149 65,594 Yuba............................................: 33 2,332 6,432 17 1,517 27 1,878 6,091 17 1,260 : ALFALFA HAY (TONS, DRY) : : State Total : : California......................................: 3,243 874,137 5,607,210 3,035 831,858 3,587 986,982 7,057,014 3,488 963,086 : Counties : : Alameda.........................................: 5 (D) (D) 5 (D) 4 (D) 2,770 3 (D) Alpine..........................................: - - - - - 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) Amador..........................................: 3 1,546 6,650 3 1,546 4 1,613 9,692 4 1,613 Butte...........................................: 24 1,688 10,501 24 1,425 20 1,349 7,782 19 1,156 Calaveras.......................................: 3 80 (D) 2 (D) 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) Colusa..........................................: 45 9,234 57,949 35 7,801 49 14,900 104,403 49 14,831 Contra Costa....................................: 23 4,732 22,394 18 4,476 15 3,696 22,423 15 3,696 Del Norte.......................................: 3 (D) (D) 3 (D) - - - - - El Dorado.......................................: 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) - - - - - Fresno..........................................: 240 62,231 440,197 234 61,682 250 69,290 528,024 248 69,162 : Glenn...........................................: 65 12,189 74,377 59 10,654 109 13,851 90,271 109 13,069 Humboldt........................................: 13 392 1,392 4 93 16 997 4,487 9 931 Imperial........................................: 197 158,235 1,173,325 190 155,091 199 127,406 976,999 199 127,406 Inyo............................................: 10 3,967 23,297 10 3,967 12 3,273 16,177 12 3,273 Kern............................................: 220 57,360 435,582 210 54,945 274 85,756 704,029 274 85,756 Kings...........................................: 211 46,925 311,495 204 46,275 243 63,840 485,411 243 63,570 Lake............................................: 10 164 353 9 (D) 8 58 347 8 58 Lassen..........................................: 101 14,116 50,862 97 13,458 119 19,752 85,017 109 16,258 Los Angeles.....................................: 22 7,466 60,939 21 (D) 30 7,693 59,240 26 7,603 Madera..........................................: 59 20,342 138,469 56 19,705 78 29,759 220,963 78 28,944 : Marin...........................................: 1 (D) (D) - - - - - - - Mariposa........................................: 1 (D) (D) - - - - - - - Mendocino.......................................: 10 571 2,723 7 379 7 1,218 5,325 7 1,127 Merced..........................................: 268 64,547 426,850 251 61,716 304 82,731 622,298 303 82,083 Modoc...........................................: 155 51,916 190,566 144 48,591 159 45,890 217,036 144 42,532 Mono............................................: 22 10,253 53,028 22 10,253 17 7,525 40,666 17 7,525 Monterey........................................: 13 898 3,908 12 (D) 12 428 2,633 11 (D) Napa............................................: 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) 6 125 436 5 (D) Nevada..........................................: - - - - - 3 (D) (D) 3 (D) Orange..........................................: 1 (D) (D) - - 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) : Placer..........................................: 4 (D) (D) 4 (D) 4 170 (D) 4 170 Plumas..........................................: 16 7,659 22,441 10 6,782 10 5,118 16,888 9 4,373 Riverside.......................................: 82 33,775 276,587 82 26,612 104 47,418 422,220 101 47,263 Sacramento......................................: 62 9,083 50,181 56 8,480 65 9,960 75,678 65 9,771 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 26. Field Seeds, Grass Seeds, Hay, Forage, and Silage: 2012 and 2007 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : 2012 : 2007 :------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ : Harvested : Irrigated : Harvested : Irrigated :------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Geographic area : Farms : Acres : Quantity : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Quantity : Farms : Acres ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- ALFALFA HAY (TONS, DRY) - Con. : : Counties - Con. : : San Benito......................................: 4 423 896 3 (D) 4 489 3,161 4 (D) San Bernardino..................................: 37 7,182 57,488 35 (D) 43 9,345 66,349 43 8,925 San Diego.......................................: 8 (D) (D) 5 (D) 10 183 660 6 (D) San Joaquin.....................................: 218 46,785 294,327 215 44,995 225 56,969 394,624 223 54,873 San Luis Obispo.................................: 24 3,797 20,309 19 3,607 20 (D) 25,519 20 (D) San Mateo.......................................: - - - - - 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) Santa Barbara...................................: 11 621 4,856 7 482 21 841 6,123 18 (D) Santa Clara.....................................: 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) 8 1,213 7,268 8 893 Shasta..........................................: 34 2,191 9,268 31 2,099 54 4,894 21,418 52 4,458 Sierra..........................................: 9 1,158 2,771 7 (D) 11 1,064 3,594 8 882 : Siskiyou........................................: 206 59,364 257,942 189 54,519 194 59,216 267,718 169 53,651 Solano..........................................: 68 31,311 187,377 54 29,781 69 28,129 197,659 69 28,045 Sonoma..........................................: 12 1,424 7,832 11 (D) 11 925 4,119 8 599 Stanislaus......................................: 233 22,626 147,892 230 22,538 259 28,836 220,581 259 28,575 Sutter..........................................: 35 6,196 36,598 35 6,196 39 6,388 40,765 39 6,388 Tehama..........................................: 40 3,731 16,816 35 3,486 44 5,289 31,465 42 4,319 Trinity.........................................: 3 66 63 3 66 6 (D) (D) 6 (D) Tulare..........................................: 293 69,376 495,425 278 66,194 306 76,413 624,055 300 75,405 Ventura.........................................: 8 (D) 3,401 7 (D) 7 1,001 6,682 7 1,001 Yolo............................................: 101 34,543 214,480 90 33,519 122 57,001 405,914 122 56,251 Yuba............................................: 4 600 2,760 3 (D) 9 850 4,267 7 806 : SMALL GRAIN HAY (TONS, DRY) : : State Total : : California......................................: 3,294 370,695 1,242,459 1,559 199,677 2,488 252,097 652,287 1,477 181,178 : Counties : : Alameda.........................................: 26 1,540 1,408 1 (D) 20 2,193 2,937 3 1,172 Alpine..........................................: - - - - - 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) Amador..........................................: 13 (D) (D) 2 (D) 3 (D) (D) 1 (D) Butte...........................................: 66 2,476 5,707 19 292 41 1,601 4,387 16 (D) Calaveras.......................................: 10 296 855 1 (D) 12 466 764 4 (D) Colusa..........................................: 18 2,894 8,723 11 (D) 12 1,336 4,163 6 910 Contra Costa....................................: 33 3,137 7,667 10 2,118 14 1,189 3,597 4 (D) Del Norte.......................................: 2 (D) (D) - - - - - - - El Dorado.......................................: 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) 7 (D) 130 7 32 Fresno..........................................: 133 14,967 49,766 76 11,496 93 9,593 27,999 68 8,775 : Glenn...........................................: 96 8,118 23,781 34 2,888 66 3,558 9,792 46 2,351 Humboldt........................................: 20 302 487 7 28 12 438 960 2 (D) Imperial........................................: 25 (D) (D) 23 (D) 21 7,685 (D) 21 7,685 Inyo............................................: 5 500 1,500 5 500 5 350 940 5 350 Kern............................................: 46 8,291 22,014 32 6,123 56 10,652 23,838 49 9,439 Kings...........................................: 103 20,008 116,134 91 18,456 91 15,701 42,610 84 15,321 Lake............................................: 47 1,560 3,388 1 (D) 35 1,087 2,633 8 108 Lassen..........................................: 77 4,992 8,837 54 3,308 58 4,912 6,295 37 3,044 Los Angeles.....................................: 21 3,965 13,005 15 3,313 11 (D) 3,132 11 (D) Madera..........................................: 65 7,198 18,858 26 3,701 44 7,474 19,270 27 6,052 : Marin...........................................: 12 3,931 6,605 2 (D) 5 1,029 2,154 1 (D) Mariposa........................................: 7 154 (D) 2 (D) 3 (D) 121 1 (D) Mendocino.......................................: 23 361 556 5 110 25 1,114 2,372 4 (D) Merced..........................................: 256 33,446 128,611 190 25,197 212 23,320 81,030 170 20,525 Modoc...........................................: 92 18,291 33,686 53 8,581 90 8,720 23,358 70 6,677 Mono............................................: 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) Monterey........................................: 69 8,846 8,806 9 1,358 40 3,726 7,393 6 2,332 Napa............................................: 12 574 1,431 3 (D) 5 204 388 1 (D) Nevada..........................................: 1 (D) (D) - - 3 (D) 90 3 (D) Orange..........................................: 1 (D) (D) - - 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) : Placer..........................................: 24 2,785 5,299 8 (D) 15 1,843 3,186 11 787 Plumas..........................................: 6 901 1,161 4 (D) 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) Riverside.......................................: 28 11,463 84,249 14 11,073 10 1,174 4,076 8 1,150 Sacramento......................................: 108 11,557 32,944 36 3,771 92 8,713 21,844 53 4,045 San Benito......................................: 89 4,989 6,968 8 178 41 5,647 16,690 24 4,225 San Bernardino..................................: 23 2,441 9,017 22 (D) 22 3,420 5,738 20 3,160 San Diego.......................................: 19 3,532 15,702 3 (D) 47 1,556 2,190 10 183 San Joaquin.....................................: 200 16,965 68,134 113 10,866 162 16,043 44,438 111 12,270 San Luis Obispo.................................: 217 20,122 40,502 55 4,962 175 11,116 17,149 49 4,077 San Mateo.......................................: 23 822 1,309 2 (D) 13 426 910 1 (D) : Santa Barbara...................................: 78 3,929 7,917 23 1,186 52 3,756 6,397 23 1,555 Santa Clara.....................................: 61 4,648 11,691 7 1,108 69 4,371 6,894 23 1,322 Santa Cruz......................................: 4 (D) (D) - - 5 (D) (D) 2 (D) Shasta..........................................: 58 3,157 7,540 23 434 43 1,412 2,824 12 321 Sierra..........................................: 5 273 834 3 (D) 6 816 1,164 4 (D) Siskiyou........................................: 107 15,173 34,973 60 7,462 95 8,189 21,237 62 5,713 Solano..........................................: 57 14,479 39,483 23 8,171 58 11,653 25,472 27 7,184 Sonoma..........................................: 67 10,752 29,013 14 1,907 53 7,958 19,138 23 5,838 Stanislaus......................................: 286 28,078 120,930 230 21,554 195 15,777 60,062 165 13,467 Sutter..........................................: 41 3,277 11,567 7 278 38 2,166 4,989 12 500 : Tehama..........................................: 133 8,011 19,600 36 2,441 77 5,706 11,735 26 (D) Trinity.........................................: 4 79 115 1 (D) - - - - - Tulare..........................................: 217 34,899 150,961 152 20,664 122 20,986 57,786 103 18,125 Tuolumne........................................: 12 (D) (D) 6 8 6 90 (D) 3 (D) Ventura.........................................: 19 1,040 1,261 3 12 21 1,006 3,123 11 696 Yolo............................................: 97 11,042 29,863 18 (D) 79 9,586 24,879 33 5,878 Yuba............................................: 30 1,152 2,882 14 696 4 377 518 2 (D) ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 26. Field Seeds, Grass Seeds, Hay, Forage, and Silage: 2012 and 2007 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : 2012 : 2007 :------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ : Harvested : Irrigated : Harvested : Irrigated :------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Geographic area : Farms : Acres : Quantity : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Quantity : Farms : Acres ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- OTHER TAME HAY (TONS, DRY) : : State Total : : California......................................: 1,699 212,238 821,999 1,217 155,054 1,619 248,401 1,078,499 1,315 214,774 : Counties : : Alameda.........................................: 6 990 1,598 4 (D) 13 2,410 3,521 10 (D) Alpine..........................................: 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) 2 (D) (D) 1 (D) Amador..........................................: 10 1,451 2,675 6 (D) 9 886 2,613 4 (D) Butte...........................................: 50 1,346 2,484 41 1,200 37 2,461 12,606 35 1,503 Calaveras.......................................: 12 152 434 3 (D) 6 (D) 232 - - Colusa..........................................: 4 414 513 2 (D) 9 2,507 6,871 9 2,493 Contra Costa....................................: 10 1,458 3,215 7 1,146 9 1,984 5,557 9 1,981 Del Norte.......................................: 2 (D) (D) 1 (D) 3 370 710 1 (D) El Dorado.......................................: 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) 5 495 (D) 4 (D) Fresno..........................................: 53 3,809 11,237 43 (D) 44 4,254 16,412 39 3,179 : Glenn...........................................: 54 3,236 5,566 44 1,445 53 1,816 3,662 50 1,567 Humboldt........................................: 99 4,650 17,586 36 2,341 94 4,744 14,388 32 1,924 Imperial........................................: 154 84,205 460,200 144 73,020 166 97,173 561,888 166 97,173 Inyo............................................: 8 1,200 6,509 8 1,200 4 207 691 4 207 Kern............................................: 17 (D) (D) 8 867 23 3,778 14,396 16 2,796 Kings...........................................: 17 761 3,093 14 755 27 5,715 18,106 25 5,390 Lake............................................: 22 760 1,929 11 236 28 1,508 4,003 14 1,252 Lassen..........................................: 51 8,728 28,350 39 7,168 50 8,651 25,904 47 6,921 Los Angeles.....................................: 10 (D) (D) 4 22 5 43 114 2 (D) Madera..........................................: 9 1,545 7,435 6 685 17 2,759 12,639 14 1,923 : Marin...........................................: 5 (D) 997 1 (D) 4 454 (D) 1 (D) Mariposa........................................: 3 (D) 44 2 (D) - - - - - Mendocino.......................................: 76 5,053 8,915 31 1,528 91 6,765 14,766 53 3,921 Merced..........................................: 51 2,982 11,632 41 (D) 58 5,914 35,393 48 5,244 Modoc...........................................: 81 15,375 33,855 67 14,043 61 14,905 39,510 58 13,139 Mono............................................: 1 (D) (D) - - 5 (D) (D) 5 (D) Monterey........................................: 7 1,223 3,116 2 (D) 7 548 1,435 7 548 Napa............................................: 4 97 (D) 4 77 6 186 256 3 180 Nevada..........................................: 17 387 595 13 248 18 1,501 (D) 18 1,485 Orange..........................................: 1 (D) (D) - - 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) : Placer..........................................: 21 3,157 8,820 17 1,024 33 6,207 16,786 32 2,185 Plumas..........................................: 19 1,998 2,936 19 1,683 11 (D) 1,804 10 (D) Riverside.......................................: 28 3,122 11,086 24 (D) 15 6,561 (D) 15 6,557 Sacramento......................................: 43 4,713 7,964 28 2,081 66 5,028 11,380 50 3,869 San Benito......................................: 7 373 314 3 (D) 4 (D) (D) 1 (D) San Bernardino..................................: 7 449 2,321 3 250 6 512 2,549 6 512 San Diego.......................................: 6 (D) (D) - - 13 832 4,385 9 70 San Francisco...................................: 1 (D) (D) - - - - - - - San Joaquin.....................................: 103 6,025 19,525 77 3,250 77 4,485 15,708 67 (D) San Luis Obispo.................................: 24 1,258 2,822 8 (D) 18 (D) (D) 7 366 : San Mateo.......................................: 6 213 579 3 40 5 (D) (D) 2 (D) Santa Barbara...................................: 12 754 1,289 4 159 12 1,874 (D) 8 (D) Santa Clara.....................................: 5 571 (D) 4 (D) 9 240 407 3 147 Santa Cruz......................................: - - - - - 2 (D) (D) 1 (D) Shasta..........................................: 130 7,027 27,586 108 5,684 106 6,627 19,702 102 5,682 Sierra..........................................: 11 928 2,580 11 928 7 (D) (D) 7 (D) Siskiyou........................................: 94 5,758 13,829 79 4,519 96 7,149 15,763 89 5,899 Solano..........................................: 44 6,480 17,502 39 2,783 39 8,407 21,159 33 4,312 Sonoma..........................................: 37 2,119 3,658 7 520 19 2,349 5,183 6 1,288 Stanislaus......................................: 95 3,830 12,442 76 1,902 68 4,417 23,492 60 3,653 : Sutter..........................................: 18 1,047 2,773 14 595 7 551 1,956 6 355 Tehama..........................................: 71 4,774 11,233 60 3,776 56 (D) (D) 52 4,832 Trinity.........................................: 11 303 418 11 295 14 584 1,626 7 423 Tulare..........................................: 30 7,222 33,928 21 (D) 37 (D) (D) 33 (D) Tuolumne........................................: 1 (D) (D) - - 4 91 (D) 2 (D) Ventura.........................................: 8 (D) 250 1 (D) 8 (D) (D) 6 (D) Yolo............................................: 27 4,251 8,881 13 3,024 21 3,739 14,501 16 3,465 Yuba............................................: 2 (D) (D) 1 (D) 11 596 1,220 9 (D) : WILD HAY (TONS, DRY) : : State Total : : California......................................: 555 45,130 77,401 202 21,927 455 40,718 62,759 188 26,148 : Counties : : Alameda.........................................: 6 (D) (D) - - 4 (D) 61 1 (D) Alpine..........................................: 1 (D) (D) - - 2 (D) (D) 1 (D) Amador..........................................: 3 (D) (D) 2 (D) 2 (D) (D) - - Butte...........................................: 15 287 541 6 93 7 272 585 4 (D) Calaveras.......................................: 4 219 (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) Colusa..........................................: 3 55 86 1 (D) 6 240 (D) 4 75 Contra Costa....................................: 6 119 132 - - 7 171 (D) 1 (D) Del Norte.......................................: 8 299 333 4 210 6 380 1,023 2 (D) El Dorado.......................................: 7 128 82 1 (D) 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) Fresno..........................................: 9 206 331 7 (D) 5 74 198 - - : Glenn...........................................: 10 651 770 4 287 10 320 476 7 150 Humboldt........................................: 61 1,365 2,831 - - 34 1,055 1,374 13 (D) Imperial........................................: 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) 7 352 (D) 7 352 Kern............................................: 1 (D) (D) - - - - - - - Lake............................................: 14 308 279 - - 11 727 (D) 4 16 Lassen..........................................: 29 7,320 19,257 25 6,779 20 8,054 9,406 18 5,972 Los Angeles.....................................: 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) 3 (D) 11 2 (D) Marin...........................................: 8 432 (D) - - 9 360 (D) 1 (D) Mariposa........................................: 1 (D) (D) - - - - - - - ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 26. Field Seeds, Grass Seeds, Hay, Forage, and Silage: 2012 and 2007 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : 2012 : 2007 :------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ : Harvested : Irrigated : Harvested : Irrigated :------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Geographic area : Farms : Acres : Quantity : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Quantity : Farms : Acres ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- WILD HAY (TONS, DRY) - Con. : : Counties - Con. : : Mendocino.......................................: 45 2,481 3,717 17 377 25 860 1,138 1 (D) Merced..........................................: 14 357 331 3 (D) 4 116 77 3 76 Modoc...........................................: 47 9,037 15,921 28 6,861 41 14,832 25,202 30 13,260 Mono............................................: 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) 4 345 544 4 345 Monterey........................................: - - - - - 5 422 (D) 2 (D) Napa............................................: 6 (D) (D) 2 (D) 6 395 735 2 (D) Nevada..........................................: 5 (D) (D) 5 10 4 (D) (D) 1 (D) Placer..........................................: 4 (D) (D) - - 5 95 259 5 95 Plumas..........................................: 9 1,126 1,249 8 (D) 7 1,440 (D) 7 1,414 Riverside.......................................: 8 666 1,311 7 (D) - - - - - : Sacramento......................................: 22 379 1,207 13 252 30 1,314 2,806 7 121 San Benito......................................: 5 420 600 - - 1 (D) (D) - - San Diego.......................................: - - - - - 3 60 48 1 (D) San Joaquin.....................................: 20 190 315 11 125 9 338 576 2 (D) San Luis Obispo.................................: 9 117 330 2 (D) 4 (D) (D) 2 (D) San Mateo.......................................: 5 345 621 2 (D) 12 850 2,229 - - Santa Barbara...................................: - - - - - 4 28 16 - - Santa Clara.....................................: 3 (D) 108 - - 7 217 (D) - - Santa Cruz......................................: 1 (D) (D) - - 2 (D) (D) 1 (D) Shasta..........................................: 20 247 344 8 166 10 936 1,597 6 144 : Sierra..........................................: 4 285 337 1 (D) 2 (D) (D) - - Siskiyou........................................: 27 10,258 15,957 15 2,847 20 547 844 16 438 Solano..........................................: 21 923 1,166 3 27 32 816 1,217 7 113 Sonoma..........................................: 16 283 372 1 (D) 43 922 2,363 11 72 Stanislaus......................................: 21 1,275 1,937 11 172 11 347 654 6 217 Sutter..........................................: 6 310 550 3 95 7 400 (D) - - Tehama..........................................: 8 104 149 4 79 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) Trinity.........................................: - - - - - 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) Tulare..........................................: 12 1,840 2,289 1 (D) 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) Tuolumne........................................: 1 (D) (D) - - - - - - - : Ventura.........................................: - - - - - 2 (D) (D) 1 (D) Yolo............................................: 24 594 666 1 (D) 10 560 (D) - - Yuba............................................: 1 (D) (D) - - 4 55 86 - - : ALL HAYLAGE, GRASS SILAGE, AND : GREENCHOP (TONS, GREEN) : (SEE TEXT) : : State Total : : California......................................: 1,268 281,430 3,266,000 1,026 246,560 1,329 305,816 3,625,272 1,147 271,934 : Counties : : Alameda.........................................: - - - - - 5 810 3,149 - - Amador..........................................: 2 (D) (D) - - - - - - - Butte...........................................: 6 150 950 6 150 14 342 3,124 12 278 Calaveras.......................................: 2 (D) (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) Colusa..........................................: 1 (D) (D) - - 1 (D) (D) - - Contra Costa....................................: 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) 2 (D) (D) 1 (D) Del Norte.......................................: 14 3,334 46,318 8 3,035 4 2,085 31,941 3 1,950 El Dorado.......................................: 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) - - - - - Fresno..........................................: 80 19,481 219,838 78 (D) 79 23,068 219,293 74 21,627 Glenn...........................................: 29 4,172 58,444 15 3,187 26 3,662 41,631 22 3,435 : Humboldt........................................: 63 4,160 31,172 37 2,353 49 3,437 23,792 23 1,795 Imperial........................................: 9 2,948 26,542 9 2,948 12 8,097 61,736 12 8,097 Kern............................................: 45 14,931 145,507 43 (D) 51 24,210 380,065 49 21,584 Kings...........................................: 108 23,999 290,794 99 21,990 126 29,359 317,185 124 28,497 Lake............................................: 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) Lassen..........................................: 8 242 325 6 (D) 7 2,495 12,164 5 1,120 Los Angeles.....................................: 4 66 (D) 2 (D) 3 5 5 3 5 Madera..........................................: 24 9,334 127,578 20 8,940 28 10,687 99,976 26 9,617 Marin...........................................: 11 1,375 15,572 4 400 7 1,630 20,812 1 (D) Mendocino.......................................: 19 788 5,593 5 21 18 993 10,215 14 705 : Merced..........................................: 163 47,717 547,052 141 43,108 177 38,537 469,973 165 35,888 Modoc...........................................: 11 (D) 3,741 9 (D) 7 3,611 9,100 5 (D) Monterey........................................: 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) (D) - - Nevada..........................................: 4 45 55 4 45 3 39 105 3 39 Orange..........................................: 2 (D) (D) - - - - - - - Placer..........................................: 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) 3 716 (D) 1 (D) Riverside.......................................: 20 6,608 53,521 20 6,573 12 (D) (D) 12 (D) Sacramento......................................: 30 2,468 14,265 21 1,905 35 4,934 40,348 29 4,286 San Benito......................................: 3 9 9 3 9 5 615 1,655 1 (D) San Bernardino..................................: 16 2,919 20,728 14 (D) 17 3,276 41,285 17 3,276 : San Diego.......................................: 9 832 3,375 3 (D) 4 58 522 2 (D) San Joaquin.....................................: 102 22,124 246,390 68 13,999 105 23,806 274,854 86 18,301 San Luis Obispo.................................: 7 749 4,380 4 (D) 8 1,171 9,997 5 1,010 Santa Barbara...................................: 4 606 (D) 3 (D) 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) Santa Clara.....................................: 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) 3 (D) (D) 2 (D) Santa Cruz......................................: - - - - - 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) Shasta..........................................: 20 1,101 5,046 19 (D) 24 227 1,543 24 227 Sierra..........................................: 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) - - - - - Siskiyou........................................: 12 1,271 10,569 9 1,126 8 268 643 8 268 Solano..........................................: 7 2,422 16,796 4 1,538 7 1,321 9,051 4 1,220 : Sonoma..........................................: 41 6,982 84,246 19 2,409 34 7,533 88,341 13 3,746 Stanislaus......................................: 154 23,368 275,607 132 19,287 212 31,390 363,215 183 26,488 Sutter..........................................: 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) Tehama..........................................: 26 1,157 8,920 16 597 16 1,422 8,557 12 1,415 Trinity.........................................: 3 16 12 3 16 - - - - - ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 26. Field Seeds, Grass Seeds, Hay, Forage, and Silage: 2012 and 2007 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : 2012 : 2007 :------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ : Harvested : Irrigated : Harvested : Irrigated :------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Geographic area : Farms : Acres : Quantity : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Quantity : Farms : Acres ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- ALL HAYLAGE, GRASS SILAGE, AND : GREENCHOP (TONS, GREEN) : (SEE TEXT) - Con. : : Counties - Con. : : Tulare..........................................: 189 71,299 977,860 185 70,318 203 71,332 1,018,034 195 68,557 Tuolumne........................................: - - - - - 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) Ventura.........................................: 4 (D) (D) 2 (D) - - - - - Yolo............................................: 3 340 1,705 2 (D) 1 (D) (D) - - Yuba............................................: 3 (D) (D) 2 (D) 6 1,132 15,320 5 1,077 : HAYLAGE OR GREENCHOP FROM : ALFALFA OR ALFALFA MIXTURES : (TONS, GREEN) : : State Total : : California......................................: 402 81,573 556,353 357 76,306 373 82,812 544,721 343 78,944 : Counties : : Butte...........................................: - - - - - 6 142 614 6 142 Calaveras.......................................: 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) - - - - - Contra Costa....................................: - - - - - 1 (D) (D) - - Del Norte.......................................: 2 (D) (D) 1 (D) - - - - - Fresno..........................................: 48 10,784 79,162 47 (D) 36 9,687 44,891 35 9,408 Glenn...........................................: - - - - - 5 360 1,312 5 360 Humboldt........................................: 19 1,051 8,743 9 603 9 370 2,468 3 130 Imperial........................................: 3 1,640 (D) 3 1,640 3 (D) (D) 3 (D) Kern............................................: 25 6,407 38,828 24 (D) 23 9,768 114,426 23 9,768 Kings...........................................: 54 7,818 44,212 49 7,356 52 10,998 54,318 47 10,136 : Lassen..........................................: 5 (D) 5 5 5 2 (D) (D) 1 (D) Los Angeles.....................................: 2 (D) (D) - - - - - - - Madera..........................................: 8 2,148 9,776 4 (D) 11 4,040 16,706 11 4,040 Mendocino.......................................: - - - - - 7 278 (D) 5 (D) Merced..........................................: 54 16,957 106,520 46 16,303 41 5,578 47,147 40 5,457 Modoc...........................................: 1 (D) (D) - - 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) Monterey........................................: 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) - - - - - Placer..........................................: - - - - - 1 (D) (D) - - Riverside.......................................: 13 2,482 21,777 13 2,482 4 (D) (D) 4 (D) Sacramento......................................: 5 542 2,159 4 (D) 7 780 9,332 5 530 : San Bernardino..................................: 10 975 9,511 10 975 9 1,169 8,675 9 1,169 San Diego.......................................: 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) - - - - - San Joaquin.....................................: 28 5,428 44,381 23 4,128 25 5,782 38,911 23 5,058 San Luis Obispo.................................: 2 (D) (D) - - 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) Santa Clara.....................................: - - - - - 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) Shasta..........................................: 5 121 452 5 121 6 36 (D) 6 36 Sierra..........................................: 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) - - - - - Siskiyou........................................: 3 (D) (D) 3 (D) - - - - - Solano..........................................: - - - - - 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) Sonoma..........................................: 5 500 6,046 5 493 6 981 7,820 2 (D) : Stanislaus......................................: 30 4,541 23,897 28 (D) 45 5,045 44,290 43 5,043 Sutter..........................................: 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) - - - - - Tehama..........................................: 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) Tulare..........................................: 71 18,170 120,971 69 (D) 66 18,449 109,327 64 18,129 Ventura.........................................: 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) - - - - - : OTHER HAYLAGE, GRASS : SILAGE, AND GREENCHOP : (TONS, GREEN) : : State Total : : California......................................: 976 199,857 2,709,647 759 170,254 1,049 223,004 3,080,551 885 192,990 : Counties : : Alameda.........................................: - - - - - 5 810 3,149 - - Amador..........................................: 2 (D) (D) - - - - - - - Butte...........................................: 6 150 950 6 150 8 200 2,510 6 136 Calaveras.......................................: 1 (D) (D) - - 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) Colusa..........................................: 1 (D) (D) - - 1 (D) (D) - - Contra Costa....................................: 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) Del Norte.......................................: 13 (D) (D) 7 (D) 4 2,085 31,941 3 1,950 El Dorado.......................................: 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) - - - - - Fresno..........................................: 46 8,697 140,676 45 (D) 51 13,381 174,402 47 12,219 Glenn...........................................: 29 4,172 58,444 15 3,187 21 3,302 40,319 17 3,075 : Humboldt........................................: 48 3,109 22,429 31 1,750 42 3,067 21,324 21 1,665 Imperial........................................: 7 1,308 (D) 7 1,308 10 (D) (D) 10 (D) Kern............................................: 24 8,524 106,679 23 (D) 33 14,442 265,639 30 11,816 Kings...........................................: 66 16,181 246,582 60 14,634 91 18,361 262,867 91 18,361 Lake............................................: 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) Lassen..........................................: 3 (D) 320 1 (D) 6 (D) (D) 4 (D) Los Angeles.....................................: 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) 3 5 5 3 5 Madera..........................................: 18 7,186 117,802 17 (D) 17 6,647 83,270 15 5,577 Marin...........................................: 11 1,375 15,572 4 400 7 1,630 20,812 1 (D) Mendocino.......................................: 19 788 5,593 5 21 11 715 (D) 9 (D) : Merced..........................................: 129 30,760 440,532 109 26,805 150 32,959 422,826 138 30,431 Modoc...........................................: 10 (D) (D) 9 (D) 6 (D) (D) 4 631 Monterey........................................: - - - - - 1 (D) (D) - - Nevada..........................................: 4 45 55 4 45 3 39 105 3 39 Orange..........................................: 2 (D) (D) - - - - - - - Placer..........................................: 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) 2 (D) (D) 1 (D) Riverside.......................................: 7 4,126 31,744 7 4,091 9 (D) (D) 9 (D) ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 26. Field Seeds, Grass Seeds, Hay, Forage, and Silage: 2012 and 2007 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : 2012 : 2007 :------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ : Harvested : Irrigated : Harvested : Irrigated :------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Geographic area : Farms : Acres : Quantity : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Quantity : Farms : Acres ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- OTHER HAYLAGE, GRASS : SILAGE, AND GREENCHOP : (TONS, GREEN) - Con. : : Counties - Con. : : Sacramento......................................: 26 1,926 12,106 18 (D) 28 4,154 31,016 24 3,756 San Benito......................................: 3 9 9 3 9 5 615 1,655 1 (D) San Bernardino..................................: 11 1,944 11,217 9 (D) 10 2,107 32,610 10 2,107 San Diego.......................................: 9 (D) (D) 3 (D) 4 58 522 2 (D) San Joaquin.....................................: 84 16,696 202,009 48 9,871 89 18,024 235,943 70 13,243 San Luis Obispo.................................: 5 (D) (D) 4 (D) 7 (D) (D) 4 (D) Santa Barbara...................................: 4 606 (D) 3 (D) 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) Santa Clara.....................................: 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) (D) - - Santa Cruz......................................: - - - - - 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) Shasta..........................................: 15 980 4,594 14 (D) 18 191 (D) 18 191 : Siskiyou........................................: 9 (D) (D) 6 (D) 8 268 643 8 268 Solano..........................................: 7 2,422 16,796 4 1,538 5 (D) (D) 2 (D) Sonoma..........................................: 38 6,482 78,200 16 1,916 29 6,552 80,521 11 (D) Stanislaus......................................: 132 18,827 251,710 112 (D) 181 26,345 318,925 154 21,445 Sutter..........................................: 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) Tehama..........................................: 24 (D) (D) 14 (D) 15 (D) (D) 11 (D) Trinity.........................................: 3 16 12 3 16 - - - - - Tulare..........................................: 143 53,129 856,889 139 (D) 154 52,883 908,707 146 50,428 Tuolumne........................................: - - - - - 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) Ventura.........................................: 2 (D) (D) - - - - - - - : Yolo............................................: 3 340 1,705 2 (D) 1 (D) (D) - - Yuba............................................: 3 (D) (D) 2 (D) 6 1,132 15,320 5 1,077 : CORN FOR SILAGE OR : GREENCHOP (TONS) : : State Total : : California......................................: 1,895 487,570 12,575,973 1,802 461,898 1,975 460,614 12,019,578 1,975 460,514 : Counties : : Alameda.........................................: - - - - - 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) Amador..........................................: 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) Butte...........................................: 5 300 5,635 4 (D) 4 250 8,906 4 250 Calaveras.......................................: - - - - - 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) Contra Costa....................................: 5 1,342 28,481 4 (D) 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) El Dorado.......................................: 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) Fresno..........................................: 130 32,438 795,828 127 31,346 149 37,699 900,826 149 37,699 Glenn...........................................: 42 7,152 193,219 40 (D) 48 5,718 154,902 48 5,718 Humboldt........................................: 7 227 4,546 2 (D) 14 979 22,820 14 879 Imperial........................................: 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) 7 2,022 44,260 7 2,022 : Kern............................................: 87 27,855 657,491 81 25,377 87 30,567 770,679 87 30,567 Kings...........................................: 197 60,904 1,547,443 185 59,450 250 58,478 1,458,255 250 58,478 Lake............................................: 5 10 5 5 10 - - - - - Lassen..........................................: 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) Los Angeles.....................................: 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) - - - - - Madera..........................................: 46 22,266 566,363 45 (D) 63 21,290 548,016 63 21,290 Mendocino.......................................: 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) - - - - - Merced..........................................: 321 91,880 2,392,000 311 88,076 342 71,535 1,891,097 342 71,535 Monterey........................................: 8 706 19,900 6 (D) - - - - - Placer..........................................: 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) : Riverside.......................................: 6 (D) (D) 2 (D) 8 1,330 38,485 8 1,330 Sacramento......................................: 32 5,726 126,045 29 4,999 37 7,033 181,574 37 7,033 San Benito......................................: - - - - - 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) San Bernardino..................................: 13 2,017 51,717 13 1,737 13 2,705 72,012 13 2,705 San Joaquin.....................................: 186 47,640 1,274,778 172 45,001 166 41,041 1,102,727 166 41,041 San Luis Obispo.................................: 1 (D) (D) - - - - - - - San Mateo.......................................: 6 6 90 6 6 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) Santa Barbara...................................: 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) Santa Clara.....................................: 3 17 290 3 17 - - - - - Shasta..........................................: 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) : Siskiyou........................................: - - - - - 4 242 4,400 4 242 Solano..........................................: 3 1,196 33,032 3 1,196 4 920 35,100 4 920 Sonoma..........................................: 11 789 22,098 10 (D) 6 718 25,600 6 718 Stanislaus......................................: 401 61,794 1,618,793 401 60,579 388 57,680 1,545,809 388 57,680 Sutter..........................................: 2 (D) (D) - - - - - - - Tehama..........................................: 15 1,760 45,689 12 1,085 10 898 23,272 10 898 Tulare..........................................: 331 113,645 2,953,108 311 105,448 349 116,372 3,100,451 349 116,372 Tuolumne........................................: 3 3 15 3 3 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) Ventura.........................................: 1 (D) (D) - - - - - - - Yolo............................................: 4 1,601 41,000 4 1,601 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) Yuba............................................: 12 954 26,368 11 (D) 5 732 23,265 5 732 : SORGHUM FOR SILAGE OR : GREENCHOP (TONS) : : State Total : : California......................................: 239 41,953 634,648 217 38,324 195 30,085 536,162 189 29,457 : Counties : : Fresno..........................................: 21 4,967 79,742 21 4,967 17 1,976 35,547 17 1,976 Glenn...........................................: 4 521 9,720 4 521 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) Imperial........................................: 5 322 3,330 5 322 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) Kern............................................: 19 7,365 108,418 17 (D) 28 7,398 156,669 27 7,084 Kings...........................................: 59 11,272 153,815 56 10,965 30 4,510 79,121 30 4,510 Madera..........................................: 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) 6 1,410 11,602 6 1,410 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 26. Field Seeds, Grass Seeds, Hay, Forage, and Silage: 2012 and 2007 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : 2012 : 2007 :------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ : Harvested : Irrigated : Harvested : Irrigated :------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Geographic area : Farms : Acres : Quantity : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Quantity : Farms : Acres ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- SORGHUM FOR SILAGE OR : GREENCHOP (TONS) - Con. : : Counties - Con. : : Merced..........................................: 30 4,136 60,672 26 3,045 24 1,728 18,021 23 (D) Riverside.......................................: 6 935 15,950 6 935 5 1,490 26,774 5 1,490 Sacramento......................................: - - - - - 1 (D) (D) - - San Bernardino..................................: 9 753 8,995 9 753 4 916 10,571 4 916 San Joaquin.....................................: 10 958 13,757 10 958 7 931 10,283 7 931 Santa Barbara...................................: - - - - - 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) Sonoma..........................................: 3 250 4,032 2 (D) 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) Stanislaus......................................: 21 3,180 49,735 14 1,860 23 2,227 32,523 23 2,227 Tehama..........................................: - - - - - 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) Tulare..........................................: 49 6,853 120,719 44 6,673 44 6,684 142,255 41 6,640 Yolo............................................: 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) - - - - - ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Table 27. Other Crops: 2012 and 2007 [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : 2012 : 2007 :--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : Harvested : Irrigated : Harvested : Irrigated :--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Geographic area : Farms : Acres : Quantity : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Quantity : Farms : Acres -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- DILL FOR OIL (POUNDS) : : State Total : : California..............................: 4 24 48,000 4 24 - - - - - : Counties : : Monterey................................: 4 24 48,000 4 24 - - - - - : HERBS, DRIED (POUNDS) : : State Total : : California..............................: 48 2,998 3,687,210 33 2,904 36 3,473 (D) 33 3,434 : Counties : : Contra Costa............................: 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) El Dorado...............................: 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) 5 5 1,500 5 5 Fresno..................................: 4 (D) (D) 4 (D) - - - - - Humboldt................................: - - - - - 3 5 250 3 5 Inyo....................................: 3 3 1,413 3 3 - - - - - Lake....................................: 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) - - - - - Los Angeles.............................: 5 5 2,355 2 (D) - - - - - Marin...................................: 3 3 705 3 3 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) Mariposa................................: 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) - - - - - Mendocino...............................: 2 (D) (D) 1 (D) - - - - - : Merced..................................: 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) - - - - - Modoc...................................: 3 3 105 - - - - - - - Monterey................................: 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) 5 (D) 13,747 2 (D) Nevada..................................: 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) - - - - - Orange..................................: 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) - - - - - Placer..................................: 2 (D) (D) - - - - - - - Riverside...............................: 9 (D) (D) 7 (D) 3 (D) (D) 3 (D) San Bernardino..........................: - - - - - 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) San Diego...............................: 3 (D) (D) 1 (D) 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) San Luis Obispo.........................: 1 (D) (D) - - - - - - - : Santa Barbara...........................: 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) 4 (D) (D) 4 (D) Shasta..................................: - - - - - 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) Siskiyou................................: - - - - - 3 (D) (D) 3 (D) Sonoma..................................: - - - - - 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) Stanislaus..............................: 1 (D) (D) - - - - - - - Sutter..................................: - - - - - 4 184 52,800 4 184 Tulare..................................: - - - - - 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) : HOPS (POUNDS) : : State Total : : California..............................: 5 7 6,058 5 7 - - - - - : Counties : : Humboldt................................: 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) - - - - - San Diego...............................: 3 (D) (D) 3 (D) - - - - - : JOJOBA HARVESTED (POUNDS) : : State Total : : California..............................: 11 329 124,134 5 81 7 1,266 245,403 6 1,223 : Counties : : Fresno..................................: 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) - - - - - Kern....................................: 2 (D) (D) - - 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) Riverside...............................: 3 26 8,400 2 (D) 3 (D) (D) 3 (D) San Bernardino..........................: 4 88 39,134 1 (D) 1 (D) (D) - - Solano..................................: 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) : MINT FOR OIL, ALL : (POUNDS OF OIL) : : State Total : : California..............................: 15 3,037 258,819 15 3,037 25 4,083 299,559 25 3,973 : Counties : : Lassen..................................: 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) Modoc...................................: 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) 7 1,474 124,392 7 1,474 Riverside...............................: - - - - - 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) Shasta..................................: 4 149 11,800 4 149 6 710 56,290 6 710 Siskiyou................................: 8 1,804 147,819 8 1,804 8 (D) (D) 8 (D) : MINT FOR OIL, PEPPERMINT : (POUNDS OF OIL) : : State Total : : California..............................: 15 3,037 258,819 15 3,037 24 (D) (D) 24 (D) : Counties : : Lassen..................................: 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) Modoc...................................: 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) 7 1,474 124,392 7 1,474 Riverside...............................: - - - - - 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 27. Other Crops: 2012 and 2007 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : 2012 : 2007 :--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : Harvested : Irrigated : Harvested : Irrigated :--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Geographic area : Farms : Acres : Quantity : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Quantity : Farms : Acres -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- MINT FOR OIL, PEPPERMINT : (POUNDS OF OIL) - Con. : : Counties - Con. : : Shasta..................................: 4 149 11,800 4 149 6 710 56,290 6 710 Siskiyou................................: 8 1,804 147,819 8 1,804 7 (D) (D) 7 (D) : MINT FOR OIL, SPEARMINT : (POUNDS OF OIL) : : State Total : : California..............................: - - - - - 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) : Counties : : Siskiyou................................: - - - - - 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) : MINT TEA LEAVES (POUNDS) : : State Total : : California..............................: 11 (D) (D) 7 (D) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) : Counties : : El Dorado...............................: 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) Merced..................................: 5 5 50 5 5 (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) Modoc...................................: 4 (D) (D) - - (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) Riverside...............................: 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) : SESAME (POUNDS) : : State Total : : California..............................: 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) - - - - - : Counties : : Fresno..................................: 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) - - - - - : SWITCHGRASS (TONS) : : State Total : : California..............................: 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) : Counties : : Fresno..................................: 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) : TARO (POUNDS) : : State Total : : California..............................: - - - - - 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) : Counties : : Fresno..................................: - - - - - 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) : OTHER CROPS (SEE TEXT) : : State Total : : California..............................: 18 1,921 (X) 17 (D) 97 1,681 (X) 81 1,434 : Counties : : Alameda.................................: - - (X) - - 1 (D) (X) - - Butte...................................: 6 885 (X) 6 885 2 (D) (X) 2 (D) Colusa..................................: 1 (D) (X) 1 (D) - - (X) - - Contra Costa............................: - - (X) - - 1 (D) (X) 1 (D) El Dorado...............................: - - (X) - - 4 4 (X) 2 (D) Fresno..................................: - - (X) - - 8 47 (X) 8 47 Glenn...................................: - - (X) - - 1 (D) (X) 1 (D) Humboldt................................: - - (X) - - 6 (D) (X) 5 22 Imperial................................: 1 (D) (X) 1 (D) 8 494 (X) 8 494 Kern....................................: - - (X) - - 1 (D) (X) 1 (D) : Kings...................................: - - (X) - - 2 (D) (X) 2 (D) Lake....................................: 1 (D) (X) 1 (D) - - (X) - - Merced..................................: 1 (D) (X) 1 (D) 2 (D) (X) 2 (D) Modoc...................................: 1 (D) (X) 1 (D) - - (X) - - Monterey................................: - - (X) - - 2 (D) (X) 2 (D) Nevada..................................: - - (X) - - 2 (D) (X) 2 (D) Placer..................................: - - (X) - - 2 (D) (X) 2 (D) Riverside...............................: 1 (D) (X) 1 (D) 2 (D) (X) 2 (D) Sacramento..............................: 1 (D) (X) 1 (D) 2 (D) (X) - - San Diego...............................: 3 (D) (X) 3 (D) 11 32 (X) 9 30 : San Joaquin.............................: - - (X) - - 8 202 (X) 8 202 San Luis Obispo.........................: - - (X) - - 6 8 (X) 4 6 Santa Barbara...........................: - - (X) - - 2 (D) (X) 2 (D) Santa Clara.............................: - - (X) - - 3 (D) (X) 3 (D) Santa Cruz..............................: - - (X) - - 1 (D) (X) - - Shasta..................................: - - (X) - - 1 (D) (X) - - Sonoma..................................: - - (X) - - 9 50 (X) 7 48 Stanislaus..............................: - - (X) - - 2 (D) (X) 2 (D) -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 27. Other Crops: 2012 and 2007 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : 2012 : 2007 :--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : Harvested : Irrigated : Harvested : Irrigated :--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Geographic area : Farms : Acres : Quantity : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Quantity : Farms : Acres -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- OTHER CROPS (SEE TEXT) - Con. : : Counties - Con. : : Sutter..................................: - - (X) - - 1 (D) (X) 1 (D) Tehama..................................: - - (X) - - 2 (D) (X) - - Tulare..................................: - - (X) - - 1 (D) (X) 1 (D) Ventura.................................: - - (X) - - 4 7 (X) 4 7 Yolo....................................: 2 (D) (X) 1 (D) - - (X) - - -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Table 28. Land Used For Vegetables and Vegetables Harvested For Sale: 2012 and 2007 [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ : 2012 : 2007 :------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : 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 : : California..............................: 6,055 985,735 6,055 985,731 1,175,249 3,868 969,013 3,868 968,965 1,169,786 : Counties : : Alameda.................................: 38 108 38 108 116 8 (D) 8 (D) (D) Amador..................................: 34 29 34 29 33 6 6 6 6 6 Butte...................................: 99 559 99 559 566 52 219 52 219 258 Calaveras...............................: 35 54 35 54 57 22 53 22 53 56 Colusa..................................: 19 12,210 19 12,210 14,773 22 18,643 22 18,643 18,960 Contra Costa............................: 66 5,254 66 5,254 5,254 28 6,199 28 6,199 6,315 Del Norte...............................: 25 54 25 54 54 5 7 5 7 7 El Dorado...............................: 147 222 147 222 229 70 85 70 85 88 Fresno..................................: 564 166,810 564 166,806 176,589 559 186,565 559 186,565 195,401 Glenn...................................: 31 3,323 31 3,323 3,403 12 1,875 12 1,875 1,961 : Humboldt................................: 177 574 177 574 598 64 280 64 232 282 Imperial................................: 105 105,979 105 105,979 126,153 86 68,970 86 68,970 83,486 Inyo....................................: 15 (D) 15 (D) (D) 5 3 5 3 (D) Kern....................................: 167 84,962 167 84,962 88,634 138 77,362 138 77,362 83,755 Kings...................................: 44 24,704 44 24,704 27,267 53 28,982 53 28,982 31,856 Lake....................................: 71 101 71 101 108 20 29 20 29 31 Lassen..................................: 4 630 4 630 630 9 411 9 411 411 Los Angeles.............................: 171 17,430 171 17,430 17,447 68 11,607 68 11,607 12,902 Madera..................................: 43 6,800 43 6,800 6,913 30 4,665 30 4,665 4,678 Marin...................................: 39 182 39 182 230 20 174 20 174 215 : Mariposa................................: 3 1 3 1 1 4 (D) 4 (D) 2 Mendocino...............................: 141 345 141 345 369 59 244 59 244 255 Merced..................................: 223 51,119 223 51,119 59,815 176 58,671 176 58,671 59,533 Modoc...................................: 18 4,386 18 4,386 4,386 19 4,120 19 4,120 4,152 Mono....................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) (D) Monterey................................: 210 189,644 210 189,644 261,546 202 163,237 202 163,237 253,704 Napa....................................: 57 62 57 62 72 22 24 22 24 29 Nevada..................................: 133 201 133 201 212 41 55 41 55 62 Orange..................................: 45 1,498 45 1,498 1,548 20 909 20 909 930 Placer..................................: 119 179 119 179 185 65 117 65 117 121 : Plumas..................................: 15 25 15 25 (D) 5 8 5 8 8 Riverside...............................: 155 30,529 155 30,529 36,314 120 22,922 120 22,922 26,667 Sacramento..............................: 174 3,686 174 3,686 3,720 63 5,528 63 5,528 5,534 San Benito..............................: 64 9,171 64 9,171 10,461 53 17,159 53 17,159 26,878 San Bernardino..........................: 112 964 112 964 1,032 76 3,497 76 3,497 4,344 San Diego...............................: 335 1,842 335 1,842 1,968 175 3,413 175 3,413 3,579 San Joaquin.............................: 193 52,651 193 52,651 57,903 181 66,652 181 66,652 69,433 San Luis Obispo.........................: 298 17,611 298 17,611 25,441 175 18,610 175 18,610 29,819 San Mateo...............................: 61 1,299 61 1,299 1,312 32 1,760 32 1,760 1,808 Santa Barbara...........................: 222 40,594 222 40,594 64,393 145 42,436 145 42,436 65,953 : Santa Clara.............................: 200 10,427 200 10,427 11,234 91 10,160 91 10,160 11,594 Santa Cruz..............................: 91 11,494 91 11,494 17,898 64 9,910 64 9,910 16,619 Shasta..................................: 97 125 97 125 134 39 132 39 132 151 Siskiyou................................: 58 8,922 58 8,922 9,129 39 6,766 39 6,766 7,201 Solano..................................: 67 12,964 67 12,964 13,277 50 11,759 50 11,759 12,147 Sonoma..................................: 330 1,073 330 1,073 1,121 172 848 172 848 919 Stanislaus..............................: 124 16,624 124 16,624 19,050 86 19,700 86 19,700 20,770 Sutter..................................: 56 16,037 56 16,037 18,934 36 17,399 36 17,399 17,924 Tehama..................................: 75 77 75 77 83 28 57 28 57 59 Trinity.................................: 66 65 66 65 67 22 22 22 22 23 : Tulare..................................: 134 3,483 134 3,483 3,611 80 4,041 80 4,041 4,414 Tuolumne................................: 17 20 17 20 (D) 11 7 11 7 7 Ventura.................................: 106 25,027 106 25,027 35,714 118 24,458 118 24,458 35,330 Yolo....................................: 114 43,449 114 43,449 45,059 96 48,034 96 48,034 48,924 Yuba....................................: 47 84 47 84 86 25 87 25 87 86 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Table 29. Vegetables, Potatoes, and Melons Harvested for Sale: 2012 and 2007 [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ : 2012 : :-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------: 2007 : Harvested : Harvested for processing : Harvested for fresh market : harvested :----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Geographic area : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ VEGETABLES HARVESTED : FOR SALE (SEE TEXT) : : State Total : : California..........................: 6,055 1,175,249 1,198 375,739 5,641 799,510 3,868 1,169,786 : Counties : : Alameda.............................: 38 116 2 (D) 38 (D) 8 (D) Amador..............................: 34 33 - - 34 33 6 6 Butte...............................: 99 566 6 381 95 185 52 258 Calaveras...........................: 35 57 8 13 35 44 22 56 Colusa..............................: 19 14,773 12 11,445 11 3,328 22 18,960 Contra Costa........................: 66 5,254 6 (D) 66 (D) 28 6,315 Del Norte...........................: 25 54 3 (Z) 25 54 5 7 El Dorado...........................: 147 229 25 16 142 212 70 88 Fresno..............................: 564 176,589 215 110,141 434 66,448 559 195,401 Glenn...............................: 31 3,403 4 (D) 28 (D) 12 1,961 : Humboldt............................: 177 598 25 4 171 594 64 282 Imperial............................: 105 126,153 31 20,885 92 105,268 86 83,486 Inyo................................: 15 (D) - - 15 (D) 5 (D) Kern................................: 167 88,634 52 28,438 145 60,196 138 83,755 Kings...............................: 44 27,267 26 21,947 29 5,319 53 31,856 Lake................................: 71 108 - - 71 108 20 31 Lassen..............................: 4 630 - - 4 630 9 411 Los Angeles.........................: 171 17,447 23 37 168 17,410 68 12,902 Madera..............................: 43 6,913 13 3,649 38 3,264 30 4,678 Marin...............................: 39 230 7 44 39 186 20 215 : Mariposa............................: 3 1 - - 3 1 4 2 Mendocino...........................: 141 369 19 35 141 334 59 255 Merced..............................: 223 59,815 85 23,948 205 35,867 176 59,533 Modoc...............................: 18 4,386 5 2,966 17 1,420 19 4,152 Mono................................: 1 (D) - - 1 (D) 1 (D) Monterey............................: 210 261,546 44 14,213 209 247,332 202 253,704 Napa................................: 57 72 5 3 57 70 22 29 Nevada..............................: 133 212 9 6 128 206 41 62 Orange..............................: 45 1,548 1 (D) 45 (D) 20 930 Placer..............................: 119 185 15 27 119 158 65 121 : Plumas..............................: 15 (D) 2 (D) 15 26 5 8 Riverside...........................: 155 36,314 15 873 154 35,441 120 26,667 Sacramento..........................: 174 3,720 33 2,116 167 1,603 63 5,534 San Benito..........................: 64 10,461 18 1,904 61 8,557 53 26,878 San Bernardino......................: 112 1,032 11 4 112 1,028 76 4,344 San Diego...........................: 335 1,968 19 10 329 1,958 175 3,579 San Joaquin.........................: 193 57,903 81 28,965 147 28,938 181 69,433 San Luis Obispo.....................: 298 25,441 27 1,307 292 24,134 175 29,819 San Mateo...........................: 61 1,312 11 88 61 1,224 32 1,808 Santa Barbara.......................: 222 64,393 40 5,866 220 58,527 145 65,953 : Santa Clara.........................: 200 11,234 22 2,551 200 8,683 91 11,594 Santa Cruz..........................: 91 17,898 14 801 90 17,097 64 16,619 Shasta..............................: 97 134 12 3 97 131 39 151 Siskiyou............................: 58 9,129 19 5,825 54 3,303 39 7,201 Solano..............................: 67 13,277 23 11,360 50 1,917 50 12,147 Sonoma..............................: 330 1,121 35 22 330 1,100 172 919 Stanislaus..........................: 124 19,050 46 11,458 99 7,592 86 20,770 Sutter..............................: 56 18,934 22 14,279 38 4,655 36 17,924 Tehama..............................: 75 83 11 5 75 78 28 59 Trinity.............................: 66 67 17 10 59 57 22 23 : Tulare..............................: 134 3,611 8 959 133 2,652 80 4,414 Tuolumne............................: 17 (D) - - 17 (D) 11 7 Ventura.............................: 106 35,714 17 5,709 105 30,005 118 35,330 Yolo................................: 114 45,059 42 41,469 85 3,590 96 48,924 Yuba................................: 47 86 12 14 46 72 25 86 : ARTICHOKES, EXCLUDING : JERUSALEM : : State Total : : California..........................: 134 7,296 11 21 132 7,275 83 9,612 : Counties : : Contra Costa........................: - - - - - - 1 (D) El Dorado...........................: 4 1 - - 4 1 - - Fresno..............................: 6 6 - - 6 6 4 (D) Humboldt............................: 6 1 4 1 6 1 2 (D) Imperial............................: 1 (D) - - 1 (D) 2 (D) Kern................................: 1 (D) - - 1 (D) - - Los Angeles.........................: 4 1 - - 4 1 4 (Z) Madera..............................: 1 (D) - - 1 (D) - - Marin...............................: 2 (D) - - 2 (D) 2 (D) Mendocino...........................: 8 2 - - 8 2 - - : Merced..............................: 9 21 7 21 7 1 2 (D) Monterey............................: 11 5,691 - - 11 5,691 17 7,124 Nevada..............................: 4 1 - - 4 1 - - Orange..............................: - - - - - - 3 4 Riverside...........................: 9 299 - - 9 299 9 1,081 Sacramento..........................: 3 (D) - - 3 (D) - - San Benito..........................: 1 (D) - - 1 (D) 2 (D) San Bernardino......................: 2 (D) - - 2 (D) - - San Diego...........................: 1 (D) - - 1 (D) 1 (D) San Luis Obispo.....................: 10 20 - - 10 20 4 16 San Mateo...........................: 6 9 - - 6 9 11 79 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ --continued Table 29. Vegetables, Potatoes, and Melons Harvested for Sale: 2012 and 2007 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ : 2012 : :-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------: 2007 : Harvested : Harvested for processing : Harvested for fresh market : harvested :----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Geographic area : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ ARTICHOKES, EXCLUDING : JERUSALEM - Con. : : Counties - Con. : : Santa Barbara.......................: 17 718 - - 17 718 2 (D) Santa Clara.........................: 3 (D) - - 3 (D) 4 (D) Santa Cruz..........................: 3 205 - - 3 205 4 (D) Shasta..............................: 7 1 - - 7 1 1 (D) Sonoma..............................: 7 3 - - 7 3 2 (D) Tulare..............................: 4 8 - - 4 8 2 (D) Ventura.............................: 4 152 - - 4 152 2 (D) Yolo................................: - - - - - - 2 (D) : ASPARAGUS, BEARING AGE : : State Total : : California..........................: 140 10,587 10 1,877 134 8,710 115 20,211 : Counties : : Butte...............................: - - - - - - 1 (D) Calaveras...........................: 4 1 - - 4 1 - - Contra Costa........................: 1 (D) - - 1 (D) 2 (D) El Dorado...........................: - - - - - - 1 (D) Fresno..............................: 7 2,339 2 (D) 5 (D) 12 1,524 Glenn...............................: 2 (D) - - 2 (D) 1 (D) Humboldt............................: 5 3 - - 5 3 2 (D) Imperial............................: 3 66 - - 3 66 2 (D) Kern................................: 6 (D) 1 (D) 6 (D) 2 (D) Kings...............................: 1 (D) - - 1 (D) 1 (D) : Lassen..............................: 1 (D) - - 1 (D) - - Los Angeles.........................: 10 302 3 (Z) 7 301 4 (Z) Madera..............................: - - - - - - 1 (D) Marin...............................: 2 (D) - - 2 (D) 1 (D) Mariposa............................: - - - - - - 1 (D) Mendocino...........................: 8 (D) - - 8 (D) 1 (D) Monterey............................: 5 1,124 - - 5 1,124 11 2,490 Napa................................: 6 1 - - 6 1 - - Nevada..............................: 5 1 - - 5 1 - - Riverside...........................: 5 25 3 9 5 16 4 3 : Sacramento..........................: 4 (D) - - 4 (D) 5 856 San Benito..........................: 1 (D) - - 1 (D) 4 (D) San Bernardino......................: 2 (D) - - 2 (D) - - San Diego...........................: 1 (D) - - 1 (D) 2 (D) San Joaquin.........................: 19 4,807 1 (D) 18 (D) 37 10,893 San Luis Obispo.....................: 7 2 - - 7 2 1 (D) Santa Barbara.......................: 5 (D) - - 5 (D) 1 (D) Santa Clara.........................: 2 (D) - - 2 (D) - - Shasta..............................: 5 2 - - 5 2 - - Siskiyou............................: - - - - - - 3 6 : Solano..............................: 2 (D) - - 2 (D) 2 (D) Sonoma..............................: 7 6 - - 7 6 2 (D) Sutter..............................: - - - - - - 2 (D) Tehama..............................: 4 7 - - 4 7 - - Ventura.............................: 4 7 - - 4 7 4 (D) Yolo................................: 6 62 - - 6 62 5 110 : BEANS, GREEN LIMA : : State Total : : California..........................: 106 7,160 42 6,770 74 390 71 7,802 : Counties : : Colusa..............................: - - - - - - 1 (D) Contra Costa........................: - - - - - - 1 (D) Fresno..............................: 16 (D) 14 (D) 7 31 23 1,456 Kings...............................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - - - Marin...............................: 3 1 3 (D) 3 (D) - - Merced..............................: - - - - - - 9 1,635 Modoc...............................: 6 7 - - 6 7 - - Monterey............................: 7 (D) 2 (D) 5 1 3 674 Riverside...........................: 4 201 - - 4 201 - - Sacramento..........................: 14 3 - - 14 3 - - : San Benito..........................: - - - - - - 2 (D) San Bernardino......................: - - - - - - 1 (D) San Diego...........................: 4 1 - - 4 1 - - San Joaquin.........................: 3 223 3 (D) 2 (D) 5 667 San Luis Obispo.....................: 9 6 6 6 3 (Z) 2 (D) San Mateo...........................: 2 (D) - - 2 (D) - - Santa Barbara.......................: 7 24 - - 7 24 4 (D) Santa Clara.........................: 5 15 - - 5 15 - - Shasta..............................: 2 (D) - - 2 (D) - - Siskiyou............................: - - - - - - 2 (D) : Solano..............................: 5 1 - - 5 1 2 (D) Sonoma..............................: 3 2 - - 3 2 - - Stanislaus..........................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - 4 599 Sutter..............................: 4 1,177 4 1,177 - - 2 (D) Tulare..............................: - - - - - - 1 (D) Ventura.............................: 6 1,956 5 (D) 1 (D) 6 1,512 Yolo................................: 3 220 2 (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) Yuba................................: - - - - - - 2 (D) ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ --continued Table 29. Vegetables, Potatoes, and Melons Harvested for Sale: 2012 and 2007 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ : 2012 : :-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------: 2007 : Harvested : Harvested for processing : Harvested for fresh market : harvested :----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Geographic area : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ BEANS, SNAP (BUSH : AND POLE) : : State Total : : California..........................: 652 9,419 56 3,645 635 5,774 374 5,474 : Counties : : Alameda.............................: 3 5 - - 3 5 1 (D) Amador..............................: 14 3 - - 14 3 1 (D) Butte...............................: 19 5 - - 19 5 1 (D) Calaveras...........................: 4 1 - - 4 1 2 (D) Contra Costa........................: 11 (D) 1 (D) 11 (D) 2 (D) El Dorado...........................: 14 2 2 (D) 14 (D) 7 1 Fresno..............................: 61 2,647 10 (D) 58 (D) 61 433 Glenn...............................: - - - - - - 2 (D) Humboldt............................: 38 13 - - 38 13 8 4 Imperial............................: 7 (D) 1 (D) 7 6 2 (D) : Inyo................................: - - - - - - 2 (D) Kern................................: 6 784 4 (D) 4 (D) 4 (D) Kings...............................: 3 (Z) - - 3 (Z) 1 (D) Lake................................: 4 (Z) - - 4 (Z) 3 (Z) Lassen..............................: 1 (D) - - 1 (D) 5 1 Los Angeles.........................: 17 35 1 (D) 16 (D) 2 (D) Madera..............................: 4 14 - - 4 14 1 (D) Marin...............................: 4 8 - - 4 8 11 11 Mendocino...........................: 21 6 - - 21 6 16 4 Merced..............................: 2 (D) - - 2 (D) - - : Monterey............................: 20 703 5 338 17 365 20 1,062 Napa................................: 10 3 - - 10 3 4 1 Nevada..............................: 21 4 - - 21 4 5 1 Orange..............................: 7 (D) 1 (D) 7 (D) 11 (D) Placer..............................: 18 4 - - 18 4 1 (D) Riverside...........................: 11 296 1 (D) 10 (D) 14 641 Sacramento..........................: 9 (D) - - 9 (D) 2 (D) San Benito..........................: 7 (D) 1 (D) 6 9 6 21 San Bernardino......................: 15 6 - - 15 6 9 (D) San Diego...........................: 31 79 - - 31 79 26 94 : San Joaquin.........................: 19 68 - - 19 68 10 (D) San Luis Obispo.....................: 47 304 4 140 46 164 28 417 San Mateo...........................: 10 15 - - 10 15 10 119 Santa Barbara.......................: 26 269 8 (D) 24 (D) 18 352 Santa Clara.........................: 16 956 - - 16 956 7 514 Santa Cruz..........................: 13 22 1 (D) 13 (D) 15 97 Shasta..............................: 20 5 - - 20 5 8 2 Siskiyou............................: 10 4 3 (D) 10 (D) 1 (D) Solano..............................: 3 (D) 1 (D) 3 (D) 2 (D) Sonoma..............................: 44 17 - - 44 17 19 36 : Stanislaus..........................: 5 (D) 1 (D) 5 (D) 8 (D) Sutter..............................: 3 4 - - 3 4 1 (D) Tehama..............................: 4 (Z) - - 4 (Z) - - Trinity.............................: 14 1 3 (Z) 11 1 4 (Z) Tulare..............................: 14 30 - - 14 30 3 (D) Ventura.............................: 10 178 1 (D) 10 (D) 4 83 Yolo................................: 4 10 4 1 4 9 5 (D) Yuba................................: 8 2 3 (Z) 8 2 1 (D) : BEETS : : State Total : : California..........................: 437 2,730 25 143 421 2,587 198 979 : Counties : : Alameda.............................: 10 2 - - 10 2 1 (D) Amador..............................: - - - - - - 2 (D) Butte...............................: 2 (D) - - 2 (D) - - Contra Costa........................: - - - - - - 1 (D) El Dorado...........................: 11 1 4 (Z) 7 1 - - Fresno..............................: 24 30 - - 24 30 26 (D) Glenn...............................: - - - - - - 2 (D) Humboldt............................: 24 32 - - 24 32 13 5 Imperial............................: 6 300 1 (D) 5 (D) - - Inyo................................: 4 (Z) - - 4 (Z) - - : Kern................................: 5 450 2 (D) 3 (D) 4 (D) Kings...............................: 3 (Z) - - 3 (Z) - - Lake................................: 2 (D) - - 2 (D) - - Los Angeles.........................: 13 3 1 (D) 12 (D) 2 (D) Madera..............................: 1 (D) - - 1 (D) - - Marin...............................: 1 (D) - - 1 (D) 9 9 Mendocino...........................: 17 3 2 (D) 15 (D) 11 4 Merced..............................: 10 2 5 (D) 10 (D) - - Monterey............................: 12 93 - - 12 93 9 37 Napa................................: 5 1 - - 5 1 - - : Nevada..............................: 5 1 - - 5 1 - - Orange..............................: - - - - - - 3 1 Placer..............................: 2 (D) - - 2 (D) - - Plumas..............................: 2 (D) - - 2 (D) - - Riverside...........................: 21 1,055 - - 21 1,055 8 (D) Sacramento..........................: 20 12 - - 20 12 4 1 San Benito..........................: 5 118 - - 5 118 3 (D) San Bernardino......................: 11 2 - - 11 2 4 (D) San Diego...........................: 19 17 - - 19 17 5 1 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ --continued Table 29. Vegetables, Potatoes, and Melons Harvested for Sale: 2012 and 2007 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ : 2012 : :-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------: 2007 : Harvested : Harvested for processing : Harvested for fresh market : harvested :----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Geographic area : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ BEETS - Con. : : Counties - Con. : : San Joaquin.........................: 10 16 - - 10 16 2 (D) San Luis Obispo.....................: 21 78 1 (D) 20 (D) 6 (D) San Mateo...........................: 10 31 - - 10 31 5 7 Santa Barbara.......................: 32 47 4 (D) 28 (D) 10 (D) Santa Clara.........................: 9 4 - - 9 4 3 1 Santa Cruz..........................: 13 17 1 (D) 12 (D) 11 7 Shasta..............................: 9 1 - - 9 1 2 (D) Siskiyou............................: - - - - - - 3 1 Solano..............................: 4 3 - - 4 3 2 (D) Sonoma..............................: 51 13 - - 51 13 19 18 : Stanislaus..........................: 7 (D) - - 7 (D) 5 (D) Sutter..............................: 3 4 - - 3 4 - - Tehama..............................: - - - - - - 2 (D) Trinity.............................: 4 (Z) - - 4 (Z) - - Tulare..............................: 4 (Z) - - 4 (Z) 3 1 Ventura.............................: 16 320 - - 16 320 13 215 Yolo................................: 4 3 - - 4 3 3 1 Yuba................................: 5 1 4 (Z) 5 1 2 (D) : BROCCOLI : : State Total : : California..........................: 617 104,268 43 8,759 600 95,508 416 106,271 : Counties : : Alameda.............................: 1 (D) - - 1 (D) - - Butte...............................: - - - - - - 3 1 Calaveras...........................: 2 (D) - - 2 (D) - - Contra Costa........................: 1 (D) - - 1 (D) - - Del Norte...........................: 3 4 - - 3 4 - - Fresno..............................: 38 4,054 5 515 33 3,539 19 5,164 Glenn...............................: - - - - - - 3 1 Humboldt............................: 19 7 - - 19 7 8 5 Imperial............................: 23 10,070 2 (D) 23 (D) 17 7,896 Kern................................: 6 (D) - - 6 (D) 8 (D) : Kings...............................: - - - - - - 1 (D) Los Angeles.........................: 4 2 - - 4 2 - - Madera..............................: 2 (D) - - 2 (D) 1 (D) Marin...............................: 6 5 - - 6 5 7 4 Mendocino...........................: 17 3 2 (D) 15 (D) 9 7 Merced..............................: 13 11 5 3 13 8 - - Modoc...............................: 6 1 - - 6 1 - - Monterey............................: 117 48,817 15 3,274 110 45,542 114 46,428 Napa................................: 4 (Z) - - 4 (Z) - - Nevada..............................: 10 7 - - 10 7 - - : Orange..............................: - - - - - - 8 (D) Placer..............................: 6 1 - - 6 1 1 (D) Riverside...........................: 14 3,534 - - 14 3,534 12 2,849 Sacramento..........................: 17 9 - - 17 9 3 (Z) San Benito..........................: 13 133 - - 13 133 15 643 San Bernardino......................: 8 (D) - - 8 (D) 9 (D) San Diego...........................: 36 29 - - 36 29 12 7 San Joaquin.........................: 9 94 - - 9 94 2 (D) San Luis Obispo.....................: 36 6,897 2 (D) 36 (D) 26 8,205 San Mateo...........................: 12 21 - - 12 21 6 7 : Santa Barbara.......................: 61 24,491 9 4,010 61 20,480 53 28,128 Santa Clara.........................: 8 (D) - - 8 (D) 7 (D) Santa Cruz..........................: 15 1,001 - - 15 1,001 11 638 Shasta..............................: 2 (D) - - 2 (D) 1 (D) Siskiyou............................: 2 (D) - - 2 (D) 3 (Z) Solano..............................: 4 (D) - - 4 (D) 1 (D) Sonoma..............................: 55 16 - - 55 16 14 5 Stanislaus..........................: 9 (D) - - 9 (D) 7 2,008 Sutter..............................: - - - - - - 2 (D) Tehama..............................: - - - - - - 1 (D) : Trinity.............................: 4 (Z) - - 4 (Z) 2 (D) Tulare..............................: 6 912 1 (D) 5 (D) 5 1,137 Tuolumne............................: 5 3 - - 5 3 - - Ventura.............................: 10 1,344 2 (D) 8 (D) 17 1,316 Yolo................................: 9 38 - - 9 38 8 (D) Yuba................................: 4 3 - - 4 3 - - : BRUSSELS SPROUTS : : State Total : : California..........................: 71 7,299 11 2,101 71 5,198 51 3,617 : Counties : : El Dorado...........................: 4 (Z) - - 4 (Z) - - Fresno..............................: 3 474 - - 3 474 1 (D) Glenn...............................: - - - - - - 2 (D) Humboldt............................: 6 4 - - 6 4 1 (D) Imperial............................: 6 2,237 2 (D) 6 (D) 2 (D) Kern................................: 2 (D) - - 2 (D) - - Kings...............................: - - - - - - 1 (D) Madera..............................: 1 (D) - - 1 (D) - - Merced..............................: 3 7 - - 3 7 - - Monterey............................: 6 1,431 2 (D) 6 (D) 3 692 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ --continued Table 29. Vegetables, Potatoes, and Melons Harvested for Sale: 2012 and 2007 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ : 2012 : :-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------: 2007 : Harvested : Harvested for processing : Harvested for fresh market : harvested :----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Geographic area : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ BRUSSELS SPROUTS - Con. : : Counties - Con. : : Orange..............................: - - - - - - 1 (D) Riverside...........................: - - - - - - 2 (D) Sacramento..........................: 3 (Z) - - 3 (Z) 2 (D) San Benito..........................: 1 (D) - - 1 (D) 1 (D) San Bernardino......................: 1 (D) - - 1 (D) - - San Joaquin.........................: 2 (D) - - 2 (D) - - San Luis Obispo.....................: 6 119 1 (D) 6 (D) 11 116 San Mateo...........................: 3 447 1 (D) 3 (D) 7 704 Santa Barbara.......................: 8 352 - - 8 352 2 (D) Santa Clara.........................: - - - - - - 1 (D) : Santa Cruz..........................: 6 1,615 5 719 6 896 6 1,222 Sonoma..............................: 4 1 - - 4 1 1 (D) Stanislaus..........................: 1 (D) - - 1 (D) 1 (D) Ventura.............................: 2 (D) - - 2 (D) 4 1 Yuba................................: 3 (Z) - - 3 (Z) 2 (D) : CABBAGE, CHINESE : : State Total : : California..........................: 155 3,412 14 25 154 3,387 111 5,593 : Counties : : Colusa..............................: - - - - - - 1 (D) Fresno..............................: 31 92 6 23 30 69 33 321 Humboldt............................: 4 3 - - 4 3 1 (D) Imperial............................: 6 (D) - - 6 (D) 3 161 Kern................................: 3 341 - - 3 341 1 (D) Mendocino...........................: - - - - - - 2 (D) Merced..............................: 16 7 8 2 16 5 1 (D) Monterey............................: 3 (D) - - 3 (D) 6 485 Nevada..............................: 2 (D) - - 2 (D) 1 (D) Orange..............................: 2 (D) - - 2 (D) - - : Placer..............................: - - - - - - 1 (D) Riverside...........................: 15 35 - - 15 35 6 (D) Sacramento..........................: 9 162 - - 9 162 6 30 San Benito..........................: 1 (D) - - 1 (D) 1 (D) San Bernardino......................: 3 465 - - 3 465 7 1,410 San Joaquin.........................: - - - - - - 2 (D) San Luis Obispo.....................: 9 1,225 - - 9 1,225 14 2,059 Santa Barbara.......................: 2 (D) - - 2 (D) 4 (D) Santa Clara.........................: 35 400 - - 35 400 12 215 Santa Cruz..........................: 1 (D) - - 1 (D) 3 1 : Shasta..............................: - - - - - - 3 1 Sonoma..............................: 5 1 - - 5 1 - - Stanislaus..........................: 1 (D) - - 1 (D) 1 (D) Tulare..............................: 2 (D) - - 2 (D) - - Ventura.............................: 3 3 - - 3 3 1 (D) Yolo................................: 2 (D) - - 2 (D) 1 (D) : CABBAGE, HEAD : : State Total : : California..........................: 255 9,812 6 39 253 9,773 177 14,099 : Counties : : Alameda.............................: 3 (D) - - 3 (D) 1 (D) Butte...............................: 2 (D) - - 2 (D) - - Fresno..............................: 11 44 - - 11 44 14 24 Glenn...............................: - - - - - - 3 1 Humboldt............................: 12 5 - - 12 5 3 (D) Imperial............................: 7 1,350 - - 7 1,350 6 1,799 Kern................................: 6 480 - - 6 480 7 583 Los Angeles.........................: 5 12 - - 5 12 - - Madera..............................: 1 (D) - - 1 (D) - - Marin...............................: 2 (D) - - 2 (D) 2 (D) : Mendocino...........................: 4 (Z) - - 4 (Z) 8 1 Merced..............................: 7 3 - - 7 3 3 (D) Modoc...............................: 6 1 - - 6 1 - - Monterey............................: 17 2,221 2 (D) 15 (D) 19 3,779 Napa................................: 6 3 - - 6 3 1 (D) Nevada..............................: 7 1 - - 7 1 - - Orange..............................: 1 (D) - - 1 (D) 6 (D) Placer..............................: 3 (Z) - - 3 (Z) 1 (D) Riverside...........................: 2 (D) - - 2 (D) 8 (D) Sacramento..........................: 3 (Z) - - 3 (Z) - - : San Benito..........................: 2 (D) - - 2 (D) 6 332 San Bernardino......................: 2 (D) - - 2 (D) 5 (D) San Diego...........................: 19 9 - - 19 9 5 3 San Joaquin.........................: 11 (D) - - 11 (D) 3 490 San Luis Obispo.....................: 15 473 - - 15 473 8 1,301 San Mateo...........................: 8 19 - - 8 19 5 8 Santa Barbara.......................: 14 1,208 1 (D) 14 (D) 13 1,235 Santa Clara.........................: 3 (D) - - 3 (D) 7 130 Santa Cruz..........................: 9 (D) - - 9 (D) 8 (D) Shasta..............................: 4 1 - - 4 1 2 (D) : Siskiyou............................: 5 2 - - 5 2 - - Solano..............................: 2 (D) - - 2 (D) - - ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ --continued Table 29. Vegetables, Potatoes, and Melons Harvested for Sale: 2012 and 2007 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ : 2012 : :-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------: 2007 : Harvested : Harvested for processing : Harvested for fresh market : harvested :----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Geographic area : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ CABBAGE, HEAD - Con. : : Counties - Con. : : Sonoma..............................: 19 6 - - 19 6 4 1 Stanislaus..........................: 4 112 - - 4 112 2 (D) Trinity.............................: 2 (D) - - 2 (D) - - Tulare..............................: 8 (D) - - 8 (D) 4 (D) Tuolumne............................: 5 1 - - 5 1 - - Ventura.............................: 14 2,708 3 (D) 14 (D) 19 2,546 Yolo................................: 4 6 - - 4 6 4 (D) : CABBAGE, MUSTARD : : State Total : : California..........................: 2 (D) (X) (X) 2 (D) - - : Counties : : Merced..............................: 2 (D) (X) (X) 2 (D) - - : CANTALOUPES AND : MUSKMELONS : : State Total : : California..........................: 1,184 37,419 8 360 1,182 37,058 626 38,489 : Counties : : Alameda.............................: 2 (D) - - 2 (D) 3 1 Amador..............................: 18 4 - - 18 4 3 (Z) Butte...............................: 44 327 2 (D) 42 (D) 11 12 Calaveras...........................: 7 2 - - 7 2 4 3 Colusa..............................: 1 (D) - - 1 (D) - - Contra Costa........................: 7 8 - - 7 8 8 5 El Dorado...........................: 30 5 - - 30 5 9 2 Fresno..............................: 85 16,938 - - 85 16,938 74 18,768 Glenn...............................: 6 (D) - - 6 (D) 3 (D) Humboldt............................: 47 29 - - 47 29 12 11 : Imperial............................: 37 8,030 - - 37 8,030 26 6,049 Inyo................................: 11 4 - - 11 4 3 3 Kern................................: 24 631 - - 24 631 19 1,101 Kings...............................: 8 1,205 - - 8 1,205 9 1,379 Lake................................: 25 13 - - 25 13 6 6 Lassen..............................: 1 (D) - - 1 (D) 5 1 Los Angeles.........................: 20 3 - - 20 3 12 6 Madera..............................: 5 (D) - - 5 (D) 10 (D) Marin...............................: 2 (D) - - 2 (D) 5 2 Mariposa............................: - - - - - - 2 (D) : Mendocino...........................: 34 14 - - 34 14 28 8 Merced..............................: 38 3,772 - - 38 3,772 19 4,091 Modoc...............................: 6 7 - - 6 7 - - Monterey............................: 8 1,295 - - 8 1,295 7 1,030 Napa................................: 13 3 - - 13 3 2 (D) Nevada..............................: 46 22 - - 46 22 21 9 Orange..............................: 4 5 - - 4 5 5 (D) Placer..............................: 40 14 - - 40 14 25 14 Plumas..............................: 2 (D) - - 2 (D) - - Riverside...........................: 55 1,443 - - 55 1,443 25 1,768 : Sacramento..........................: 37 26 - - 37 26 9 (D) San Benito..........................: 7 5 - - 7 5 11 30 San Bernardino......................: 17 14 - - 17 14 19 134 San Diego...........................: 28 47 - - 28 47 21 18 San Joaquin.........................: 43 97 - - 43 97 9 107 San Luis Obispo.....................: 46 161 - - 46 161 21 140 San Mateo...........................: 7 1 - - 7 1 2 (D) Santa Barbara.......................: 22 28 - - 22 28 11 (D) Santa Clara.........................: 20 17 - - 20 17 5 11 Santa Cruz..........................: 4 3 - - 4 3 8 (D) : Shasta..............................: 43 15 - - 43 15 12 3 Siskiyou............................: 2 (D) - - 2 (D) 9 3 Solano..............................: 11 17 - - 11 17 9 34 Sonoma..............................: 75 20 - - 75 20 35 74 Stanislaus..........................: 35 896 - - 35 896 21 1,371 Sutter..............................: 20 1,510 2 (D) 20 (D) 6 (D) Tehama..............................: 20 12 - - 20 12 11 5 Trinity.............................: 33 6 - - 33 6 9 2 Tulare..............................: 32 13 - - 32 13 9 16 Ventura.............................: 5 (D) - - 5 (D) 10 51 : Yolo................................: 41 139 - - 41 139 16 115 Yuba................................: 10 9 4 (Z) 10 9 7 4 : CARROTS : : State Total : : California..........................: 511 65,400 54 9,625 483 55,775 326 56,263 : Counties : : Alameda.............................: 1 (D) - - 1 (D) 1 (D) Amador..............................: 5 1 - - 5 1 - - Butte...............................: 4 (Z) - - 4 (Z) - - Calaveras...........................: 2 (D) - - 2 (D) - - ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ --continued Table 29. Vegetables, Potatoes, and Melons Harvested for Sale: 2012 and 2007 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ : 2012 : :-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------: 2007 : Harvested : Harvested for processing : Harvested for fresh market : harvested :----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Geographic area : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ CARROTS - Con. : : Counties - Con. : : Contra Costa........................: 1 (D) - - 1 (D) 1 (D) Del Norte...........................: 3 (Z) - - 3 (Z) - - El Dorado...........................: 2 (D) - - 2 (D) - - Fresno..............................: 30 735 2 (D) 29 (D) 21 (D) Glenn...............................: - - - - - - 2 (D) Humboldt............................: 16 10 - - 16 10 11 23 Imperial............................: 35 14,871 5 1,467 33 13,404 35 12,729 Inyo................................: - - - - - - 2 (D) Kern................................: 63 33,414 25 6,604 50 26,811 67 26,997 Kings...............................: 3 (Z) - - 3 (Z) - - : Los Angeles.........................: 3 3,412 - - 3 3,412 5 5,943 Madera..............................: 4 (D) - - 4 (D) 1 (D) Marin...............................: 3 (Z) - - 3 (Z) 9 8 Mendocino...........................: 15 4 2 (D) 13 (D) 9 5 Merced..............................: 5 2 - - 5 2 2 (D) Monterey............................: 37 2,970 10 1,318 31 1,652 36 1,642 Nevada..............................: 13 1 - - 13 1 - - Orange..............................: 2 (D) - - 2 (D) 4 2 Placer..............................: 2 (D) - - 2 (D) 1 (D) Riverside...........................: 23 (D) - - 23 (D) 5 (D) : Sacramento..........................: 10 2 - - 10 2 2 (D) San Benito..........................: 9 128 4 (Z) 9 127 3 (D) San Bernardino......................: 7 5 - - 7 5 3 (D) San Diego...........................: 27 15 - - 27 15 7 (D) San Joaquin.........................: 17 103 - - 17 103 4 (D) San Luis Obispo.....................: 29 (D) - - 29 (D) 10 1,217 San Mateo...........................: 3 1 - - 3 1 - - Santa Barbara.......................: 35 (D) 4 (D) 31 (D) 15 (D) Santa Clara.........................: 2 (D) - - 2 (D) 3 1 Santa Cruz..........................: 7 15 - - 7 15 8 5 : Shasta..............................: 2 (D) - - 2 (D) 3 1 Siskiyou............................: 2 (D) - - 2 (D) 3 (Z) Solano..............................: 9 11 - - 9 11 1 (D) Sonoma..............................: 53 14 2 (D) 53 (D) 22 8 Stanislaus..........................: 1 (D) - - 1 (D) 4 (Z) Sutter..............................: 4 (D) - - 4 (D) 1 (D) Tehama..............................: - - - - - - 2 (D) Trinity.............................: 2 (D) - - 2 (D) - - Tulare..............................: 2 (D) - - 2 (D) 3 (D) Ventura.............................: 11 422 - - 11 422 13 631 Yolo................................: 7 13 - - 7 13 7 (D) : CAULIFLOWER : : State Total : : California..........................: 262 34,369 21 1,764 256 32,605 194 32,277 : Counties : : Alameda.............................: 1 (D) - - 1 (D) 1 (D) Fresno..............................: 12 11 - - 12 11 9 (D) Glenn...............................: - - - - - - 3 1 Humboldt............................: 16 4 - - 16 4 1 (D) Imperial............................: 21 5,757 3 (D) 20 (D) 12 2,801 Kern................................: 1 (D) - - 1 (D) 2 (D) Marin...............................: 5 5 - - 5 5 4 1 Mendocino...........................: 6 2 - - 6 2 5 2 Merced..............................: 6 2 - - 6 2 1 (D) Modoc...............................: 6 1 - - 6 1 - - : Monterey............................: 53 15,450 11 600 50 14,850 61 15,378 Napa................................: 1 (D) - - 1 (D) - - Orange..............................: 1 (D) - - 1 (D) - - Placer..............................: 1 (D) - - 1 (D) 1 (D) Riverside...........................: 14 1,613 1 (D) 13 (D) 7 1,053 Sacramento..........................: 3 1 - - 3 1 - - San Benito..........................: 7 31 - - 7 31 8 312 San Bernardino......................: 2 (D) - - 2 (D) 3 (D) San Diego...........................: 2 (D) - - 2 (D) 3 (D) San Joaquin.........................: 6 15 - - 6 15 1 (D) : San Luis Obispo.....................: 19 1,877 1 (D) 19 (D) 11 2,110 San Mateo...........................: 1 (D) - - 1 (D) 4 6 Santa Barbara.......................: 41 8,451 5 662 40 7,789 27 8,753 Santa Clara.........................: 7 31 - - 7 31 5 65 Santa Cruz..........................: 12 406 - - 12 406 8 435 Sonoma..............................: 8 1 - - 8 1 2 (D) Stanislaus..........................: 2 (D) - - 2 (D) 4 (D) Tulare..............................: 2 (D) - - 2 (D) 3 (D) Ventura.............................: 1 (D) - - 1 (D) 5 (D) Yolo................................: 1 (D) - - 1 (D) 3 (D) Yuba................................: 4 3 - - 4 3 - - : CELERY : : State Total : : California..........................: 201 27,039 16 1,228 196 25,812 128 24,769 : Counties : : Humboldt............................: 2 (D) - - 2 (D) 1 (D) Imperial............................: 7 1,055 3 340 6 715 2 (D) ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ --continued Table 29. Vegetables, Potatoes, and Melons Harvested for Sale: 2012 and 2007 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ : 2012 : :-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------: 2007 : Harvested : Harvested for processing : Harvested for fresh market : harvested :----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Geographic area : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ CELERY - Con. : : Counties - Con. : : Kern................................: 1 (D) - - 1 (D) - - Los Angeles.........................: 5 3 - - 5 3 - - Marin...............................: 2 (D) - - 2 (D) - - Mendocino...........................: 4 (Z) 4 (Z) - - - - Monterey............................: 47 9,590 2 (D) 47 (D) 46 8,909 Orange..............................: 3 1 - - 3 1 - - Riverside...........................: 5 431 - - 5 431 6 304 Sacramento..........................: 6 6 - - 6 6 - - San Benito..........................: 9 319 - - 9 319 10 452 San Diego...........................: 12 4 - - 12 4 4 8 : San Joaquin.........................: 1 (D) - - 1 (D) 1 (D) San Luis Obispo.....................: 11 888 - - 11 888 9 880 Santa Barbara.......................: 29 2,990 5 455 29 2,535 15 2,151 Santa Clara.........................: 21 153 - - 21 153 5 (D) Santa Cruz..........................: 4 (D) - - 4 (D) 4 271 Sonoma..............................: 8 3 - - 8 3 - - Stanislaus..........................: 1 (D) - - 1 (D) - - Ventura.............................: 22 11,337 2 (D) 22 (D) 23 11,390 Yolo................................: 1 (D) - - 1 (D) 2 (D) : CHICORY : : State Total : : California..........................: 25 (D) (X) (X) 25 (D) 23 2,085 : Counties : : Contra Costa........................: - - (X) (X) - - 1 (D) Humboldt............................: 5 1 (X) (X) 5 1 - - Los Angeles.........................: 5 1 (X) (X) 5 1 - - Marin...............................: - - (X) (X) - - 6 4 Monterey............................: 1 (D) (X) (X) 1 (D) 5 (D) Nevada..............................: 2 (D) (X) (X) 2 (D) - - Riverside...........................: 1 (D) (X) (X) 1 (D) - - San Benito..........................: 3 26 (X) (X) 3 26 4 (D) San Diego...........................: 3 1 (X) (X) 3 1 - - San Joaquin.........................: 1 (D) (X) (X) 1 (D) 3 (D) : San Luis Obispo.....................: 2 (D) (X) (X) 2 (D) - - Santa Barbara.......................: 1 (D) (X) (X) 1 (D) 2 (D) Solano..............................: 1 (D) (X) (X) 1 (D) - - Sonoma..............................: - - (X) (X) - - 1 (D) Stanislaus..........................: - - (X) (X) - - 1 (D) : COLLARDS : : State Total : : California..........................: 91 633 1 (D) 91 (D) 42 183 : Counties : : Alameda.............................: 2 (D) - - 2 (D) - - Colusa..............................: - - - - - - 1 (D) Del Norte...........................: 3 1 - - 3 1 - - Fresno..............................: 15 12 - - 15 12 3 13 Humboldt............................: 2 (D) - - 2 (D) 4 3 Imperial............................: 1 (D) - - 1 (D) - - Kern................................: 2 (D) - - 2 (D) 1 (D) Los Angeles.........................: 7 1 - - 7 1 - - Madera..............................: 1 (D) - - 1 (D) - - Marin...............................: 1 (D) - - 1 (D) 2 (D) : Mendocino...........................: 5 1 - - 5 1 4 3 Monterey............................: 4 201 - - 4 201 2 (D) Riverside...........................: 4 4 - - 4 4 2 (D) Sacramento..........................: 6 1 - - 6 1 2 (D) San Benito..........................: 1 (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) San Bernardino......................: - - - - - - 2 (D) San Diego...........................: 2 (D) - - 2 (D) - - San Joaquin.........................: 3 (D) - - 3 (D) 1 (D) San Luis Obispo.....................: 6 2 - - 6 2 2 (D) San Mateo...........................: 5 18 - - 5 18 - - : Santa Barbara.......................: - - - - - - 2 (D) Santa Cruz..........................: 3 2 - - 3 2 2 (D) Siskiyou............................: 2 (D) - - 2 (D) 1 (D) Solano..............................: 1 (D) - - 1 (D) - - Sonoma..............................: 6 2 - - 6 2 1 (D) Stanislaus..........................: 1 (D) - - 1 (D) 1 (D) Tulare..............................: - - - - - - 3 1 Ventura.............................: 4 216 - - 4 216 3 (D) Yolo................................: 4 (Z) - - 4 (Z) 2 (D) : CUCUMBERS AND PICKLES : : State Total : : California..........................: 718 7,884 49 4,120 681 3,764 435 6,999 : Counties : : Alameda.............................: 3 (Z) - - 3 (Z) 3 (Z) Amador..............................: 14 2 - - 14 2 1 (D) Butte...............................: 17 30 2 (D) 15 (D) 7 (D) ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ --continued Table 29. Vegetables, Potatoes, and Melons Harvested for Sale: 2012 and 2007 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ : 2012 : :-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------: 2007 : Harvested : Harvested for processing : Harvested for fresh market : harvested :----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Geographic area : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ CUCUMBERS AND PICKLES - Con. : : Counties - Con. : : Calaveras...........................: 1 (D) - - 1 (D) 4 1 Colusa..............................: 2 (D) - - 2 (D) 4 (D) Contra Costa........................: 3 (D) - - 3 (D) 5 (D) El Dorado...........................: 17 2 - - 17 2 10 1 Fresno..............................: 55 151 3 1 55 150 54 355 Glenn...............................: 9 740 3 (D) 6 (D) 3 (D) Humboldt............................: 21 11 - - 21 11 10 5 Imperial............................: 7 (D) - - 7 (D) 5 6 Inyo................................: - - - - - - 2 (D) Kern................................: 7 2 - - 7 2 7 3 : Kings...............................: 4 1 - - 4 1 - - Lake................................: 13 3 - - 13 3 6 1 Los Angeles.........................: 14 1 4 (Z) 10 1 4 1 Madera..............................: 3 4 - - 3 4 3 (D) Marin...............................: 1 (D) - - 1 (D) 1 (D) Mariposa............................: - - - - - - 1 (D) Mendocino...........................: 29 11 4 (Z) 25 11 9 1 Merced..............................: 17 20 - - 17 20 10 454 Monterey............................: 8 39 3 (D) 5 (D) 17 14 Napa................................: 8 1 - - 8 1 2 (D) : Nevada..............................: 14 3 - - 14 3 10 2 Orange..............................: 6 (D) - - 6 (D) 4 (D) Placer..............................: 32 5 - - 32 5 14 8 Riverside...........................: 25 21 - - 25 21 15 19 Sacramento..........................: 30 30 3 (Z) 30 30 6 2 San Benito..........................: 1 (D) - - 1 (D) 7 22 San Bernardino......................: 15 2 - - 15 2 4 12 San Diego...........................: 40 90 - - 40 90 31 312 San Joaquin.........................: 34 2,848 6 1,162 28 1,686 21 3,547 San Luis Obispo.....................: 26 18 1 (D) 26 (D) 20 24 : San Mateo...........................: 2 (D) - - 2 (D) 5 4 Santa Barbara.......................: 14 29 - - 14 29 8 43 Santa Clara.........................: 22 32 - - 22 32 10 6 Santa Cruz..........................: 6 1 1 (D) 5 (D) 6 (D) Shasta..............................: 23 4 - - 23 4 13 5 Siskiyou............................: 11 3 6 2 5 1 5 1 Solano..............................: 18 649 3 555 16 94 8 424 Sonoma..............................: 63 18 - - 63 18 25 27 Stanislaus..........................: 8 6 - - 8 6 7 2 Sutter..............................: 1 (D) - - 1 (D) 1 (D) : Tehama..............................: 13 1 - - 13 1 6 2 Trinity.............................: 5 1 3 (D) 2 (D) 2 (D) Tulare..............................: 14 93 - - 14 93 9 (D) Tuolumne............................: 6 1 - - 6 1 - - Ventura.............................: 11 9 - - 11 9 12 52 Yolo................................: 14 2,331 3 2,320 11 11 13 (D) Yuba................................: 11 2 4 (Z) 11 2 5 3 : DAIKON : : State Total : : California..........................: 139 670 1 (D) 138 (D) 83 389 : Counties : : Butte...............................: - - - - - - 1 (D) Calaveras...........................: 4 1 - - 4 1 - - Fresno..............................: 73 505 1 (D) 72 (D) 50 271 Imperial............................: 1 (D) - - 1 (D) - - Kern................................: 2 (D) - - 2 (D) - - Los Angeles.........................: 2 (D) - - 2 (D) 1 (D) Madera..............................: 3 9 - - 3 9 - - Merced..............................: 5 3 - - 5 3 2 (D) Monterey............................: 3 8 - - 3 8 - - Riverside...........................: 7 4 - - 7 4 5 43 : San Diego...........................: 10 3 - - 10 3 3 1 San Joaquin.........................: 4 6 - - 4 6 2 (D) Santa Clara.........................: 2 (D) - - 2 (D) 1 (D) Santa Cruz..........................: - - - - - - 2 (D) Solano..............................: 1 (D) - - 1 (D) - - Sonoma..............................: 1 (D) - - 1 (D) - - Stanislaus..........................: 3 3 - - 3 3 1 (D) Tulare..............................: 13 68 - - 13 68 3 3 Ventura.............................: - - - - - - 5 48 Yolo................................: 4 (Z) - - 4 (Z) 5 2 Yuba................................: 1 (D) - - 1 (D) 2 (D) : EGGPLANT : : State Total : : California..........................: 528 1,156 38 70 515 1,086 306 1,191 : Counties : : Butte...............................: 9 3 - - 9 3 1 (D) Calaveras...........................: 5 1 - - 5 1 6 4 Contra Costa........................: 6 1 - - 6 1 4 2 El Dorado...........................: 14 3 3 2 11 2 3 (Z) Fresno..............................: 86 546 6 65 86 481 79 446 Glenn...............................: - - - - - - 2 (D) ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ --continued Table 29. Vegetables, Potatoes, and Melons Harvested for Sale: 2012 and 2007 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ : 2012 : :-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------: 2007 : Harvested : Harvested for processing : Harvested for fresh market : harvested :----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Geographic area : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ EGGPLANT - Con. : : Counties - Con. : : Humboldt............................: 7 1 - - 7 1 2 (D) Imperial............................: 5 1 - - 5 1 - - Inyo................................: 4 (Z) - - 4 (Z) - - Kern................................: 5 2 - - 5 2 3 11 Kings...............................: 1 (D) - - 1 (D) - - Lake................................: 8 1 - - 8 1 1 (D) Los Angeles.........................: 17 2 3 (D) 14 (D) 4 5 Madera..............................: 8 23 - - 8 23 2 (D) Mariposa............................: - - - - - - 1 (D) Mendocino...........................: 12 4 - - 12 4 14 4 : Merced..............................: 21 9 - - 21 9 2 (D) Monterey............................: 5 7 - - 5 7 - - Napa................................: 3 (Z) - - 3 (Z) 2 (D) Nevada..............................: 8 1 - - 8 1 1 (D) Orange..............................: 17 3 - - 17 3 - - Placer..............................: 7 1 - - 7 1 7 8 Plumas..............................: - - - - - - 1 (D) Riverside...........................: 39 122 - - 39 122 21 151 Sacramento..........................: 29 23 3 (Z) 29 22 4 2 San Benito..........................: 5 1 - - 5 1 - - : San Bernardino......................: 16 2 4 (Z) 16 2 9 11 San Diego...........................: 18 8 - - 18 8 18 6 San Joaquin.........................: 17 224 - - 17 224 8 126 San Luis Obispo.....................: 13 3 - - 13 3 12 3 Santa Barbara.......................: 2 (D) - - 2 (D) 2 (D) Santa Clara.........................: 14 33 - - 14 33 6 10 Santa Cruz..........................: 2 (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) 3 (D) Shasta..............................: 13 2 - - 13 2 5 2 Siskiyou............................: 1 (D) - - 1 (D) 4 (Z) Solano..............................: 13 6 - - 13 6 5 1 : Sonoma..............................: 26 4 6 1 20 3 15 8 Stanislaus..........................: 11 6 5 (D) 11 (D) 13 14 Sutter..............................: 7 1 - - 7 1 1 (D) Tehama..............................: 2 (D) - - 2 (D) 5 1 Tulare..............................: 16 55 3 (Z) 16 55 26 341 Tuolumne............................: 3 (Z) - - 3 (Z) - - Ventura.............................: 2 (D) - - 2 (D) 1 (D) Yolo................................: 16 53 - - 16 53 9 23 Yuba................................: 15 3 4 (Z) 15 3 4 2 : ESCAROLE AND ENDIVE : : State Total : : California..........................: 23 1,258 (X) (X) 23 1,258 28 1,974 : Counties : : Fresno..............................: - - (X) (X) - - 1 (D) Imperial............................: 1 (D) (X) (X) 1 (D) 1 (D) Madera..............................: 1 (D) (X) (X) 1 (D) - - Marin...............................: - - (X) (X) - - 5 1 Monterey............................: 4 574 (X) (X) 4 574 7 471 San Benito..........................: 3 (D) (X) (X) 3 (D) 4 379 San Joaquin.........................: 1 (D) (X) (X) 1 (D) - - San Luis Obispo.....................: 3 185 (X) (X) 3 185 4 595 Santa Barbara.......................: 1 (D) (X) (X) 1 (D) 1 (D) Santa Cruz..........................: 3 1 (X) (X) 3 1 2 (D) : Shasta..............................: - - (X) (X) - - 1 (D) Sonoma..............................: 5 1 (X) (X) 5 1 - - Ventura.............................: 1 (D) (X) (X) 1 (D) 2 (D) : GARLIC : : State Total : : California..........................: 422 20,875 61 10,791 386 10,084 280 22,177 : Counties : : Alameda.............................: - - - - - - 1 (D) Amador..............................: - - - - - - 2 (D) Butte...............................: 4 2 - - 4 2 5 2 Calaveras...........................: 4 1 - - 4 1 4 2 Colusa..............................: - - - - - - 1 (D) Contra Costa........................: 2 (D) - - 2 (D) 4 5 Del Norte...........................: 4 (Z) - - 4 (Z) - - El Dorado...........................: 13 4 - - 13 4 4 1 Fresno..............................: 50 11,922 29 5,891 30 6,031 55 14,473 Glenn...............................: 11 2 - - 11 2 2 (D) : Humboldt............................: 11 4 - - 11 4 16 12 Imperial............................: 1 (D) - - 1 (D) - - Inyo................................: - - - - - - 2 (D) Kern................................: 18 2,957 7 1,951 11 1,006 15 2,873 Kings...............................: 12 2,584 5 (D) 7 (D) 16 3,232 Lake................................: 2 (D) - - 2 (D) 2 (D) Lassen..............................: 2 (D) - - 2 (D) 1 (D) Los Angeles.........................: 4 (Z) - - 4 (Z) 4 1 Madera..............................: 3 (D) - - 3 (D) 3 (D) Marin...............................: 3 1 - - 3 1 3 1 Mariposa............................: - - - - - - 2 (D) ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ --continued Table 29. Vegetables, Potatoes, and Melons Harvested for Sale: 2012 and 2007 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ : 2012 : :-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------: 2007 : Harvested : Harvested for processing : Harvested for fresh market : harvested :----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Geographic area : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ GARLIC - Con. : : Counties - Con. : : Mendocino...........................: 23 4 - - 23 4 16 7 Merced..............................: 7 1 - - 7 1 1 (D) Mono................................: 1 (D) - - 1 (D) 1 (D) Monterey............................: 10 943 1 (D) 10 (D) 10 289 Napa................................: 6 1 - - 6 1 - - Nevada..............................: 19 5 - - 19 5 8 2 Placer..............................: 7 2 - - 7 2 - - Plumas..............................: - - - - - - 2 (D) Riverside...........................: 16 (D) - - 16 (D) 8 8 Sacramento..........................: 15 4 3 (Z) 15 3 5 2 : San Benito..........................: 4 460 1 (D) 3 (D) 3 (D) San Bernardino......................: 3 4 - - 3 4 6 6 San Diego...........................: 6 1 - - 6 1 1 (D) San Joaquin.........................: 5 7 - - 5 7 3 (D) San Luis Obispo.....................: 19 4 - - 19 4 10 6 San Mateo...........................: 9 2 - - 9 2 - - Santa Barbara.......................: 9 10 - - 9 10 1 (D) Santa Clara.........................: 11 609 2 (D) 9 (D) 10 (D) Santa Cruz..........................: 8 8 - - 8 8 5 1 Shasta..............................: 3 2 - - 3 2 2 (D) : Siskiyou............................: - - - - - - 3 1 Solano..............................: 6 5 - - 6 5 1 (D) Sonoma..............................: 34 16 2 (D) 34 (D) 18 9 Stanislaus..........................: 5 1 - - 5 1 6 1 Sutter..............................: - - - - - - 1 (D) Tehama..............................: 10 7 7 3 10 4 - - Trinity.............................: 7 3 3 1 7 3 3 1 Tulare..............................: 5 1 - - 5 1 2 (D) Tuolumne............................: 3 (Z) - - 3 (Z) - - Ventura.............................: 6 4 - - 6 4 5 1 : Yolo................................: 12 (D) 1 (D) 11 9 5 (D) Yuba................................: 9 3 - - 9 3 2 (D) : GINSENG : : State Total : : California..........................: - - - - - - 2 (D) : Counties : : Humboldt............................: - - - - - - 2 (D) : HERBS, FRESH CUT : : State Total : : California..........................: 385 2,176 (X) (X) 385 2,176 262 4,908 : Counties : : Alameda.............................: 2 (D) (X) (X) 2 (D) 1 (D) Amador..............................: - - (X) (X) - - 2 (D) Butte...............................: 8 5 (X) (X) 8 5 3 (Z) Calaveras...........................: 7 2 (X) (X) 7 2 6 1 Contra Costa........................: 5 4 (X) (X) 5 4 2 (D) Del Norte...........................: 6 1 (X) (X) 6 1 - - El Dorado...........................: 11 7 (X) (X) 11 7 7 1 Fresno..............................: 11 23 (X) (X) 11 23 14 23 Glenn...............................: 8 (D) (X) (X) 8 (D) 2 (D) Humboldt............................: 19 18 (X) (X) 19 18 12 12 : Imperial............................: 8 (D) (X) (X) 8 (D) - - Inyo................................: 3 1 (X) (X) 3 1 - - Kern................................: 2 (D) (X) (X) 2 (D) - - Lake................................: 9 1 (X) (X) 9 1 - - Lassen..............................: - - (X) (X) - - 1 (D) Los Angeles.........................: 26 30 (X) (X) 26 30 10 (D) Madera..............................: 1 (D) (X) (X) 1 (D) 1 (D) Marin...............................: 15 6 (X) (X) 15 6 5 3 Mariposa............................: - - (X) (X) - - 1 (D) Mendocino...........................: 15 19 (X) (X) 15 19 2 (D) : Merced..............................: 2 (D) (X) (X) 2 (D) - - Monterey............................: 4 113 (X) (X) 4 113 15 377 Napa................................: 5 3 (X) (X) 5 3 7 4 Nevada..............................: 4 (Z) (X) (X) 4 (Z) 2 (D) Orange..............................: 2 (D) (X) (X) 2 (D) - - Placer..............................: 8 1 (X) (X) 8 1 1 (D) Riverside...........................: 27 60 (X) (X) 27 60 15 59 Sacramento..........................: 14 4 (X) (X) 14 4 8 9 San Benito..........................: 2 (D) (X) (X) 2 (D) 3 4 San Bernardino......................: 3 30 (X) (X) 3 30 1 (D) : San Diego...........................: 31 14 (X) (X) 31 14 24 (D) San Joaquin.........................: 8 12 (X) (X) 8 12 8 6 San Luis Obispo.....................: 16 71 (X) (X) 16 71 14 (D) San Mateo...........................: 6 27 (X) (X) 6 27 2 (D) Santa Barbara.......................: 5 (D) (X) (X) 5 (D) 8 179 Santa Clara.........................: 16 9 (X) (X) 16 9 9 18 Santa Cruz..........................: 11 (D) (X) (X) 11 (D) 6 (D) Shasta..............................: - - (X) (X) - - 7 9 Siskiyou............................: - - (X) (X) - - 1 (D) Solano..............................: 8 4 (X) (X) 8 4 2 (D) ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ --continued Table 29. Vegetables, Potatoes, and Melons Harvested for Sale: 2012 and 2007 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ : 2012 : :-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------: 2007 : Harvested : Harvested for processing : Harvested for fresh market : harvested :----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Geographic area : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ HERBS, FRESH CUT - Con. : : Counties - Con. : : Sonoma..............................: 20 7 (X) (X) 20 7 15 7 Stanislaus..........................: 6 (D) (X) (X) 6 (D) 4 154 Sutter..............................: 1 (D) (X) (X) 1 (D) - - Tehama..............................: - - (X) (X) - - 2 (D) Trinity.............................: - - (X) (X) - - 2 (D) Tulare..............................: 2 (D) (X) (X) 2 (D) 3 (Z) Tuolumne............................: - - (X) (X) - - 2 (D) Ventura.............................: 21 745 (X) (X) 21 745 24 2,079 Yolo................................: 6 6 (X) (X) 6 6 7 8 Yuba................................: 1 (D) (X) (X) 1 (D) 1 (D) : HONEYDEW MELONS : : State Total : : California..........................: 128 9,031 (X) (X) 128 9,031 88 13,303 : Counties : : Calaveras...........................: 1 (D) (X) (X) 1 (D) - - Colusa..............................: 1 (D) (X) (X) 1 (D) - - El Dorado...........................: 4 1 (X) (X) 4 1 - - Fresno..............................: 7 2,244 (X) (X) 7 2,244 25 3,147 Humboldt............................: - - (X) (X) - - 1 (D) Imperial............................: 15 655 (X) (X) 15 655 7 600 Kern................................: 9 927 (X) (X) 9 927 6 384 Kings...............................: - - (X) (X) - - 1 (D) Los Angeles.........................: 3 1 (X) (X) 3 1 1 (D) Madera..............................: - - (X) (X) - - 2 (D) : Mendocino...........................: - - (X) (X) - - 2 (D) Merced..............................: 12 (D) (X) (X) 12 (D) 6 988 Monterey............................: 1 (D) (X) (X) 1 (D) 1 (D) Nevada..............................: 4 (Z) (X) (X) 4 (Z) 1 (D) Orange..............................: 2 (D) (X) (X) 2 (D) - - Placer..............................: 8 4 (X) (X) 8 4 - - Riverside...........................: 16 1,308 (X) (X) 16 1,308 2 (D) Sacramento..........................: 1 (D) (X) (X) 1 (D) - - San Benito..........................: - - (X) (X) - - 1 (D) San Bernardino......................: 1 (D) (X) (X) 1 (D) 1 (D) : San Diego...........................: 14 8 (X) (X) 14 8 - - San Joaquin.........................: - - (X) (X) - - 1 (D) San Luis Obispo.....................: - - (X) (X) - - 2 (D) Santa Barbara.......................: 3 1 (X) (X) 3 1 - - Santa Clara.........................: - - (X) (X) - - 1 (D) Shasta..............................: 4 (Z) (X) (X) 4 (Z) 5 2 Solano..............................: 5 (D) (X) (X) 5 (D) 2 (D) Sonoma..............................: 4 2 (X) (X) 4 2 2 (D) Sutter..............................: 4 2,287 (X) (X) 4 2,287 5 5,947 Tehama..............................: - - (X) (X) - - 2 (D) : Trinity.............................: 2 (D) (X) (X) 2 (D) - - Tulare..............................: 1 (D) (X) (X) 1 (D) 2 (D) Ventura.............................: - - (X) (X) - - 2 (D) Yolo................................: 2 (D) (X) (X) 2 (D) 5 287 Yuba................................: 4 (Z) (X) (X) 4 (Z) 2 (D) : HORSERADISH : : State Total : : California..........................: 26 (D) 4 (D) 25 51 3 (D) : Counties : : Contra Costa........................: 1 (D) - - 1 (D) 1 (D) Fresno..............................: 3 2 - - 3 2 - - Glenn...............................: 7 1 - - 7 1 - - Modoc...............................: 2 (D) 2 (D) 1 (D) 2 (D) Plumas..............................: 8 3 2 (D) 8 (D) - - Santa Clara.........................: 5 (D) - - 5 (D) - - : KALE : : State Total : : California..........................: 390 1,680 26 37 379 1,643 96 1,077 : Counties : : Alameda.............................: - - - - - - 3 (Z) Calaveras...........................: 8 1 - - 8 1 - - Del Norte...........................: 6 6 3 (Z) 6 6 - - El Dorado...........................: 20 4 4 (Z) 16 3 2 (D) Fresno..............................: 26 29 - - 26 29 2 (D) Glenn...............................: - - - - - - 2 (D) Humboldt............................: 7 11 - - 7 11 3 2 Imperial............................: 3 (D) - - 3 (D) - - Kern................................: 4 (D) - - 4 (D) 3 (D) Lake................................: 2 (D) - - 2 (D) - - : Los Angeles.........................: 7 1 - - 7 1 - - Madera..............................: 1 (D) - - 1 (D) 1 (D) Marin...............................: 3 8 - - 3 8 3 2 Mendocino...........................: 23 2 6 1 17 2 7 3 Monterey............................: 11 382 1 (D) 10 (D) 9 (D) ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ --continued Table 29. Vegetables, Potatoes, and Melons Harvested for Sale: 2012 and 2007 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ : 2012 : :-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------: 2007 : Harvested : Harvested for processing : Harvested for fresh market : harvested :----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Geographic area : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ KALE - Con. : : Counties - Con. : : Napa................................: 10 6 5 3 10 3 1 (D) Nevada..............................: 17 5 - - 17 5 - - Orange..............................: 6 3 - - 6 3 - - Plumas..............................: 8 3 - - 8 3 2 (D) Riverside...........................: 19 30 - - 19 30 5 4 Sacramento..........................: 11 1 - - 11 1 - - San Benito..........................: 10 48 1 (D) 10 (D) 3 (D) San Bernardino......................: 6 1 - - 6 1 - - San Diego...........................: 28 55 - - 28 55 2 (D) San Joaquin.........................: 6 16 - - 6 16 - - : San Luis Obispo.....................: 25 134 - - 25 134 6 (D) San Mateo...........................: 8 3 - - 8 3 - - Santa Barbara.......................: 11 38 1 (D) 11 (D) 6 40 Santa Clara.........................: 7 3 - - 7 3 5 4 Santa Cruz..........................: 14 140 - - 14 140 10 16 Siskiyou............................: 2 (D) - - 2 (D) - - Solano..............................: 8 3 - - 8 3 - - Sonoma..............................: 30 18 3 (Z) 30 18 4 2 Stanislaus..........................: 13 49 - - 13 49 2 (D) Trinity.............................: 5 1 - - 5 1 - - : Tulare..............................: 4 (Z) - - 4 (Z) 3 1 Tuolumne............................: 6 1 - - 6 1 - - Ventura.............................: 10 310 2 (D) 10 (D) 9 206 Yolo................................: 4 (Z) - - 4 (Z) 3 (D) Yuba................................: 1 (D) - - 1 (D) - - : LETTUCE, ALL : : State Total : : California..........................: 1,486 232,842 (X) (X) 1,486 232,842 753 227,515 : Counties : : Alameda.............................: 15 (D) (X) (X) 15 (D) 1 (D) Amador..............................: - - (X) (X) - - 2 (D) Butte...............................: 22 7 (X) (X) 22 7 2 (D) Calaveras...........................: 12 4 (X) (X) 12 4 6 3 Contra Costa........................: 9 5 (X) (X) 9 5 3 2 Del Norte...........................: 9 5 (X) (X) 9 5 - - El Dorado...........................: 41 15 (X) (X) 41 15 12 2 Fresno..............................: 62 8,567 (X) (X) 62 8,567 55 12,370 Glenn...............................: 6 1 (X) (X) 6 1 2 (D) Humboldt............................: 60 28 (X) (X) 60 28 18 30 : Imperial............................: 55 41,739 (X) (X) 55 41,739 40 28,751 Kern................................: 20 1,966 (X) (X) 20 1,966 12 1,610 Kings...............................: - - (X) (X) - - 2 (D) Lake................................: 33 6 (X) (X) 33 6 8 2 Los Angeles.........................: 40 14 (X) (X) 40 14 15 6 Madera..............................: 2 (D) (X) (X) 2 (D) 4 (D) Marin...............................: 7 7 (X) (X) 7 7 15 84 Mariposa............................: - - (X) (X) - - 1 (D) Mendocino...........................: 56 26 (X) (X) 56 26 17 17 Merced..............................: 27 (D) (X) (X) 27 (D) 2 (D) : Monterey............................: 137 134,662 (X) (X) 137 134,662 135 127,676 Napa................................: 7 4 (X) (X) 7 4 1 (D) Nevada..............................: 36 14 (X) (X) 36 14 7 6 Orange..............................: 15 57 (X) (X) 15 57 8 19 Placer..............................: 18 9 (X) (X) 18 9 8 4 Plumas..............................: 13 10 (X) (X) 13 10 4 4 Riverside...........................: 60 7,478 (X) (X) 60 7,478 24 5,674 Sacramento..........................: 63 48 (X) (X) 63 48 12 (D) San Benito..........................: 21 1,105 (X) (X) 21 1,105 28 12,421 San Bernardino......................: 21 8 (X) (X) 21 8 11 192 : San Diego...........................: 58 62 (X) (X) 58 62 23 342 San Joaquin.........................: 28 118 (X) (X) 28 118 9 (D) San Luis Obispo.....................: 64 4,635 (X) (X) 64 4,635 49 7,896 San Mateo...........................: 28 45 (X) (X) 28 45 4 4 Santa Barbara.......................: 78 15,755 (X) (X) 78 15,755 55 11,640 Santa Clara.........................: 32 770 (X) (X) 32 770 15 1,604 Santa Cruz..........................: 38 9,770 (X) (X) 38 9,770 21 10,277 Shasta..............................: 15 5 (X) (X) 15 5 7 3 Siskiyou............................: 10 5 (X) (X) 10 5 1 (D) Solano..............................: 6 8 (X) (X) 6 8 2 (D) : Sonoma..............................: 118 86 (X) (X) 118 86 34 66 Stanislaus..........................: 17 (D) (X) (X) 17 (D) 12 313 Sutter..............................: 3 4 (X) (X) 3 4 - - Tehama..............................: - - (X) (X) - - 7 3 Trinity.............................: 34 6 (X) (X) 34 6 1 (D) Tulare..............................: 13 7 (X) (X) 13 7 13 9 Tuolumne............................: 1 (D) (X) (X) 1 (D) - - Ventura.............................: 33 3,681 (X) (X) 33 3,681 32 4,607 Yolo................................: 21 (D) (X) (X) 21 (D) 10 45 Yuba................................: 22 7 (X) (X) 22 7 3 1 : LETTUCE, HEAD : : State Total : : California..........................: 798 111,503 (X) (X) 798 111,503 414 118,676 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ --continued Table 29. Vegetables, Potatoes, and Melons Harvested for Sale: 2012 and 2007 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ : 2012 : :-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------: 2007 : Harvested : Harvested for processing : Harvested for fresh market : harvested :----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Geographic area : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ LETTUCE, HEAD - Con. : : Counties : : Alameda.............................: 1 (D) (X) (X) 1 (D) 1 (D) Butte...............................: 15 3 (X) (X) 15 3 - - Calaveras...........................: 9 2 (X) (X) 9 2 4 (Z) Contra Costa........................: 3 (D) (X) (X) 3 (D) 3 1 Del Norte...........................: 3 (Z) (X) (X) 3 (Z) - - El Dorado...........................: 29 8 (X) (X) 29 8 4 (Z) Fresno..............................: 43 5,868 (X) (X) 43 5,868 19 8,142 Glenn...............................: 4 (Z) (X) (X) 4 (Z) 2 (D) Humboldt............................: 28 8 (X) (X) 28 8 8 4 Imperial............................: 41 21,227 (X) (X) 41 21,227 36 16,022 : Kern................................: 7 (D) (X) (X) 7 (D) 8 843 Kings...............................: - - (X) (X) - - 1 (D) Lake................................: 10 1 (X) (X) 10 1 5 1 Los Angeles.........................: 24 6 (X) (X) 24 6 8 1 Madera..............................: - - (X) (X) - - 3 (Z) Marin...............................: 4 3 (X) (X) 4 3 9 (D) Mendocino...........................: 20 4 (X) (X) 20 4 3 1 Merced..............................: 13 (D) (X) (X) 13 (D) 1 (D) Monterey............................: 103 60,408 (X) (X) 103 60,408 107 64,998 Napa................................: 1 (D) (X) (X) 1 (D) - - : Nevada..............................: 17 6 (X) (X) 17 6 2 (D) Orange..............................: 7 19 (X) (X) 7 19 2 (D) Placer..............................: 9 2 (X) (X) 9 2 2 (D) Riverside...........................: 26 2,259 (X) (X) 26 2,259 15 (D) Sacramento..........................: 17 10 (X) (X) 17 10 6 (D) San Benito..........................: 13 372 (X) (X) 13 372 12 4,212 San Bernardino......................: 10 1 (X) (X) 10 1 6 (D) San Diego...........................: 26 6 (X) (X) 26 6 4 (D) San Joaquin.........................: 9 9 (X) (X) 9 9 2 (D) San Luis Obispo.....................: 38 2,903 (X) (X) 38 2,903 18 4,913 : San Mateo...........................: 19 19 (X) (X) 19 19 - - Santa Barbara.......................: 51 9,204 (X) (X) 51 9,204 32 8,371 Santa Clara.........................: 18 161 (X) (X) 18 161 10 (D) Santa Cruz..........................: 25 5,768 (X) (X) 25 5,768 11 5,968 Shasta..............................: 13 2 (X) (X) 13 2 2 (D) Siskiyou............................: 3 (Z) (X) (X) 3 (Z) - - Solano..............................: 3 (D) (X) (X) 3 (D) 2 (D) Sonoma..............................: 61 34 (X) (X) 61 34 22 25 Stanislaus..........................: 8 3 (X) (X) 8 3 8 (D) Tehama..............................: - - (X) (X) - - 2 (D) : Trinity.............................: 23 2 (X) (X) 23 2 1 (D) Tulare..............................: 8 4 (X) (X) 8 4 7 2 Tuolumne............................: 1 (D) (X) (X) 1 (D) - - Ventura.............................: 15 639 (X) (X) 15 639 19 2,023 Yolo................................: 13 22 (X) (X) 13 22 5 12 Yuba................................: 7 1 (X) (X) 7 1 2 (D) : LETTUCE, LEAF : : State Total : : California..........................: 1,104 49,063 (X) (X) 1,104 49,063 520 44,068 : Counties : : Alameda.............................: 15 20 (X) (X) 15 20 1 (D) Amador..............................: - - (X) (X) - - 2 (D) Butte...............................: 18 2 (X) (X) 18 2 2 (D) Calaveras...........................: 9 (D) (X) (X) 9 (D) 6 1 Contra Costa........................: 6 3 (X) (X) 6 3 3 1 Del Norte...........................: 9 4 (X) (X) 9 4 - - El Dorado...........................: 29 7 (X) (X) 29 7 9 2 Fresno..............................: 41 955 (X) (X) 41 955 35 581 Glenn...............................: 6 1 (X) (X) 6 1 2 (D) Humboldt............................: 49 13 (X) (X) 49 13 15 22 : Imperial............................: 28 9,847 (X) (X) 28 9,847 18 6,212 Kern................................: 17 (D) (X) (X) 17 (D) 6 (D) Kings...............................: - - (X) (X) - - 1 (D) Lake................................: 31 3 (X) (X) 31 3 8 1 Los Angeles.........................: 27 4 (X) (X) 27 4 14 3 Madera..............................: 2 (D) (X) (X) 2 (D) 4 (D) Marin...............................: 4 3 (X) (X) 4 3 12 24 Mariposa............................: - - (X) (X) - - 1 (D) Mendocino...........................: 47 20 (X) (X) 47 20 16 16 Merced..............................: 10 6 (X) (X) 10 6 - - : Monterey............................: 81 28,977 (X) (X) 81 28,977 84 21,640 Napa................................: 7 4 (X) (X) 7 4 1 (D) Nevada..............................: 27 6 (X) (X) 27 6 7 (D) Orange..............................: 8 19 (X) (X) 8 19 1 (D) Placer..............................: 18 4 (X) (X) 18 4 8 2 Plumas..............................: 13 8 (X) (X) 13 8 4 4 Riverside...........................: 48 2,323 (X) (X) 48 2,323 19 (D) Sacramento..........................: 50 27 (X) (X) 50 27 7 15 San Benito..........................: 17 172 (X) (X) 17 172 11 6,687 San Bernardino......................: 18 6 (X) (X) 18 6 10 (D) : San Diego...........................: 38 26 (X) (X) 38 26 20 (D) San Joaquin.........................: 28 79 (X) (X) 28 79 9 (D) San Luis Obispo.....................: 38 593 (X) (X) 38 593 34 1,351 San Mateo...........................: 21 22 (X) (X) 21 22 4 (D) Santa Barbara.......................: 54 2,006 (X) (X) 54 2,006 26 1,155 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ --continued Table 29. Vegetables, Potatoes, and Melons Harvested for Sale: 2012 and 2007 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ : 2012 : :-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------: 2007 : Harvested : Harvested for processing : Harvested for fresh market : harvested :----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Geographic area : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ LETTUCE, LEAF - Con. : : Counties - Con. : : Santa Clara.........................: 29 126 (X) (X) 29 126 9 (D) Santa Cruz..........................: 25 1,248 (X) (X) 25 1,248 16 1,078 Shasta..............................: 10 2 (X) (X) 10 2 6 (D) Siskiyou............................: 10 4 (X) (X) 10 4 - - Solano..............................: 4 4 (X) (X) 4 4 2 (D) Sonoma..............................: 106 42 (X) (X) 106 42 28 31 Stanislaus..........................: 15 (D) (X) (X) 15 (D) 10 (D) Sutter..............................: 3 4 (X) (X) 3 4 - - Tehama..............................: - - (X) (X) - - 7 2 Trinity.............................: 21 3 (X) (X) 21 3 1 (D) : Tulare..............................: 7 2 (X) (X) 7 2 12 5 Ventura.............................: 22 1,423 (X) (X) 22 1,423 16 1,582 Yolo................................: 20 (D) (X) (X) 20 (D) 10 20 Yuba................................: 18 6 (X) (X) 18 6 3 (D) : LETTUCE, ROMAINE : : State Total : : California..........................: 750 72,276 (X) (X) 750 72,276 414 64,771 : Counties : : Alameda.............................: 1 (D) (X) (X) 1 (D) 1 (D) Butte...............................: 15 2 (X) (X) 15 2 2 (D) Calaveras...........................: 2 (D) (X) (X) 2 (D) 4 1 Contra Costa........................: 1 (D) (X) (X) 1 (D) - - Del Norte...........................: 6 1 (X) (X) 6 1 - - El Dorado...........................: 5 1 (X) (X) 5 1 3 (Z) Fresno..............................: 36 1,745 (X) (X) 36 1,745 33 3,648 Glenn...............................: 4 (Z) (X) (X) 4 (Z) 2 (D) Humboldt............................: 26 6 (X) (X) 26 6 5 4 Imperial............................: 32 10,666 (X) (X) 32 10,666 18 6,517 : Kern................................: 5 (D) (X) (X) 5 (D) 7 (D) Lake................................: 13 2 (X) (X) 13 2 5 1 Los Angeles.........................: 18 3 (X) (X) 18 3 7 1 Madera..............................: - - (X) (X) - - 4 (D) Marin...............................: 7 2 (X) (X) 7 2 7 (D) Mendocino...........................: 15 2 (X) (X) 15 2 5 1 Merced..............................: 24 10 (X) (X) 24 10 1 (D) Monterey............................: 108 45,277 (X) (X) 108 45,277 105 41,039 Napa................................: 1 (D) (X) (X) 1 (D) 1 (D) Nevada..............................: 13 2 (X) (X) 13 2 2 (D) : Orange..............................: 12 18 (X) (X) 12 18 8 (D) Placer..............................: 11 3 (X) (X) 11 3 3 (D) Plumas..............................: 8 3 (X) (X) 8 3 - - Riverside...........................: 41 2,896 (X) (X) 41 2,896 17 2,382 Sacramento..........................: 30 11 (X) (X) 30 11 1 (D) San Benito..........................: 15 560 (X) (X) 15 560 24 1,521 San Bernardino......................: 4 1 (X) (X) 4 1 6 (D) San Diego...........................: 29 30 (X) (X) 29 30 8 (D) San Joaquin.........................: 19 30 (X) (X) 19 30 7 (D) San Luis Obispo.....................: 40 1,139 (X) (X) 40 1,139 19 1,633 : San Mateo...........................: 7 5 (X) (X) 7 5 2 (D) Santa Barbara.......................: 48 4,545 (X) (X) 48 4,545 24 2,114 Santa Clara.........................: 18 483 (X) (X) 18 483 13 952 Santa Cruz..........................: 17 2,754 (X) (X) 17 2,754 14 3,232 Shasta..............................: 6 1 (X) (X) 6 1 - - Siskiyou............................: 5 1 (X) (X) 5 1 1 (D) Solano..............................: 1 (D) (X) (X) 1 (D) 2 (D) Sonoma..............................: 46 10 (X) (X) 46 10 14 11 Stanislaus..........................: 11 (D) (X) (X) 11 (D) 7 (D) Tehama..............................: - - (X) (X) - - 4 (D) : Trinity.............................: 7 1 (X) (X) 7 1 1 (D) Tulare..............................: 6 1 (X) (X) 6 1 7 2 Tuolumne............................: 1 (D) (X) (X) 1 (D) - - Ventura.............................: 17 1,619 (X) (X) 17 1,619 13 1,002 Yolo................................: 13 8 (X) (X) 13 8 5 13 Yuba................................: 6 1 (X) (X) 6 1 2 (D) : MUSTARD GREENS : : State Total : : California..........................: 157 736 8 19 155 717 87 1,902 : Counties : : Butte...............................: - - - - - - 4 11 Calaveras...........................: 3 1 - - 3 1 - - Fresno..............................: 32 24 - - 32 24 24 12 Glenn...............................: - - - - - - 2 (D) Humboldt............................: 2 (D) - - 2 (D) 2 (D) Imperial............................: 6 (D) - - 6 (D) 1 (D) Kern................................: 2 (D) - - 2 (D) - - Los Angeles.........................: 5 1 - - 5 1 - - Marin...............................: 3 (Z) - - 3 (Z) - - Mendocino...........................: - - - - - - 3 (Z) : Merced..............................: 10 6 - - 10 6 1 (D) Monterey............................: 3 (D) - - 3 (D) 3 148 Nevada..............................: 3 1 - - 3 1 - - ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ --continued Table 29. Vegetables, Potatoes, and Melons Harvested for Sale: 2012 and 2007 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ : 2012 : :-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------: 2007 : Harvested : Harvested for processing : Harvested for fresh market : harvested :----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Geographic area : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ MUSTARD GREENS - Con. : : Counties - Con. : : Orange..............................: 5 3 - - 5 3 - - Placer..............................: - - - - - - 3 1 Plumas..............................: 3 1 - - 3 1 2 (D) Riverside...........................: 10 8 - - 10 8 - - Sacramento..........................: 21 9 - - 21 9 8 27 San Benito..........................: 3 19 3 (D) 1 (D) 2 (D) San Bernardino......................: - - - - - - 2 (D) San Diego...........................: 7 2 - - 7 2 - - San Joaquin.........................: 3 19 - - 3 19 4 (D) San Luis Obispo.....................: 3 (D) - - 3 (D) 2 (D) : Santa Barbara.......................: - - - - - - 3 (D) Santa Clara.........................: 13 7 - - 13 7 1 (D) Santa Cruz..........................: 2 (D) - - 2 (D) 2 (D) Shasta..............................: - - - - - - 3 1 Solano..............................: 1 (D) - - 1 (D) - - Sonoma..............................: 6 3 5 (D) 6 (D) 2 (D) Stanislaus..........................: 1 (D) - - 1 (D) 2 (D) Trinity.............................: 3 (Z) - - 3 (Z) - - Tulare..............................: - - - - - - 1 (D) Ventura.............................: 3 288 - - 3 288 4 (D) : Yolo................................: 4 2 - - 4 2 2 (D) Yuba................................: - - - - - - 4 4 : OKRA : : State Total : : California..........................: 193 415 - - 193 415 108 254 : Counties : : Butte...............................: 2 (D) - - 2 (D) 4 1 Contra Costa........................: - - - - - - 3 1 El Dorado...........................: 1 (D) - - 1 (D) - - Fresno..............................: 26 18 - - 26 18 30 19 Glenn...............................: 2 (D) - - 2 (D) 2 (D) Imperial............................: 15 269 - - 15 269 6 184 Kern................................: 7 1 - - 7 1 5 1 Kings...............................: 3 (Z) - - 3 (Z) - - Lake................................: - - - - - - 3 (Z) Los Angeles.........................: - - - - - - 2 (D) : Madera..............................: 3 1 - - 3 1 - - Mendocino...........................: 2 (D) - - 2 (D) 2 (D) Merced..............................: 9 6 - - 9 6 - - Monterey............................: 1 (D) - - 1 (D) - - Nevada..............................: 1 (D) - - 1 (D) - - Orange..............................: 2 (D) - - 2 (D) - - Placer..............................: 7 2 - - 7 2 - - Riverside...........................: 21 7 - - 21 7 - - Sacramento..........................: 15 4 - - 15 4 2 (D) San Bernardino......................: 2 (D) - - 2 (D) 5 5 : San Diego...........................: 18 29 - - 18 29 15 19 San Joaquin.........................: 9 2 - - 9 2 3 2 Shasta..............................: - - - - - - 3 1 Siskiyou............................: 1 (D) - - 1 (D) - - Solano..............................: 1 (D) - - 1 (D) - - Sonoma..............................: 2 (D) - - 2 (D) - - Stanislaus..........................: 5 1 - - 5 1 4 3 Sutter..............................: - - - - - - 1 (D) Tehama..............................: 4 1 - - 4 1 5 1 Trinity.............................: 6 1 - - 6 1 - - : Tulare..............................: 21 19 - - 21 19 8 12 Yolo................................: 4 (Z) - - 4 (Z) 2 (D) Yuba................................: 3 (Z) - - 3 (Z) 3 1 : ONIONS, DRY : : State Total : : California..........................: 561 38,128 102 20,257 475 17,870 380 43,255 : Counties : : Alameda.............................: 3 3 - - 3 3 3 1 Amador..............................: 9 1 - - 9 1 2 (D) Butte...............................: 2 (D) - - 2 (D) 4 7 Colusa..............................: 5 206 - - 5 206 2 (D) Contra Costa........................: 9 6 - - 9 6 6 (D) Del Norte...........................: - - - - - - 2 (D) El Dorado...........................: 8 1 - - 8 1 - - Fresno..............................: 88 13,828 40 7,668 53 6,159 62 12,260 Glenn...............................: 4 97 - - 4 97 9 (D) Humboldt............................: 18 12 - - 18 12 10 12 : Imperial............................: 42 8,565 15 4,094 30 4,471 33 9,969 Kern................................: 28 3,691 13 2,520 15 1,170 15 3,632 Kings...............................: 11 1,919 6 1,292 6 628 10 1,524 Lake................................: 4 1 - - 4 1 8 3 Los Angeles.........................: 9 1,234 - - 9 1,234 10 4,545 Madera..............................: 3 (D) - - 3 (D) 5 (D) Marin...............................: 6 3 - - 6 3 1 (D) Mariposa............................: - - - - - - 2 (D) ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ --continued Table 29. Vegetables, Potatoes, and Melons Harvested for Sale: 2012 and 2007 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ : 2012 : :-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------: 2007 : Harvested : Harvested for processing : Harvested for fresh market : harvested :----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Geographic area : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ ONIONS, DRY - Con. : : Counties - Con. : : Mendocino...........................: 17 4 - - 17 4 13 5 Merced..............................: 8 3 - - 8 3 2 (D) Modoc...............................: - - - - - - 7 (D) Monterey............................: 26 952 5 283 21 669 20 673 Napa................................: 6 1 - - 6 1 1 (D) Nevada..............................: 13 3 - - 13 3 3 1 Orange..............................: - - - - - - 3 (D) Placer..............................: 3 (Z) - - 3 (Z) 4 1 Riverside...........................: 18 (D) 1 (D) 17 7 10 (D) Sacramento..........................: 9 4 3 (Z) 9 4 2 (D) : San Benito..........................: 8 524 2 (D) 6 (D) 16 2,082 San Bernardino......................: 4 1 - - 4 1 6 5 San Diego...........................: 12 2 - - 12 2 3 1 San Joaquin.........................: 24 2,009 2 (D) 22 (D) 13 2,169 San Luis Obispo.....................: 21 (D) 1 (D) 21 713 11 (D) San Mateo...........................: 4 1 - - 4 1 1 (D) Santa Barbara.......................: 7 13 - - 7 13 7 (D) Santa Clara.........................: 7 6 - - 7 6 7 396 Santa Cruz..........................: 11 5 1 (D) 10 (D) 3 1 Shasta..............................: 5 1 - - 5 1 1 (D) : Siskiyou............................: 7 2,837 7 2,837 - - 16 2,404 Solano..............................: 12 (D) 1 (D) 11 (D) 2 (D) Sonoma..............................: 31 7 - - 31 7 14 9 Stanislaus..........................: 5 2 - - 5 2 7 3 Sutter..............................: 3 105 2 (D) 1 (D) 3 (D) Tehama..............................: 7 3 - - 7 3 3 1 Trinity.............................: 6 1 2 (D) 6 (D) - - Tulare..............................: 8 6 - - 8 6 8 (D) Ventura.............................: 2 (D) - - 2 (D) 4 1 Yolo................................: 16 52 1 (D) 16 (D) 6 7 Yuba................................: 12 2 - - 12 2 - - : ONIONS, GREEN : : State Total : : California..........................: 262 3,131 11 803 259 2,328 128 2,061 : Counties : : Alameda.............................: 9 2 - - 9 2 1 (D) Amador..............................: - - - - - - 2 (D) Butte...............................: 5 1 - - 5 1 2 (D) Colusa..............................: 2 (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) Contra Costa........................: 1 (D) - - 1 (D) 1 (D) El Dorado...........................: 9 2 - - 9 2 1 (D) Fresno..............................: 25 693 1 (D) 25 (D) 20 287 Glenn...............................: - - - - - - 2 (D) Humboldt............................: 2 (D) - - 2 (D) 3 (Z) Imperial............................: 2 (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) : Kern................................: 8 594 - - 8 594 3 (D) Kings...............................: 3 521 - - 3 521 - - Lake................................: 10 1 - - 10 1 - - Los Angeles.........................: 5 1 - - 5 1 3 1 Marin...............................: 3 4 - - 3 4 6 2 Mendocino...........................: - - - - - - 3 (Z) Merced..............................: 16 (D) 1 (D) 16 (D) 1 (D) Monterey............................: 10 293 - - 10 293 12 965 Napa................................: 5 1 - - 5 1 - - Nevada..............................: 2 (D) - - 2 (D) - - : Orange..............................: 3 1 - - 3 1 - - Placer..............................: 16 3 4 (Z) 16 2 1 (D) Riverside...........................: 7 9 - - 7 9 6 5 Sacramento..........................: 28 50 - - 28 50 4 (Z) San Benito..........................: 1 (D) - - 1 (D) 1 (D) San Bernardino......................: 4 3 - - 4 3 1 (D) San Diego...........................: 13 5 - - 13 5 13 28 San Joaquin.........................: 2 (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) - - San Luis Obispo.....................: 9 6 - - 9 6 2 (D) San Mateo...........................: 2 (D) - - 2 (D) 1 (D) : Santa Barbara.......................: 5 9 - - 5 9 5 6 Santa Clara.........................: 9 4 - - 9 4 5 1 Santa Cruz..........................: 3 3 - - 3 3 3 (D) Shasta..............................: 4 5 - - 4 5 - - Solano..............................: 1 (D) - - 1 (D) 1 (D) Sonoma..............................: 15 11 - - 15 11 8 16 Stanislaus..........................: 4 5 - - 4 5 5 1 Trinity.............................: 2 (D) 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Tulare..............................: 2 (D) - - 2 (D) 2 (D) Ventura.............................: 8 (D) - - 8 (D) 2 (D) : Yolo................................: 4 3 - - 4 3 2 (D) Yuba................................: 3 2 - - 3 2 4 1 : PARSLEY : : State Total : : California..........................: 129 2,241 16 594 118 1,647 63 2,265 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ --continued Table 29. Vegetables, Potatoes, and Melons Harvested for Sale: 2012 and 2007 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ : 2012 : :-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------: 2007 : Harvested : Harvested for processing : Harvested for fresh market : harvested :----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Geographic area : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ PARSLEY - Con. : : Counties : : Alameda.............................: - - - - - - 1 (D) Butte...............................: 1 (D) - - 1 (D) - - Fresno..............................: 7 (D) - - 7 (D) 2 (D) Glenn...............................: - - - - - - 2 (D) Humboldt............................: 2 (D) - - 2 (D) 1 (D) Imperial............................: 3 (D) 1 (D) 3 (D) 1 (D) Kern................................: 4 321 1 (D) 3 (D) 3 472 Lake................................: 10 1 - - 10 1 - - Los Angeles.........................: - - - - - - 1 (D) Madera..............................: 1 (D) - - 1 (D) - - : Marin...............................: - - - - - - 2 (D) Mendocino...........................: 4 (Z) 4 (Z) - - - - Merced..............................: 6 1 - - 6 1 1 (D) Monterey............................: 17 476 1 (D) 16 (D) 9 100 Nevada..............................: 7 1 - - 7 1 - - Placer..............................: 5 14 5 14 - - - - Riverside...........................: 5 3 4 1 5 2 1 (D) Sacramento..........................: 6 6 - - 6 6 - - San Benito..........................: 1 (D) - - 1 (D) 1 (D) San Diego...........................: 4 2 - - 4 2 1 (D) : San Luis Obispo.....................: 4 44 - - 4 44 4 (D) San Mateo...........................: 1 (D) - - 1 (D) 1 (D) Santa Barbara.......................: 2 (D) - - 2 (D) 5 67 Santa Clara.........................: 7 3 - - 7 3 4 1 Santa Cruz..........................: 4 (D) - - 4 (D) 1 (D) Shasta..............................: 2 (D) - - 2 (D) - - Siskiyou............................: - - - - - - 1 (D) Solano..............................: 3 1 - - 3 1 - - Sonoma..............................: 6 2 - - 6 2 3 1 Stanislaus..........................: 2 (D) - - 2 (D) 4 260 : Ventura.............................: 11 429 - - 11 429 12 450 Yolo................................: 4 (Z) - - 4 (Z) 2 (D) : PEAS, CHINESE (SUGAR : AND SNOW) : : State Total : : California..........................: 217 2,157 10 102 213 2,055 145 2,241 : Counties : : Alameda.............................: - - - - - - 1 (D) Contra Costa........................: 5 1 - - 5 1 1 (D) El Dorado...........................: 8 1 - - 8 1 3 (Z) Fresno..............................: 22 20 - - 22 20 40 97 Glenn...............................: - - - - - - 2 (D) Humboldt............................: 2 (D) 2 (D) 2 (D) 4 1 Imperial............................: 6 3 - - 6 3 - - Kern................................: 1 (D) - - 1 (D) 1 (D) Los Angeles.........................: 2 (D) - - 2 (D) - - Madera..............................: 1 (D) - - 1 (D) 1 (D) : Marin...............................: - - - - - - 3 (Z) Mendocino...........................: 6 1 4 (D) 2 (D) 7 2 Merced..............................: 10 5 - - 10 5 - - Monterey............................: 4 419 1 (D) 4 (D) 7 577 Napa................................: 2 (D) - - 2 (D) 1 (D) Nevada..............................: 15 3 - - 15 3 1 (D) Orange..............................: 2 (D) - - 2 (D) - - Placer..............................: - - - - - - 3 3 Riverside...........................: 7 18 - - 7 18 - - Sacramento..........................: 3 18 - - 3 18 - - : San Benito..........................: 4 442 - - 4 442 1 (D) San Bernardino......................: 12 4 - - 12 4 - - San Diego...........................: 12 19 - - 12 19 7 6 San Joaquin.........................: - - - - - - 2 (D) San Luis Obispo.....................: 33 499 3 (D) 33 (D) 30 939 San Mateo...........................: 3 1 - - 3 1 2 (D) Santa Barbara.......................: 17 (D) - - 17 (D) 2 (D) Santa Clara.........................: 18 25 - - 18 25 6 24 Shasta..............................: - - - - - - 3 1 Siskiyou............................: 3 1 - - 3 1 - - : Solano..............................: 1 (D) - - 1 (D) - - Sonoma..............................: 6 1 - - 6 1 3 2 Stanislaus..........................: - - - - - - 3 1 Tehama..............................: - - - - - - 2 (D) Trinity.............................: 4 1 - - 4 1 2 (D) Tulare..............................: 1 (D) - - 1 (D) 2 (D) Ventura.............................: 1 (D) - - 1 (D) 2 (D) Yolo................................: 4 2 - - 4 2 1 (D) Yuba................................: 2 (D) - - 2 (D) 2 (D) : PEAS, GREEN (EXCLUDING : SOUTHERN) : : State Total : : California..........................: 138 821 - - 138 821 68 826 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ --continued Table 29. Vegetables, Potatoes, and Melons Harvested for Sale: 2012 and 2007 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ : 2012 : :-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------: 2007 : Harvested : Harvested for processing : Harvested for fresh market : harvested :----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Geographic area : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ PEAS, GREEN (EXCLUDING : SOUTHERN) - Con. : : Counties : : Alameda.............................: 1 (D) - - 1 (D) 1 (D) Amador..............................: 5 1 - - 5 1 - - Calaveras...........................: 3 (Z) - - 3 (Z) - - Del Norte...........................: 7 2 - - 7 2 - - Fresno..............................: 6 50 - - 6 50 11 31 Glenn...............................: - - - - - - 2 (D) Humboldt............................: 2 (D) - - 2 (D) 4 1 Imperial............................: 2 (D) - - 2 (D) - - Kern................................: 7 6 - - 7 6 - - Los Angeles.........................: 5 1 - - 5 1 - - : Madera..............................: 1 (D) - - 1 (D) - - Marin...............................: 2 (D) - - 2 (D) - - Mendocino...........................: 2 (D) - - 2 (D) 3 (D) Monterey............................: 12 280 - - 12 280 5 385 Napa................................: - - - - - - 1 (D) Nevada..............................: - - - - - - 3 (Z) Placer..............................: 3 (Z) - - 3 (Z) - - Riverside...........................: 2 (D) - - 2 (D) - - Sacramento..........................: - - - - - - 2 (D) San Benito..........................: 1 (D) - - 1 (D) 1 (D) : San Bernardino......................: 1 (D) - - 1 (D) - - San Diego...........................: 1 (D) - - 1 (D) 4 3 San Joaquin.........................: 2 (D) - - 2 (D) - - San Luis Obispo.....................: 17 63 - - 17 63 - - San Mateo...........................: 2 (D) - - 2 (D) 10 182 Santa Barbara.......................: 4 (D) - - 4 (D) 7 (D) Santa Clara.........................: 18 31 - - 18 31 3 2 Santa Cruz..........................: 1 (D) - - 1 (D) 1 (D) Siskiyou............................: 9 7 - - 9 7 - - Solano..............................: 3 (D) - - 3 (D) - - : Sonoma..............................: 5 1 - - 5 1 3 1 Stanislaus..........................: 4 (D) - - 4 (D) 4 (D) Trinity.............................: 4 1 - - 4 1 - - Tulare..............................: 1 (D) - - 1 (D) - - Yolo................................: 5 27 - - 5 27 3 (Z) : PEAS, GREEN SOUTHERN : (COWPEAS) BLACKEYED, : CROWDER, ETC. : : State Total : : California..........................: 40 713 4 (D) 37 (D) 25 (D) : Counties : : Fresno..............................: 14 38 - - 14 38 7 9 Glenn...............................: - - - - - - 2 (D) Kern................................: 3 (D) 2 (D) 2 (D) 4 1 Kings...............................: 3 (Z) - - 3 (Z) - - Lassen..............................: 1 (D) - - 1 (D) - - Mendocino...........................: - - - - - - 2 (D) Monterey............................: 1 (D) - - 1 (D) 2 (D) San Bernardino......................: - - - - - - 3 5 San Diego...........................: - - - - - - 1 (D) San Joaquin.........................: 1 (D) - - 1 (D) 1 (D) : San Mateo...........................: 1 (D) - - 1 (D) - - Solano..............................: 1 (D) - - 1 (D) 1 (D) Stanislaus..........................: 4 (D) 1 (D) 3 3 1 (D) Tulare..............................: 4 (D) 1 (D) 3 1 - - Yolo................................: 4 2 - - 4 2 1 (D) Yuba................................: 3 (Z) - - 3 (Z) - - : PEPPERS, BELL (EXCLUDING : PIMIENTOS) : : State Total : : California..........................: 580 19,168 51 3,306 552 15,862 367 21,098 : Counties : : Alameda.............................: 2 (D) - - 2 (D) 1 (D) Amador..............................: - - - - - - 2 (D) Butte...............................: 13 3 - - 13 3 8 (D) Calaveras...........................: 3 1 - - 3 1 2 (D) Contra Costa........................: 2 (D) - - 2 (D) - - Del Norte...........................: 4 (Z) - - 4 (Z) - - El Dorado...........................: 15 2 - - 15 2 13 4 Fresno..............................: 35 1,725 5 401 33 1,324 38 2,126 Glenn...............................: - - - - - - 3 (D) Humboldt............................: 21 7 - - 21 7 7 3 : Imperial............................: 10 (D) 1 (D) 9 (D) 2 (D) Kern................................: 19 2,611 2 (D) 19 (D) 18 3,576 Kings...............................: 1 (D) - - 1 (D) 3 (D) Lake................................: 8 1 - - 8 1 2 (D) Los Angeles.........................: 9 1 3 (Z) 6 1 4 1 Madera..............................: 3 2 - - 3 2 3 (D) Marin...............................: 2 (D) - - 2 (D) - - Mendocino...........................: 21 7 - - 21 7 6 1 Merced..............................: 15 462 - - 15 462 4 528 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ --continued Table 29. Vegetables, Potatoes, and Melons Harvested for Sale: 2012 and 2007 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ : 2012 : :-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------: 2007 : Harvested : Harvested for processing : Harvested for fresh market : harvested :----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Geographic area : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ PEPPERS, BELL (EXCLUDING : PIMIENTOS) - Con. : : Counties - Con. : : Monterey............................: 9 813 4 (D) 8 (D) 17 746 Napa................................: 2 (D) - - 2 (D) 1 (D) Nevada..............................: 2 (D) - - 2 (D) 2 (D) Orange..............................: 8 514 - - 8 514 4 (D) Placer..............................: 25 5 - - 25 5 12 3 Riverside...........................: 34 4,208 1 (D) 34 (D) 16 3,147 Sacramento..........................: 20 19 - - 20 19 4 (D) San Benito..........................: 8 922 3 115 7 807 12 1,293 San Bernardino......................: 17 6 - - 17 6 1 (D) San Diego...........................: 23 24 - - 23 24 12 180 : San Joaquin.........................: 30 992 1 (D) 29 (D) 19 1,064 San Luis Obispo.....................: 34 819 6 6 28 813 18 961 San Mateo...........................: 1 (D) - - 1 (D) 3 4 Santa Barbara.......................: 15 93 - - 15 93 14 511 Santa Clara.........................: 25 2,444 4 759 24 1,685 17 2,465 Santa Cruz..........................: 6 (D) 1 (D) 5 (D) 3 53 Shasta..............................: 10 3 - - 10 3 3 1 Siskiyou............................: 2 (D) - - 2 (D) 4 (Z) Solano..............................: 18 535 6 (D) 12 (D) 13 903 Sonoma..............................: 40 26 2 (D) 40 (D) 12 9 : Stanislaus..........................: 8 11 - - 8 11 10 3 Sutter..............................: 4 (Z) - - 4 (Z) 1 (D) Tehama..............................: 6 1 - - 6 1 4 1 Trinity.............................: 8 6 4 5 6 1 3 (Z) Tulare..............................: 9 3 - - 9 3 15 (D) Tuolumne............................: 3 (Z) - - 3 (Z) - - Ventura.............................: 15 2,097 3 292 13 1,805 16 1,735 Yolo................................: 8 (D) 1 (D) 7 4 12 967 Yuba................................: 7 1 4 (Z) 7 1 3 1 : PEPPERS OTHER THAN BELL : (INCLUDING CHILE) : : State Total : : California..........................: 556 7,029 45 3,799 526 3,230 385 5,617 : Counties : : Alameda.............................: 4 1 - - 4 1 3 (Z) Amador..............................: 4 (Z) - - 4 (Z) 1 (D) Butte...............................: 11 4 2 (D) 11 (D) 9 1 Calaveras...........................: 4 1 - - 4 1 7 13 Contra Costa........................: 4 (D) - - 4 (D) 2 (D) El Dorado...........................: 15 4 - - 15 4 16 6 Fresno..............................: 24 139 3 1 24 138 46 69 Glenn...............................: 4 (Z) - - 4 (Z) 3 (D) Humboldt............................: 24 9 6 1 18 8 8 3 Imperial............................: 7 (D) - - 7 (D) 2 (D) : Inyo................................: 3 1 - - 3 1 - - Kern................................: 14 179 1 (D) 13 (D) 8 163 Kings...............................: 2 (D) - - 2 (D) 5 (D) Lake................................: 9 2 - - 9 2 1 (D) Los Angeles.........................: 9 1 - - 9 1 4 (D) Madera..............................: 1 (D) - - 1 (D) 5 6 Mendocino...........................: 10 2 4 (Z) 6 1 13 3 Merced..............................: 14 43 - - 14 43 5 93 Monterey............................: 23 657 5 371 18 286 12 766 Napa................................: 7 1 - - 7 1 1 (D) : Nevada..............................: 22 5 - - 22 5 3 (Z) Orange..............................: 8 4 - - 8 4 - - Placer..............................: 14 3 - - 14 3 11 2 Riverside...........................: 13 310 1 (D) 13 (D) 11 (D) Sacramento..........................: 13 1 - - 13 1 5 (D) San Benito..........................: 8 99 3 (D) 5 (D) 8 544 San Bernardino......................: 2 (D) - - 2 (D) 2 (D) San Diego...........................: 25 3 - - 25 3 13 3 San Joaquin.........................: 17 125 4 40 13 85 16 72 San Luis Obispo.....................: 27 109 - - 27 109 31 204 : San Mateo...........................: 3 (D) - - 3 (D) 1 (D) Santa Barbara.......................: 16 711 - - 16 711 22 1,131 Santa Clara.........................: 27 1,108 2 (D) 27 (D) 26 988 Santa Cruz..........................: 12 7 1 (D) 11 (D) 8 4 Shasta..............................: 7 1 - - 7 1 8 7 Siskiyou............................: - - - - - - 2 (D) Solano..............................: 15 39 - - 15 39 7 (D) Sonoma..............................: 52 97 3 (Z) 49 97 18 26 Stanislaus..........................: 16 9 - - 16 9 10 2 Sutter..............................: 4 (Z) - - 4 (Z) - - : Tehama..............................: 2 (D) - - 2 (D) 6 1 Trinity.............................: 4 1 2 (D) 4 (D) 3 (Z) Tulare..............................: 12 14 - - 12 14 7 5 Tuolumne............................: 6 1 - - 6 1 - - Ventura.............................: 4 2,775 3 (D) 2 (D) 8 756 Yolo................................: 20 131 1 (D) 19 (D) 6 (D) Yuba................................: 14 3 4 1 14 3 2 (D) ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ --continued Table 29. Vegetables, Potatoes, and Melons Harvested for Sale: 2012 and 2007 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ : 2012 : :-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------: 2007 : Harvested : Harvested for processing : Harvested for fresh market : harvested :----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Geographic area : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ POTATOES : : State Total : : California..........................: 441 42,660 36 14,436 426 28,224 224 37,858 : Counties : : Alameda.............................: 2 (D) - - 2 (D) 2 (D) Amador..............................: 11 1 - - 11 1 - - Butte...............................: 11 3 - - 11 3 3 12 Calaveras...........................: 2 (D) - - 2 (D) 2 (D) Del Norte...........................: - - - - - - 2 (D) El Dorado...........................: 13 3 4 (Z) 9 2 5 1 Fresno..............................: 8 12 - - 8 12 8 6 Glenn...............................: - - - - - - 2 (D) Humboldt............................: 33 82 - - 33 82 7 (D) Imperial............................: 7 1,840 2 (D) 5 (D) 6 921 : Inyo................................: 1 (D) - - 1 (D) - - Kern................................: 44 22,768 10 6,798 40 15,969 43 21,564 Kings...............................: - - - - - - 2 (D) Lake................................: 15 5 - - 15 5 2 (D) Lassen..............................: - - - - - - 1 (D) Los Angeles.........................: 4 (D) - - 4 (D) 3 (D) Madera..............................: 2 (D) - - 2 (D) 2 (D) Marin...............................: 4 115 2 (D) 4 (D) 6 27 Mariposa............................: - - - - - - 2 (D) Mendocino...........................: 29 16 4 (Z) 29 16 7 3 : Merced..............................: 9 2 - - 9 2 2 (D) Modoc...............................: 10 (D) 3 (D) 10 (D) 14 2,089 Monterey............................: 5 (D) 1 (D) 4 2 8 (D) Napa................................: 8 4 - - 8 4 3 1 Nevada..............................: 23 15 - - 23 15 2 (D) Placer..............................: 6 3 - - 6 3 1 (D) Plumas..............................: 3 1 - - 3 1 2 (D) Riverside...........................: 5 2,830 - - 5 2,830 9 (D) Sacramento..........................: 17 5 - - 17 5 2 (D) San Benito..........................: 5 48 - - 5 48 2 (D) : San Diego...........................: 19 9 - - 19 9 4 6 San Joaquin.........................: 6 2,952 1 (D) 5 (D) 2 (D) San Luis Obispo.....................: 8 (D) - - 8 (D) 10 14 San Mateo...........................: 8 4 - - 8 4 1 (D) Santa Barbara.......................: 5 (D) 2 (D) 5 (D) 5 (D) Santa Clara.........................: 5 4 - - 5 4 - - Santa Cruz..........................: 9 18 - - 9 18 6 3 Shasta..............................: 5 1 - - 5 1 - - Siskiyou............................: 17 6,217 7 2,986 14 3,231 16 4,766 Solano..............................: 5 11 - - 5 11 1 (D) : Sonoma..............................: 26 24 - - 26 24 17 50 Stanislaus..........................: 15 22 - - 15 22 5 2 Sutter..............................: 3 1 - - 3 1 - - Trinity.............................: 10 2 - - 10 2 1 (D) Tulare..............................: 4 (D) - - 4 (D) 2 (D) Tuolumne............................: 5 1 - - 5 1 - - Ventura.............................: 3 2 - - 3 2 - - Yolo................................: 9 23 - - 9 23 4 (D) Yuba................................: 2 (D) - - 2 (D) - - : PUMPKINS : : State Total : : California..........................: 519 6,175 23 71 506 6,104 359 5,106 : Counties : : Alameda.............................: 1 (D) - - 1 (D) 1 (D) Amador..............................: 6 9 - - 6 9 1 (D) Butte...............................: 8 43 - - 8 43 7 53 Calaveras...........................: 9 4 - - 9 4 - - Colusa..............................: - - - - - - 2 (D) Contra Costa........................: 5 28 - - 5 28 5 100 Del Norte...........................: 5 25 - - 5 25 4 3 El Dorado...........................: 26 71 5 2 23 69 21 36 Fresno..............................: 24 68 - - 24 68 11 15 Glenn...............................: 3 83 - - 3 83 2 (D) : Humboldt............................: 25 109 - - 25 109 11 39 Imperial............................: 2 (D) - - 2 (D) 1 (D) Kern................................: 7 (D) - - 7 (D) 2 (D) Kings...............................: 3 (Z) - - 3 (Z) 2 (D) Lake................................: 17 23 - - 17 23 3 5 Lassen..............................: - - - - - - 1 (D) Los Angeles.........................: 8 21 - - 8 21 6 88 Madera..............................: 3 30 - - 3 30 2 (D) Marin...............................: - - - - - - 3 1 Mendocino...........................: 9 16 - - 9 16 9 12 : Merced..............................: 3 (D) - - 3 (D) 5 24 Monterey............................: 2 (D) - - 2 (D) 8 20 Napa................................: 11 1 - - 11 1 4 3 Nevada..............................: 12 3 - - 12 3 4 1 Orange..............................: 16 10 - - 16 10 2 (D) Placer..............................: 27 26 3 (D) 27 (D) 20 6 Riverside...........................: 11 184 - - 11 184 14 (D) Sacramento..........................: 17 (D) - - 17 (D) 3 (D) San Benito..........................: 2 (D) - - 2 (D) 11 161 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ --continued Table 29. Vegetables, Potatoes, and Melons Harvested for Sale: 2012 and 2007 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ : 2012 : :-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------: 2007 : Harvested : Harvested for processing : Harvested for fresh market : harvested :----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Geographic area : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ PUMPKINS - Con. : : Counties - Con. : : San Bernardino......................: 4 (D) - - 4 (D) 14 142 San Diego...........................: 31 104 - - 31 104 19 55 San Joaquin.........................: 9 3,441 - - 9 3,441 11 2,543 San Luis Obispo.....................: 35 130 2 (D) 35 (D) 19 77 San Mateo...........................: 17 141 9 (D) 11 (D) 13 172 Santa Barbara.......................: 39 128 - - 39 128 9 113 Santa Clara.........................: 19 185 - - 19 185 15 300 Santa Cruz..........................: 13 18 1 (D) 12 (D) 7 (D) Shasta..............................: 10 13 - - 10 13 4 (D) Siskiyou............................: 9 15 - - 9 15 1 (D) : Solano..............................: 7 102 - - 7 102 3 66 Sonoma..............................: 17 66 - - 17 66 34 155 Stanislaus..........................: 8 39 - - 8 39 6 49 Sutter..............................: 4 72 3 (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) Tehama..............................: 9 13 - - 9 13 7 13 Trinity.............................: 2 (D) - - 2 (D) 2 (D) Tulare..............................: 7 103 - - 7 103 1 (D) Ventura.............................: 8 95 - - 8 95 17 195 Yolo................................: 6 45 - - 6 45 7 36 Yuba................................: 3 (Z) - - 3 (Z) 4 (D) : RADISHES : : State Total : : California..........................: 150 1,926 10 2 150 1,924 76 1,705 : Counties : : Alameda.............................: - - - - - - 1 (D) Butte...............................: 2 (D) - - 2 (D) 2 (D) Fresno..............................: 21 33 6 2 21 31 19 17 Glenn...............................: - - - - - - 2 (D) Humboldt............................: 2 (D) - - 2 (D) 1 (D) Imperial............................: 3 (D) - - 3 (D) 2 (D) Kern................................: 4 205 - - 4 205 - - Los Angeles.........................: 4 1 4 (Z) 4 1 - - Madera..............................: 1 (D) - - 1 (D) - - Marin...............................: 4 1 - - 4 1 2 (D) : Mendocino...........................: 2 (D) - - 2 (D) 4 (Z) Merced..............................: - - - - - - 1 (D) Monterey............................: 3 11 - - 3 11 2 (D) Nevada..............................: 6 2 - - 6 2 - - Placer..............................: 1 (D) - - 1 (D) - - Plumas..............................: 8 3 - - 8 3 - - Riverside...........................: 4 (D) - - 4 (D) 6 4 Sacramento..........................: 5 1 - - 5 1 - - San Benito..........................: - - - - - - 1 (D) San Bernardino......................: 11 49 - - 11 49 2 (D) : San Diego...........................: 8 4 - - 8 4 6 2 San Luis Obispo.....................: 5 1 - - 5 1 4 2 San Mateo...........................: 2 (D) - - 2 (D) - - Santa Barbara.......................: 4 10 - - 4 10 2 (D) Santa Clara.........................: 10 4 - - 10 4 3 1 Santa Cruz..........................: 3 7 - - 3 7 2 (D) Shasta..............................: 8 1 - - 8 1 - - Solano..............................: 3 2 - - 3 2 - - Sonoma..............................: 9 2 - - 9 2 2 (D) Stanislaus..........................: 1 (D) - - 1 (D) 2 (D) : Tulare..............................: 2 (D) - - 2 (D) 3 6 Ventura.............................: 10 1,038 - - 10 1,038 4 (D) Yolo................................: 4 2 - - 4 2 3 1 : RHUBARB : : State Total : : California..........................: 54 52 3 (Z) 51 52 17 4 : Counties : : Calaveras...........................: 6 1 - - 6 1 - - El Dorado...........................: 3 1 - - 3 1 1 (D) Fresno..............................: 3 2 - - 3 2 - - Humboldt............................: 1 (D) - - 1 (D) - - Lake................................: - - - - - - 2 (D) Marin...............................: 1 (D) - - 1 (D) 2 (D) Mendocino...........................: - - - - - - 2 (D) Monterey............................: 3 (D) - - 3 (D) 2 (D) Nevada..............................: 7 (D) - - 7 (D) - - San Diego...........................: 9 3 - - 9 3 2 (D) : San Luis Obispo.....................: 1 (D) - - 1 (D) 1 (D) Santa Barbara.......................: 5 1 - - 5 1 1 (D) Santa Clara.........................: 5 3 - - 5 3 - - Shasta..............................: 3 (Z) - - 3 (Z) - - Siskiyou............................: 1 (D) - - 1 (D) 1 (D) Sonoma..............................: 6 1 3 (Z) 3 (Z) 2 (D) Ventura.............................: - - - - - - 1 (D) ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ --continued Table 29. Vegetables, Potatoes, and Melons Harvested for Sale: 2012 and 2007 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ : 2012 : :-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------: 2007 : Harvested : Harvested for processing : Harvested for fresh market : harvested :----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Geographic area : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ SPINACH : : State Total : : California..........................: 278 27,156 31 4,754 262 22,401 174 25,843 : Counties : : Butte...............................: 1 (D) - - 1 (D) - - Contra Costa........................: 5 1 - - 5 1 - - El Dorado...........................: 3 (Z) - - 3 (Z) - - Fresno..............................: 16 409 1 (D) 15 (D) 20 910 Glenn...............................: - - - - - - 2 (D) Humboldt............................: 10 7 - - 10 7 2 (D) Imperial............................: 8 4,624 1 (D) 7 (D) 5 1,820 Kern................................: 9 (D) - - 9 (D) - - Los Angeles.........................: - - - - - - 4 1 Madera..............................: 2 (D) - - 2 (D) 1 (D) : Marin...............................: 4 1 - - 4 1 4 (D) Mendocino...........................: 2 (D) - - 2 (D) 5 1 Merced..............................: 3 1 - - 3 1 1 (D) Monterey............................: 39 14,834 12 1,997 32 12,837 43 14,999 Napa................................: - - - - - - 1 (D) Nevada..............................: 5 1 - - 5 1 - - Orange..............................: 8 4 - - 8 4 - - Placer..............................: 1 (D) - - 1 (D) - - Plumas..............................: 11 4 - - 11 4 2 (D) Riverside...........................: 18 836 2 (D) 17 (D) 3 (D) : Sacramento..........................: 6 1 - - 6 1 - - San Benito..........................: 8 1,536 - - 8 1,536 7 3,129 San Bernardino......................: 4 1 - - 4 1 2 (D) San Diego...........................: 11 7 - - 11 7 8 (D) San Joaquin.........................: 2 (D) 2 (D) 2 (D) - - San Luis Obispo.....................: 21 386 3 5 21 380 8 380 San Mateo...........................: 4 4 - - 4 4 - - Santa Barbara.......................: 8 1,129 1 (D) 8 (D) 15 1,324 Santa Clara.........................: 23 20 2 (D) 23 (D) 3 (D) Santa Cruz..........................: 6 (D) - - 6 (D) 2 (D) : Shasta..............................: - - - - - - 4 2 Solano..............................: 2 (D) - - 2 (D) - - Sonoma..............................: 10 7 1 (D) 10 (D) 2 (D) Stanislaus..........................: 9 545 4 (D) 5 (D) 6 751 Trinity.............................: 2 (D) - - 2 (D) - - Tulare..............................: 4 (D) 2 (D) 2 (D) 5 823 Ventura.............................: 8 1,679 - - 8 1,679 11 1,056 Yolo................................: 5 19 - - 5 19 8 (D) : SQUASH, ALL : : State Total : : California..........................: 1,270 7,798 58 846 1,238 6,953 706 5,535 : Counties : : Alameda.............................: 10 10 - - 10 10 1 (D) Amador..............................: 6 1 - - 6 1 3 (Z) Butte...............................: 23 15 2 (D) 21 5 13 15 Calaveras...........................: 8 2 - - 8 2 2 (D) Colusa..............................: 1 (D) - - 1 (D) 1 (D) Contra Costa........................: 9 29 - - 9 29 3 (D) El Dorado...........................: 24 12 2 (D) 24 12 29 9 Fresno..............................: 97 1,403 6 140 91 1,263 81 754 Glenn...............................: 9 41 1 (D) 8 36 4 (D) Humboldt............................: 46 (D) 2 (D) 46 76 16 15 : Imperial............................: 8 71 - - 8 71 4 9 Inyo................................: 4 1 - - 4 1 - - Kern................................: 30 78 - - 30 78 11 12 Kings...............................: 3 1 - - 3 1 1 (D) Lake................................: 37 20 - - 37 20 7 4 Los Angeles.........................: 27 (D) 3 (D) 24 10 7 (D) Madera..............................: 5 (D) - - 5 (D) 1 (D) Marin...............................: 6 8 - - 6 8 5 4 Mariposa............................: 3 1 - - 3 1 - - Mendocino...........................: 43 26 4 1 39 25 21 13 : Merced..............................: 28 261 4 205 27 56 5 270 Monterey............................: 10 37 1 (D) 9 32 21 25 Napa................................: 25 6 - - 25 6 6 1 Nevada..............................: 30 17 - - 30 17 9 2 Orange..............................: 7 41 1 (D) 7 31 3 (D) Placer..............................: 30 16 1 (D) 30 14 12 5 Plumas..............................: 2 (D) - - 2 (D) 4 1 Riverside...........................: 26 455 - - 26 455 42 272 Sacramento..........................: 24 42 - - 24 42 11 37 San Benito..........................: 13 102 1 (D) 13 62 10 274 : San Bernardino......................: 16 64 - - 16 64 14 76 San Diego...........................: 73 (D) - - 73 164 44 185 San Joaquin.........................: 49 1,368 3 12 49 1,356 21 1,070 San Luis Obispo.....................: 92 495 3 30 89 465 66 546 San Mateo...........................: 19 18 6 9 13 9 6 12 Santa Barbara.......................: 68 814 10 160 68 654 37 322 Santa Clara.........................: 19 25 - - 19 (D) 12 137 Santa Cruz..........................: 33 134 1 (D) 32 134 19 212 Shasta..............................: 37 16 - - 37 16 11 14 Siskiyou............................: 8 2 - - 8 2 5 3 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ --continued Table 29. Vegetables, Potatoes, and Melons Harvested for Sale: 2012 and 2007 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ : 2012 : :-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------: 2007 : Harvested : Harvested for processing : Harvested for fresh market : harvested :----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Geographic area : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ SQUASH, ALL - Con. : : Counties - Con. : : Solano..............................: 17 248 - - 17 248 3 (D) Sonoma..............................: 87 265 1 (D) 87 265 49 123 Stanislaus..........................: 16 18 - - 16 18 16 (D) Sutter..............................: - - - - - - 7 183 Tehama..............................: 8 5 - - 8 5 12 5 Trinity.............................: 21 4 3 (Z) 18 4 2 (D) Tulare..............................: 52 (D) - - 52 220 15 283 Tuolumne............................: 9 2 - - 9 2 - - Ventura.............................: 7 25 1 (D) 6 5 17 86 Yolo................................: 36 531 2 (D) 36 336 13 75 Yuba................................: 9 3 - - 9 3 4 1 : SQUASH, SUMMER : : State Total : : California..........................: 1,021 4,439 35 268 1,003 4,171 580 3,523 : Counties : : Alameda.............................: 8 (D) - - 8 (D) 1 (D) Amador..............................: 6 1 - - 6 1 3 (Z) Butte...............................: 19 (D) - - 19 (D) 12 13 Calaveras...........................: 8 2 - - 8 2 2 (D) Colusa..............................: 1 (D) - - 1 (D) 1 (D) Contra Costa........................: 9 (D) - - 9 (D) 3 (D) El Dorado...........................: 23 (D) 2 (D) 23 (D) 22 4 Fresno..............................: 66 706 4 (D) 62 (D) 70 564 Glenn...............................: 7 (D) 1 (D) 6 (D) 3 1 Humboldt............................: 30 (D) - - 30 (D) 11 (D) : Imperial............................: 6 2 - - 6 2 4 9 Inyo................................: 4 (Z) - - 4 (Z) - - Kern................................: 26 66 - - 26 66 11 (D) Kings...............................: 3 (Z) - - 3 (Z) 1 (D) Lake................................: 27 11 - - 27 11 7 (D) Los Angeles.........................: 22 9 3 (D) 19 (D) 6 3 Madera..............................: 5 (D) - - 5 (D) 1 (D) Marin...............................: 6 7 - - 6 7 4 3 Mariposa............................: 3 (Z) - - 3 (Z) - - Mendocino...........................: 29 6 4 (Z) 25 6 20 3 : Merced..............................: 25 43 1 (D) 25 (D) 3 (D) Monterey............................: 9 (D) 1 (D) 8 (D) 17 14 Napa................................: 23 4 - - 23 4 5 (D) Nevada..............................: 20 3 - - 20 3 9 2 Orange..............................: 7 (D) 1 (D) 7 (D) 3 (D) Placer..............................: 26 (D) - - 26 (D) 7 2 Plumas..............................: - - - - - - 4 1 Riverside...........................: 22 353 - - 22 353 28 (D) Sacramento..........................: 19 26 - - 19 26 11 (D) San Benito..........................: 8 (D) - - 8 (D) 6 (D) : San Bernardino......................: 13 4 - - 13 4 9 (D) San Diego...........................: 56 (D) - - 56 (D) 32 (D) San Joaquin.........................: 33 455 3 12 33 443 14 430 San Luis Obispo.....................: 67 379 - - 67 379 59 (D) San Mateo...........................: 13 6 - - 13 6 5 (D) Santa Barbara.......................: 57 575 10 160 57 415 32 166 Santa Clara.........................: 19 (D) - - 19 (D) 11 135 Santa Cruz..........................: 29 126 1 (D) 28 (D) 13 (D) Shasta..............................: 36 10 - - 36 10 10 8 Siskiyou............................: 2 (D) - - 2 (D) - - : Solano..............................: 17 (D) - - 17 (D) 2 (D) Sonoma..............................: 69 (D) - - 69 (D) 41 (D) Stanislaus..........................: 16 12 - - 16 12 16 (D) Sutter..............................: - - - - - - 4 (D) Tehama..............................: 8 5 - - 8 5 9 (D) Trinity.............................: 21 3 3 (Z) 18 3 2 (D) Tulare..............................: 43 (D) - - 43 (D) 14 (D) Tuolumne............................: 9 1 - - 9 1 - - Ventura.............................: 7 (D) 1 (D) 6 (D) 17 83 Yolo................................: 31 (D) - - 31 (D) 11 (D) Yuba................................: 8 (D) - - 8 (D) 4 1 : SQUASH, WINTER : : State Total : : California..........................: 575 3,359 28 577 556 2,782 252 2,012 : Counties : : Alameda.............................: 2 (D) - - 2 (D) 1 (D) Butte...............................: 5 (D) 2 (D) 3 (D) 7 3 Colusa..............................: 1 (D) - - 1 (D) - - Contra Costa........................: 1 (D) - - 1 (D) - - El Dorado...........................: 8 (D) - - 8 (D) 11 5 Fresno..............................: 40 697 2 (D) 38 (D) 21 190 Glenn...............................: 2 (D) - - 2 (D) 4 (D) Humboldt............................: 22 (D) 2 (D) 22 (D) 8 (D) Imperial............................: 8 69 - - 8 69 - - Inyo................................: 4 (Z) - - 4 (Z) - - : Kern................................: 17 13 - - 17 13 2 (D) Kings...............................: 3 (Z) - - 3 (Z) - - ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ --continued Table 29. Vegetables, Potatoes, and Melons Harvested for Sale: 2012 and 2007 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ : 2012 : :-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------: 2007 : Harvested : Harvested for processing : Harvested for fresh market : harvested :----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Geographic area : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ SQUASH, WINTER - Con. : : Counties - Con. : : Lake................................: 17 10 - - 17 10 2 (D) Los Angeles.........................: 11 (D) - - 11 (D) 2 (D) Madera..............................: 3 9 - - 3 9 - - Marin...............................: 3 1 - - 3 1 3 2 Mariposa............................: 3 (Z) - - 3 (Z) - - Mendocino...........................: 22 20 4 (Z) 18 20 14 10 Merced..............................: 10 218 3 (D) 9 (D) 2 (D) Monterey............................: 3 (D) - - 3 (D) 4 11 Napa................................: 16 2 - - 16 2 2 (D) Nevada..............................: 23 14 - - 23 14 4 1 : Orange..............................: 2 (D) - - 2 (D) - - Placer..............................: 12 (D) 1 (D) 12 (D) 8 3 Plumas..............................: 2 (D) - - 2 (D) - - Riverside...........................: 13 102 - - 13 102 14 (D) Sacramento..........................: 10 15 - - 10 15 2 (D) San Benito..........................: 9 (D) 1 (D) 9 (D) 5 (D) San Bernardino......................: 3 61 - - 3 61 7 (D) San Diego...........................: 43 (D) - - 43 (D) 18 (D) San Joaquin.........................: 35 913 - - 35 913 7 640 San Luis Obispo.....................: 45 116 3 30 42 86 20 (D) : San Mateo...........................: 12 12 6 9 6 3 1 (D) Santa Barbara.......................: 16 240 - - 16 240 6 156 Santa Clara.........................: 10 (D) - - 10 (D) 4 2 Santa Cruz..........................: 15 8 1 (D) 14 (D) 7 (D) Shasta..............................: 7 6 - - 7 6 6 7 Siskiyou............................: 8 (D) - - 8 (D) 5 3 Solano..............................: 6 (D) - - 6 (D) 1 (D) Sonoma..............................: 46 (D) 1 (D) 46 (D) 26 (D) Stanislaus..........................: 6 6 - - 6 6 5 1 Sutter..............................: - - - - - - 3 (D) : Tehama..............................: - - - - - - 3 (D) Trinity.............................: 6 1 - - 6 1 2 (D) Tulare..............................: 17 (D) - - 17 (D) 2 (D) Tuolumne............................: 5 1 - - 5 1 - - Ventura.............................: 5 (D) - - 5 (D) 7 3 Yolo................................: 17 (D) 2 (D) 17 (D) 6 (D) Yuba................................: 1 (D) - - 1 (D) - - : SWEET CORN : : State Total : : California..........................: 441 32,667 12 561 438 32,106 330 24,866 : Counties : : Alameda.............................: 2 (D) - - 2 (D) 3 (D) Butte...............................: 3 (Z) - - 3 (Z) 5 (D) Calaveras...........................: - - - - - - 2 (D) Contra Costa........................: 10 3,481 1 (D) 10 (D) 6 3,396 El Dorado...........................: 3 (D) - - 3 (D) 6 1 Fresno..............................: 23 8,346 1 (D) 23 (D) 19 (D) Glenn...............................: 4 (Z) - - 4 (Z) 2 (D) Humboldt............................: 20 21 - - 20 21 10 18 Imperial............................: 16 5,838 - - 16 5,838 16 4,595 Kern................................: 4 43 - - 4 43 6 88 : Kings...............................: 6 (D) - - 6 (D) 4 4 Lake................................: 16 3 - - 16 3 - - Lassen..............................: 1 (D) - - 1 (D) - - Los Angeles.........................: 16 132 - - 16 132 6 135 Madera..............................: 2 (D) - - 2 (D) 2 (D) Marin...............................: - - - - - - 2 (D) Mendocino...........................: 14 22 - - 14 22 7 (D) Merced..............................: 8 2,092 - - 8 2,092 2 (D) Monterey............................: 2 (D) - - 2 (D) 18 (D) Napa................................: 7 1 - - 7 1 2 (D) : Nevada..............................: 8 7 - - 8 7 - - Orange..............................: 4 (D) - - 4 (D) 4 25 Placer..............................: 6 5 - - 6 5 1 (D) Riverside...........................: 14 4,837 1 (D) 14 (D) 12 2,046 Sacramento..........................: 18 647 2 (D) 16 (D) 12 448 San Benito..........................: 2 (D) - - 2 (D) 7 51 San Bernardino......................: 8 28 - - 8 28 4 56 San Diego...........................: 21 56 - - 21 56 15 39 San Joaquin.........................: 18 2,935 - - 18 2,935 25 2,646 San Luis Obispo.....................: 40 45 2 (D) 40 (D) 13 49 : San Mateo...........................: 1 (D) - - 1 (D) 2 (D) Santa Barbara.......................: 15 51 1 (D) 14 (D) 10 (D) Santa Clara.........................: 21 1,427 - - 21 1,427 15 2,171 Santa Cruz..........................: - - - - - - 1 (D) Shasta..............................: 10 3 - - 10 3 8 6 Siskiyou............................: 7 2 - - 7 2 4 4 Solano..............................: 6 (D) - - 6 (D) 5 (D) Sonoma..............................: 23 18 1 (D) 23 (D) 28 23 Stanislaus..........................: 5 (D) 3 2 5 (D) 3 (D) Sutter..............................: 1 (D) - - 1 (D) - - : Tehama..............................: 10 7 - - 10 7 - - Trinity.............................: 12 4 - - 12 4 7 3 Tulare..............................: 9 211 - - 9 211 14 198 Tuolumne............................: - - - - - - 1 (D) ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ --continued Table 29. Vegetables, Potatoes, and Melons Harvested for Sale: 2012 and 2007 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ : 2012 : :-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------: 2007 : Harvested : Harvested for processing : Harvested for fresh market : harvested :----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Geographic area : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ SWEET CORN - Con. : : Counties - Con. : : Ventura.............................: 5 (D) - - 5 (D) 5 (D) Yolo................................: 16 538 - - 16 538 9 463 Yuba................................: 4 1 - - 4 1 7 4 : SWEET POTATOES : : State Total : : California..........................: 188 18,189 27 2,571 183 15,618 92 13,644 : Counties : : Fresno..............................: - - - - - - 4 (D) Imperial............................: 2 (D) - - 2 (D) - - Kern................................: 5 335 - - 5 335 2 (D) Lake................................: 10 1 - - 10 1 - - Mendocino...........................: 4 (Z) - - 4 (Z) - - Merced..............................: 96 15,959 27 2,571 91 13,388 73 12,722 Napa................................: 6 1 - - 6 1 - - Orange..............................: 15 2 - - 15 2 2 (D) Riverside...........................: 3 9 - - 3 9 2 (D) San Bernardino......................: 8 3 - - 8 3 1 (D) : San Diego...........................: 2 (D) - - 2 (D) - - San Joaquin.........................: 1 (D) - - 1 (D) 2 (D) Santa Clara.........................: 2 (D) - - 2 (D) - - Solano..............................: 2 (D) - - 2 (D) - - Stanislaus..........................: 12 1,207 - - 12 1,207 2 (D) Trinity.............................: 2 (D) - - 2 (D) - - Tulare..............................: 8 3 - - 8 3 3 8 Yolo................................: 3 1 - - 3 1 - - Yuba................................: 7 1 - - 7 1 1 (D) : TOMATOES IN THE OPEN : : State Total : : California..........................: 3,176 295,247 631 256,051 2,759 39,196 1,782 335,133 : Counties : : Alameda.............................: 35 17 2 (D) 35 (D) 7 3 Amador..............................: 24 5 - - 24 5 5 2 Butte...............................: 52 17 - - 52 17 24 15 Calaveras...........................: 14 4 3 (Z) 14 4 15 13 Colusa..............................: 13 11,507 11 (D) 2 (D) 16 17,283 Contra Costa........................: 57 (D) 5 (D) 56 84 19 1,608 Del Norte...........................: 3 5 - - 3 5 2 (D) El Dorado...........................: 93 49 17 12 79 37 49 20 Fresno..............................: 290 93,967 157 89,256 143 4,711 284 109,758 Glenn...............................: 9 (D) 1 (D) 8 3 5 (D) : Humboldt............................: 91 66 11 2 85 64 26 24 Imperial............................: 6 (D) 1 (D) 5 3 5 47 Inyo................................: 14 2 - - 14 2 - - Kern................................: 57 10,495 16 9,217 42 1,278 35 13,803 Kings...............................: 27 20,605 20 19,049 10 1,557 36 24,654 Lake................................: 59 18 - - 59 18 13 6 Lassen..............................: 1 (D) - - 1 (D) - - Los Angeles.........................: 90 50 13 13 86 36 34 53 Madera..............................: 23 4,439 7 (D) 16 (D) 21 2,900 Marin...............................: 31 24 3 (Z) 31 23 10 7 : Mariposa............................: 3 (Z) - - 3 (Z) 2 (D) Mendocino...........................: 81 36 6 9 78 27 42 19 Merced..............................: 105 34,457 46 21,050 89 13,408 55 35,644 Monterey............................: 51 4,313 3 524 49 3,789 42 2,511 Napa................................: 44 17 - - 44 17 13 10 Nevada..............................: 100 49 9 6 95 43 31 15 Orange..............................: 37 38 - - 37 38 16 31 Placer..............................: 85 47 5 3 85 44 34 19 Plumas..............................: - - - - - - 2 (D) Riverside...........................: 67 333 5 2 66 330 38 47 : Sacramento..........................: 104 2,056 27 (D) 99 (D) 30 3,785 San Benito..........................: 36 1,527 3 994 34 533 18 1,207 San Bernardino......................: 61 26 7 4 61 22 32 31 San Diego...........................: 190 809 13 7 190 803 96 1,528 San Joaquin.........................: 121 30,942 58 25,559 77 5,383 114 39,247 San Luis Obispo.....................: 117 439 5 144 115 296 74 (D) San Mateo...........................: 2 (D) - - 2 (D) 5 16 Santa Barbara.......................: 70 719 9 62 68 657 29 322 Santa Clara.........................: 66 2,040 7 (D) 66 (D) 32 1,248 Santa Cruz..........................: 44 169 9 (D) 41 (D) 25 87 : Shasta..............................: 74 41 12 3 74 39 18 14 Siskiyou............................: 15 9 1 (D) 14 (D) 13 4 Solano..............................: 55 10,341 18 10,258 37 83 38 9,298 Sonoma..............................: 242 176 14 5 242 171 103 162 Stanislaus..........................: 82 9,814 35 9,272 52 542 59 12,836 Sutter..............................: 25 13,051 13 12,960 12 91 20 8,296 Tehama..............................: 41 18 4 2 41 16 17 7 Trinity.............................: 47 13 12 3 37 11 15 7 Tulare..............................: 59 176 3 22 59 155 28 66 Tuolumne............................: 14 6 - - 14 6 6 (D) Ventura.............................: 37 883 2 (D) 37 (D) 41 1,678 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ --continued Table 29. Vegetables, Potatoes, and Melons Harvested for Sale: 2012 and 2007 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ : 2012 : :-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------: 2007 : Harvested : Harvested for processing : Harvested for fresh market : harvested :----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Geographic area : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ TOMATOES IN THE OPEN - Con. : : Counties - Con. : : Yolo................................: 82 39,269 33 37,855 51 1,414 77 45,103 Yuba................................: 30 19 5 6 25 13 11 6 : TURNIP GREENS : : State Total : : California..........................: 38 71 - - 38 71 9 (D) : Counties : : Butte...............................: 3 (Z) - - 3 (Z) - - Fresno..............................: 12 20 - - 12 20 2 (D) Glenn...............................: - - - - - - 2 (D) Kern................................: 1 (D) - - 1 (D) 1 (D) Los Angeles.........................: 5 1 - - 5 1 - - Merced..............................: - - - - - - 1 (D) Monterey............................: 1 (D) - - 1 (D) - - Nevada..............................: 1 (D) - - 1 (D) - - San Diego...........................: 7 9 - - 7 9 1 (D) Solano..............................: 1 (D) - - 1 (D) - - : Sonoma..............................: 2 (D) - - 2 (D) - - Stanislaus..........................: 1 (D) - - 1 (D) 2 (D) Yolo................................: 4 2 - - 4 2 - - : TURNIPS : : State Total : : California..........................: 103 386 4 2 101 384 44 246 : Counties : : Butte...............................: 4 1 - - 4 1 - - Contra Costa........................: 4 (Z) - - 4 (Z) - - Fresno..............................: 11 26 - - 11 26 12 107 Glenn...............................: - - - - - - 2 (D) Humboldt............................: 6 5 - - 6 5 1 (D) Imperial............................: 3 (D) - - 3 (D) 1 (D) Kern................................: 3 (D) - - 3 (D) 2 (D) Madera..............................: 1 (D) - - 1 (D) - - Marin...............................: 1 (D) - - 1 (D) 2 (D) Mendocino...........................: 4 (Z) 2 (D) 2 (D) 2 (D) : Merced..............................: 4 4 - - 4 4 - - Monterey............................: 1 (D) - - 1 (D) 1 (D) Nevada..............................: 5 2 - - 5 2 - - Placer..............................: 1 (D) - - 1 (D) 2 (D) Plumas..............................: 2 (D) - - 2 (D) - - Riverside...........................: 2 (D) - - 2 (D) - - San Benito..........................: 4 1 - - 4 1 - - San Bernardino......................: 1 (D) - - 1 (D) 2 (D) San Diego...........................: 11 7 - - 11 7 2 (D) San Joaquin.........................: 4 8 - - 4 8 - - : San Luis Obispo.....................: 4 2 - - 4 2 - - San Mateo...........................: 1 (D) - - 1 (D) - - Santa Barbara.......................: - - - - - - 2 (D) Santa Clara.........................: 3 (Z) - - 3 (Z) - - Santa Cruz..........................: 2 (D) - - 2 (D) - - Shasta..............................: 2 (D) - - 2 (D) - - Solano..............................: 3 (D) - - 3 (D) - - Sonoma..............................: 6 3 - - 6 3 5 2 Stanislaus..........................: 1 (D) - - 1 (D) 1 (D) Tulare..............................: 1 (D) - - 1 (D) - - : Ventura.............................: 2 (D) - - 2 (D) 2 (D) Yolo................................: 6 4 2 (D) 6 (D) 5 (D) : WATERCRESS : : State Total : : California..........................: 20 229 (X) (X) 20 229 17 151 : Counties : : Fresno..............................: - - (X) (X) - - 2 (D) Kings...............................: 2 (D) (X) (X) 2 (D) - - Los Angeles.........................: 1 (D) (X) (X) 1 (D) - - Napa................................: - - (X) (X) - - 1 (D) Riverside...........................: - - (X) (X) - - 2 (D) Sacramento..........................: 6 6 (X) (X) 6 6 - - San Benito..........................: 1 (D) (X) (X) 1 (D) 1 (D) San Diego...........................: - - (X) (X) - - 2 (D) Santa Barbara.......................: 3 (Z) (X) (X) 3 (Z) - - Santa Clara.........................: - - (X) (X) - - 1 (D) : Santa Cruz..........................: - - (X) (X) - - 1 (D) Solano..............................: - - (X) (X) - - 1 (D) Sonoma..............................: 1 (D) (X) (X) 1 (D) 3 (D) Sutter..............................: 1 (D) (X) (X) 1 (D) - - Ventura.............................: 5 185 (X) (X) 5 185 3 (D) ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ --continued Table 29. Vegetables, Potatoes, and Melons Harvested for Sale: 2012 and 2007 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ : 2012 : :-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------: 2007 : Harvested : Harvested for processing : Harvested for fresh market : harvested :----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Geographic area : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ WATERMELONS : : State Total : : California..........................: 381 13,360 4 100 377 13,260 276 10,977 : Counties : : Alameda.............................: - - - - - - 1 (D) Butte...............................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - 2 (D) Colusa..............................: 4 1,322 - - 4 1,322 5 420 Contra Costa........................: 4 4 - - 4 4 1 (D) El Dorado...........................: 4 2 - - 4 2 6 1 Fresno..............................: 37 1,350 - - 37 1,350 35 1,885 Glenn...............................: 6 1,007 - - 6 1,007 3 (D) Humboldt............................: 12 3 - - 12 3 6 2 Imperial............................: 12 1,386 - - 12 1,386 8 1,139 Inyo................................: 4 2 - - 4 2 - - : Kern................................: 30 1,883 2 (D) 28 (D) 27 2,365 Kings...............................: 2 (D) - - 2 (D) 3 7 Lake................................: 4 1 - - 4 1 1 (D) Lassen..............................: 3 4 - - 3 4 - - Los Angeles.........................: 3 1 - - 3 1 1 (D) Madera..............................: 5 16 - - 5 16 4 47 Mendocino...........................: 12 24 - - 12 24 7 1 Merced..............................: 12 15 - - 12 15 5 11 Monterey............................: 3 (D) - - 3 (D) 3 798 Napa................................: 6 1 - - 6 1 1 (D) : Nevada..............................: 8 1 - - 8 1 2 (D) Orange..............................: 2 (D) - - 2 (D) 2 (D) Placer..............................: 3 6 - - 3 6 13 9 Riverside...........................: 15 1,086 - - 15 1,086 27 1,389 Sacramento..........................: 6 (D) - - 6 (D) 4 (D) San Benito..........................: - - - - - - 2 (D) San Bernardino......................: 4 8 - - 4 8 11 185 San Diego...........................: 33 46 - - 33 46 13 22 San Joaquin.........................: 23 3,048 - - 23 3,048 9 1,642 San Luis Obispo.....................: 18 19 - - 18 19 10 16 : San Mateo...........................: 1 (D) - - 1 (D) - - Santa Barbara.......................: 4 (D) - - 4 (D) - - Santa Clara.........................: 5 2 - - 5 2 5 3 Shasta..............................: 19 6 - - 19 6 5 2 Siskiyou............................: 8 3 - - 8 3 6 1 Solano..............................: 6 11 - - 6 11 4 (D) Sonoma..............................: 13 5 - - 13 5 8 5 Stanislaus..........................: 7 (D) - - 7 (D) 5 (D) Sutter..............................: 8 543 - - 8 543 3 (D) Tehama..............................: 3 (Z) - - 3 (Z) 12 17 : Trinity.............................: 2 (D) - - 2 (D) 2 (D) Tulare..............................: 16 33 - - 16 33 3 13 Ventura.............................: - - - - - - 2 (D) Yolo................................: 11 73 - - 11 73 8 113 Yuba................................: 1 (D) - - 1 (D) 1 (D) : OTHER VEGETABLES : (SEE TEXT) : : State Total : : California..........................: 1,154 48,325 108 14,914 1,117 33,411 540 21,031 : Counties : : Alameda.............................: 3 3 - - 3 3 1 (D) Amador..............................: 8 6 - - 8 6 1 (D) Butte...............................: 14 58 2 (D) 12 (D) 9 36 Calaveras...........................: 13 27 5 13 13 15 1 (D) Colusa..............................: - - - - - - 1 (D) Contra Costa........................: 9 13 - - 9 13 1 (D) Del Norte...........................: 4 4 - - 4 4 1 (D) El Dorado...........................: 16 36 - - 16 36 3 1 Fresno..............................: 100 1,646 6 399 95 1,247 117 1,401 Glenn...............................: 3 3 - - 3 3 - - : Humboldt............................: 33 14 - - 33 14 11 8 Imperial............................: 12 14,014 3 (D) 9 (D) 8 (D) Kern................................: 13 (D) - - 13 (D) 9 2,356 Kings...............................: 2 (D) - - 2 (D) 2 (D) Lake................................: 7 5 - - 7 5 1 (D) Los Angeles.........................: 55 12,062 2 (D) 55 (D) 15 48 Madera..............................: 12 15 6 (D) 12 (D) 3 3 Marin...............................: 17 23 2 (D) 15 (D) 8 22 Mariposa............................: - - - - - - 2 (D) Mendocino...........................: 40 42 9 (D) 33 (D) 7 (D) : Merced..............................: 32 302 17 97 32 205 14 61 Monterey............................: 45 8,344 5 2,739 41 5,606 25 8,634 Napa................................: 9 16 - - 9 16 6 2 Nevada..............................: 21 35 - - 21 35 3 1 Orange..............................: 17 3 - - 17 3 - - Placer..............................: 16 12 - - 16 12 13 22 Plumas..............................: 2 (D) - - 2 (D) - - Riverside...........................: 44 918 2 (D) 44 (D) 16 333 Sacramento..........................: 24 63 4 (Z) 24 62 10 24 San Benito..........................: 15 1,235 3 302 12 933 2 (D) San Bernardino......................: 36 185 - - 36 185 15 149 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ --continued Table 29. Vegetables, Potatoes, and Melons Harvested for Sale: 2012 and 2007 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ : 2012 : :-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------: 2007 : Harvested : Harvested for processing : Harvested for fresh market : harvested :----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Geographic area : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ OTHER VEGETABLES : (SEE TEXT) - Con. : : Counties - Con. : : San Diego...........................: 71 220 6 3 65 217 21 165 San Joaquin.........................: 25 140 6 12 25 128 13 (D) San Luis Obispo.....................: 50 732 2 (D) 49 (D) 13 332 San Mateo...........................: 24 378 1 (D) 24 (D) 11 341 Santa Barbara.......................: 20 (D) - - 20 (D) 22 439 Santa Clara.........................: 79 473 12 35 79 439 28 179 Santa Cruz..........................: 19 (D) 2 (D) 17 (D) 19 (D) Shasta..............................: 13 5 - - 13 5 14 9 Siskiyou............................: 15 16 - - 15 16 3 3 Solano..............................: 9 49 2 (D) 9 (D) 2 (D) : Sonoma..............................: 65 148 1 (D) 65 (D) 29 59 Stanislaus..........................: 16 214 1 (D) 15 (D) 4 (D) Sutter..............................: 12 19 - - 12 19 2 (D) Tehama..............................: 15 9 - - 15 9 5 1 Trinity.............................: 11 5 - - 11 5 4 6 Tulare..............................: 35 595 2 (D) 35 (D) 14 19 Tuolumne............................: 3 6 - - 3 6 3 3 Ventura.............................: 21 1,747 2 (D) 21 (D) 20 1,304 Yolo................................: 19 252 1 (D) 18 (D) 8 85 Yuba................................: 10 16 4 5 10 11 - - ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Table 30. Land in Orchards: 2012 and 2007 [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : 2012 : 2007 :--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : Total : Irrigated : Total : Irrigated :--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Geographic area : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- State Total : : California..............................: 38,098 3,138,943 34,580 3,072,245 39,484 2,826,291 32,908 2,728,176 : Counties : : Alameda.................................: 113 6,228 96 6,063 167 4,074 138 3,932 Alpine..................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - - - Amador..................................: 161 3,849 130 3,160 164 3,975 115 2,945 Butte...................................: 1,162 93,629 1,073 91,648 1,113 90,083 893 86,490 Calaveras...............................: 153 3,068 111 2,019 134 1,782 97 1,454 Colusa..................................: 306 59,424 294 58,306 314 52,442 289 51,853 Contra Costa............................: 211 6,771 170 6,232 212 4,889 161 4,210 Del Norte...............................: 1 (D) - - 5 9 - - El Dorado...............................: 580 3,926 494 3,370 494 3,954 391 3,239 Fresno..................................: 3,753 529,516 3,585 519,372 4,008 471,825 3,503 459,219 : Glenn...................................: 622 94,701 597 93,129 566 71,905 495 70,663 Humboldt................................: 148 428 79 224 110 404 57 217 Imperial................................: 41 6,354 33 6,323 56 8,627 56 8,627 Inyo....................................: 6 (D) 2 (D) 7 31 7 (D) Kern....................................: 823 450,716 797 450,229 836 407,208 836 406,988 Kings...................................: 413 77,038 399 76,638 434 57,435 434 57,396 Lake....................................: 533 15,410 319 12,502 549 15,089 267 11,461 Lassen..................................: 18 87 17 (D) 13 220 10 189 Los Angeles.............................: 298 1,826 243 1,765 317 1,954 317 1,937 Madera..................................: 928 222,444 911 222,192 1,023 191,155 1,023 190,976 : Marin...................................: 65 794 48 429 43 252 33 218 Mariposa................................: 46 518 33 467 24 134 19 110 Mendocino...............................: 510 20,853 419 19,590 502 20,188 371 18,051 Merced..................................: 1,197 160,612 1,119 155,365 1,276 144,863 1,163 142,397 Modoc...................................: 3 (D) 3 (D) 7 52 7 52 Mono....................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) Monterey................................: 273 60,056 233 59,766 277 43,998 254 43,600 Napa....................................: 1,454 50,527 1,284 47,820 1,464 50,533 1,154 45,453 Nevada..................................: 158 559 121 498 125 548 92 383 Orange..................................: 102 2,846 102 2,846 74 2,021 74 2,005 : Placer..................................: 329 1,752 277 1,501 296 1,525 230 1,306 Plumas..................................: - - - - 2 (D) - - Riverside...............................: 1,540 44,894 1,449 43,875 1,688 54,070 1,596 53,327 Sacramento..............................: 232 28,362 232 28,348 231 28,785 231 28,752 San Benito..............................: 192 7,215 169 6,949 218 7,447 172 6,808 San Bernardino..........................: 460 5,855 414 5,180 472 5,320 472 5,287 San Diego...............................: 4,124 32,887 3,749 30,497 4,685 49,160 3,739 43,273 San Francisco...........................: 2 (D) - - - - - - San Joaquin.............................: 2,327 238,036 2,254 237,113 2,334 187,613 2,001 180,025 San Luis Obispo.........................: 1,108 52,739 860 48,687 1,165 53,670 829 47,327 : San Mateo...............................: 56 217 41 139 36 394 20 320 Santa Barbara...........................: 735 33,541 670 32,220 787 28,044 645 26,548 Santa Clara.............................: 366 3,598 280 2,938 395 4,228 264 3,409 Santa Cruz..............................: 271 4,274 193 3,256 292 3,658 154 2,368 Shasta..................................: 298 1,911 232 1,463 273 1,761 176 1,253 Sierra..................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) 2 (D) 2 (D) Siskiyou................................: 23 166 21 (D) 31 146 31 146 Solano..................................: 318 19,869 276 19,568 308 18,264 245 17,577 Sonoma..................................: 2,029 66,107 1,667 61,381 2,061 68,425 1,531 61,183 Stanislaus..............................: 2,293 186,029 2,169 182,466 2,236 172,288 1,932 165,116 : Sutter..................................: 839 75,020 783 71,855 782 68,021 664 65,029 Tehama..................................: 614 47,806 568 46,096 651 37,422 512 35,529 Trinity.................................: 62 271 46 230 48 222 30 170 Tulare..................................: 3,448 294,735 3,282 287,863 3,671 274,351 3,081 263,594 Tuolumne................................: 65 404 54 370 48 264 37 217 Ventura.................................: 1,622 42,998 1,527 42,027 1,807 52,983 1,433 47,520 Yolo....................................: 401 49,418 389 49,383 402 34,483 402 34,460 Yuba....................................: 262 28,572 262 28,572 248 24,082 222 23,532 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Table 31. Fruits and Nuts: 2012 and 2007 [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : Total : Bearing age acres : Nonbearing age acres :----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Geographic area : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- NONCITRUS, ALL : : State Total : : California..........................2012: 23,941 1,346,040 22,327 1,217,426 7,367 128,614 2007: 24,910 1,312,993 23,669 1,190,005 7,817 122,989 : Counties, 2012 : : Alameda.................................: 102 5,414 93 5,261 20 153 Alpine..................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Amador..................................: 150 3,573 136 3,145 47 428 Butte...................................: 356 14,958 315 13,035 139 1,923 Calaveras...............................: 127 2,210 110 2,029 38 181 Colusa..................................: 41 4,002 36 3,270 13 732 Contra Costa............................: 176 5,823 163 5,498 60 325 Del Norte...............................: 1 (D) - - 1 (D) El Dorado...............................: 536 3,522 454 3,217 219 304 Fresno..................................: 2,710 273,623 2,638 254,656 607 18,967 : Glenn...................................: 285 19,073 278 12,253 61 6,820 Humboldt................................: 146 367 130 308 58 59 Imperial................................: 29 1,487 19 1,098 14 389 Inyo....................................: 5 (D) 5 (D) 1 (D) Kern....................................: 357 138,999 329 128,484 128 10,514 Kings...................................: 128 18,012 120 16,376 39 1,637 Lake....................................: 243 10,550 222 10,037 65 512 Lassen..................................: 17 (D) 15 42 10 (D) Los Angeles.............................: 256 1,291 233 1,113 89 179 Madera..................................: 438 82,987 428 77,248 103 5,739 : Marin...................................: 54 673 43 624 16 49 Mariposa................................: 46 (D) 40 409 10 (D) Mendocino...............................: 503 20,629 488 19,133 149 1,495 Merced..................................: 169 31,377 153 27,399 66 3,978 Modoc...................................: 3 (D) 3 (D) 3 (D) Mono....................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Monterey................................: 252 57,232 242 53,768 71 3,464 Napa....................................: 1,433 50,374 1,409 45,188 332 5,187 Nevada..................................: 156 539 135 474 73 64 Orange..................................: 77 1,667 68 1,596 27 71 : Placer..................................: 203 985 164 829 81 157 Riverside...............................: 1,085 27,156 976 24,185 435 2,972 Sacramento..............................: 200 27,447 161 23,280 74 4,167 San Benito..............................: 139 5,698 128 5,146 52 552 San Bernardino..........................: 180 1,243 152 1,092 79 151 San Diego...............................: 3,280 23,128 3,059 20,008 1,129 3,119 San Francisco...........................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - San Joaquin.............................: 1,211 133,332 1,150 118,450 376 14,882 San Luis Obispo.........................: 979 46,870 882 42,498 301 4,372 San Mateo...............................: 55 (D) 50 167 12 (D) : Santa Barbara...........................: 701 30,061 673 27,478 202 2,583 Santa Clara.............................: 320 3,025 296 2,747 81 279 Santa Cruz..............................: 267 4,236 242 3,802 86 434 Shasta..................................: 217 1,255 166 1,097 105 158 Sierra..................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) Siskiyou................................: 18 (D) 15 40 7 (D) Solano..................................: 176 5,511 162 4,552 61 959 Sonoma..................................: 2,003 65,911 1,944 60,969 473 4,942 Stanislaus..............................: 376 18,238 340 16,001 121 2,237 Sutter..................................: 309 29,425 280 25,663 123 3,763 : Tehama..................................: 410 17,235 374 13,992 132 3,243 Trinity.................................: 57 270 54 255 23 15 Tulare..................................: 1,356 107,434 1,266 97,747 380 9,687 Tuolumne................................: 62 (D) 40 135 37 (D) Ventura.................................: 1,224 18,625 1,156 16,916 413 1,709 Yolo....................................: 146 18,005 132 14,646 56 3,358 Yuba....................................: 165 11,582 154 10,022 68 1,560 : APPLES : : State Total : : California..........................2012: 2,527 18,205 1,984 15,988 980 2,217 2007: 2,074 22,184 1,850 20,954 536 1,230 : Counties, 2012 : : Alameda.................................: 4 (D) 2 (D) 2 (D) Alpine..................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Amador..................................: 16 19 6 17 10 3 Butte...................................: 39 43 32 37 17 7 Calaveras...............................: 22 188 15 150 14 37 Colusa..................................: 9 10 6 4 4 7 Contra Costa............................: 20 (D) 15 (D) 7 6 Del Norte...............................: 1 (D) - - 1 (D) El Dorado...............................: 239 839 185 743 115 96 Fresno..................................: 70 768 67 699 16 69 : Glenn...................................: 10 7 10 (D) 1 (D) Humboldt................................: 81 112 67 98 27 14 Inyo....................................: 4 (D) 4 (D) - - Kern....................................: 57 2,351 50 2,052 19 299 Kings...................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Lake....................................: 23 28 19 27 6 1 Lassen..................................: 11 26 7 24 6 1 Los Angeles.............................: 46 97 35 91 18 6 Madera..................................: 16 690 11 681 8 9 Marin...................................: 17 22 11 6 6 16 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 31. Fruits and Nuts: 2012 and 2007 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : Total : Bearing age acres : Nonbearing age acres :----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Geographic area : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- APPLES - Con. : : Counties, 2012 - Con. : : Mariposa................................: 13 (D) 13 41 1 (D) Mendocino...............................: 113 540 101 416 33 123 Merced..................................: 15 (D) 4 (D) 12 1 Modoc...................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) Monterey................................: 35 258 26 244 10 14 Napa....................................: 18 12 15 11 6 1 Nevada..................................: 66 96 51 81 37 15 Orange..................................: 8 3 5 2 3 (Z) Placer..................................: 70 73 44 56 38 17 Riverside...............................: 84 113 43 87 49 26 : Sacramento..............................: 38 629 25 532 16 96 San Benito..............................: 16 288 12 252 7 36 San Bernardino..........................: 63 288 53 242 26 46 San Diego...............................: 202 446 143 334 88 112 San Joaquin.............................: 50 1,625 47 1,312 21 313 San Luis Obispo.........................: 166 508 132 453 49 55 San Mateo...............................: 19 30 14 25 8 6 Santa Barbara...........................: 29 97 28 (D) 1 (D) Santa Clara.............................: 27 157 18 154 9 3 Santa Cruz..............................: 133 2,423 122 2,273 35 150 : Shasta..................................: 100 182 53 138 72 44 Sierra..................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) Siskiyou................................: 12 24 10 20 4 4 Solano..................................: 14 158 14 (D) 6 (D) Sonoma..................................: 270 2,393 252 2,204 61 188 Stanislaus..............................: 55 700 49 (D) 19 (D) Sutter..................................: 7 (D) 7 16 3 (D) Tehama..................................: 19 10 16 9 4 (Z) Trinity.................................: 32 19 25 17 9 2 Tulare..................................: 47 528 42 497 19 30 : Tuolumne................................: 30 88 14 54 22 34 Ventura.................................: 41 655 31 (D) 14 (D) Yolo....................................: 14 163 5 135 11 27 Yuba....................................: 31 19 23 16 8 3 : APRICOTS : : State Total : : California..........................2012: 703 10,751 595 9,503 242 1,248 2007: 775 11,290 670 10,683 221 607 : Counties, 2012 : : Alameda.................................: 7 3 7 3 - - Amador..................................: 1 (D) - - 1 (D) Butte...................................: 11 (D) 5 (D) 6 1 Colusa..................................: 5 2 5 2 - - Contra Costa............................: 24 1,088 24 1,085 6 4 El Dorado...............................: 19 3 1 (D) 19 (D) Fresno..................................: 63 1,962 59 1,690 13 272 Glenn...................................: 8 14 8 (D) 1 (D) Humboldt................................: 4 (D) - - 4 (D) Inyo....................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - : Kern....................................: 21 355 17 (D) 5 (D) Kings...................................: 10 338 10 (D) 2 (D) Los Angeles.............................: 15 23 15 21 6 1 Madera..................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) Marin...................................: 3 (Z) - - 3 (Z) Merced..................................: 19 601 19 566 4 35 Monterey................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Nevada..................................: 5 5 5 (D) 2 (D) Placer..................................: 14 5 9 4 7 2 Riverside...............................: 24 37 15 27 12 10 : Sacramento..............................: 10 7 7 3 5 4 San Benito..............................: 60 562 56 538 16 24 San Bernardino..........................: 7 3 5 1 6 2 San Diego...............................: 29 10 23 9 7 2 San Joaquin.............................: 27 752 26 734 9 19 San Luis Obispo.........................: 30 45 25 39 10 5 San Mateo...............................: 6 12 6 12 - - Santa Barbara...........................: 4 (D) 3 (D) 1 (D) Santa Clara.............................: 49 328 49 305 11 24 Shasta..................................: 18 7 3 4 17 2 : Solano..................................: 26 104 24 93 10 10 Sonoma..................................: 9 4 7 (D) 2 (D) Stanislaus..............................: 65 3,576 59 3,016 22 560 Sutter..................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Tehama..................................: 13 7 11 (D) 2 (D) Tulare..................................: 48 704 48 666 15 38 Tuolumne................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Ventura.................................: 13 44 10 41 6 3 Yolo....................................: 17 77 16 56 6 20 Yuba....................................: 12 25 11 24 5 1 : AVOCADOS : : State Total : : California..........................2012: 5,602 59,814 5,238 52,026 1,834 7,789 2007: 6,230 74,767 5,906 65,453 2,322 9,314 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 31. Fruits and Nuts: 2012 and 2007 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : Total : Bearing age acres : Nonbearing age acres :----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Geographic area : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- AVOCADOS - Con. : : Counties, 2012 : : Butte...................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) Colusa..................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - El Dorado...............................: 10 1 7 1 3 (Z) Fresno..................................: 6 257 5 (D) 2 (D) Humboldt................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Kern....................................: 8 70 5 (D) 4 (D) Los Angeles.............................: 80 221 75 200 25 21 Mendocino...............................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Merced..................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) Monterey................................: 21 225 17 219 11 6 : Napa....................................: 3 (D) 3 (D) - - Orange..................................: 54 1,495 48 1,442 16 53 Placer..................................: 6 1 - - 6 1 Riverside...............................: 670 6,883 626 5,678 232 1,205 San Benito..............................: 5 9 5 9 - - San Bernardino..........................: 68 274 48 (D) 36 (D) San Diego...............................: 2,778 20,506 2,614 17,932 918 2,574 San Joaquin.............................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - San Luis Obispo.........................: 216 5,141 194 3,364 75 1,776 San Mateo...............................: 5 11 2 (D) 3 (D) : Santa Barbara...........................: 466 7,171 455 6,674 126 496 Santa Clara.............................: 7 1 3 (Z) 4 1 Santa Cruz..............................: 18 52 18 52 - - Siskiyou................................: 1 (D) - - 1 (D) Sonoma..................................: 2 (D) - - 2 (D) Stanislaus..............................: 2 (D) - - 2 (D) Tehama..................................: 2 (D) - - 2 (D) Tulare..................................: 37 304 35 253 9 52 Ventura.................................: 1,129 17,053 1,070 15,594 355 1,459 : BANANAS : : State Total : : California..........................2012: 11 14 11 (D) 1 (D) 2007: 15 44 4 (D) 11 (D) : Counties, 2012 : : Los Angeles.............................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - San Diego...............................: 3 (D) 3 2 1 (D) San Luis Obispo.........................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Santa Barbara...........................: 5 4 5 4 - - : CHERRIES, SWEET : : State Total : : California..........................2012: 1,226 37,944 975 32,786 531 5,158 2007: 1,291 30,433 1,115 24,091 450 6,341 : Counties, 2012 : : Amador..................................: 6 1 - - 6 1 Butte...................................: 8 3 5 1 4 2 Calaveras...............................: 7 (D) 3 (D) 5 56 Colusa..................................: 3 6 - - 3 6 Contra Costa............................: 30 705 24 480 15 225 El Dorado...............................: 43 55 20 32 33 23 Fresno..................................: 101 3,809 80 2,438 57 1,371 Glenn...................................: 6 16 6 16 - - Humboldt................................: 10 5 3 2 10 3 Inyo....................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - : Kern....................................: 51 5,471 42 5,317 22 153 Kings...................................: 14 1,361 14 (D) 2 (D) Lake....................................: 4 (D) - - 4 (D) Lassen..................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Los Angeles.............................: 22 (D) 21 (D) 8 5 Madera..................................: 12 485 12 (D) 4 (D) Mendocino...............................: 3 2 - - 3 2 Merced..................................: 21 474 19 411 9 64 Monterey................................: 3 3 - - 3 3 Nevada..................................: 14 3 7 1 7 2 : Placer..................................: 25 9 14 4 14 5 Riverside...............................: 22 33 13 25 10 8 Sacramento..............................: 33 971 21 843 18 128 San Benito..............................: 15 754 12 743 8 11 San Bernardino..........................: 10 23 6 22 4 1 San Diego...............................: 4 2 4 2 - - San Joaquin.............................: 400 17,468 372 15,796 132 1,673 San Luis Obispo.........................: 7 (D) 6 (D) 5 1 San Mateo...............................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Santa Barbara...........................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - : Santa Clara.............................: 42 893 39 758 12 135 Santa Cruz..............................: 4 (D) 4 51 2 (D) Shasta..................................: 20 13 8 6 15 7 Solano..................................: 10 41 9 (D) 4 (D) Sonoma..................................: 7 1 7 1 - - Stanislaus..............................: 99 2,320 93 1,888 30 432 Sutter..................................: 16 29 12 27 9 2 Tehama..................................: 9 3 6 2 3 1 Trinity.................................: 3 (D) - - 3 (D) Tulare..................................: 103 2,114 70 1,802 47 312 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 31. Fruits and Nuts: 2012 and 2007 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : Total : Bearing age acres : Nonbearing age acres :----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Geographic area : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- CHERRIES, SWEET - Con. : : Counties, 2012 - Con. : : Tuolumne................................: 11 2 2 (D) 9 (D) Ventura.................................: 4 15 1 (D) 3 (D) Yolo....................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Yuba....................................: 18 (D) 14 (D) 8 (D) : CHERRIES, TART : : State Total : : California..........................2012: 44 28 21 13 36 16 2007: 38 19 28 13 14 7 : Counties, 2012 : : Alameda.................................: 5 1 - - 5 1 El Dorado...............................: 6 2 6 2 - - Fresno..................................: 1 (D) - - 1 (D) Humboldt................................: 6 5 6 5 6 1 Los Angeles.............................: 5 2 1 (D) 5 (D) Madera..................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Nevada..................................: 1 (D) - - 1 (D) San Bernardino..........................: 3 1 3 (Z) 3 1 Shasta..................................: 6 1 - - 6 1 Siskiyou................................: 2 (D) - - 2 (D) : Solano..................................: 3 2 3 (D) 3 (D) Sutter..................................: 4 (Z) - - 4 (Z) : DATES : : State Total : : California..........................2012: 169 7,257 148 6,090 91 1,167 2007: 151 6,315 124 5,131 85 1,184 : Counties, 2012 : : Imperial................................: 25 1,165 16 (D) 13 (D) Inyo....................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) Kern....................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Orange..................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) Riverside...............................: 136 6,001 124 5,193 74 809 Stanislaus..............................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Tulare..................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Yolo....................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) 2 (D) : FIGS : : State Total : : California..........................2012: 325 6,787 240 6,071 133 716 2007: 302 9,384 240 9,069 85 315 : Counties, 2012 : : Butte...................................: 5 2 4 (D) 1 (D) Colusa..................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Contra Costa............................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - El Dorado...............................: 18 (D) 9 (D) 10 (D) Fresno..................................: 26 (D) 15 140 13 (D) Glenn...................................: 2 (D) - - 2 (D) Humboldt................................: 10 8 5 3 10 5 Imperial................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Kern....................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Lake....................................: 4 2 3 (D) 1 (D) : Los Angeles.............................: 6 7 4 2 6 5 Madera..................................: 22 4,497 22 3,897 6 600 Marin...................................: 6 3 3 1 4 2 Merced..................................: 19 1,008 19 (D) 3 (D) Monterey................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Napa....................................: 13 3 10 3 3 (Z) Nevada..................................: 10 3 6 1 10 2 Placer..................................: 7 1 7 1 3 (Z) Riverside...............................: 19 (D) 9 (D) 10 1 Sacramento..............................: 9 3 6 2 3 1 : San Benito..............................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - San Bernardino..........................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - San Diego...............................: 49 47 36 41 20 6 San Joaquin.............................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - San Luis Obispo.........................: 8 6 5 5 4 1 San Mateo...............................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Santa Clara.............................: 3 (D) 3 (D) - - Santa Cruz..............................: 1 (D) - - 1 (D) Shasta..................................: 13 2 8 1 5 1 Solano..................................: 4 (D) 4 (D) - - : Sonoma..................................: 17 8 13 6 4 2 Stanislaus..............................: 9 3 9 3 - - Tehama..................................: 5 (D) 5 (D) - - Tulare..................................: 7 16 7 15 3 1 Ventura.................................: 5 5 4 4 3 1 Yolo....................................: 13 18 11 11 6 7 Yuba....................................: 2 (D) - - 2 (D) ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 31. Fruits and Nuts: 2012 and 2007 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : Total : Bearing age acres : Nonbearing age acres :----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Geographic area : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- GRAPES : : State Total : : California..........................2012: 11,462 940,177 10,842 864,831 2,751 75,347 2007: 11,623 868,329 11,115 809,281 3,020 59,048 : Counties, 2012 : : Alameda.................................: 76 5,265 74 5,150 13 115 Amador..................................: 133 3,486 126 3,081 38 405 Butte...................................: 64 362 58 290 22 72 Calaveras...............................: 72 1,389 70 1,308 16 81 Colusa..................................: 9 2,038 9 (D) 1 (D) Contra Costa............................: 104 2,518 97 2,488 22 30 El Dorado...............................: 315 2,164 283 2,098 75 67 Fresno..................................: 2,101 215,465 2,075 205,599 349 9,865 Glenn...................................: 19 1,414 17 (D) 4 (D) Humboldt................................: 55 170 53 164 13 6 : Imperial................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Inyo....................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Kern....................................: 235 109,063 220 99,649 76 9,414 Kings...................................: 43 5,395 39 4,891 12 505 Lake....................................: 184 8,112 175 7,665 43 447 Lassen..................................: 8 9 6 (D) 2 (D) Los Angeles.............................: 83 445 69 345 23 100 Madera..................................: 352 73,432 345 69,048 70 4,384 Marin...................................: 31 448 28 440 5 8 Mariposa................................: 18 213 18 209 4 4 : Mendocino...............................: 401 18,964 393 17,617 108 1,347 Merced..................................: 46 22,078 39 19,710 18 2,368 Monterey................................: 194 56,490 187 53,106 48 3,384 Napa....................................: 1,388 49,992 1,367 44,862 308 5,130 Nevada..................................: 90 330 67 304 38 27 Orange..................................: 9 102 7 (D) 2 (D) Placer..................................: 101 326 81 279 28 47 Riverside...............................: 211 12,900 158 12,087 96 813 Sacramento..............................: 114 20,469 102 16,930 27 3,540 San Benito..............................: 54 4,017 47 3,556 25 461 : San Bernardino..........................: 26 (D) 19 (D) 12 5 San Diego...............................: 317 993 262 784 117 209 San Francisco...........................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - San Joaquin.............................: 794 106,753 762 94,636 198 12,116 San Luis Obispo.........................: 589 39,837 554 37,597 132 2,240 San Mateo...............................: 31 107 27 105 6 2 Santa Barbara...........................: 189 22,005 184 20,343 45 1,662 Santa Clara.............................: 195 1,362 176 1,287 45 75 Santa Cruz..............................: 117 1,362 106 1,197 34 165 Shasta..................................: 76 201 63 162 25 39 : Sierra..................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) Siskiyou................................: 7 19 7 (D) 2 (D) Solano..................................: 101 3,477 91 2,780 24 697 Sonoma..................................: 1,729 62,688 1,683 58,069 380 4,620 Stanislaus..............................: 113 6,640 105 6,081 18 559 Sutter..................................: 12 212 8 211 5 1 Tehama..................................: 38 131 36 106 9 25 Trinity.................................: 27 231 25 228 10 3 Tulare..................................: 409 60,025 365 53,926 124 6,098 Tuolumne................................: 20 55 18 39 13 16 : Ventura.................................: 51 348 40 292 28 56 Yolo....................................: 74 16,099 70 13,136 27 2,963 Yuba....................................: 32 (D) 26 (D) 10 4 : GUAVAS : : State Total : : California..........................2012: 111 268 98 (D) 27 (D) 2007: 127 270 112 247 26 23 : Counties, 2012 : : Mendocino...............................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Merced..................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Napa....................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Orange..................................: 2 (D) - - 2 (D) Riverside...............................: 6 40 6 (D) 2 (D) Sacramento..............................: 3 2 - - 3 2 San Bernardino..........................: 5 10 - - 5 10 San Diego...............................: 73 160 70 146 14 14 San Luis Obispo.........................: 4 7 4 7 - - San Mateo...............................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - : Santa Barbara...........................: 1 (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) Sonoma..................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Tulare..................................: 5 (D) 5 (D) - - Ventura.................................: 4 40 4 40 - - : KIWIFRUIT : : State Total : : California..........................2012: 205 4,309 182 3,683 56 626 2007: 265 4,375 244 4,200 54 175 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 31. Fruits and Nuts: 2012 and 2007 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : Total : Bearing age acres : Nonbearing age acres :----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Geographic area : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- KIWIFRUIT - Con. : : Counties, 2012 : : Amador..................................: 3 5 - - 3 5 Butte...................................: 57 1,047 57 992 10 55 El Dorado...............................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Fresno..................................: 16 342 10 (D) 8 (D) Glenn...................................: 7 61 5 (D) 2 (D) Kern....................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Kings...................................: 3 (D) 1 (D) 3 300 Lake....................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Madera..................................: 4 24 4 24 - - Mendocino...............................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - : Merced..................................: 4 (D) 2 (D) 2 (D) Monterey................................: 6 7 6 (D) 1 (D) Placer..................................: 15 36 15 36 - - Riverside...............................: 2 (D) 2 (D) 2 (D) Sacramento..............................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - San Benito..............................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - San Bernardino..........................: 2 (D) 2 (D) 2 (D) San Joaquin.............................: 1 (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) San Luis Obispo.........................: 8 19 4 3 4 16 Santa Barbara...........................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - : Santa Clara.............................: 3 5 3 5 - - Santa Cruz..............................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Solano..................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) 1 (D) Sonoma..................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Stanislaus..............................: 8 178 8 (D) 2 (D) Sutter..................................: 10 90 10 (D) 3 (D) Tehama..................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Tulare..................................: 26 1,592 26 1,582 3 10 Tuolumne................................: 2 (D) - - 2 (D) Yolo....................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) Yuba....................................: 12 148 10 123 6 25 : MANGOES : : State Total : : California..........................2012: 23 (D) 16 (D) 12 12 2007: 19 (D) 13 (D) 9 (D) : Counties, 2012 : : Los Angeles.............................: 2 (D) 2 (D) 2 (D) Riverside...............................: 7 (D) 3 (D) 6 (D) San Bernardino..........................: 3 3 3 3 - - San Diego...............................: 11 17 8 16 4 1 : NECTARINES : : State Total : : California..........................2012: 535 19,555 453 17,154 202 2,401 2007: 743 28,430 674 25,508 230 2,923 : Counties, 2012 : : Butte...................................: 8 4 3 2 6 2 Calaveras...............................: 2 (D) - - 2 (D) Colusa..................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) 1 (D) Contra Costa............................: 12 25 12 (D) 2 (D) El Dorado...............................: 16 12 8 10 8 1 Fresno..................................: 165 11,551 153 9,713 59 1,838 Glenn...................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Humboldt................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Kern....................................: 16 682 14 652 6 30 Kings...................................: 25 1,562 25 1,497 4 65 : Lassen..................................: 2 (D) - - 2 (D) Los Angeles.............................: 3 (D) 3 (D) 1 (D) Marin...................................: 3 (Z) - - 3 (Z) Merced..................................: 11 126 11 125 5 1 Monterey................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Napa....................................: 3 3 3 3 - - Nevada..................................: 14 3 10 2 9 2 Placer..................................: 16 37 6 32 11 5 Riverside...............................: 11 (D) 7 (D) 7 18 Sacramento..............................: 5 11 3 6 4 5 : San Benito..............................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - San Bernardino..........................: 5 4 3 1 3 3 San Diego...............................: 17 7 17 7 - - San Joaquin.............................: 13 16 13 15 4 1 San Luis Obispo.........................: 8 1 5 1 3 1 San Mateo...............................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Santa Barbara...........................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Santa Clara.............................: 7 3 4 (Z) 3 3 Santa Cruz..............................: 2 (D) 2 (D) 1 (D) Shasta..................................: 7 (D) 4 (D) 3 (D) : Siskiyou................................: 2 (D) - - 2 (D) Solano..................................: 5 5 5 (D) 1 (D) Stanislaus..............................: 18 54 14 52 12 2 Sutter..................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Tehama..................................: 2 (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) Tulare..................................: 108 5,138 101 4,726 31 412 Tuolumne................................: 2 (D) - - 2 (D) Ventura.................................: 4 3 3 (D) 1 (D) ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 31. Fruits and Nuts: 2012 and 2007 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : Total : Bearing age acres : Nonbearing age acres :----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Geographic area : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- NECTARINES - Con. : : Counties, 2012 - Con. : : Yolo....................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) Yuba....................................: 9 16 9 15 4 1 : OLIVES : : State Total : : California..........................2012: 1,937 49,737 1,706 37,954 574 11,783 2007: 1,660 38,142 1,455 29,986 483 8,156 : Counties, 2012 : : Alameda.................................: 6 87 6 87 - - Amador..................................: 14 40 13 30 3 10 Butte...................................: 86 2,502 80 2,326 21 176 Calaveras...............................: 34 538 34 538 - - Colusa..................................: 7 236 7 (D) 1 (D) Contra Costa............................: 17 (D) 10 (D) 9 (D) El Dorado...............................: 51 100 25 41 35 59 Fresno..................................: 45 1,541 37 997 16 544 Glenn...................................: 201 12,249 198 6,426 43 5,823 Humboldt................................: 3 7 3 4 3 3 : Imperial................................: 2 (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) Kern....................................: 5 420 5 (D) 1 (D) Kings...................................: 2 (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) Lake....................................: 30 52 18 31 14 21 Los Angeles.............................: 13 108 8 97 7 11 Madera..................................: 12 423 12 423 - - Marin...................................: 14 187 9 175 6 12 Mariposa................................: 14 174 8 (D) 6 (D) Mendocino...............................: 24 94 24 (D) 2 (D) Merced..................................: 8 210 8 (D) 3 (D) : Mono....................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Monterey................................: 31 226 28 174 7 52 Napa....................................: 72 250 63 204 21 46 Nevada..................................: 7 19 7 19 3 (Z) Orange..................................: 6 (D) 2 (D) 4 (D) Placer..................................: 13 84 7 (D) 6 (D) Riverside...............................: 22 131 11 116 16 16 Sacramento..............................: 5 44 3 (D) 3 (D) San Benito..............................: 13 28 13 27 4 1 San Bernardino..........................: 7 5 7 3 4 2 : San Diego...............................: 36 70 24 33 22 38 San Joaquin.............................: 38 3,104 35 2,851 8 253 San Luis Obispo.........................: 105 1,027 85 819 54 208 San Mateo...............................: 5 8 4 (D) 1 (D) Santa Barbara...........................: 29 595 18 191 17 405 Santa Clara.............................: 11 118 11 118 - - Santa Cruz..............................: 18 58 12 48 7 10 Shasta..................................: 53 781 47 753 9 28 Solano..................................: 27 184 25 145 11 39 Sonoma..................................: 137 645 120 550 48 96 : Stanislaus..............................: 8 153 8 147 4 6 Sutter..................................: 7 434 5 157 6 276 Tehama..................................: 221 8,647 210 6,433 55 2,214 Tulare..................................: 399 13,165 381 12,275 62 891 Tuolumne................................: 11 35 11 35 - - Ventura.................................: 5 57 5 (D) 2 (D) Yolo....................................: 27 370 23 199 12 171 Yuba....................................: 34 167 32 138 16 30 : PAPAYAS : : State Total : : California..........................2012: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - 2007: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - : Counties, 2012 : : San Diego...............................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Tulare..................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - : PASSION FRUIT : : State Total : : California..........................2012: 20 31 18 28 6 3 2007: 5 (D) 5 (D) 2 (D) : Counties, 2012 : : San Bernardino..........................: 2 (D) - - 2 (D) San Diego...............................: 12 19 12 19 3 (Z) San Luis Obispo.........................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Santa Barbara...........................: 2 (D) 2 (D) 1 (D) Ventura.................................: 3 2 3 2 - - : PEACHES, ALL : : State Total : : California..........................2012: 2,201 51,948 1,741 46,044 889 5,904 2007: 2,005 66,408 1,834 57,546 632 8,862 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 31. Fruits and Nuts: 2012 and 2007 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : Total : Bearing age acres : Nonbearing age acres :----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Geographic area : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- PEACHES, ALL - Con. : : Counties, 2012 : : Alpine..................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Amador..................................: 8 9 3 (D) 5 (D) Butte...................................: 69 1,510 54 1,437 23 73 Calaveras...............................: 6 2 3 1 3 1 Colusa..................................: 13 254 10 245 5 9 Contra Costa............................: 42 (D) 37 144 17 (D) El Dorado...............................: 129 137 73 103 72 34 Fresno..................................: 321 16,180 305 14,472 98 1,708 Glenn...................................: 21 23 21 (D) 1 (D) Humboldt................................: 39 34 18 15 28 18 : Inyo....................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Kern....................................: 46 1,097 37 1,010 24 87 Kings...................................: 43 2,456 41 2,044 17 412 Lake....................................: 17 11 13 10 4 1 Lassen..................................: 8 11 8 (D) 2 (D) Los Angeles.............................: 54 209 44 191 16 18 Madera..................................: 22 859 14 701 13 158 Marin...................................: 3 1 - - 3 1 Mendocino...............................: 19 36 10 28 15 8 Merced..................................: 53 4,237 42 3,579 27 658 : Monterey................................: 6 3 4 1 3 2 Napa....................................: 13 8 12 6 3 2 Nevada..................................: 56 54 43 46 29 8 Orange..................................: 4 1 1 (D) 3 (D) Placer..................................: 66 141 46 109 34 32 Riverside...............................: 69 257 35 244 38 13 Sacramento..............................: 28 26 15 14 15 13 San Benito..............................: 16 4 14 (D) 2 (D) San Bernardino..........................: 32 18 22 14 16 5 San Diego...............................: 132 66 94 49 57 16 : San Joaquin.............................: 60 2,568 54 2,220 22 348 San Luis Obispo.........................: 61 (D) 50 71 20 (D) San Mateo...............................: 7 1 2 (D) 5 (D) Santa Barbara...........................: 9 10 8 (D) 2 (D) Santa Clara.............................: 30 23 24 21 10 2 Santa Cruz..............................: 15 9 9 8 6 1 Shasta..................................: 72 40 34 19 48 20 Siskiyou................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) Solano..................................: 19 28 19 25 8 3 Sonoma..................................: 46 51 41 47 5 4 : Stanislaus..............................: 122 3,898 107 3,522 41 376 Sutter..................................: 94 6,135 90 5,273 29 862 Tehama..................................: 23 147 21 142 7 5 Trinity.................................: 8 9 4 5 6 4 Tulare..................................: 172 7,858 164 7,142 56 716 Tuolumne................................: 15 4 1 (D) 14 (D) Ventura.................................: 38 36 26 18 17 18 Yolo....................................: 15 210 13 (D) 3 (D) Yuba....................................: 56 3,019 51 2,815 16 204 : PEACHES, CLINGSTONE : : State Total : : California..........................2012: 1,084 25,866 844 22,890 413 2,975 2007: 904 30,909 811 26,620 287 4,289 : Counties, 2012 : : Alpine..................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Amador..................................: 4 6 3 (D) 1 (D) Butte...................................: 44 1,303 30 1,259 19 45 Colusa..................................: 5 (D) 5 (D) 1 (D) Contra Costa............................: 6 (D) 6 (D) - - El Dorado...............................: 50 11 26 8 24 3 Fresno..................................: 142 5,148 131 4,868 30 280 Glenn...................................: 14 (D) 14 (D) - - Humboldt................................: 11 8 5 1 6 7 Inyo....................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - : Kern....................................: 17 136 14 92 5 44 Kings...................................: 18 932 18 820 8 112 Lake....................................: 4 1 4 1 - - Los Angeles.............................: 21 93 15 (D) 7 (D) Madera..................................: 10 371 2 (D) 9 (D) Mendocino...............................: 5 (D) 1 (D) 4 (Z) Merced..................................: 35 1,926 30 1,564 18 362 Monterey................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Napa....................................: 8 3 8 (D) 2 (D) Nevada..................................: 12 7 10 5 7 1 : Orange..................................: 4 (D) 1 (D) 3 (D) Placer..................................: 25 43 16 31 13 12 Riverside...............................: 36 11 13 4 23 7 Sacramento..............................: 5 1 5 1 - - San Benito..............................: 10 1 8 (D) 2 (D) San Bernardino..........................: 21 11 11 6 16 5 San Diego...............................: 80 24 53 16 37 7 San Joaquin.............................: 39 2,087 36 1,813 14 274 San Luis Obispo.........................: 40 8 35 7 7 1 San Mateo...............................: 4 1 2 (D) 2 (D) : Santa Barbara...........................: 7 5 6 (D) 1 (D) Santa Clara.............................: 14 2 5 (D) 9 (D) ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 31. Fruits and Nuts: 2012 and 2007 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : Total : Bearing age acres : Nonbearing age acres :----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Geographic area : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- PEACHES, CLINGSTONE - Con. : : Counties, 2012 - Con. : : Santa Cruz..............................: 12 5 7 (D) 5 (D) Shasta..................................: 30 11 13 1 19 9 Solano..................................: 5 3 5 2 5 1 Sonoma..................................: 21 9 18 (D) 3 (D) Stanislaus..............................: 84 3,405 75 3,054 27 350 Sutter..................................: 78 5,683 74 4,882 24 801 Tehama..................................: 10 (D) 10 (D) 5 1 Tulare..................................: 73 1,283 66 998 28 285 Tuolumne................................: 2 (D) - - 2 (D) Ventura.................................: 20 16 12 (D) 8 (D) : Yolo....................................: 7 156 5 (D) 3 (D) Yuba....................................: 46 2,804 41 (D) 16 (D) : PEACHES, FREESTONE : : State Total : : California..........................2012: 1,474 26,082 1,149 23,154 610 2,928 2007: 1,399 35,499 1,295 30,926 413 4,573 : Counties, 2012 : : Amador..................................: 7 3 2 (D) 5 (D) Butte...................................: 36 206 29 179 13 28 Calaveras...............................: 6 2 3 1 3 1 Colusa..................................: 11 (D) 8 (D) 4 (D) Contra Costa............................: 40 155 35 (D) 17 (D) El Dorado...............................: 94 126 51 95 59 31 Fresno..................................: 239 11,032 225 9,603 77 1,429 Glenn...................................: 12 (D) 12 (D) 1 (D) Humboldt................................: 30 26 15 15 22 11 Inyo....................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - : Kern....................................: 35 961 26 918 21 43 Kings...................................: 28 1,524 26 1,224 10 300 Lake....................................: 15 10 11 9 4 1 Lassen..................................: 8 11 8 (D) 2 (D) Los Angeles.............................: 38 117 34 (D) 9 (D) Madera..................................: 17 489 12 (D) 9 (D) Marin...................................: 3 1 - - 3 1 Mendocino...............................: 19 (D) 10 (D) 15 8 Merced..................................: 35 2,311 23 2,015 16 296 Monterey................................: 6 (D) 3 (D) 3 2 : Napa....................................: 7 5 6 (D) 1 (D) Nevada..................................: 54 47 41 41 29 6 Orange..................................: 3 (D) - - 3 (D) Placer..................................: 55 98 41 78 24 21 Riverside...............................: 44 246 28 240 20 6 Sacramento..............................: 23 25 10 12 15 13 San Benito..............................: 8 3 6 (D) 2 (D) San Bernardino..........................: 14 8 14 8 - - San Diego...............................: 65 42 51 33 23 9 San Joaquin.............................: 39 481 34 407 15 73 : San Luis Obispo.........................: 34 (D) 26 63 15 (D) San Mateo...............................: 4 1 1 (D) 3 (D) Santa Barbara...........................: 4 5 4 (D) 1 (D) Santa Clara.............................: 21 21 20 (D) 1 (D) Santa Cruz..............................: 5 4 4 (D) 1 (D) Shasta..................................: 58 29 24 18 42 11 Siskiyou................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) Solano..................................: 19 24 19 22 8 2 Sonoma..................................: 33 41 31 (D) 2 (D) Stanislaus..............................: 58 494 48 468 24 26 : Sutter..................................: 22 452 22 391 7 61 Tehama..................................: 18 (D) 14 (D) 7 3 Trinity.................................: 8 9 4 5 6 4 Tulare..................................: 124 6,575 119 6,144 35 432 Tuolumne................................: 15 (D) 1 (D) 14 4 Ventura.................................: 28 20 18 (D) 15 (D) Yolo....................................: 9 54 9 (D) 1 (D) Yuba....................................: 21 216 19 (D) 2 (D) : PEARS, ALL : : State Total : : California..........................2012: 681 11,907 525 11,398 268 509 2007: 739 15,859 631 14,818 203 1,041 : Counties, 2012 : : Alameda.................................: 2 (D) - - 2 (D) Amador..................................: 11 4 6 3 5 1 Butte...................................: 19 30 19 19 8 10 Calaveras...............................: 8 (D) 2 (D) 6 (D) Colusa..................................: 8 11 5 5 3 6 Contra Costa............................: 4 8 4 8 - - El Dorado...............................: 68 64 45 54 31 10 Fresno..................................: 14 729 12 697 8 32 Glenn...................................: 6 5 6 5 - - Humboldt................................: 23 13 16 8 11 5 : Kern....................................: 16 95 12 (D) 5 (D) Lake....................................: 36 2,323 32 (D) 7 (D) ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 31. Fruits and Nuts: 2012 and 2007 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : Total : Bearing age acres : Nonbearing age acres :----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Geographic area : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- PEARS, ALL - Con. : : Counties, 2012 - Con. : : Lassen..................................: 2 (D) - - 2 (D) Los Angeles.............................: 6 25 6 25 - - Madera..................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) 1 (D) Marin...................................: 11 6 5 1 7 5 Mendocino...............................: 35 939 34 933 7 6 Merced..................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Monterey................................: 13 11 8 9 8 2 Napa....................................: 7 3 7 3 - - Nevada..................................: 20 8 15 7 14 2 Orange..................................: 3 2 3 2 - - : Placer..................................: 32 78 30 75 11 3 Riverside...............................: 15 8 9 5 9 3 Sacramento..............................: 45 5,143 34 4,890 17 253 San Benito..............................: 5 (D) 1 (D) 5 (D) San Bernardino..........................: 14 30 11 25 9 5 San Diego...............................: 24 26 13 11 15 14 San Joaquin.............................: 18 610 18 (D) 4 (D) San Luis Obispo.........................: 28 19 24 17 8 2 San Mateo...............................: 3 (D) 3 (D) - - Santa Barbara...........................: 1 (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) : Santa Clara.............................: 4 (D) 4 (D) - - Santa Cruz..............................: 15 119 14 (D) 4 (D) Shasta..................................: 26 6 19 5 13 2 Sierra..................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) Siskiyou................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Solano..................................: 8 (D) 8 (D) - - Sonoma..................................: 57 54 55 (D) 9 (D) Stanislaus..............................: 4 (D) - - 4 (D) Sutter..................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Tehama..................................: 4 3 2 (D) 4 (D) : Trinity.................................: 12 10 4 (D) 10 (D) Tulare..................................: 24 235 20 (D) 6 (D) Tuolumne................................: 11 4 1 (D) 10 (D) Ventura.................................: 7 3 5 3 3 (Z) Yuba....................................: 4 (D) 4 (D) - - : PEARS, BARTLETT : : State Total : : California..........................2012: 303 8,900 252 8,636 88 264 2007: 369 11,313 327 10,627 85 687 : Counties, 2012 : : Alameda.................................: 2 (D) - - 2 (D) Amador..................................: 5 1 - - 5 1 Butte...................................: 4 (Z) 4 (Z) - - Calaveras...............................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Colusa..................................: 3 6 - - 3 6 El Dorado...............................: 49 49 36 44 15 5 Fresno..................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) 2 (D) Glenn...................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Humboldt................................: 9 5 7 3 5 2 Kern....................................: 8 2 4 (D) 4 (D) : Lake....................................: 27 2,156 23 (D) 5 (D) Los Angeles.............................: 4 (D) 4 (D) - - Madera..................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Marin...................................: 4 1 1 (D) 4 (D) Mendocino...............................: 20 781 20 (D) 1 (D) Monterey................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Napa....................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Nevada..................................: 3 3 3 (D) 2 (D) Orange..................................: 3 2 3 2 - - Placer..................................: 17 48 17 48 3 (Z) : Riverside...............................: 3 (D) 1 (D) 2 (D) Sacramento..............................: 33 4,436 33 (D) 2 (D) San Benito..............................: 1 (D) - - 1 (D) San Bernardino..........................: 4 6 4 (D) 4 (D) San Diego...............................: 6 5 6 (D) 2 (D) San Joaquin.............................: 11 534 11 (D) 2 (D) San Luis Obispo.........................: 10 3 10 (D) 2 (D) San Mateo...............................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Santa Cruz..............................: 6 (D) 6 (D) 2 (D) Shasta..................................: 17 3 14 2 9 1 : Solano..................................: 5 (D) 5 (D) - - Sonoma..................................: 18 (D) 18 (D) 1 (D) Stanislaus..............................: 2 (D) - - 2 (D) Trinity.................................: 4 (D) 2 (D) 2 (D) Tulare..................................: 7 65 3 (D) 5 (D) Tuolumne................................: 2 (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) Ventura.................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Yuba....................................: 3 (D) 3 (D) - - : PEARS, OTHER THAN BARTLETT : : State Total : : California..........................2012: 451 3,007 339 2,762 188 245 2007: 500 4,546 418 4,191 140 354 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 31. Fruits and Nuts: 2012 and 2007 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : Total : Bearing age acres : Nonbearing age acres :----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Geographic area : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- PEARS, OTHER THAN : BARTLETT - Con. : : Counties, 2012 : : Amador..................................: 6 3 6 3 - - Butte...................................: 16 29 16 19 8 10 Calaveras...............................: 7 (D) 1 (D) 6 (D) Colusa..................................: 5 5 5 5 - - Contra Costa............................: 4 8 4 8 - - El Dorado...............................: 26 16 13 10 19 6 Fresno..................................: 12 (D) 10 (D) 6 (D) Glenn...................................: 6 (D) 6 (D) - - Humboldt................................: 18 8 10 5 8 3 Kern....................................: 12 93 12 (D) 1 (D) : Lake....................................: 14 167 14 (D) 3 (D) Lassen..................................: 2 (D) - - 2 (D) Los Angeles.............................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Madera..................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) Marin...................................: 7 5 4 (D) 3 (D) Mendocino...............................: 26 158 25 (D) 6 (D) Merced..................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Monterey................................: 13 (D) 8 (D) 8 2 Napa....................................: 5 (D) 5 (D) - - Nevada..................................: 17 6 12 (D) 12 (D) : Placer..................................: 19 29 17 27 8 3 Riverside...............................: 12 (D) 8 (D) 7 (D) Sacramento..............................: 24 707 13 (D) 16 (D) San Benito..............................: 5 4 1 (D) 5 (D) San Bernardino..........................: 10 24 7 (D) 5 (D) San Diego...............................: 19 21 8 (D) 13 (D) San Joaquin.............................: 10 76 10 (D) 2 (D) San Luis Obispo.........................: 18 16 14 (D) 6 (D) San Mateo...............................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Santa Barbara...........................: 1 (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) : Santa Clara.............................: 4 (D) 4 (D) - - Santa Cruz..............................: 12 (D) 11 62 2 (D) Shasta..................................: 9 4 5 3 4 1 Sierra..................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) Siskiyou................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Solano..................................: 6 (D) 6 (D) - - Sonoma..................................: 46 (D) 44 (D) 8 1 Stanislaus..............................: 2 (D) - - 2 (D) Sutter..................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Tehama..................................: 4 3 2 (D) 4 (D) : Trinity.................................: 8 (D) 2 (D) 8 (D) Tulare..................................: 18 170 18 (D) 1 (D) Tuolumne................................: 9 (D) - - 9 (D) Ventura.................................: 7 (D) 5 (D) 3 (Z) Yuba....................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - : PERSIMMONS : : State Total : : California..........................2012: 753 4,091 667 3,222 193 869 2007: 745 3,236 686 2,906 165 329 : Counties, 2012 : : Alameda.................................: 3 (D) 1 (D) 2 (D) Butte...................................: 19 78 19 77 4 1 Colusa..................................: 3 (D) 3 (D) 1 (D) Contra Costa............................: 9 10 9 (D) 4 (D) El Dorado...............................: 16 7 13 6 5 1 Fresno..................................: 114 1,263 103 772 24 491 Glenn...................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Kern....................................: 13 167 13 (D) 3 (D) Kings...................................: 12 239 12 (D) 2 (D) Lake....................................: 2 (D) - - 2 (D) : Los Angeles.............................: 11 7 11 7 - - Madera..................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) 1 (D) Marin...................................: 3 (Z) - - 3 (Z) Mendocino...............................: 7 (D) 3 (D) 7 (D) Merced..................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Monterey................................: 4 5 4 (D) 2 (D) Napa....................................: 8 1 8 1 - - Nevada..................................: 9 (D) 4 (D) 5 (D) Orange..................................: 5 1 5 1 - - Placer..................................: 18 37 16 35 4 1 : Riverside...............................: 24 66 18 64 10 3 Sacramento..............................: 12 103 4 1 8 102 San Benito..............................: 4 2 4 2 - - San Bernardino..........................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - San Diego...............................: 106 264 100 244 17 20 San Joaquin.............................: 31 189 26 134 9 55 San Luis Obispo.........................: 8 9 8 (D) 1 (D) San Mateo...............................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Santa Barbara...........................: 16 17 16 17 - - Santa Clara.............................: 21 42 17 39 4 3 : Santa Cruz..............................: 8 23 8 (D) 2 (D) Shasta..................................: 8 5 8 5 - - Solano..................................: 13 27 13 (D) 1 (D) Sonoma..................................: 13 4 13 2 6 1 Stanislaus..............................: 13 29 9 24 8 6 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 31. Fruits and Nuts: 2012 and 2007 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : Total : Bearing age acres : Nonbearing age acres :----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Geographic area : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- PERSIMMONS - Con. : : Counties, 2012 - Con. : : Sutter..................................: 21 138 21 (D) 7 (D) Tehama..................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Tulare..................................: 146 1,084 129 965 35 119 Tuolumne................................: 2 (D) - - 2 (D) Ventura.................................: 21 33 19 29 6 4 Yolo....................................: 7 21 7 9 5 12 Yuba....................................: 13 162 13 157 3 5 : PLUMS AND PRUNES : : State Total : : California..........................2012: 1,656 82,910 1,445 73,363 580 9,547 2007: 2,024 102,860 1,884 92,479 651 10,381 : Counties, 2012 : : Alameda.................................: 4 (D) 2 (D) 2 (D) Amador..................................: 7 5 6 (D) 1 (D) Butte...................................: 97 9,310 85 7,791 44 1,519 Colusa..................................: 15 1,408 13 (D) 7 (D) Contra Costa............................: 9 (D) 9 (D) - - El Dorado...............................: 47 38 25 33 24 5 Fresno..................................: 267 10,092 244 8,323 92 1,769 Glenn...................................: 58 5,183 56 (D) 8 (D) Humboldt................................: 22 6 18 5 7 1 Inyo....................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - : Kern....................................: 22 1,909 15 (D) 11 (D) Kings...................................: 28 1,491 21 (D) 12 (D) Lake....................................: 3 (Z) 2 (D) 1 (D) Los Angeles.............................: 15 8 7 (D) 8 (D) Madera..................................: 14 1,034 14 (D) 4 (D) Marin...................................: 4 1 1 (D) 3 (D) Mendocino...............................: 6 4 - - 6 4 Merced..................................: 15 1,505 14 (D) 2 (D) Modoc...................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) 2 (D) Monterey................................: 6 1 6 1 4 (Z) : Napa....................................: 16 82 16 (D) 2 (D) Nevada..................................: 11 7 7 6 7 1 Orange..................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Placer..................................: 39 61 29 57 14 4 Riverside...............................: 11 51 9 (D) 3 (D) Sacramento..............................: 11 16 5 10 8 6 San Benito..............................: 6 3 - - 6 3 San Bernardino..........................: 8 6 6 3 6 4 San Diego...............................: 34 17 24 11 14 7 San Joaquin.............................: 10 15 9 8 5 7 : San Luis Obispo.........................: 11 4 10 (D) 1 (D) San Mateo...............................: 5 1 5 1 - - Santa Barbara...........................: 4 1 3 (D) 1 (D) Santa Clara.............................: 21 62 17 45 5 16 Santa Cruz..............................: 11 (D) 10 81 3 (D) Shasta..................................: 20 4 14 (D) 6 (D) Solano..................................: 32 1,144 32 958 10 186 Sonoma..................................: 39 22 35 17 6 5 Stanislaus..............................: 23 (D) 19 (D) 9 2 Sutter..................................: 219 22,166 200 19,685 77 2,480 : Tehama..................................: 124 8,056 119 7,073 44 983 Trinity.................................: 5 (D) 5 (D) - - Tulare..................................: 248 11,022 246 10,543 59 479 Tuolumne................................: 4 (Z) - - 4 (Z) Ventura.................................: 16 14 8 5 11 9 Yolo....................................: 25 1,004 17 869 16 136 Yuba....................................: 59 6,003 57 5,059 25 944 : PLUMS : : State Total : : California..........................2012: 995 21,616 820 19,177 358 2,439 2007: 1,284 32,838 1,168 29,344 402 3,493 : Counties, 2012 : : Alameda.................................: 4 (D) 2 (D) 2 (D) Amador..................................: 3 1 2 (D) 1 (D) Butte...................................: 19 383 16 309 8 74 Colusa..................................: 3 (D) 1 (D) 2 (D) Contra Costa............................: 8 15 8 15 - - El Dorado...............................: 47 38 25 33 24 5 Fresno..................................: 234 8,332 213 6,894 82 1,437 Glenn...................................: 6 (D) 6 (D) - - Humboldt................................: 18 4 14 3 7 1 Inyo....................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - : Kern....................................: 20 (D) 13 1,176 10 (D) Kings...................................: 27 (D) 20 (D) 12 (D) Lake....................................: 1 (D) - - 1 (D) Los Angeles.............................: 15 (D) 7 (D) 8 (D) Madera..................................: 3 140 3 (D) 2 (D) Marin...................................: 4 1 1 (D) 3 (D) Mendocino...............................: 6 4 - - 6 4 Merced..................................: 4 32 4 32 - - Modoc...................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) 2 (D) ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 31. Fruits and Nuts: 2012 and 2007 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : Total : Bearing age acres : Nonbearing age acres :----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Geographic area : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- PLUMS - Con. : : Counties, 2012 - Con. : : Monterey................................: 6 1 6 1 4 (Z) Napa....................................: 9 2 9 2 - - Nevada..................................: 11 7 7 6 7 1 Orange..................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Placer..................................: 39 61 29 57 14 4 Riverside...............................: 10 (D) 8 (D) 3 (D) Sacramento..............................: 11 16 5 10 8 6 San Benito..............................: 4 (D) - - 4 (D) San Bernardino..........................: 8 6 6 3 6 4 San Diego...............................: 34 17 24 11 14 7 : San Joaquin.............................: 9 13 9 (D) 4 (D) San Luis Obispo.........................: 11 4 10 (D) 1 (D) San Mateo...............................: 5 1 5 1 - - Santa Barbara...........................: 4 1 3 (D) 1 (D) Santa Clara.............................: 6 15 4 (D) 2 (D) Santa Cruz..............................: 8 6 7 (D) 2 (D) Shasta..................................: 19 (D) 13 (D) 6 (D) Solano..................................: 11 54 11 28 4 27 Sonoma..................................: 34 12 30 7 6 5 Stanislaus..............................: 21 36 17 34 9 2 : Sutter..................................: 19 1,148 16 1,023 7 125 Tehama..................................: 20 537 16 (D) 4 (D) Trinity.................................: 5 (D) 5 (D) - - Tulare..................................: 218 7,983 216 7,604 49 379 Tuolumne................................: 4 (Z) - - 4 (Z) Ventura.................................: 16 14 8 5 11 9 Yolo....................................: 14 79 6 (D) 13 (D) Yuba....................................: 12 24 10 21 5 3 : PRUNES : : State Total : : California..........................2012: 686 61,295 650 54,186 231 7,108 2007: 784 70,022 760 63,134 254 6,888 : Counties, 2012 : : Amador..................................: 4 4 4 4 - - Butte...................................: 80 8,927 71 7,482 38 1,445 Colusa..................................: 12 (D) 12 (D) 5 (D) Contra Costa............................: 5 (D) 5 (D) - - Fresno..................................: 34 1,760 32 1,429 11 332 Glenn...................................: 52 (D) 50 (D) 8 (D) Humboldt................................: 7 2 7 2 3 (Z) Kern....................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) 1 (D) Kings...................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Lake....................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - : Los Angeles.............................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Madera..................................: 11 894 11 (D) 2 (D) Merced..................................: 11 1,473 10 (D) 2 (D) Napa....................................: 8 80 8 (D) 2 (D) Riverside...............................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - San Benito..............................: 2 (D) - - 2 (D) San Joaquin.............................: 3 2 2 (D) 1 (D) Santa Clara.............................: 15 46 13 (D) 3 (D) Santa Cruz..............................: 3 (D) 3 (D) 1 (D) Shasta..................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - : Solano..................................: 22 1,089 22 930 7 159 Sonoma..................................: 5 10 5 10 - - Stanislaus..............................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Sutter..................................: 200 21,017 184 18,662 70 2,355 Tehama..................................: 105 7,519 104 (D) 40 (D) Tulare..................................: 38 3,039 38 2,939 12 101 Yolo....................................: 11 925 11 (D) 3 (D) Yuba....................................: 48 5,979 48 5,038 20 941 : PLUMCOTS, PLUOTS, AND OTHER : PLUM-APRICOT HYBRIDS (SEE TEXT) : : State Total : : California..........................2012: 175 3,240 142 2,930 64 310 2007: 249 4,136 213 3,701 76 436 : Counties, 2012 : : Butte...................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) 2 (D) Contra Costa............................: 5 5 5 5 - - El Dorado...............................: 4 4 4 4 - - Fresno..................................: 38 1,802 29 1,631 16 172 Glenn...................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Humboldt................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) 2 (D) Kern....................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Kings...................................: 8 128 8 128 - - Merced..................................: 4 43 4 43 - - Napa....................................: 1 (D) - - 1 (D) : Nevada..................................: 5 1 5 1 5 1 Orange..................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Placer..................................: 6 3 6 2 4 1 Sacramento..............................: 2 (D) - - 2 (D) San Bernardino..........................: 3 2 3 2 - - San Diego...............................: 4 4 4 (D) 2 (D) ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 31. Fruits and Nuts: 2012 and 2007 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : Total : Bearing age acres : Nonbearing age acres :----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Geographic area : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- PLUMCOTS, PLUOTS, AND OTHER : PLUM-APRICOT HYBRIDS : (SEE TEXT) - Con. : : Counties, 2012 - Con. : : San Joaquin.............................: 8 9 6 (D) 2 (D) San Luis Obispo.........................: 6 4 6 4 - - Santa Barbara...........................: 1 (D) - - 1 (D) Solano..................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Sonoma..................................: 10 2 8 (D) 2 (D) Stanislaus..............................: 20 53 9 27 15 26 Tehama..................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) 2 (D) Tulare..................................: 31 1,028 30 (D) 3 (D) Tuolumne................................: 4 (Z) - - 4 (Z) Yolo....................................: 3 3 3 3 - - Yuba....................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) 1 (D) : POMEGRANATES : : State Total : : California..........................2012: 783 32,226 626 29,570 314 2,656 2007: 517 24,458 379 12,057 256 12,401 : Counties, 2012 : : Alameda.................................: 4 (D) 3 3 1 (D) Butte...................................: 13 37 12 31 8 6 Calaveras...............................: 1 (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) Colusa..................................: 3 11 3 11 - - Contra Costa............................: 7 34 7 34 - - El Dorado...............................: 14 37 11 35 7 2 Fresno..................................: 143 5,545 122 4,927 42 618 Glenn...................................: 8 12 8 12 - - Humboldt................................: 1 (D) - - 1 (D) Kern....................................: 18 16,696 18 16,572 9 124 : Kings...................................: 29 4,268 29 4,178 7 91 Los Angeles.............................: 4 (D) 2 (D) 2 (D) Madera..................................: 46 1,478 45 1,169 20 309 Mariposa................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Mendocino...............................: 4 (Z) - - 4 (Z) Merced..................................: 17 957 16 (D) 2 (D) Monterey................................: 4 2 4 2 - - Napa....................................: 6 3 3 (D) 3 (D) Nevada..................................: 5 2 - - 5 2 Orange..................................: 7 6 7 2 3 4 : Placer..................................: 11 6 9 (D) 2 (D) Riverside...............................: 34 82 14 66 20 16 Sacramento..............................: 1 (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) San Benito..............................: 1 (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) San Bernardino..........................: 13 11 9 8 5 3 San Diego...............................: 76 180 58 114 37 66 San Joaquin.............................: 23 215 18 125 7 91 San Luis Obispo.........................: 23 102 15 51 12 51 San Mateo...............................: 2 (D) 2 (D) 2 (D) Santa Barbara...........................: 7 4 7 4 - - : Santa Clara.............................: 3 (D) 1 (D) 2 (D) Shasta..................................: 8 12 3 1 5 12 Solano..................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) 1 (D) Sonoma..................................: 3 40 3 (D) 2 (D) Stanislaus..............................: 18 55 15 49 6 6 Sutter..................................: 14 111 9 47 10 64 Tehama..................................: 12 8 - - 12 8 Tulare..................................: 164 2,128 149 1,721 53 407 Tuolumne................................: 5 6 - - 5 6 Ventura.................................: 14 18 6 4 10 14 : Yolo....................................: 8 23 6 10 5 13 Yuba....................................: 5 50 5 (D) 1 (D) : OTHER NONCITRUS FRUIT : : State Total : : California..........................2012: 535 4,736 471 4,428 160 308 2007: 701 (D) 661 (D) 81 (D) : Counties, 2012 : : Alameda.................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Amador..................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Butte...................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) 2 (D) Colusa..................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Contra Costa............................: 7 36 7 (D) 1 (D) El Dorado...............................: 20 36 12 34 8 2 Fresno..................................: 71 2,163 71 2,050 11 113 Glenn...................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) Humboldt................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Kern....................................: 6 46 6 46 - - : Kings...................................: 7 149 7 (D) 2 (D) Lake....................................: 4 20 4 (D) 2 (D) Los Angeles.............................: 23 25 21 23 11 2 Marin...................................: 4 5 1 (D) 3 (D) Mendocino...............................: 6 12 6 (D) 2 (D) Merced..................................: 11 62 11 61 8 1 Napa....................................: 7 6 5 (D) 2 (D) Nevada..................................: 6 5 6 5 - - ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 31. Fruits and Nuts: 2012 and 2007 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : Total : Bearing age acres : Nonbearing age acres :----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Geographic area : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- OTHER NONCITRUS FRUIT - Con. : : Counties, 2012 - Con. : : Orange..................................: 7 4 7 (D) 2 (D) Placer..................................: 16 89 11 86 7 3 Riverside...............................: 26 76 23 65 4 11 Sacramento..............................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - San Bernardino..........................: 14 63 12 (D) 2 (D) San Diego...............................: 120 293 98 251 37 41 San Luis Obispo.........................: 20 33 17 32 5 2 San Mateo...............................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Santa Barbara...........................: 35 132 35 115 14 17 Santa Clara.............................: 7 15 7 (D) 2 (D) : Santa Cruz..............................: 4 1 1 (D) 3 (D) Shasta..................................: 2 (D) - - 2 (D) Siskiyou................................: 1 (D) - - 1 (D) Solano..................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Sonoma..................................: 5 1 5 1 - - Stanislaus..............................: 11 234 8 224 7 11 Sutter..................................: 8 (D) 8 (D) - - Tehama..................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Tulare..................................: 37 474 36 462 7 12 Tuolumne................................: 5 3 5 3 - - : Ventura.................................: 23 299 21 287 10 11 Yolo....................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Yuba....................................: 4 359 2 (D) 4 (D) : CITRUS FRUIT, ALL : : State Total : : California..........................2012: 7,283 293,387 6,687 260,129 1,934 33,259 2007: 7,358 303,101 7,027 279,212 1,652 23,890 : Counties, 2012 : : Alameda.................................: 4 (D) 2 (D) 2 (D) Butte...................................: 86 294 70 261 32 33 Calaveras...............................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Colusa..................................: 7 32 7 32 - - Contra Costa............................: 14 12 9 11 6 1 El Dorado...............................: 28 34 16 31 12 4 Fresno..................................: 590 53,148 530 45,336 207 7,812 Glenn...................................: 52 389 46 329 13 60 Humboldt................................: 5 1 4 (D) 1 (D) Imperial................................: 15 4,690 15 4,314 5 376 : Inyo....................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Kern....................................: 171 60,581 156 53,992 63 6,589 Kings...................................: 7 56 5 (D) 3 (D) Lake....................................: 3 5 - - 3 5 Los Angeles.............................: 83 263 69 250 32 13 Madera..................................: 47 4,860 41 4,306 14 555 Marin...................................: 3 (D) 3 (D) - - Mariposa................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Mendocino...............................: 7 2 3 1 4 (Z) Merced..................................: 21 1,042 9 855 14 188 : Monterey................................: 28 2,032 26 2,025 15 7 Napa....................................: 12 12 12 12 - - Nevada..................................: 14 5 11 4 3 1 Orange..................................: 64 1,178 59 1,131 23 47 Placer..................................: 162 370 142 316 57 54 Riverside...............................: 706 16,730 647 15,852 181 878 Sacramento..............................: 22 9 16 8 6 1 San Benito..............................: 6 14 3 14 3 (Z) San Bernardino..........................: 291 4,198 278 2,894 51 1,304 San Diego...............................: 1,541 9,327 1,424 8,350 353 977 : San Joaquin.............................: 21 913 17 909 5 4 San Luis Obispo.........................: 124 1,815 107 1,723 34 93 San Mateo...............................: 7 2 4 1 5 2 Santa Barbara...........................: 104 1,727 103 1,656 20 71 Santa Clara.............................: 23 26 17 22 8 5 Santa Cruz..............................: 30 24 27 24 4 1 Shasta..................................: 34 19 9 8 28 11 Siskiyou................................: 4 (D) 1 (D) 3 2 Solano..................................: 22 54 16 (D) 10 (D) Sonoma..................................: 34 14 30 10 8 4 : Stanislaus..............................: 41 805 32 (D) 16 (D) Sutter..................................: 14 48 9 43 7 5 Tehama..................................: 16 24 8 19 8 5 Trinity.................................: 5 1 5 1 - - Tulare..................................: 1,886 104,051 1,812 91,489 481 12,562 Tuolumne................................: 7 (D) - - 7 (D) Ventura.................................: 854 24,239 824 22,943 172 1,296 Yolo....................................: 45 244 40 231 11 13 Yuba....................................: 18 46 18 38 4 8 : GRAPEFRUIT : : State Total : : California..........................2012: 714 10,447 647 9,675 145 772 2007: 879 10,725 815 9,520 177 1,205 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 31. Fruits and Nuts: 2012 and 2007 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : Total : Bearing age acres : Nonbearing age acres :----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Geographic area : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- GRAPEFRUIT - Con. : : Counties, 2012 : : Butte...................................: 5 3 5 (D) 2 (D) El Dorado...............................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Fresno..................................: 29 (D) 24 1,094 7 (D) Glenn...................................: 4 (D) 3 1 1 (D) Imperial................................: 6 587 6 (D) 3 (D) Inyo....................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Kern....................................: 19 568 15 (D) 6 (D) Los Angeles.............................: 4 3 4 (D) 4 (D) Monterey................................: 5 7 3 (D) 2 (D) Orange..................................: 7 83 7 (D) 2 (D) : Placer..................................: 9 1 9 1 - - Riverside...............................: 261 4,592 247 4,543 32 50 San Bernardino..........................: 23 177 21 (D) 4 (D) San Diego...............................: 176 979 152 909 47 70 San Joaquin.............................: 3 65 3 65 - - San Luis Obispo.........................: 4 (D) 4 (D) - - Santa Barbara...........................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Santa Cruz..............................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Shasta..................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) Siskiyou................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - : Tehama..................................: 2 (D) - - 2 (D) Tulare..................................: 112 1,790 104 1,535 19 256 Ventura.................................: 32 284 27 273 13 11 Yolo....................................: 3 (D) 3 (D) - - Yuba....................................: 4 (D) 4 (D) - - : KUMQUATS : : State Total : : California..........................2012: 58 97 50 91 13 6 2007: 94 133 82 126 17 8 : Counties, 2012 : : Fresno..................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Glenn...................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Los Angeles.............................: 2 (D) - - 2 (D) Orange..................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Placer..................................: 3 (Z) 1 (D) 2 (D) Riverside...............................: 7 42 7 42 - - San Bernardino..........................: 2 (D) - - 2 (D) San Diego...............................: 35 51 35 47 5 5 San Luis Obispo.........................: 1 (D) - - 1 (D) Tulare..................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Ventura.................................: 1 (D) - - 1 (D) : LEMONS : : State Total : : California..........................2012: 2,320 49,631 1,992 44,123 621 5,509 2007: 1,880 53,232 1,735 49,563 410 3,670 : Counties, 2012 : : Alameda.................................: 4 (D) 2 (D) 2 (D) Butte...................................: 21 19 10 (D) 11 (D) Calaveras...............................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Colusa..................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Contra Costa............................: 10 2 5 (D) 5 (D) El Dorado...............................: 18 7 10 6 8 1 Fresno..................................: 74 2,880 57 1,652 27 1,229 Glenn...................................: 12 4 10 (D) 2 (D) Humboldt................................: 4 (D) 4 (D) - - Imperial................................: 14 3,027 14 2,953 5 73 : Kern....................................: 34 3,520 28 (D) 10 (D) Los Angeles.............................: 44 104 34 97 18 7 Madera..................................: 5 (D) - - 5 (D) Marin...................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Mendocino...............................: 3 1 3 1 - - Merced..................................: 8 1 1 (D) 7 (D) Monterey................................: 23 2,023 17 2,021 13 3 Napa....................................: 7 4 7 4 - - Nevada..................................: 8 1 5 (D) 3 (D) Orange..................................: 30 898 27 888 8 9 : Placer..................................: 39 30 33 24 11 6 Riverside...............................: 220 5,676 183 5,360 66 317 Sacramento..............................: 12 2 6 (D) 6 (D) San Benito..............................: 3 (D) 3 (D) - - San Bernardino..........................: 37 1,346 35 (D) 2 (D) San Diego...............................: 624 2,543 554 2,347 137 196 San Joaquin.............................: 12 2 10 (D) 2 (D) San Luis Obispo.........................: 91 1,505 80 1,439 18 66 San Mateo...............................: 5 (D) 2 (D) 3 (Z) Santa Barbara...........................: 63 1,485 62 1,435 8 51 : Santa Clara.............................: 17 (D) 9 (D) 8 3 Santa Cruz..............................: 26 21 25 (D) 2 (D) Shasta..................................: 20 2 4 (Z) 16 2 Solano..................................: 8 (D) 8 (D) - - Sonoma..................................: 26 (D) 23 3 7 (D) Stanislaus..............................: 20 410 16 (D) 7 (D) Sutter..................................: 8 10 4 6 6 4 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 31. Fruits and Nuts: 2012 and 2007 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : Total : Bearing age acres : Nonbearing age acres :----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Geographic area : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- LEMONS - Con. : : Counties, 2012 - Con. : : Tehama..................................: 4 1 - - 4 1 Tulare..................................: 284 6,523 245 5,223 92 1,299 Tuolumne................................: 7 (D) - - 7 (D) Ventura.................................: 452 17,515 435 16,718 92 797 Yolo....................................: 10 9 8 (D) 3 (D) Yuba....................................: 7 1 7 1 - - : LIMES : : State Total : : California..........................2012: 296 460 261 435 61 25 2007: 363 525 352 494 64 31 : Counties, 2012 : : Butte...................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - El Dorado...............................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Humboldt................................: 1 (D) - - 1 (D) Kern....................................: 2 (D) - - 2 (D) Placer..................................: 3 (Z) 1 (D) 2 (D) Riverside...............................: 27 138 19 136 10 2 San Bernardino..........................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - San Diego...............................: 220 279 208 265 35 14 San Luis Obispo.........................: 3 (D) 2 (D) 1 (D) Santa Barbara...........................: 8 16 8 16 - - : Santa Cruz..............................: 5 1 5 1 - - Shasta..................................: 2 (D) - - 2 (D) Stanislaus..............................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Tehama..................................: 2 (D) - - 2 (D) Tulare..................................: 10 (D) 8 (D) 3 7 Ventura.................................: 5 5 4 (D) 1 (D) Yolo....................................: 2 (D) - - 2 (D) : ORANGES, ALL : : State Total : : California..........................2012: 5,204 193,087 4,776 176,222 1,287 16,865 2007: 5,254 212,313 5,042 200,424 1,036 11,889 : Counties, 2012 : : Alameda.................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Butte...................................: 61 203 48 178 25 25 Calaveras...............................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Colusa..................................: 5 (D) 5 (D) - - Contra Costa............................: 8 7 8 7 - - El Dorado...............................: 22 13 12 10 10 3 Fresno..................................: 484 39,683 457 37,108 136 2,575 Glenn...................................: 43 259 38 252 6 7 Imperial................................: 6 100 6 (D) 1 (D) Kern....................................: 160 40,091 145 36,771 55 3,321 : Kings...................................: 4 (D) 4 13 1 (D) Los Angeles.............................: 55 155 45 151 16 4 Madera..................................: 37 2,813 32 2,543 12 269 Mendocino...............................: 7 1 3 1 4 (Z) Merced..................................: 20 837 9 (D) 13 (D) Monterey................................: 12 2 12 (D) 3 (D) Napa....................................: 3 (D) 3 (D) - - Nevada..................................: 11 (D) 9 2 2 (D) Orange..................................: 49 184 47 150 13 34 Placer..................................: 90 154 68 124 36 30 : Riverside...............................: 387 4,250 348 4,027 107 223 Sacramento..............................: 11 (D) 9 2 2 (D) San Benito..............................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - San Bernardino..........................: 253 2,640 244 2,549 43 91 San Diego...............................: 917 4,980 822 4,520 210 460 San Joaquin.............................: 17 726 15 (D) 3 (D) San Luis Obispo.........................: 75 273 62 252 22 21 San Mateo...............................: 5 1 - - 5 1 Santa Barbara...........................: 55 167 54 161 9 6 Santa Clara.............................: 19 21 15 19 6 2 : Santa Cruz..............................: 10 2 8 (D) 2 (D) Shasta..................................: 22 5 4 (Z) 18 4 Siskiyou................................: 4 (D) 1 (D) 3 2 Solano..................................: 19 43 14 (D) 9 (D) Sonoma..................................: 21 6 18 (D) 3 (D) Stanislaus..............................: 25 (D) 18 125 11 (D) Sutter..................................: 6 2 2 (D) 4 (D) Tehama..................................: 13 14 7 (D) 6 (D) Tulare..................................: 1,737 89,286 1,676 80,156 389 9,129 Ventura.................................: 476 5,731 456 5,356 93 375 : Yolo....................................: 39 214 36 202 8 12 Yuba....................................: 10 27 10 (D) 1 (D) : VALENCIA ORANGES : : State Total : : California..........................2012: 2,431 43,910 2,252 41,763 428 2,147 2007: 2,620 54,051 2,522 52,001 372 2,049 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 31. Fruits and Nuts: 2012 and 2007 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : Total : Bearing age acres : Nonbearing age acres :----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Geographic area : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- VALENCIA ORANGES - Con. : : Counties, 2012 : : Butte...................................: 11 5 10 5 7 1 Colusa..................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Contra Costa............................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - El Dorado...............................: 10 5 5 2 5 2 Fresno..................................: 123 7,530 118 7,271 24 258 Glenn...................................: 13 14 11 (D) 2 (D) Kern....................................: 61 6,330 53 6,151 20 179 Kings...................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Los Angeles.............................: 30 105 23 103 9 2 Madera..................................: 8 818 8 (D) 1 (D) : Mendocino...............................: 7 1 3 1 4 (Z) Merced..................................: 9 (D) 2 (D) 7 1 Monterey................................: 3 (D) 3 (D) - - Napa....................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Nevada..................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Orange..................................: 34 141 34 136 8 5 Placer..................................: 21 14 16 13 5 1 Riverside...............................: 170 2,440 146 2,353 41 88 Sacramento..............................: 3 (D) 3 (D) - - San Bernardino..........................: 119 1,425 113 1,397 13 28 : San Diego...............................: 603 3,990 557 3,664 110 325 San Joaquin.............................: 11 381 11 381 - - San Luis Obispo.........................: 31 210 28 (D) 5 (D) San Mateo...............................: 3 1 - - 3 1 Santa Barbara...........................: 26 31 26 (D) 1 (D) Santa Clara.............................: 13 2 7 1 6 1 Santa Cruz..............................: 10 1 8 (D) 2 (D) Shasta..................................: 5 1 - - 5 1 Siskiyou................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Solano..................................: 6 11 1 (D) 5 (D) : Sonoma..................................: 12 1 12 1 - - Stanislaus..............................: 7 (D) 3 (D) 4 (D) Tehama..................................: 2 (D) - - 2 (D) Tulare..................................: 668 15,959 651 14,978 76 981 Ventura.................................: 389 4,382 378 4,202 62 181 Yolo....................................: 11 50 10 (D) 1 (D) Yuba....................................: 3 1 3 1 - - : OTHER ORANGES : : State Total : : California..........................2012: 4,114 149,177 3,745 134,460 1,053 14,718 2007: 4,052 158,263 3,867 148,423 833 9,840 : Counties, 2012 : : Alameda.................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Butte...................................: 54 198 41 174 19 24 Calaveras...............................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Colusa..................................: 5 3 5 3 - - Contra Costa............................: 8 (D) 8 (D) - - El Dorado...............................: 14 8 9 8 5 1 Fresno..................................: 447 32,153 424 29,836 125 2,317 Glenn...................................: 41 244 36 (D) 6 (D) Imperial................................: 6 100 6 (D) 1 (D) Kern....................................: 142 33,761 129 30,619 45 3,142 : Kings...................................: 3 10 3 (D) 1 (D) Los Angeles.............................: 34 50 28 48 10 1 Madera..................................: 35 1,995 30 (D) 12 (D) Merced..................................: 20 (D) 9 (D) 13 (D) Monterey................................: 9 (D) 9 (D) 3 (D) Napa....................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Nevada..................................: 9 2 7 (D) 2 (D) Orange..................................: 25 44 23 14 5 29 Placer..................................: 81 140 64 110 31 29 Riverside...............................: 303 1,810 269 1,675 84 135 : Sacramento..............................: 11 2 9 (D) 2 (D) San Benito..............................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - San Bernardino..........................: 214 1,215 202 1,152 36 63 San Diego...............................: 548 990 465 856 151 134 San Joaquin.............................: 17 345 15 (D) 3 (D) San Luis Obispo.........................: 62 63 48 (D) 21 (D) San Mateo...............................: 5 1 - - 5 1 Santa Barbara...........................: 48 136 47 (D) 8 (D) Santa Clara.............................: 14 19 10 18 4 1 Santa Cruz..............................: 6 1 6 1 - - : Shasta..................................: 19 4 4 (Z) 15 4 Siskiyou................................: 3 2 - - 3 2 Solano..................................: 15 31 13 (D) 6 (D) Sonoma..................................: 21 5 18 (D) 3 (D) Stanislaus..............................: 22 128 15 (D) 11 (D) Sutter..................................: 6 2 2 (D) 4 (D) Tehama..................................: 11 (D) 7 (D) 4 (D) Tulare..................................: 1,573 73,327 1,522 65,179 355 8,148 Ventura.................................: 232 1,349 214 1,154 51 195 Yolo....................................: 35 165 32 (D) 8 (D) Yuba....................................: 9 26 9 (D) 1 (D) ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 31. Fruits and Nuts: 2012 and 2007 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : Total : Bearing age acres : Nonbearing age acres :----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Geographic area : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- TANGELOS : : State Total : : California..........................2012: 185 3,632 171 3,179 46 453 2007: 253 4,517 239 3,998 50 519 : Counties, 2012 : : Butte...................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) Calaveras...............................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Fresno..................................: 12 (D) 12 (D) 2 (D) Imperial................................: 6 412 6 (D) 2 (D) Kern....................................: 7 (D) 7 286 1 (D) Madera..................................: 4 391 4 (D) 1 (D) Merced..................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Orange..................................: 3 (D) - - 3 (D) Placer..................................: 3 3 3 2 3 1 Riverside...............................: 22 588 20 576 6 13 : San Bernardino..........................: 8 19 4 18 4 1 San Diego...............................: 54 92 51 89 8 3 Santa Barbara...........................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Shasta..................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) 2 (D) Solano..................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Stanislaus..............................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Tulare..................................: 49 1,235 47 935 11 301 Ventura.................................: 7 (D) 7 14 2 (D) : TANGERINES : : State Total : : California..........................2012: 755 33,465 643 24,428 264 9,037 2007: 706 21,528 595 15,030 234 6,499 : Counties, 2012 : : Butte...................................: 23 66 23 61 4 5 Colusa..................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - El Dorado...............................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Fresno..................................: 129 7,154 96 3,800 61 3,354 Glenn...................................: 7 72 7 (D) 1 (D) Imperial................................: 7 565 5 501 3 64 Kern....................................: 28 16,106 24 12,937 13 3,169 Kings...................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Lake....................................: 3 5 - - 3 5 Los Angeles.............................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - : Madera..................................: 10 1,647 9 (D) 3 (D) Mariposa................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Merced..................................: 1 (D) - - 1 (D) Napa....................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Nevada..................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Orange..................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Placer..................................: 39 91 39 79 9 12 Riverside...............................: 41 1,395 31 1,130 21 265 Sacramento..............................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - San Bernardino..........................: 4 5 4 (D) 1 (D) : San Diego...............................: 69 340 61 123 23 217 San Joaquin.............................: 4 120 4 120 - - San Luis Obispo.........................: 4 5 4 (D) 2 (D) Santa Barbara...........................: 11 52 10 (D) 4 (D) Santa Clara.............................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Santa Cruz..............................: 1 (D) - - 1 (D) Shasta..................................: 3 (D) 3 (D) 2 (D) Sonoma..................................: 4 3 4 3 - - Stanislaus..............................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Sutter..................................: 8 36 7 (D) 1 (D) : Tehama..................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Tulare..................................: 240 5,009 202 3,467 85 1,542 Ventura.................................: 93 687 84 574 24 113 Yolo....................................: 4 1 4 1 - - Yuba....................................: 5 13 5 (D) 2 (D) : OTHER CITRUS FRUIT : : State Total : : California..........................2012: 238 2,568 196 1,976 80 592 2007: 40 127 35 57 15 70 : Counties, 2012 : : Contra Costa............................: 5 4 5 (D) 1 (D) El Dorado...............................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Fresno..................................: 30 1,861 23 (D) 15 (D) Glenn...................................: 11 53 7 1 6 52 Kings...................................: 2 (D) - - 2 (D) Los Angeles.............................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Madera..................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Marin...................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Merced..................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Napa....................................: 4 (Z) 4 (Z) - - : Orange..................................: 6 8 6 8 - - Placer..................................: 37 91 36 86 10 6 Riverside...............................: 21 49 11 39 11 9 Sacramento..............................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - San Benito..............................: 3 (Z) - - 3 (Z) ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 31. Fruits and Nuts: 2012 and 2007 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : Total : Bearing age acres : Nonbearing age acres :----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Geographic area : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- OTHER CITRUS FRUIT - Con. : : Counties, 2012 - Con. : : San Bernardino..........................: 5 10 3 (D) 2 (D) San Diego...............................: 44 63 42 50 10 14 San Luis Obispo.........................: 9 6 6 (D) 4 (D) San Mateo...............................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Santa Barbara...........................: 2 (D) 2 (D) 2 (D) Shasta..................................: 5 2 2 (D) 3 (D) Solano..................................: 2 (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) Sonoma..................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Stanislaus..............................: 2 (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) Trinity.................................: 5 1 5 1 - - : Tulare..................................: 24 192 21 164 8 28 Ventura.................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Yolo....................................: 4 (D) 4 (D) - - Yuba....................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) 1 (D) : NUTS, ALL : : State Total : : California..........................2012: 12,939 1,499,520 11,802 1,275,752 4,877 223,769 2007: 12,639 1,210,203 11,494 990,830 4,892 219,374 : Counties, 2012 : : Alameda.................................: 17 (D) 9 (D) 8 709 Amador..................................: 27 277 26 (D) 1 (D) Butte...................................: 844 78,378 789 69,585 307 8,792 Calaveras...............................: 41 (D) 35 829 19 (D) Colusa..................................: 283 55,391 266 47,755 116 7,636 Contra Costa............................: 46 935 38 797 19 138 El Dorado...............................: 130 371 90 318 70 52 Fresno..................................: 1,161 202,745 1,072 169,068 384 33,677 Glenn...................................: 373 75,239 328 66,303 166 8,936 Humboldt................................: 14 60 9 59 5 1 : Imperial................................: 3 177 3 105 3 72 Kern....................................: 457 251,136 411 221,675 190 29,461 Kings...................................: 330 58,971 313 48,952 116 10,018 Lake....................................: 352 4,856 328 3,913 89 943 Lassen..................................: 3 (D) 3 (D) - - Los Angeles.............................: 30 272 21 (D) 9 (D) Madera..................................: 610 134,597 577 115,001 216 19,596 Marin...................................: 12 (D) 6 91 8 (D) Mariposa................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) Mendocino...............................: 24 223 17 149 14 74 : Merced..................................: 1,109 128,193 1,075 111,735 378 16,458 Monterey................................: 22 792 22 659 6 133 Napa....................................: 33 141 27 100 11 41 Nevada..................................: 21 16 17 15 7 1 Orange..................................: 5 1 - - 5 1 Placer..................................: 58 397 50 343 25 54 Riverside...............................: 73 1,008 48 937 32 71 Sacramento..............................: 46 907 33 728 23 179 San Benito..............................: 95 1,503 91 1,411 29 93 San Bernardino..........................: 66 415 51 317 30 98 : San Diego...............................: 169 433 142 280 64 153 San Joaquin.............................: 1,397 103,791 1,322 86,931 520 16,861 San Luis Obispo.........................: 231 4,054 194 3,586 83 469 San Mateo...............................: 5 (D) 3 (D) 2 (D) Santa Barbara...........................: 30 1,754 28 (D) 8 (D) Santa Clara.............................: 81 546 70 469 25 78 Santa Cruz..............................: 16 14 8 1 9 13 Shasta..................................: 111 637 83 490 53 147 Siskiyou................................: 5 (D) 5 (D) 2 (D) Solano..................................: 179 14,305 167 12,127 73 2,178 : Sonoma..................................: 62 182 52 132 16 50 Stanislaus..............................: 2,112 166,986 1,930 144,574 859 22,412 Sutter..................................: 655 45,547 596 37,264 278 8,283 Tehama..................................: 287 30,547 263 23,169 120 7,378 Trinity.................................: 3 (Z) - - 3 (Z) Tulare..................................: 856 83,250 769 63,893 294 19,357 Tuolumne................................: 7 (D) 3 (D) 4 1 Ventura.................................: 27 134 25 (D) 3 (D) Yolo....................................: 268 31,169 247 25,329 115 5,841 Yuba....................................: 152 16,944 139 14,435 59 2,509 : ALMONDS : : State Total : : California..........................2012: 6,841 935,804 6,204 817,920 2,539 117,885 2007: 6,474 790,160 5,821 649,892 2,721 140,269 : Counties, 2012 : : Alameda.................................: 5 (D) 5 (D) - - Butte...................................: 382 41,117 373 (D) 119 (D) Calaveras...............................: 5 (D) 5 (D) - - Colusa..................................: 168 (D) 159 (D) 66 (D) Contra Costa............................: 8 (D) 4 (D) 4 22 El Dorado...............................: 54 9 21 3 36 5 Fresno..................................: 849 153,609 790 132,091 246 21,518 Glenn...................................: 204 49,984 181 45,693 84 4,291 Humboldt................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 31. Fruits and Nuts: 2012 and 2007 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : Total : Bearing age acres : Nonbearing age acres :----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Geographic area : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- ALMONDS - Con. : : Counties, 2012 - Con. : : Kern....................................: 318 157,819 298 143,809 118 14,010 Kings...................................: 93 24,538 84 18,501 38 6,038 Lake....................................: 9 (D) 2 (D) 7 (D) Lassen..................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Los Angeles.............................: 15 (D) 8 (D) 7 1 Madera..................................: 425 92,589 392 80,630 170 11,959 Marin...................................: 3 (D) - - 3 (D) Mariposa................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) Mendocino...............................: 6 (D) - - 6 (D) Merced..................................: 977 115,599 946 101,499 334 14,100 : Monterey................................: 5 (D) 3 (D) 2 (D) Napa....................................: 7 (D) 5 (D) 2 (D) Nevada..................................: 6 (D) 5 1 1 (D) Orange..................................: 2 (D) - - 2 (D) Placer..................................: 28 27 16 19 15 8 Riverside...............................: 23 83 10 (D) 14 (D) Sacramento..............................: 14 (D) 10 (D) 5 2 San Benito..............................: 4 (D) 2 (D) 2 (D) San Bernardino..........................: 10 (D) 6 (D) 4 (Z) San Diego...............................: 22 42 12 (D) 10 (D) : San Joaquin.............................: 777 54,283 725 46,380 277 7,903 San Luis Obispo.........................: 86 865 63 595 39 270 San Mateo...............................: 2 (D) - - 2 (D) Santa Barbara...........................: 7 (D) 5 (D) 4 (D) Santa Clara.............................: 18 178 8 176 10 3 Santa Cruz..............................: 11 13 3 (Z) 8 12 Shasta..................................: 17 45 6 (D) 12 (D) Siskiyou................................: 3 (D) 3 (D) - - Solano..................................: 52 (D) 48 (D) 19 (D) Sonoma..................................: 17 5 17 5 - - : Stanislaus..............................: 1,717 138,162 1,566 120,339 674 17,823 Sutter..................................: 87 7,999 75 6,975 39 1,025 Tehama..................................: 68 7,552 62 6,555 32 997 Tulare..................................: 174 27,787 150 22,365 60 5,422 Tuolumne................................: 5 (D) 1 (D) 4 (D) Ventura.................................: 13 (D) 12 (D) 1 (D) Yolo....................................: 114 14,187 98 11,882 51 2,305 Yuba....................................: 28 2,567 22 (D) 11 (D) : CHESTNUTS : : State Total : : California..........................2012: 59 507 53 428 20 79 2007: 76 334 62 (D) 31 (D) : Counties, 2012 : : Butte...................................: 3 (D) 3 (D) - - Contra Costa............................: 2 (D) - - 2 (D) El Dorado...............................: 6 43 6 (D) 2 (D) Glenn...................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Humboldt................................: 3 53 3 53 - - Mendocino...............................: 3 (D) 3 (D) - - Merced..................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Nevada..................................: 7 (D) 7 (D) - - Placer..................................: 3 17 3 (D) 1 (D) Sacramento..............................: 1 (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) : San Diego...............................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - San Joaquin.............................: 4 (D) 4 (D) 2 (D) Santa Cruz..............................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Siskiyou................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Sonoma..................................: 8 29 4 12 5 17 Stanislaus..............................: 10 177 10 131 5 46 Tulare..................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Yolo....................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) 2 (D) Yuba....................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - : HAZELNUTS (FILBERTS) : : State Total : : California..........................2012: 33 137 21 26 12 110 2007: 12 10 7 (D) 5 (D) : Counties, 2012 : : Calaveras...............................: 3 2 3 2 - - Contra Costa............................: 2 (D) - - 2 (D) El Dorado...............................: 5 6 4 (D) 1 (D) Humboldt................................: 2 (D) - - 2 (D) Lake....................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Lassen..................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Madera..................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Monterey................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Napa....................................: 2 (D) - - 2 (D) Nevada..................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - : Santa Clara.............................: 3 9 3 9 - - Shasta..................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Sonoma..................................: 3 26 - - 3 26 Stanislaus..............................: 2 (D) - - 2 (D) ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 31. Fruits and Nuts: 2012 and 2007 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : Total : Bearing age acres : Nonbearing age acres :----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Geographic area : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- MACADAMIA NUTS : : State Total : : California..........................2012: 146 277 126 230 46 48 2007: 139 184 100 102 56 82 : Counties, 2012 : : Calaveras...............................: 3 (D) - - 3 (D) Los Angeles.............................: 3 4 3 4 - - Marin...................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) 2 (D) Riverside...............................: 3 3 3 (D) 1 (D) San Diego...............................: 112 161 101 136 34 26 San Luis Obispo.........................: 7 2 3 (D) 4 (D) Santa Barbara...........................: 6 14 6 14 - - Santa Clara.............................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Tehama..................................: 2 (D) - - 2 (D) Ventura.................................: 6 11 6 11 - - : PECANS, ALL : : State Total : : California..........................2012: 222 3,309 190 2,563 74 746 2007: 283 3,128 233 2,487 96 641 : Counties, 2012 : : Amador..................................: 1 (D) - - 1 (D) Butte...................................: 12 266 12 (D) 2 (D) Calaveras...............................: 3 (Z) - - 3 (Z) Colusa..................................: 3 (D) 3 130 2 (D) El Dorado...............................: 3 (D) 1 (D) 3 (D) Fresno..................................: 53 562 50 317 12 245 Glenn...................................: 13 (D) 11 204 6 (D) Kern....................................: 6 (D) 1 (D) 5 (D) Kings...................................: 5 75 5 (D) 2 (D) Los Angeles.............................: 2 (D) - - 2 (D) : Madera..................................: 5 (D) 4 (D) 1 (D) Mendocino...............................: 1 (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) Merced..................................: 6 (D) 6 50 2 (D) Placer..................................: 8 8 8 (D) 1 (D) Riverside...............................: 8 (D) 8 (D) - - Sacramento..............................: 6 (D) 3 (D) 4 (D) San Bernardino..........................: 4 (D) 4 (D) - - San Diego...............................: 1 (D) - - 1 (D) San Joaquin.............................: 4 (D) 4 (D) 1 (D) San Luis Obispo.........................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - : Shasta..................................: 16 (D) 15 (D) 9 (D) Solano..................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Stanislaus..............................: 9 95 7 (D) 3 (D) Sutter..................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Tehama..................................: 12 166 10 (D) 4 (D) Tulare..................................: 33 416 29 333 9 83 Yolo....................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Yuba....................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - : PECANS, IMPROVED : : State Total : : California..........................2012: 179 3,081 153 2,377 63 704 2007: 279 3,128 233 2,487 92 641 : Counties, 2012 : : Amador..................................: 1 (D) - - 1 (D) Butte...................................: 11 (D) 11 264 2 (D) Calaveras...............................: 3 (Z) - - 3 (Z) Colusa..................................: 3 (D) 3 130 2 (D) El Dorado...............................: 3 (D) 1 (D) 3 (D) Fresno..................................: 38 426 35 181 12 245 Glenn...................................: 13 (D) 11 204 6 (D) Kern....................................: 6 (D) 1 (D) 5 (D) Kings...................................: 4 (D) 4 (D) 2 (D) Madera..................................: 4 (D) 4 (D) - - : Merced..................................: 6 (D) 6 50 2 (D) Placer..................................: 8 8 8 (D) 1 (D) Riverside...............................: 6 (D) 6 (D) - - Sacramento..............................: 4 (D) 1 (D) 4 (D) San Bernardino..........................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - San Diego...............................: 1 (D) - - 1 (D) San Joaquin.............................: 4 (D) 4 (D) 1 (D) San Luis Obispo.........................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Shasta..................................: 8 (D) 8 (D) 4 (D) Solano..................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - : Stanislaus..............................: 9 95 7 (D) 3 (D) Sutter..................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Tehama..................................: 10 (D) 10 (D) 2 (D) Tulare..................................: 28 402 24 319 9 83 Yuba....................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 31. Fruits and Nuts: 2012 and 2007 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : Total : Bearing age acres : Nonbearing age acres :----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Geographic area : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- PECANS, NATIVE AND : SEEDLING : : State Total : : California..........................2012: 45 228 39 187 11 42 2007: 4 (Z) - - 4 (Z) : Counties, 2012 : : Butte...................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Fresno..................................: 15 136 15 136 - - Kings...................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Los Angeles.............................: 2 (D) - - 2 (D) Madera..................................: 1 (D) - - 1 (D) Mendocino...............................: 1 (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) Riverside...............................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Sacramento..............................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - San Bernardino..........................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Shasta..................................: 8 13 7 2 5 11 : Tehama..................................: 4 (D) 2 (D) 2 (D) Tulare..................................: 5 14 5 14 - - Yolo....................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - : PISTACHIOS : : State Total : : California..........................2012: 1,305 228,248 1,076 181,957 519 46,290 2007: 1,141 151,484 936 114,832 435 36,651 : Counties, 2012 : : Alameda.................................: 12 807 4 98 8 709 Amador..................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Butte...................................: 14 634 14 (D) 3 (D) Calaveras...............................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Colusa..................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Contra Costa............................: 3 (D) 3 (D) 2 (D) El Dorado...............................: 14 (D) 5 (D) 10 1 Fresno..................................: 211 40,535 179 30,084 72 10,452 Glenn...................................: 14 (D) 13 (D) 4 (D) Imperial................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) 2 (D) : Kern....................................: 173 89,772 145 74,524 78 15,248 Kings...................................: 74 19,738 59 17,429 39 2,309 Los Angeles.............................: 18 (D) 11 (D) 7 1 Madera..................................: 235 38,085 223 31,960 56 6,125 Mendocino...............................: 6 (D) 2 (D) 4 (Z) Merced..................................: 60 6,547 58 5,267 14 1,280 Nevada..................................: 3 (D) - - 3 (D) Placer..................................: 9 32 7 11 3 21 Riverside...............................: 15 (D) 7 (D) 8 (D) Sacramento..............................: 6 (D) 6 (D) - - : San Bernardino..........................: 52 (D) 38 234 28 (D) San Diego...............................: 17 35 14 28 11 7 San Joaquin.............................: 15 597 11 499 7 99 San Luis Obispo.........................: 38 (D) 23 329 21 (D) Santa Barbara...........................: 8 757 8 737 4 20 Santa Clara.............................: 6 (D) 6 (D) - - Santa Cruz..............................: 2 (D) - - 2 (D) Shasta..................................: 12 26 - - 12 26 Solano..................................: 6 (D) 6 (D) 1 (D) Stanislaus..............................: 11 (D) 11 (D) - - : Sutter..................................: 6 (D) 6 (D) 3 (D) Tehama..................................: 11 133 8 (D) 5 (D) Tulare..................................: 224 25,318 182 15,778 102 9,540 Yolo....................................: 15 263 14 (D) 8 (D) Yuba....................................: 9 7 7 (D) 2 (D) : WALNUTS, ENGLISH : : State Total : : California..........................2012: 5,712 329,112 5,176 270,819 2,034 58,293 2007: 5,712 264,517 5,345 222,887 1,878 41,629 : Counties, 2012 : : Amador..................................: 26 (D) 25 (D) 1 (D) Butte...................................: 560 36,294 503 30,522 203 5,772 Calaveras...............................: 35 800 29 773 16 27 Colusa..................................: 139 (D) 124 (D) 62 (D) Contra Costa............................: 35 628 30 515 13 113 El Dorado...............................: 90 281 67 243 50 38 Fresno..................................: 169 7,884 140 6,445 70 1,439 Glenn...................................: 197 23,968 169 19,400 80 4,568 Humboldt................................: 9 6 6 (D) 3 (D) Imperial................................: 3 (D) 3 (D) 3 (D) : Kern....................................: 22 (D) 18 (D) 9 (D) Kings...................................: 205 14,316 197 (D) 50 (D) Lake....................................: 337 4,836 320 3,895 81 941 Los Angeles.............................: 8 (D) 4 (D) 4 (Z) Madera..................................: 38 (D) 32 2,383 15 (D) Marin...................................: 6 37 3 (D) 3 (D) Mendocino...............................: 16 174 11 112 11 62 Merced..................................: 113 5,861 104 (D) 39 (D) Monterey................................: 20 790 20 (D) 4 (D) ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 31. Fruits and Nuts: 2012 and 2007 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : Total : Bearing age acres : Nonbearing age acres :----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Geographic area : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- WALNUTS, ENGLISH - Con. : : Counties, 2012 - Con. : : Napa....................................: 23 120 21 (D) 7 (D) Nevada..................................: 8 1 5 1 3 (Z) Orange..................................: 3 (D) - - 3 (D) Placer..................................: 28 314 20 (D) 9 (D) Riverside...............................: 31 336 24 330 12 6 Sacramento..............................: 27 413 21 (D) 13 (D) San Benito..............................: 92 1,498 88 (D) 27 (D) San Bernardino..........................: 6 1 4 (D) 2 (D) San Diego...............................: 34 187 27 76 13 111 San Joaquin.............................: 712 48,850 679 39,992 260 8,858 : San Luis Obispo.........................: 135 2,795 124 2,641 38 154 San Mateo...............................: 5 (D) 3 (D) 2 (D) Santa Barbara...........................: 10 (D) 9 319 1 (D) Santa Clara.............................: 62 328 54 253 18 75 Santa Cruz..............................: 6 1 4 (D) 3 (D) Shasta..................................: 79 539 67 456 27 84 Siskiyou................................: 3 3 3 (D) 2 (D) Solano..................................: 142 9,868 133 8,387 58 1,481 Sonoma..................................: 43 122 40 115 8 8 Stanislaus..............................: 602 28,051 551 23,727 218 4,324 : Sutter..................................: 575 37,305 526 30,115 237 7,190 Tehama..................................: 221 22,681 200 16,309 90 6,372 Trinity.................................: 3 (Z) - - 3 (Z) Tulare..................................: 514 29,542 476 25,229 144 4,313 Tuolumne................................: 4 (D) 2 (D) 2 (D) Ventura.................................: 7 72 6 (D) 2 (D) Yolo....................................: 170 16,640 158 13,354 61 3,287 Yuba....................................: 139 14,222 126 11,866 54 2,356 : OTHER NUTS : : State Total : : California..........................2012: 119 2,128 107 1,809 38 319 2007: 21 387 17 358 5 29 : Counties, 2012 : : Butte...................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) Contra Costa............................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - El Dorado...............................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Fresno..................................: 18 155 18 132 8 24 Kings...................................: 9 304 9 (D) 2 (D) Lake....................................: 8 17 8 (D) 1 (D) Marin...................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Merced..................................: 9 (D) 9 (D) - - Napa....................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Riverside...............................: 1 (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) : San Benito..............................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - San Diego...............................: 1 (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) San Luis Obispo.........................: 3 (D) 3 (D) - - Santa Clara.............................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Shasta..................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Solano..................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) Stanislaus..............................: 19 338 15 232 9 106 Sutter..................................: 11 130 8 (D) 7 (D) Tehama..................................: 3 (D) 3 (D) - - Tulare..................................: 17 (D) 17 (D) - - : Ventura.................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Yolo....................................: 5 (D) - - 5 (D) Yuba....................................: 3 (D) 3 (D) 2 (D) ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Table 32. Land in Berries: 2012 and 2007 [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : 2012 : 2007 :--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : Total : Irrigated : Total : Irrigated :--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Geographic area : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- State Total : : California..............................: 1,985 52,626 1,985 52,626 1,411 42,081 1,411 42,081 : Counties : : Alameda.................................: 8 2 8 2 1 (D) 1 (D) Amador..................................: 11 2 11 2 2 (D) 2 (D) Butte...................................: 34 84 34 84 33 65 33 65 Calaveras...............................: 14 20 14 20 14 23 14 23 Colusa..................................: 3 2 3 2 3 (D) 3 2 Contra Costa............................: 22 19 22 19 13 27 13 27 Del Norte...............................: 11 7 11 7 7 14 7 14 El Dorado...............................: 87 127 87 127 58 66 58 66 Fresno..................................: 43 603 43 603 43 559 43 559 Glenn...................................: 13 93 13 93 9 172 9 172 : Humboldt................................: 86 43 86 43 30 34 30 34 Imperial................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - - - Inyo....................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - - - Kern....................................: 27 1,942 27 1,942 20 1,112 20 1,112 Kings...................................: 21 22 21 22 5 32 5 32 Lake....................................: 15 26 15 26 11 18 11 18 Lassen..................................: 3 2 3 2 1 (D) 1 (D) Los Angeles.............................: 39 67 39 67 32 139 32 139 Madera..................................: 12 95 12 95 9 23 9 23 Marin...................................: 15 10 15 10 9 4 9 4 : Mariposa................................: 7 (D) 7 (D) 2 (D) 2 (D) Mendocino...............................: 69 52 69 52 31 37 31 37 Merced..................................: 30 462 30 462 13 134 13 134 Monterey................................: 121 15,502 121 15,502 148 11,029 148 11,029 Napa....................................: 13 13 13 13 8 15 8 15 Nevada..................................: 64 24 64 24 24 11 24 11 Orange..................................: 19 1,900 19 1,900 28 1,831 28 1,831 Placer..................................: 56 53 56 53 43 97 43 97 Riverside...............................: 42 149 42 149 32 101 32 101 Sacramento..............................: 46 117 46 117 32 96 32 96 : San Benito..............................: 5 5 5 5 12 76 12 76 San Bernardino..........................: 43 183 43 183 25 117 25 117 San Diego...............................: 110 445 110 445 70 342 70 342 San Joaquin.............................: 38 437 38 437 17 257 17 257 San Luis Obispo.........................: 87 913 87 913 52 690 52 690 San Mateo...............................: 24 39 24 39 7 (D) 7 (D) Santa Barbara...........................: 123 7,182 123 7,182 103 5,567 103 5,567 Santa Clara.............................: 30 96 30 96 13 94 13 94 Santa Cruz..............................: 122 7,297 122 7,297 121 5,651 121 5,651 Shasta..................................: 58 43 58 43 33 46 33 46 : Sierra..................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - - - Siskiyou................................: 10 7 10 7 16 (D) 16 (D) Solano..................................: 6 35 6 35 10 26 10 26 Sonoma..................................: 97 159 97 159 58 125 58 125 Stanislaus..............................: 22 140 22 140 25 95 25 95 Sutter..................................: 19 29 19 29 3 1 3 1 Tehama..................................: 15 22 15 22 8 18 8 18 Trinity.................................: 33 14 33 14 10 3 10 3 Tulare..................................: 64 596 64 596 34 512 34 512 Tuolumne................................: 3 (D) 3 (D) 10 8 10 8 : Ventura.................................: 99 13,439 99 13,439 95 12,335 95 12,335 Yolo....................................: 22 60 22 60 16 55 16 55 Yuba....................................: 20 34 20 34 12 23 12 23 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Table 33. Berries: 2012 and 2007 [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : Total : Harvested : Not harvested :----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Geographic area : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- BLACKBERRIES AND DEWBERRIES : (INCLUDING MARIONBERRIES) : : State Total : : California..........................2012: 626 1,172 531 776 161 396 2007: 383 1,132 335 920 80 212 : Counties, 2012 : : Alameda.................................: 7 (D) 7 (D) - - Butte...................................: 21 33 21 33 - - Calaveras...............................: 4 1 3 (D) 1 (D) Contra Costa............................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - El Dorado...............................: 42 38 34 19 21 19 Fresno..................................: 14 20 14 20 - - Glenn...................................: 8 (D) 3 (D) 5 1 Humboldt................................: 25 8 22 8 3 (Z) Inyo....................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) 1 (D) Kern....................................: 4 6 4 6 - - : Kings...................................: 7 3 4 1 3 2 Lake....................................: 3 (D) 3 (D) - - Lassen..................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Los Angeles.............................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Madera..................................: 7 (D) - - 7 (D) Marin...................................: 4 2 4 1 4 (Z) Mariposa................................: 3 (D) 1 (D) 3 (D) Mendocino...............................: 22 8 19 6 9 2 Monterey................................: 23 379 19 102 7 277 Napa....................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - : Nevada..................................: 31 6 23 4 18 3 Orange..................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Placer..................................: 36 29 31 25 9 4 Riverside...............................: 9 (D) 2 (D) 7 1 Sacramento..............................: 18 9 18 8 3 (Z) San Bernardino..........................: 6 3 6 3 - - San Diego...............................: 38 12 29 11 10 1 San Joaquin.............................: 4 4 4 3 3 1 San Luis Obispo.........................: 40 89 34 78 9 11 San Mateo...............................: 8 7 8 (D) 2 (D) : Santa Barbara...........................: 12 5 12 5 - - Santa Clara.............................: 12 10 12 10 - - Santa Cruz..............................: 37 380 32 326 13 55 Shasta..................................: 22 8 20 (D) 2 (D) Sierra..................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Siskiyou................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Sonoma..................................: 52 16 45 12 8 4 Stanislaus..............................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Sutter..................................: 13 13 13 13 - - Tehama..................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - : Trinity.................................: 9 9 9 9 - - Tulare..................................: 34 22 29 19 8 3 Tuolumne................................: 1 (D) - - 1 (D) Ventura.................................: 15 14 14 (D) 1 (D) Yolo....................................: 9 2 7 (D) 2 (D) Yuba....................................: 12 11 11 (D) 1 (D) : BLUEBERRIES, TAME : : State Total : : California..........................2012: 416 4,806 324 4,187 157 619 2007: 223 3,081 186 2,232 72 849 : Counties, 2012 : : Amador..................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) Butte...................................: 9 12 7 11 3 1 Calaveras...............................: 8 5 5 4 3 (Z) Contra Costa............................: 2 (D) - - 2 (D) Del Norte...............................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - El Dorado...............................: 57 61 42 49 27 12 Fresno..................................: 17 524 17 (D) 1 (D) Glenn...................................: 3 59 3 (D) 2 (D) Humboldt................................: 24 11 15 10 9 1 Imperial................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - : Inyo....................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Kern....................................: 12 (D) 12 1,491 5 (D) Kings...................................: 3 1 - - 3 1 Lassen..................................: 2 (D) - - 2 (D) Los Angeles.............................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Madera..................................: 8 90 3 (D) 7 (D) Marin...................................: 3 (D) - - 3 (D) Mariposa................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Mendocino...............................: 4 21 4 9 3 12 Merced..................................: 3 (D) 3 (D) - - : Monterey................................: 4 22 4 22 - - Napa....................................: 3 7 3 7 - - Nevada..................................: 14 7 8 4 9 3 Orange..................................: 4 (Z) - - 4 (Z) Placer..................................: 15 3 15 (D) 2 (D) Riverside...............................: 10 11 8 (D) 4 (D) Sacramento..............................: 5 (D) 5 (D) - - San Bernardino..........................: 3 (Z) 3 (Z) - - San Diego...............................: 33 174 21 170 14 4 San Joaquin.............................: 10 327 10 327 - - ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 33. Berries: 2012 and 2007 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : Total : Harvested : Not harvested :----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Geographic area : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- BLUEBERRIES, TAME - Con. : : Counties, 2012 - Con. : : San Luis Obispo.........................: 25 79 21 71 7 8 San Mateo...............................: 4 (D) 4 (D) 4 1 Santa Barbara...........................: 12 120 12 117 3 3 Santa Clara.............................: 3 9 3 1 3 8 Santa Cruz..............................: 12 (D) 11 (D) 1 (D) Shasta..................................: 10 5 5 2 8 2 Siskiyou................................: 2 (D) - - 2 (D) Sonoma..................................: 19 56 19 56 - - Stanislaus..............................: 5 46 5 46 - - Sutter..................................: 3 (Z) 3 (Z) - - : Tehama..................................: 8 11 4 11 6 1 Trinity.................................: 9 (D) 4 (D) 5 1 Tulare..................................: 15 540 15 (D) 2 (D) Tuolumne................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) 2 (D) Ventura.................................: 17 585 16 395 8 190 Yolo....................................: 4 19 2 (D) 2 (D) Yuba....................................: 3 2 3 2 - - : BLUEBERRIES, WILD : : State Total : : California..........................2012: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - 2007: - - - - - - : Counties, 2012 : : Sacramento..............................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - : BOYSENBERRIES : : State Total : : California..........................2012: 210 75 167 61 49 13 2007: 117 114 104 103 22 11 : Counties, 2012 : : Butte...................................: 8 1 8 1 - - Calaveras...............................: 3 (D) 2 (D) 1 (D) Contra Costa............................: 8 3 3 2 5 1 El Dorado...............................: 9 3 4 3 5 1 Fresno..................................: 6 4 6 (D) 1 (D) Humboldt................................: 9 1 9 1 - - Inyo....................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) 1 (D) Kern....................................: 4 (Z) 4 (Z) - - Kings...................................: 4 (Z) 1 (D) 3 (D) Los Angeles.............................: 8 3 8 3 - - : Madera..................................: 3 (Z) 1 (D) 2 (D) Mendocino...............................: 8 1 8 1 - - Merced..................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Monterey................................: 8 2 2 (D) 6 (D) Nevada..................................: 11 2 11 2 - - Orange..................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Placer..................................: 9 3 6 3 3 1 Riverside...............................: 6 4 6 4 - - San Bernardino..........................: 4 1 4 1 - - San Diego...............................: 15 (D) 14 3 1 (D) : San Joaquin.............................: 4 7 4 7 - - San Luis Obispo.........................: 15 3 14 (D) 2 (D) San Mateo...............................: 4 1 4 1 - - Santa Barbara...........................: 3 (D) 2 (D) 1 (D) Santa Clara.............................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Santa Cruz..............................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Shasta..................................: 12 4 6 1 9 4 Sonoma..................................: 14 (D) 12 4 2 (D) Stanislaus..............................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Sutter..................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - : Tehama..................................: 7 1 1 (D) 6 (D) Tulare..................................: 8 4 8 4 - - Ventura.................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Yolo....................................: 7 2 6 (D) 1 (D) : CURRANTS : : State Total : : California..........................2012: 14 (D) 8 7 9 (D) 2007: 7 (D) 5 2 3 (D) : Counties, 2012 : : Contra Costa............................: 2 (D) - - 2 (D) Fresno..................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Humboldt................................: 6 1 2 (D) 6 (D) Lake....................................: 3 2 3 2 - - San Luis Obispo.........................: 1 (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) Sonoma..................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 33. Berries: 2012 and 2007 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : Total : Harvested : Not harvested :----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Geographic area : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- LOGANBERRIES : : State Total : : California..........................2012: 46 14 41 9 9 5 2007: 5 2 5 2 - - : Counties, 2012 : : Contra Costa............................: 3 1 3 1 - - El Dorado...............................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Humboldt................................: 12 2 12 2 - - Inyo....................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) Kern....................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Mendocino...............................: 3 1 3 (D) 1 (D) Monterey................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Riverside...............................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Sacramento..............................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - San Diego...............................: 7 7 5 2 4 4 : Santa Cruz..............................: 3 1 3 1 - - Shasta..................................: 4 1 3 (D) 1 (D) Trinity.................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Tulare..................................: 2 (D) - - 2 (D) : RASPBERRIES, ALL : : State Total : : California..........................2012: 483 5,570 418 5,129 103 441 2007: 274 3,247 254 3,084 51 163 : Counties, 2012 : : Alameda.................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Butte...................................: 12 3 12 3 - - Calaveras...............................: 8 2 6 (D) 2 (D) Del Norte...............................: 7 (D) 7 (D) - - El Dorado...............................: 38 8 26 6 12 2 Fresno..................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Glenn...................................: 5 (D) 5 (D) - - Humboldt................................: 25 6 18 5 7 1 Kern....................................: 7 4 7 (D) 1 (D) Kings...................................: 3 (Z) - - 3 (Z) : Lake....................................: 14 2 14 2 - - Lassen..................................: 3 (Z) 1 (D) 3 (D) Los Angeles.............................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Madera..................................: 2 (D) - - 2 (D) Marin...................................: 6 2 6 2 - - Mendocino...............................: 19 9 19 9 3 (Z) Monterey................................: 24 669 24 571 3 97 Napa....................................: 3 (D) 3 (D) - - Nevada..................................: 27 5 19 4 8 1 Placer..................................: 10 2 8 (D) 2 (D) : Riverside...............................: 13 3 9 2 9 1 San Bernardino..........................: 3 2 3 2 - - San Diego...............................: 14 10 13 9 6 1 San Joaquin.............................: 8 7 4 3 4 4 San Luis Obispo.........................: 31 106 25 99 8 7 San Mateo...............................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Santa Barbara...........................: 21 39 21 39 - - Santa Clara.............................: 12 11 12 11 - - Santa Cruz..............................: 61 2,836 56 2,813 14 23 Shasta..................................: 15 2 8 1 7 1 : Sierra..................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Siskiyou................................: 4 1 4 1 - - Sonoma..................................: 33 14 33 (D) 1 (D) Sutter..................................: 3 3 3 2 3 2 Tehama..................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Trinity.................................: 14 3 14 3 - - Tulare..................................: 6 4 6 4 - - Ventura.................................: 21 1,792 21 1,494 5 298 Yuba....................................: 3 1 3 1 - - : STRAWBERRIES : : State Total : : California..........................2012: 995 40,926 887 38,800 216 2,126 2007: 729 34,442 719 34,101 77 341 : Counties, 2012 : : Alameda.................................: 3 1 3 1 - - Amador..................................: 10 (D) 10 (D) - - Butte...................................: 9 34 9 (D) 2 (D) Calaveras...............................: 6 11 5 (D) 1 (D) Contra Costa............................: 10 8 7 8 3 (Z) Del Norte...............................: 7 1 7 1 - - El Dorado...............................: 26 16 22 8 11 8 Fresno..................................: 7 51 7 (D) 1 (D) Glenn...................................: 3 8 3 8 - - Humboldt................................: 49 12 29 10 20 3 : Kern....................................: 10 (D) 10 (D) - - Kings...................................: 14 17 14 17 - - Lake....................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) Los Angeles.............................: 23 57 14 55 13 2 Madera..................................: 8 2 3 1 5 2 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 33. Berries: 2012 and 2007 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : Total : Harvested : Not harvested :----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Geographic area : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- STRAWBERRIES - Con. : : Counties, 2012 - Con. : : Marin...................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Mariposa................................: 3 (Z) 3 (Z) - - Mendocino...............................: 31 6 15 4 18 2 Merced..................................: 25 (D) 19 365 6 (D) Monterey................................: 99 14,430 98 14,017 10 413 Napa....................................: 6 4 1 (D) 5 (D) Nevada..................................: 25 4 23 (D) 2 (D) Orange..................................: 14 1,900 13 (D) 1 (D) Placer..................................: 8 16 5 9 6 7 Riverside...............................: 16 129 11 123 8 6 : Sacramento..............................: 34 (D) 34 (D) 4 4 San Benito..............................: 5 4 5 4 - - San Bernardino..........................: 30 171 30 171 - - San Diego...............................: 44 237 43 235 6 2 San Joaquin.............................: 22 91 22 73 11 18 San Luis Obispo.........................: 36 628 32 620 5 8 San Mateo...............................: 15 16 12 10 4 5 Santa Barbara...........................: 105 7,017 103 5,743 16 1,274 Santa Clara.............................: 12 66 12 34 6 32 Santa Cruz..............................: 52 3,922 52 3,860 8 61 : Shasta..................................: 23 22 17 16 7 6 Siskiyou................................: 4 (D) 4 (D) - - Solano..................................: 6 35 6 35 - - Sonoma..................................: 39 68 36 68 3 (Z) Stanislaus..............................: 16 91 14 59 8 32 Sutter..................................: 3 (D) 3 6 1 (D) Tehama..................................: 6 8 6 2 6 7 Trinity.................................: 12 1 7 1 5 1 Tulare..................................: 16 25 16 (D) 2 (D) Ventura.................................: 74 11,046 74 10,941 7 105 : Yolo....................................: 14 35 13 (D) 4 (D) Yuba....................................: 13 19 13 19 - - : OTHER BERRIES : : State Total : : California..........................2012: 82 52 71 44 19 8 2007: 67 (D) 62 27 6 (D) : Counties, 2012 : : Calaveras...............................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Colusa..................................: 3 2 3 2 - - Contra Costa............................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - El Dorado...............................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Fresno..................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Humboldt................................: 6 1 4 (D) 2 (D) Lake....................................: 3 2 3 2 - - Los Angeles.............................: 4 2 2 (D) 2 (D) Marin...................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Mendocino...............................: 9 5 9 (D) 2 (D) : Merced..................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) Monterey................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Nevada..................................: 3 (Z) 3 (Z) - - Riverside...............................: 7 2 3 (Z) 4 1 San Benito..............................: 3 (Z) 3 (Z) - - San Bernardino..........................: 5 6 5 6 - - San Diego...............................: 1 (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) San Luis Obispo.........................: 8 (D) 6 (D) 6 2 San Mateo...............................: 4 12 4 12 - - Santa Barbara...........................: 1 (D) - - 1 (D) : Santa Clara.............................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Santa Cruz..............................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Shasta..................................: 5 1 5 1 - - Tulare..................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Ventura.................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Yolo....................................: 4 3 4 3 - - ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Table 34. Nursery, Greenhouse, Floriculture, Sod, Mushrooms, Vegetable Seeds, and Propagative Materials Grown For Sale: 2012 and 2007 [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : 2012 : 2007 :--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : : 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 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- AQUATIC PLANTS : : State Total : : California........................................................: 37 107,777 22 37 (D) 44 145,812 20 : Counties : : Alameda...........................................................: - - - - - 1 (D) (D) Amador............................................................: - - - - - 2 - (D) Fresno............................................................: - - - - - 1 - (D) Glenn.............................................................: 4 968 5 4 400 - - - Humboldt..........................................................: 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) 5 - (D) Kern..............................................................: - - - - - 2 - (D) Los Angeles.......................................................: 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) 1 - (D) Madera............................................................: 3 - 2 3 7,500 1 (D) (D) Marin.............................................................: 4 - (Z) 4 1,600 - - - Monterey..........................................................: - - - - - 1 - (D) : Nevada............................................................: 4 - (Z) 4 2,000 1 (D) - Placer............................................................: - - - - - 1 (D) (D) Riverside.........................................................: 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) 4 4,588 (D) Sacramento........................................................: 3 - (D) 3 (D) - - - San Bernardino....................................................: - - - - - 1 - (D) San Diego.........................................................: 6 (D) 10 6 (D) 6 (D) 2 San Joaquin.......................................................: 2 (D) - 2 (D) 2 (D) - San Luis Obispo...................................................: - - - - - 3 (D) (D) Santa Barbara.....................................................: 1 - (D) 1 (D) - - - Santa Clara.......................................................: 1 (D) - 1 (D) 1 - (D) : Shasta............................................................: 1 - (D) 1 (D) 2 (D) (D) Solano............................................................: - - - - - 1 - (D) Sonoma............................................................: - - - - - 5 (D) 5 Tehama............................................................: 3 - 2 3 150 1 - (D) Ventura...........................................................: 1 (D) - 1 (D) 2 (D) (D) : BULBS, CORMS, RHIZOMES, AND : TUBERS - DRY : : State Total : : California........................................................: 98 129,465 1,877 95 31,893,260 86 95,958 823 : Counties : : Amador............................................................: - - - - - 1 - (D) Butte.............................................................: - - - - - 2 - (D) Contra Costa......................................................: 1 - (D) 1 (D) 2 - (D) Del Norte.........................................................: 2 - (D) 2 (D) 4 (D) 278 El Dorado.........................................................: 5 - 5 5 (D) 3 - (Z) Fresno............................................................: 7 - 6 7 25,301 7 - 6 Humboldt..........................................................: 10 (D) 10 10 45,800 3 12,200 2 Kern..............................................................: 2 - (D) 2 (D) 1 - (D) Kings.............................................................: - - - - - 2 - (D) Lake..............................................................: - - - - - 1 - (D) : Lassen............................................................: 1 - (D) 1 (D) - - - Los Angeles.......................................................: 1 - (D) 1 (D) 1 - (D) Mariposa..........................................................: - - - - - 1 - (D) Mendocino.........................................................: 2 - (D) 2 (D) 1 - (D) Merced............................................................: 1 - (D) 1 (D) 2 (D) (D) Monterey..........................................................: 8 - (D) 8 (D) 7 - (D) Napa..............................................................: 1 - (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) (D) Nevada............................................................: - - - - - 2 - (D) Placer............................................................: 3 - 6 3 (D) 3 - (D) Riverside.........................................................: 3 - 14 3 42,000 2 - (D) : Sacramento........................................................: 4 - 2 4 11,200 2 - (D) San Bernardino....................................................: 1 - (D) 1 (D) 3 - 8 San Diego.........................................................: 13 (D) 2 13 18,400 8 (D) (D) San Luis Obispo...................................................: 6 (D) 4 6 (D) 3 - 3 San Mateo.........................................................: 2 - (D) 2 (D) 3 - (D) Santa Barbara.....................................................: 3 - 1 - - 1 - (D) Santa Clara.......................................................: 1 (D) - 1 (D) 1 - (D) Santa Cruz........................................................: - - - - - 1 - (D) Shasta............................................................: 2 (D) - 2 (D) 2 (D) - Solano............................................................: 1 (D) - 1 (D) 3 - 2 : Sonoma............................................................: 1 - (D) 1 (D) 5 - 1 Stanislaus........................................................: - - - - - 3 (D) (D) Tehama............................................................: 5 - 5 5 25,000 - - - Tulare............................................................: 3 - 41 3 205,000 2 - (D) Tuolumne..........................................................: 2 - (D) 2 (D) - - - Ventura...........................................................: 7 (D) (D) 7 60,500 2 (D) (D) Yolo..............................................................: - - - - - 1 (D) (D) : CUTTINGS, SEEDLINGS, LINERS, AND PLUGS : : State Total : : California........................................................: 143 5,139,559 1,903 143 136,817,046 128 4,426,391 177 : Counties : : Butte.............................................................: 3 (D) (D) 3 (D) 2 (D) - Calaveras.........................................................: - - - - - 2 - (D) Contra Costa......................................................: 4 (D) 2 4 (D) 2 (D) - ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 34. Nursery, Greenhouse, Floriculture, Sod, Mushrooms, Vegetable Seeds, and Propagative Materials Grown For Sale: 2012 and 2007 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : 2012 : 2007 :--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : : 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 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- CUTTINGS, SEEDLINGS, LINERS, AND PLUGS - Con. : : Counties - Con. : : Del Norte.........................................................: 2 (D) - 2 (D) - - - El Dorado.........................................................: 1 (D) - 1 (D) 3 (D) (D) Fresno............................................................: 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) 3 252,000 - Glenn.............................................................: 4 16,968 - 4 2,000 - - - Humboldt..........................................................: 3 192 - 3 300 3 (D) - Kern..............................................................: 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) 2 - (D) Lake..............................................................: 3 300 - 3 7,500 1 (D) - Los Angeles.......................................................: 6 (D) 1 6 (D) 8 117,340 4 Marin.............................................................: - - - - - 1 (D) (D) Mendocino.........................................................: 6 (D) 14 6 46,800 8 (D) (D) : Merced............................................................: 1 (D) - 1 (D) 1 (D) (D) Modoc.............................................................: 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) - - - Mono..............................................................: 1 - (D) 1 (D) - - - Monterey..........................................................: 3 53,014 (D) 3 214,410 3 (D) (D) Nevada............................................................: - - - - - 2 (D) - Orange............................................................: 3 300 (Z) 3 5,280 5 21,000 1 Riverside.........................................................: 9 721,932 18 9 8,729,200 9 543,000 9 Sacramento........................................................: 1 - (D) 1 (D) 4 (D) (D) San Benito........................................................: - - - - - 1 (D) - San Diego.........................................................: 25 1,899,918 44 25 45,709,671 28 2,573,200 48 : San Joaquin.......................................................: - - - - - 1 (D) - San Luis Obispo...................................................: 3 (D) (D) 3 (D) 2 (D) (D) San Mateo.........................................................: 4 (D) 14 4 (D) 1 (D) (D) Santa Barbara.....................................................: 2 (D) - 2 (D) 5 (D) (D) Santa Clara.......................................................: 14 298,215 15 14 (D) 3 (D) (D) Santa Cruz........................................................: 5 (D) (D) 5 (D) 4 (D) 3 Shasta............................................................: - - - - - 1 (D) - Siskiyou..........................................................: 2 - (D) 2 (D) - - - Solano............................................................: - - - - - 5 3,000 (D) Sonoma............................................................: 11 121,800 1 11 (D) 5 (D) (D) : Stanislaus........................................................: - - - - - 2 (D) (D) Tehama............................................................: - - - - - 1 - (D) Trinity...........................................................: 2 (D) - 2 (D) - - - Tulare............................................................: 3 (D) (D) 3 (D) 2 (D) - Ventura...........................................................: 7 606,381 10 7 (D) 6 (D) 2 Yolo..............................................................: 7 400 32 7 166,510 2 (D) (D) Yuba..............................................................: 2 (D) - 2 (D) - - - : FLORICULTURE AND BEDDING CROPS: : BEDDING/GARDEN PLANTS - ANNUALS, : HERBACEOUS PERENNIALS, VEGETABLE PLANTS : (INCLUDING HANGING BASKETS), CUT FLOWERS : AND CUT FLORIST GREENS, FOLIAGE PLANTS - : INDOOR (INCLUDING HANGING BASKETS), POTTED : FLOWERING PLANTS, AND OTHER FLORICULTURE : AND BEDDING CROPS, TOTAL : : State Total : : California........................................................: 2,140 115,337,135 12,535 2,134 1,029,723,139 1,870 103,139,657 12,017 : Counties : : Alameda...........................................................: 14 6,620 (D) 14 (D) 18 353,360 52 Amador............................................................: 12 34,960 8 12 225,468 7 (D) (D) Butte.............................................................: 33 22,882 16 33 375,308 21 38,761 17 Calaveras.........................................................: 9 7,314 5 9 158,690 5 (D) (D) Contra Costa......................................................: 28 198,785 13 28 573,286 21 1,095,744 67 Del Norte.........................................................: 13 (D) 11 13 (D) 7 (D) 61 El Dorado.........................................................: 34 30,242 21 34 251,182 31 31,840 30 Fresno............................................................: 32 456,797 143 32 3,762,278 38 265,354 101 Glenn.............................................................: 13 19,368 48 13 (D) 3 (D) (D) Humboldt..........................................................: 64 (D) 131 64 (D) 50 (D) (D) : Imperial..........................................................: 2 - (D) 2 (D) 4 (D) 160 Inyo..............................................................: - - - - - 3 (D) (D) Kern..............................................................: 21 144,320 84 21 (D) 12 (D) 8 Kings.............................................................: 3 (D) (D) 3 301,152 - - - Lake..............................................................: 11 (D) 8 11 94,904 6 (D) (D) Lassen............................................................: 4 (D) (D) 4 (D) 4 (D) (D) Los Angeles.......................................................: 135 4,090,045 333 135 40,213,088 108 2,755,512 384 Madera............................................................: 6 (D) 3 6 (D) 5 (D) (D) Marin.............................................................: 19 (D) 50 19 731,731 8 (D) (D) Mariposa..........................................................: 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) 4 800 - : Mendocino.........................................................: 40 93,539 23 40 823,898 43 98,218 15 Merced............................................................: 3 - (D) 3 (D) 1 (D) (D) Modoc.............................................................: 8 27,000 - 8 233,390 - - - Mono..............................................................: 1 - (D) 1 (D) - - - Monterey..........................................................: 88 13,308,312 745 88 (D) 92 15,269,867 669 Napa..............................................................: 15 (D) 7 15 (D) 12 (D) 37 Nevada............................................................: 31 89,900 20 31 653,432 17 79,860 25 Orange............................................................: 45 3,732,575 279 45 38,617,485 48 (D) 314 Placer............................................................: 26 (D) 31 26 959,378 20 (D) 44 Plumas............................................................: 3 - 3 3 (D) 5 - 3 : Riverside.........................................................: 73 736,849 311 73 5,682,958 79 1,287,574 234 Sacramento........................................................: 30 70,336 71 30 1,195,696 16 171,980 31 San Benito........................................................: 16 121,440 20 16 1,034,256 11 (D) 15 San Bernardino....................................................: 26 555,700 69 26 18,805,395 40 1,645,620 151 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 34. Nursery, Greenhouse, Floriculture, Sod, Mushrooms, Vegetable Seeds, and Propagative Materials Grown For Sale: 2012 and 2007 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : 2012 : 2007 :--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : : 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 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- FLORICULTURE AND BEDDING CROPS: : BEDDING/GARDEN PLANTS - ANNUALS, : HERBACEOUS PERENNIALS, VEGETABLE PLANTS : (INCLUDING HANGING BASKETS), CUT FLOWERS : AND CUT FLORIST GREENS, FOLIAGE PLANTS - : INDOOR (INCLUDING HANGING BASKETS), POTTED : FLOWERING PLANTS, AND OTHER FLORICULTURE : AND BEDDING CROPS, TOTAL - Con. : : Counties - Con. : : San Diego.........................................................: 508 22,728,905 3,904 505 236,749,270 512 20,525,092 4,413 San Francisco.....................................................: - - - - - 4 (D) (D) San Joaquin.......................................................: 28 1,514,597 (D) 28 52,328,910 19 773,646 57 San Luis Obispo...................................................: 83 11,031,749 142 83 60,749,650 48 5,704,148 277 San Mateo.........................................................: 53 7,854,777 300 53 51,257,140 54 8,323,964 589 Santa Barbara.....................................................: 87 16,056,345 1,835 84 124,982,954 88 12,591,610 1,381 Santa Clara.......................................................: 47 5,326,831 100 47 34,510,247 53 4,248,380 144 Santa Cruz........................................................: 86 11,089,463 608 86 52,096,265 70 4,428,258 375 Shasta............................................................: 18 9,366 9 18 96,018 9 6,440 16 Sierra............................................................: 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) - - - : Siskiyou..........................................................: 20 24,465 27 20 334,300 9 26,261 (D) Solano............................................................: 6 (D) 13 6 230,150 11 17,000 18 Sonoma............................................................: 139 1,575,246 153 139 13,487,049 88 1,094,206 131 Stanislaus........................................................: 15 144,900 43 15 (D) 23 249,010 127 Sutter............................................................: 1 (D) - 1 (D) - - - Tehama............................................................: 19 24,840 6 19 24,143 7 (D) 4 Trinity...........................................................: 12 8,776 (D) 12 95,294 3 1,520 - Tulare............................................................: 21 555,364 (D) 21 (D) 17 96,660 11 Tuolumne..........................................................: 7 2,064 4 7 44,659 4 (D) 3 Ventura...........................................................: 112 7,319,470 794 112 74,306,037 96 10,164,809 601 : Yolo..............................................................: 11 (D) 646 11 2,264,375 12 55,309 19 Yuba..............................................................: 6 27,636 1 6 22,400 4 (D) 3 : BEDDING/GARDEN PLANTS : : State Total : : California........................................................: 773 24,270,690 2,081 773 307,364,419 618 24,093,631 2,601 : Counties : : Alameda...........................................................: 8 (D) 3 8 (D) 7 184,120 (D) Amador............................................................: 1 (D) - 1 (D) 2 - (D) Butte.............................................................: 19 15,182 (D) 19 (D) 16 16,484 10 Calaveras.........................................................: 8 (D) 2 8 (D) 2 (D) (D) Contra Costa......................................................: 13 85,003 2 13 234,247 11 (D) 56 Del Norte.........................................................: 8 (D) (D) 8 (D) 4 1,600 - El Dorado.........................................................: 21 24,742 6 21 111,543 7 22,800 13 Fresno............................................................: 15 (D) 69 15 3,074,792 26 213,904 89 Glenn.............................................................: 8 (D) 44 8 42,000 - - - Humboldt..........................................................: 33 24,698 11 33 340,738 19 32,820 10 : Imperial..........................................................: - - - - - 1 (D) - Kern..............................................................: 11 (D) 38 11 1,456,200 6 (D) 3 Lake..............................................................: 5 (D) (D) 5 (D) 6 (D) (D) Lassen............................................................: 4 (D) (D) 4 (D) 4 (D) (D) Los Angeles.......................................................: 50 2,309,874 108 50 21,025,286 58 1,906,898 235 Madera............................................................: 2 - (D) 2 (D) 4 (D) (D) Marin.............................................................: 11 (D) (D) 11 (D) 1 - (D) Mariposa..........................................................: 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) 2 (D) - Mendocino.........................................................: 23 51,383 (D) 23 612,396 25 61,050 6 Merced............................................................: - - - - - 1 (D) (D) : Modoc.............................................................: 8 27,000 - 8 233,390 - - - Mono..............................................................: 1 - (D) 1 (D) - - - Monterey..........................................................: 12 1,777,000 61 12 20,571,750 11 (D) 111 Napa..............................................................: 8 (D) 5 8 (D) 3 (D) (D) Nevada............................................................: 21 (D) (D) 21 544,911 6 (D) (D) Orange............................................................: 19 (D) 262 19 (D) 18 (D) 271 Placer............................................................: 15 (D) 8 15 (D) 11 (D) (D) Plumas............................................................: 3 - 3 3 (D) 5 - (D) Riverside.........................................................: 37 (D) (D) 37 1,405,582 34 729,046 57 Sacramento........................................................: 22 (D) 56 22 725,096 13 (D) (D) : San Benito........................................................: 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) 3 15,000 (D) San Bernardino....................................................: 11 130,440 42 11 3,835,850 13 (D) 123 San Diego.........................................................: 83 7,082,155 857 83 126,486,623 55 6,945,615 627 San Joaquin.......................................................: 8 243,800 (D) 8 (D) 11 621,800 13 San Luis Obispo...................................................: 31 172,730 45 31 (D) 19 (D) 23 San Mateo.........................................................: 10 597,128 8 10 (D) 9 47,186 (D) Santa Barbara.....................................................: 18 834,636 (D) 18 5,658,389 24 273,150 39 Santa Clara.......................................................: 10 (D) 62 10 24,559,320 22 1,756,140 94 Santa Cruz........................................................: 32 748,583 55 32 16,211,559 23 204,956 65 Shasta............................................................: 17 9,366 7 17 (D) 6 (D) (D) : Siskiyou..........................................................: 10 20,180 - 10 135,080 9 26,261 (D) Solano............................................................: 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) 5 (D) 9 Sonoma............................................................: 79 790,791 26 79 9,205,832 43 647,756 30 Stanislaus........................................................: 3 (D) (D) 3 20,350 11 (D) (D) Sutter............................................................: 1 (D) - 1 (D) - - - Tehama............................................................: 11 24,480 (Z) 11 15,902 4 (D) (D) Trinity...........................................................: 8 5,586 - 8 31,094 3 1,520 - Tulare............................................................: 14 (D) 4 14 658,276 7 23,960 (D) Tuolumne..........................................................: 2 - (D) 2 (D) 3 - (D) ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 34. Nursery, Greenhouse, Floriculture, Sod, Mushrooms, Vegetable Seeds, and Propagative Materials Grown For Sale: 2012 and 2007 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : 2012 : 2007 :--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : : 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 - Con. : : Counties - Con. : : Ventura...........................................................: 33 1,751,598 162 33 13,371,961 35 1,913,937 73 Yolo..............................................................: - - - - - 8 55,309 (D) Yuba..............................................................: - - - - - 2 (D) (D) : CUT FLOWERS AND CUT FLORIST GREENS : : State Total : : California........................................................: 958 50,469,142 7,279 952 333,813,948 768 38,885,970 8,126 : Counties : : Alameda...........................................................: 3 - (D) 3 (D) 5 - (D) Amador............................................................: 7 - (D) 7 (D) 4 - (D) Butte.............................................................: 14 (D) 10 14 171,208 9 (D) 5 Calaveras.........................................................: - - - - - 3 (D) (D) Contra Costa......................................................: 4 - (D) 4 12,500 3 - 7 Del Norte.........................................................: 3 - (D) 3 1,920 - - - El Dorado.........................................................: 9 (D) 11 9 68,314 13 (D) 8 Fresno............................................................: 3 - (D) 3 (D) 6 - 8 Glenn.............................................................: 4 - 4 4 (D) 2 - (D) Humboldt..........................................................: 25 (D) 116 25 (D) 17 (D) (D) : Imperial..........................................................: 2 - (D) 2 (D) 3 - 160 Inyo..............................................................: - - - - - 2 - (D) Kern..............................................................: 10 (D) 45 10 (D) 2 (D) (D) Lake..............................................................: 1 - (D) 1 (D) - - - Los Angeles.......................................................: 39 265,032 173 39 (D) 19 137,176 88 Madera............................................................: 4 6,588 (D) 4 46,000 2 - (D) Marin.............................................................: 6 (D) (D) 6 (D) 4 (D) (D) Mariposa..........................................................: - - - - - 2 (D) - Mendocino.........................................................: 20 (D) 6 20 49,190 14 (D) 6 Merced............................................................: 2 - (D) 2 (D) 1 (D) (D) : Monterey..........................................................: 54 (D) 518 54 (D) 65 (D) 505 Napa..............................................................: 5 - (D) 5 12,800 8 - (D) Nevada............................................................: 15 (D) 18 15 (D) 9 (D) 21 Orange............................................................: 10 (D) 10 10 (D) 8 (D) 8 Placer............................................................: 14 (D) 20 14 132,858 9 - 25 Plumas............................................................: - - - - - 1 - (D) Riverside.........................................................: 33 176,577 139 33 581,522 19 - 154 Sacramento........................................................: 5 (D) 12 5 37,600 1 - (D) San Benito........................................................: 7 - 13 7 79,216 5 (D) 7 San Bernardino....................................................: 2 - (D) 2 (D) 3 (D) (D) : San Diego.........................................................: 306 5,651,180 2,530 303 35,612,824 286 (D) 3,153 San Joaquin.......................................................: 9 (D) 17 9 (D) 5 - 12 San Luis Obispo...................................................: 36 7,003,264 57 36 28,048,640 15 3,445,717 183 San Mateo.........................................................: 31 1,671,452 219 31 7,768,255 28 (D) 527 Santa Barbara.....................................................: 52 11,939,332 1,761 49 74,574,223 51 8,630,100 1,331 Santa Clara.......................................................: 32 1,589,500 38 32 7,162,040 21 1,658,980 39 Santa Cruz........................................................: 47 8,630,500 449 47 23,664,816 31 (D) 291 Shasta............................................................: 1 - (D) 1 (D) 4 - (D) Siskiyou..........................................................: 5 - 24 5 42,280 - - - Solano............................................................: 3 - (D) 3 (D) 3 - 9 : Sonoma............................................................: 58 755,350 120 58 3,132,679 25 (D) (D) Stanislaus........................................................: 6 - 41 6 418,545 5 - (D) Tehama............................................................: 4 - 4 4 5,425 3 - (D) Trinity...........................................................: 3 1,300 (D) 3 (D) - - - Tulare............................................................: 2 - (D) 2 (D) 6 (D) (D) Tuolumne..........................................................: 1 - (D) 1 (D) 1 - (D) Ventura...........................................................: 54 2,139,910 497 54 29,035,031 41 4,947,600 (D) Yolo..............................................................: 5 - 32 5 (D) 3 - 8 Yuba..............................................................: 2 - (D) 2 (D) 1 - (D) : FOLIAGE PLANTS, INDOOR (INCLUDING HANGING : BASKETS) (SEE TEXT) : : State Total : : California........................................................: 192 8,104,320 317 192 55,125,450 289 12,213,485 778 : Counties : : Alameda...........................................................: - - - - - 2 (D) - Amador............................................................: - - - - - 2 (D) - Butte.............................................................: 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) 5 (D) (D) Calaveras.........................................................: 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) - - - Contra Costa......................................................: 3 39,738 (D) 3 53,333 2 (D) - Fresno............................................................: 6 (D) (D) 6 (D) 5 (D) (D) Humboldt..........................................................: 3 (D) 4 3 360,370 8 6,772 (D) Kern..............................................................: - - - - - 3 (D) (D) Lake..............................................................: - - - - - 1 (D) - Los Angeles.......................................................: 16 296,306 4 16 3,862,142 15 186,320 8 : Madera............................................................: 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) (D) Mendocino.........................................................: 1 (D) - 1 (D) 3 (D) (D) Merced............................................................: - - - - - 1 (D) (D) Monterey..........................................................: 6 (D) (D) 6 (D) 4 694,400 (D) Napa..............................................................: - - - - - 2 (D) - Nevada............................................................: - - - - - 1 (D) - Orange............................................................: 5 (D) (D) 5 17,700 10 61,670 8 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 34. Nursery, Greenhouse, Floriculture, Sod, Mushrooms, Vegetable Seeds, and Propagative Materials Grown For Sale: 2012 and 2007 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : 2012 : 2007 :--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : : 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 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- FOLIAGE PLANTS, INDOOR (INCLUDING HANGING : BASKETS) (SEE TEXT) - Con. : : Counties - Con. : : Placer............................................................: 1 (D) - 1 (D) - - - Riverside.........................................................: 5 399,500 (D) 5 1,960,950 18 301,528 9 San Bernardino....................................................: 5 (D) (D) 5 (D) 19 358,500 12 San Diego.........................................................: 75 4,724,277 222 75 30,847,919 128 7,690,658 540 San Joaquin.......................................................: 4 (D) 1 4 390,376 2 (D) (D) San Luis Obispo...................................................: 16 738,200 2 16 4,771,501 8 335,788 68 San Mateo.........................................................: 7 195,220 (D) 7 (D) 5 (D) (D) Santa Barbara.....................................................: 6 106,231 (D) 6 (D) 9 253,986 (D) Santa Clara.......................................................: 3 201,445 - 3 (D) 6 3,100 2 Santa Cruz........................................................: 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) 1 (D) - : Sonoma............................................................: 8 (D) (D) 8 (D) 7 114,352 (D) Stanislaus........................................................: 5 (D) (D) 5 (D) 6 180,000 1 Tulare............................................................: - - - - - 2 (D) (D) Tuolumne..........................................................: 3 (D) - 3 30,000 1 (D) - Ventura...........................................................: 8 244,230 (D) 8 1,594,945 12 1,367,470 (D) : POTTED FLOWERING PLANTS : : State Total : : California........................................................: 405 29,919,592 1,661 405 281,283,269 418 27,854,763 431 : Counties : : Alameda...........................................................: 4 (D) (D) 4 24,350 4 (D) - Amador............................................................: 3 (D) - 3 190,080 1 - (D) Butte.............................................................: - - - - - 2 (D) (D) Calaveras.........................................................: 3 (D) (D) 3 (D) - - - Contra Costa......................................................: 10 74,044 5 10 265,598 10 (D) 4 Del Norte.........................................................: 2 (D) - 2 (D) 4 (D) (D) El Dorado.........................................................: 3 (D) (D) 3 62,000 15 (D) 8 Fresno............................................................: 11 46,760 4 11 238,380 7 (D) (D) Glenn.............................................................: 1 (D) - 1 (D) 1 (D) - Humboldt..........................................................: 12 13,114 (D) 12 197,352 14 14,276 4 : Inyo..............................................................: - - - - - 1 (D) - Kern..............................................................: 3 - 2 3 4,500 3 (D) (D) Lake..............................................................: 2 - (D) 2 (D) 1 (D) - Los Angeles.......................................................: 39 673,733 18 39 4,160,113 33 525,118 54 Madera............................................................: 1 - (D) 1 (D) - - - Marin.............................................................: 1 (D) - 1 (D) 3 (D) (D) Mendocino.........................................................: 9 (D) 2 9 109,958 12 26,488 (D) Merced............................................................: 1 - (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) (D) Monterey..........................................................: 14 6,162,885 84 14 45,218,178 17 6,739,750 (D) Napa..............................................................: 2 (D) - 2 (D) 3 (D) (D) : Nevada............................................................: 1 - (D) 1 (D) 3 (D) (D) Orange............................................................: 18 (D) 4 18 761,458 20 470,510 28 Placer............................................................: 4 (D) (D) 4 (D) 2 (D) (D) Riverside.........................................................: 10 (D) 4 10 (D) 17 257,000 14 Sacramento........................................................: 6 54,325 3 6 433,000 2 (D) - San Benito........................................................: 3 - (D) 3 (D) 3 - (D) San Bernardino....................................................: 10 (D) 10 10 (D) 12 1,105,680 (D) San Diego.........................................................: 78 5,248,753 100 78 38,854,042 73 3,588,096 70 San Francisco.....................................................: - - - - - 4 (D) (D) San Joaquin.......................................................: 10 141,000 (D) 10 (D) 4 (D) (D) : San Luis Obispo...................................................: 13 3,117,555 (D) 13 23,396,806 11 (D) 3 San Mateo.........................................................: 17 5,390,977 (D) 17 36,172,885 13 (D) (D) Santa Barbara.....................................................: 23 3,108,333 34 23 41,144,080 21 3,434,374 (D) Santa Clara.......................................................: 7 637,845 - 7 2,732,939 17 830,160 9 Santa Cruz........................................................: 16 (D) (D) 16 (D) 24 1,339,872 19 Shasta............................................................: - - - - - 2 (D) - Siskiyou..........................................................: 3 - 3 3 12,000 - - - Solano............................................................: 1 (D) - 1 (D) - - - Sonoma............................................................: 23 11,245 5 23 (D) 24 (D) 8 Stanislaus........................................................: 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) 2 (D) (D) : Tehama............................................................: 6 360 1 6 1,800 - - - Tulare............................................................: 4 (D) (D) 4 (D) 4 3,500 (D) Tuolumne..........................................................: 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) - - - Ventura...........................................................: 24 2,383,312 59 24 23,406,244 27 1,935,802 78 Yolo..............................................................: 2 (D) - 2 (D) - - - Yuba..............................................................: 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) (D) : OTHER FLORICULTURE AND BEDDING CROPS : (SEE TEXT) : : State Total : : California........................................................: 145 2,573,391 1,198 145 52,136,053 27 91,808 81 : Counties : : Amador............................................................: 1 - (D) 1 (D) - - - Contra Costa......................................................: 3 - 3 3 7,608 - - - Del Norte.........................................................: - - - - - 1 - (D) El Dorado.........................................................: 3 (D) (D) 3 9,325 - - - Fresno............................................................: 2 - (D) 2 (D) - - - Humboldt..........................................................: 3 (D) (D) 3 (D) 2 (D) - Kings.............................................................: 3 (D) (D) 3 301,152 - - - ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 34. Nursery, Greenhouse, Floriculture, Sod, Mushrooms, Vegetable Seeds, and Propagative Materials Grown For Sale: 2012 and 2007 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : 2012 : 2007 :--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : : 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 : (SEE TEXT) - Con. : : Counties - Con. : : Lake..............................................................: 3 - 7 3 (D) - - - Los Angeles.......................................................: 14 545,100 30 14 (D) - - - Marin.............................................................: 1 - (D) 1 (D) - - - Mendocino.........................................................: 3 (D) (D) 3 (D) - - - Monterey..........................................................: 10 - (D) 10 (D) 1 - (D) Napa..............................................................: 1 - (D) 1 (D) - - - Nevada............................................................: - - - - - 1 - (D) Orange............................................................: 2 - (D) 2 (D) - - - Placer............................................................: 2 - (D) 2 (D) 1 - (D) Riverside.........................................................: 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) - - - : San Benito........................................................: 4 (D) - 4 902,400 - - - San Bernardino....................................................: 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) 1 - (D) San Diego.........................................................: 23 22,540 196 23 4,947,862 10 (D) 24 San Joaquin.......................................................: 2 (D) - 2 (D) 1 - (D) San Luis Obispo...................................................: 2 - (D) 2 (D) - - - San Mateo.........................................................: 1 - (D) 1 (D) - - - Santa Barbara.....................................................: 5 67,813 31 5 (D) - - - Santa Clara.......................................................: 2 (D) - 2 (D) - - - Santa Cruz........................................................: 3 (D) (D) 3 (D) - - - Shasta............................................................: 1 - (D) 1 (D) - - - : Sierra............................................................: 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) - - - Siskiyou..........................................................: 3 4,285 - 3 144,940 - - - Solano............................................................: - - - - - 3 (D) - Sonoma............................................................: 7 (D) (D) 7 683,352 3 (D) 3 Tehama............................................................: 4 - (Z) 4 1,016 - - - Trinity...........................................................: 3 1,890 - 3 (D) - - - Tulare............................................................: 3 23,208 - 3 174,525 2 (D) - Ventura...........................................................: 18 800,420 (D) 18 6,897,856 - - - Yolo..............................................................: 5 (D) 614 5 (D) 1 - (D) Yuba..............................................................: 3 (D) - 3 13,500 - - - : FLOWER SEEDS : : State Total : : California........................................................: 44 (D) 2,049 44 15,951,844 29 23,984 1,065 : Counties : : Del Norte.........................................................: 1 (D) - 1 (D) - - - Fresno............................................................: - - - - - 2 - (D) Glenn.............................................................: 2 - (D) 2 (D) - - - Humboldt..........................................................: 3 - (Z) 3 150 - - - Lake..............................................................: - - - - - 1 (D) - Lassen............................................................: - - - - - 1 - (D) Los Angeles.......................................................: - - - - - 1 - (D) Marin.............................................................: - - - - - 1 - (D) Mono..............................................................: 1 - (D) 1 (D) - - - Monterey..........................................................: 7 - (D) 7 197,546 3 - 9 : Orange............................................................: - - - - - 1 (D) - Riverside.........................................................: 4 - 154 4 83,980 - - - San Benito........................................................: 3 - 3 3 5,400 1 - (D) San Bernardino....................................................: 2 - (D) 2 (D) - - - San Diego.........................................................: 4 (D) 2 4 1,128 5 (D) 43 San Luis Obispo...................................................: 4 - 214 4 336,600 - - - San Mateo.........................................................: 2 - (D) 2 (D) - - - Santa Barbara.....................................................: 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) 3 - 393 Santa Clara.......................................................: - - - - - 1 - (D) Shasta............................................................: - - - - - 2 (D) - : Sonoma............................................................: 2 - (D) 2 (D) 1 - (D) Tulare............................................................: - - - - - 1 - (D) Tuolumne..........................................................: 1 - (D) 1 (D) 1 - (D) Ventura...........................................................: 1 - (D) 1 (D) - - - Yolo..............................................................: 5 - 1,004 5 (D) 3 (D) (D) Yuba..............................................................: - - - - - 1 - (D) : GREENHOUSE FRUITS AND BERRIES : : State Total : : California........................................................: 57 4,845,106 (X) 57 19,120,342 13 (D) (X) : Counties : : Butte.............................................................: 2 (D) (X) 2 (D) - - (X) Calaveras.........................................................: 1 (D) (X) 1 (D) - - (X) Del Norte.........................................................: 1 (D) (X) 1 (D) - - (X) El Dorado.........................................................: 3 87 (X) 3 297 - - (X) Fresno............................................................: 2 (D) (X) 2 (D) 3 1,889 (X) Humboldt..........................................................: 4 4,491 (X) 4 5,669 - - (X) Lake..............................................................: 3 30 (X) 3 102 1 (D) (X) Lassen............................................................: - - (X) - - 1 (D) (X) Los Angeles.......................................................: - - (X) - - 1 (D) (X) Riverside.........................................................: 4 1,200 (X) 4 2,970 - - (X) : Sacramento........................................................: 3 36 (X) 3 900 - - (X) San Bernardino....................................................: 1 (D) (X) 1 (D) 2 (D) (X) San Diego.........................................................: 11 (D) (X) 11 661,252 2 (D) (X) ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 34. Nursery, Greenhouse, Floriculture, Sod, Mushrooms, Vegetable Seeds, and Propagative Materials Grown For Sale: 2012 and 2007 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : 2012 : 2007 :--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : : 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 FRUITS AND BERRIES - Con. : : Counties - Con. : : San Joaquin.......................................................: 1 (D) (X) 1 (D) - - (X) Santa Barbara.....................................................: 2 (D) (X) 2 (D) - - (X) Santa Cruz........................................................: 3 (D) (X) 3 18,349,418 1 (D) (X) Shasta............................................................: 2 (D) (X) 2 (D) 2 (D) (X) Sonoma............................................................: 4 124 (X) 4 400 - - (X) Tulare............................................................: 4 1,000 (X) 4 3,400 - - (X) Tuolumne..........................................................: 4 1,952 (X) 4 6,636 - - (X) Ventura...........................................................: 2 (D) (X) 2 (D) - - (X) : TOTAL GREENHOUSE VEGETABLES AND : FRESH CUT HERBS : : State Total : : California........................................................: 427 28,312,315 (X) 427 164,808,642 182 12,924,882 (X) : Counties : : Alameda...........................................................: 4 400 (X) 4 1,200 - - (X) Amador............................................................: 1 (D) (X) 1 (D) - - (X) Butte.............................................................: 12 13,424 (X) 12 51,134 2 (D) (X) Calaveras.........................................................: 4 134 (X) 4 1,300 - - (X) Contra Costa......................................................: 4 87,060 (X) 4 25,600 - - (X) Del Norte.........................................................: 12 7,740 (X) 12 26,859 2 (D) (X) El Dorado.........................................................: 16 6,685 (X) 16 39,299 1 (D) (X) Fresno............................................................: 24 172,843 (X) 24 (D) 14 75,520 (X) Humboldt..........................................................: 20 78,755 (X) 20 184,265 11 19,520 (X) Imperial..........................................................: 3 (D) (X) 3 2,795,046 - - (X) : Kern..............................................................: 5 235,992 (X) 5 4,452,336 3 (D) (X) Kings.............................................................: 3 48,000 (X) 3 210,000 4 (D) (X) Lake..............................................................: 8 6,776 (X) 8 23,610 6 11,660 (X) Lassen............................................................: - - (X) - - 1 (D) (X) Los Angeles.......................................................: 26 394,494 (X) 26 3,165,656 10 309,898 (X) Madera............................................................: 3 17,500 (X) 3 20,450 1 (D) (X) Marin.............................................................: 5 9,505 (X) 5 26,338 3 (D) (X) Mariposa..........................................................: 1 (D) (X) 1 (D) - - (X) Mendocino.........................................................: 12 29,600 (X) 12 116,940 4 8,532 (X) Merced............................................................: 3 (D) (X) 3 (D) 1 (D) (X) : Modoc.............................................................: 6 18,000 (X) 6 144,000 2 (D) (X) Monterey..........................................................: 8 474,300 (X) 8 904,300 5 773,748 (X) Napa..............................................................: - - (X) - - 1 (D) (X) Nevada............................................................: 16 14,644 (X) 16 30,710 8 68,836 (X) Orange............................................................: 3 150 (X) 3 4,800 - - (X) Placer............................................................: 14 4,377 (X) 14 (D) 2 (D) (X) Plumas............................................................: 2 (D) (X) 2 (D) - - (X) Riverside.........................................................: 27 2,599,822 (X) 27 (D) 6 (D) (X) Sacramento........................................................: 7 25,030 (X) 7 2,869,228 3 8,000 (X) San Benito........................................................: 3 340,200 (X) 3 270,000 3 (D) (X) : San Bernardino....................................................: 7 105,024 (X) 7 (D) 7 80,028 (X) San Diego.........................................................: 26 4,649,990 (X) 26 29,379,686 9 541,749 (X) San Joaquin.......................................................: 7 281,300 (X) 7 (D) 2 (D) (X) San Luis Obispo...................................................: 15 106,256 (X) 15 258,121 14 69,805 (X) San Mateo.........................................................: 18 192,200 (X) 18 785,640 6 (D) (X) Santa Barbara.....................................................: 13 3,826,760 (X) 13 24,485,822 5 (D) (X) Santa Clara.......................................................: 17 4,508,936 (X) 17 3,160,325 3 124,000 (X) Santa Cruz........................................................: 6 1,582,888 (X) 6 4,592,200 6 785,600 (X) Shasta............................................................: 7 16,060 (X) 7 7,150 3 (D) (X) Siskiyou..........................................................: 2 (D) (X) 2 (D) 2 (D) (X) : Solano............................................................: 1 (D) (X) 1 (D) 2 (D) (X) Sonoma............................................................: 32 87,846 (X) 32 216,679 13 26,900 (X) Stanislaus........................................................: 1 (D) (X) 1 (D) 3 (D) (X) Sutter............................................................: 3 32,800 (X) 3 (D) 1 (D) (X) Tehama............................................................: 2 (D) (X) 2 (D) 1 (D) (X) Trinity...........................................................: 2 (D) (X) 2 (D) - - (X) Tulare............................................................: 1 (D) (X) 1 (D) 4 (D) (X) Tuolumne..........................................................: - - (X) - - 2 (D) (X) Ventura...........................................................: 11 (D) (X) 11 (D) 4 (D) (X) Yolo..............................................................: 3 (D) (X) 3 (D) 2 (D) (X) Yuba..............................................................: 1 (D) (X) 1 (D) - - (X) : GREENHOUSE TOMATOES : : State Total : : California........................................................: 223 8,491,057 (X) 221 64,864,808 81 6,008,943 (X) : Counties : : Alameda...........................................................: 4 400 (X) 4 1,200 - - (X) Amador............................................................: 1 (D) (X) 1 (D) - - (X) Butte.............................................................: 7 10,914 (X) 7 23,978 - - (X) Calaveras.........................................................: 3 (D) (X) 3 (D) - - (X) Contra Costa......................................................: 3 60,424 (X) 3 20,000 - - (X) Del Norte.........................................................: 9 2,400 (X) 9 10,877 2 (D) (X) El Dorado.........................................................: 14 4,556 (X) 14 33,080 1 (D) (X) Fresno............................................................: 2 (D) (X) 2 (D) 1 (D) (X) Humboldt..........................................................: 10 24,168 (X) 10 115,344 6 6,138 (X) Kern..............................................................: 2 (D) (X) 2 (D) 1 (D) (X) Kings.............................................................: 3 48,000 (X) 3 210,000 3 33,000 (X) ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 34. Nursery, Greenhouse, Floriculture, Sod, Mushrooms, Vegetable Seeds, and Propagative Materials Grown For Sale: 2012 and 2007 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : 2012 : 2007 :--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : : 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. : : Lake..............................................................: 4 (D) (X) 4 (D) 5 6,030 (X) Lassen............................................................: - - (X) - - 1 (D) (X) Los Angeles.......................................................: 11 (D) (X) 11 (D) 2 (D) (X) Marin.............................................................: 4 7,508 (X) 4 23,464 - - (X) Mariposa..........................................................: 1 (D) (X) 1 (D) - - (X) Mendocino.........................................................: 10 11,600 (X) 10 79,600 3 (D) (X) Merced............................................................: 1 (D) (X) 1 (D) 1 (D) (X) Modoc.............................................................: 6 18,000 (X) 6 144,000 2 (D) (X) Monterey..........................................................: - - (X) - - 1 (D) (X) Napa..............................................................: - - (X) - - 1 (D) (X) : Nevada............................................................: 6 1,900 (X) 6 15,200 3 4,100 (X) Placer............................................................: 8 1,329 (X) 6 4,382 - - (X) Riverside.........................................................: 15 4,230 (X) 15 33,840 - - (X) San Benito........................................................: - - (X) - - 1 (D) (X) San Bernardino....................................................: 6 22,076 (X) 6 61,408 6 (D) (X) San Diego.........................................................: 13 96,478 (X) 13 219,824 3 (D) (X) San Joaquin.......................................................: 3 (D) (X) 3 (D) - - (X) San Luis Obispo...................................................: 13 65,193 (X) 13 234,128 8 55,710 (X) San Mateo.........................................................: 13 145,000 (X) 13 (D) 5 (D) (X) Santa Barbara.....................................................: 5 (D) (X) 5 820,696 2 (D) (X) : Santa Clara.......................................................: 5 200,060 (X) 5 40,480 - - (X) Santa Cruz........................................................: 4 (D) (X) 4 (D) 4 (D) (X) Shasta............................................................: 4 (D) (X) 4 4,224 2 (D) (X) Siskiyou..........................................................: - - (X) - - 2 (D) (X) Sonoma............................................................: 18 12,222 (X) 18 99,446 5 10,900 (X) Stanislaus........................................................: - - (X) - - 2 (D) (X) Sutter............................................................: 3 32,800 (X) 3 (D) 1 (D) (X) Trinity...........................................................: 2 (D) (X) 2 (D) - - (X) Tulare............................................................: 1 (D) (X) 1 (D) 4 (D) (X) Ventura...........................................................: 5 (D) (X) 5 (D) 1 (D) (X) : Yolo..............................................................: 3 (D) (X) 3 (D) 2 (D) (X) Yuba..............................................................: 1 (D) (X) 1 (D) - - (X) : OTHER GREENHOUSE VEGETABLES AND : FRESH CUT HERBS : : State Total : : California........................................................: 336 19,821,258 (X) 336 99,943,834 140 6,915,939 (X) : Counties : : Butte.............................................................: 10 2,510 (X) 10 27,156 2 (D) (X) Calaveras.........................................................: 1 (D) (X) 1 (D) - - (X) Contra Costa......................................................: 3 26,636 (X) 3 5,600 - - (X) Del Norte.........................................................: 8 5,340 (X) 8 15,982 2 (D) (X) El Dorado.........................................................: 12 2,129 (X) 12 6,219 1 (D) (X) Fresno............................................................: 22 (D) (X) 22 (D) 13 (D) (X) Humboldt..........................................................: 14 54,587 (X) 14 68,921 6 13,382 (X) Imperial..........................................................: 3 (D) (X) 3 2,795,046 - - (X) Kern..............................................................: 3 (D) (X) 3 (D) 2 (D) (X) Kings.............................................................: - - (X) - - 1 (D) (X) : Lake..............................................................: 8 (D) (X) 8 (D) 6 5,630 (X) Lassen............................................................: - - (X) - - 1 (D) (X) Los Angeles.......................................................: 24 (D) (X) 24 (D) 9 (D) (X) Madera............................................................: 3 17,500 (X) 3 20,450 1 (D) (X) Marin.............................................................: 4 1,997 (X) 4 2,874 3 (D) (X) Mendocino.........................................................: 8 18,000 (X) 8 37,340 1 (D) (X) Merced............................................................: 2 (D) (X) 2 (D) 1 (D) (X) Monterey..........................................................: 8 474,300 (X) 8 904,300 5 (D) (X) Nevada............................................................: 16 12,744 (X) 16 15,510 8 64,736 (X) Orange............................................................: 3 150 (X) 3 4,800 - - (X) : Placer............................................................: 13 3,048 (X) 13 (D) 2 (D) (X) Plumas............................................................: 2 (D) (X) 2 (D) - - (X) Riverside.........................................................: 20 2,595,592 (X) 20 (D) 6 (D) (X) Sacramento........................................................: 7 25,030 (X) 7 2,869,228 3 8,000 (X) San Benito........................................................: 3 340,200 (X) 3 270,000 3 (D) (X) San Bernardino....................................................: 6 82,948 (X) 6 (D) 3 (D) (X) San Diego.........................................................: 21 4,553,512 (X) 21 29,159,862 8 (D) (X) San Joaquin.......................................................: 4 (D) (X) 4 223,631 2 (D) (X) San Luis Obispo...................................................: 15 41,063 (X) 15 23,993 11 14,095 (X) San Mateo.........................................................: 9 47,200 (X) 9 (D) 3 (D) (X) : Santa Barbara.....................................................: 12 (D) (X) 12 23,665,126 3 (D) (X) Santa Clara.......................................................: 17 4,308,876 (X) 17 3,119,845 3 124,000 (X) Santa Cruz........................................................: 4 (D) (X) 4 (D) 3 (D) (X) Shasta............................................................: 6 (D) (X) 6 2,926 3 (D) (X) Siskiyou..........................................................: 2 (D) (X) 2 (D) 2 (D) (X) Solano............................................................: 1 (D) (X) 1 (D) 2 (D) (X) Sonoma............................................................: 27 75,624 (X) 27 117,233 10 16,000 (X) Stanislaus........................................................: 1 (D) (X) 1 (D) 2 (D) (X) Sutter............................................................: - - (X) - - 1 (D) (X) Tehama............................................................: 2 (D) (X) 2 (D) 1 (D) (X) : Tulare............................................................: 1 (D) (X) 1 (D) 1 (D) (X) Tuolumne..........................................................: - - (X) - - 2 (D) (X) Ventura...........................................................: 8 705,775 (X) 8 2,199,217 3 (D) (X) Yolo..............................................................: 3 (D) (X) 3 (D) 1 (D) (X) ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 34. Nursery, Greenhouse, Floriculture, Sod, Mushrooms, Vegetable Seeds, and Propagative Materials Grown For Sale: 2012 and 2007 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : 2012 : 2007 :--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : : 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 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- MUSHROOM SPAWN (SEE TEXT) : : State Total : : California........................................................: 2 (X) (X) 2 (D) 2 (X) (X) : Counties : : Riverside.........................................................: 1 (X) (X) 1 (D) - (X) (X) San Diego.........................................................: 1 (X) (X) 1 (D) 1 (X) (X) Sonoma............................................................: - (X) (X) - - 1 (X) (X) : MUSHROOMS : : State Total : : California........................................................: 74 6,179,983 (X) 74 241,283,866 55 5,483,804 (X) : Counties : : Butte.............................................................: 5 1,500 (X) 5 5,000 - - (X) Calaveras.........................................................: 3 300 (X) 3 900 - - (X) Colusa............................................................: 1 (D) (X) 1 (D) 1 (D) (X) Fresno............................................................: 2 (D) (X) 2 (D) 1 (D) (X) Humboldt..........................................................: 2 (D) (X) 2 (D) 1 (D) (X) Los Angeles.......................................................: 2 (D) (X) 2 (D) - - (X) Mendocino.........................................................: 3 800 (X) 3 (D) 6 7,896 (X) Merced............................................................: 2 (D) (X) 2 (D) - - (X) Monterey..........................................................: 3 (D) (X) 3 (D) 6 982,000 (X) Nevada............................................................: 3 760 (X) 3 12,011 1 (D) (X) : Riverside.........................................................: 5 (D) (X) 5 (D) 3 43,840 (X) Sacramento........................................................: 2 (D) (X) 2 (D) - - (X) San Bernardino....................................................: 4 79,100 (X) 4 1,234,451 3 191,670 (X) San Diego.........................................................: 5 569,240 (X) 5 (D) 5 383,000 (X) San Joaquin.......................................................: 6 244,000 (X) 6 1,926,700 1 (D) (X) San Luis Obispo...................................................: 2 (D) (X) 2 (D) 6 125,000 (X) San Mateo.........................................................: 6 116,000 (X) 6 1,931,810 5 (D) (X) Santa Clara.......................................................: 5 1,846,040 (X) 5 53,150,812 6 1,676,581 (X) Santa Cruz........................................................: 2 (D) (X) 2 (D) 2 (D) (X) Solano............................................................: 2 (D) (X) 2 (D) 1 (D) (X) : Sonoma............................................................: 4 (D) (X) 4 (D) 4 (D) (X) Tehama............................................................: - - (X) - - 1 (D) (X) Ventura...........................................................: 2 (D) (X) 2 (D) 2 (D) (X) Yuba..............................................................: 3 2,707 (X) 3 (D) - - (X) : NURSERY STOCK CROPS (SEE TEXT) : : State Total : : California........................................................: 1,585 38,053,449 31,876 1,578 779,682,531 1,655 25,179,297 31,889 : Counties : : Alameda...........................................................: 8 (D) (D) 8 (D) 13 50,800 99 Amador............................................................: 2 - (D) 2 (D) 2 - (D) Butte.............................................................: 25 (D) 46 25 6,364,187 23 (D) 215 Calaveras.........................................................: 8 (D) 48 8 (D) 4 (D) 17 Colusa............................................................: 1 - (D) 1 (D) 2 - (D) Contra Costa......................................................: 9 29,930 21 9 749,860 10 11,600 19 Del Norte.........................................................: 7 (D) (D) 7 9,415,492 5 (D) (D) El Dorado.........................................................: 28 (D) 63 28 933,480 25 (D) 61 Fresno............................................................: 42 1,244,244 1,258 42 22,506,756 53 91,684 620 Glenn.............................................................: 3 - (D) 3 (D) 3 - 7 : Humboldt..........................................................: 42 176,850 42 42 1,586,198 30 129,540 38 Imperial..........................................................: 9 - 166 9 (D) 14 (D) 108 Inyo..............................................................: 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) - Kern..............................................................: 29 801,856 1,535 29 43,100,773 40 (D) 2,730 Kings.............................................................: 5 (D) 3 5 483,000 3 - 3 Lake..............................................................: 9 (D) (D) 9 (D) 8 (D) 71 Lassen............................................................: 1 - (D) 1 (D) 4 - (D) Los Angeles.......................................................: 158 2,300,062 904 158 47,422,249 157 1,214,341 2,286 Madera............................................................: 12 40,000 (D) 12 (D) 11 (D) 436 Marin.............................................................: 10 49,808 (D) 10 799,094 7 77,080 9 : Mariposa..........................................................: 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) - - - Mendocino.........................................................: 34 17,373 46 34 519,164 42 46,048 36 Merced............................................................: 8 (D) 48 8 440,082 7 (D) 205 Modoc.............................................................: 8 - 19 8 (D) 2 - (D) Mono..............................................................: - - - - - 2 - (D) Monterey..........................................................: 16 359,858 80 16 7,611,082 22 752,770 176 Napa..............................................................: 7 - 7 7 (D) 10 (D) 35 Nevada............................................................: 20 - 14 20 86,104 15 (D) 16 Orange............................................................: 59 3,943,546 520 59 39,178,468 68 4,498,758 2,170 Placer............................................................: 20 40,200 156 18 5,628,871 23 (D) 245 : Plumas............................................................: 3 (D) 12 3 148,000 1 - (D) Riverside.........................................................: 144 3,337,052 1,889 144 44,985,811 173 1,037,240 2,791 Sacramento........................................................: 17 64,500 433 17 12,591,400 23 (D) 547 San Benito........................................................: 9 412,710 37 9 (D) 6 (D) 4 San Bernardino....................................................: 46 132,356 137 46 3,661,798 64 118,120 510 San Diego.........................................................: 300 11,820,513 3,529 299 120,962,822 337 5,536,775 4,344 San Joaquin.......................................................: 24 30,780 907 24 (D) 23 (D) 990 San Luis Obispo...................................................: 58 214,387 270 58 7,083,420 39 625,749 806 San Mateo.........................................................: 14 73,625 71 14 (D) 11 63,000 127 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 34. Nursery, Greenhouse, Floriculture, Sod, Mushrooms, Vegetable Seeds, and Propagative Materials Grown For Sale: 2012 and 2007 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : 2012 : 2007 :--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : : 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 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- NURSERY STOCK CROPS (SEE TEXT) - Con. : : Counties - Con. : : Santa Barbara.....................................................: 44 395,926 211 44 14,638,505 35 2,281,570 347 Santa Clara.......................................................: 29 280,945 395 29 10,190,736 25 438,204 456 Santa Cruz........................................................: 41 720,904 5,287 39 11,657,006 40 1,084,824 408 Shasta............................................................: 14 7,564 1,812 14 5,140,073 23 33,484 322 Siskiyou..........................................................: 7 (D) 2,946 7 57,553,500 10 (D) 2,231 Solano............................................................: 10 (D) 311 10 (D) 12 28,010 (D) Sonoma............................................................: 80 544,068 107 78 8,121,147 57 753,210 238 Stanislaus........................................................: 27 1,976,805 2,514 27 72,899,148 33 1,721,870 1,305 Sutter............................................................: 7 (D) (D) 7 (D) 6 6,000 (D) Tehama............................................................: 5 - 21 5 (D) 3 - 12 : Trinity...........................................................: 7 600 4 7 28,208 - - - Tulare............................................................: 46 591,653 1,420 46 34,071,153 39 1,648,024 2,312 Tuolumne..........................................................: 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) 7 (D) 9 Ventura...........................................................: 49 1,815,157 2,802 49 77,844,894 70 439,876 2,328 Yolo..............................................................: 13 (D) 616 13 19,228,781 8 - (D) Yuba..............................................................: 6 (D) (D) 6 (D) 4 (D) (D) : SOD HARVESTED : : State Total : : California........................................................: 48 (X) 12,530 48 124,935,633 55 (X) 19,087 : Counties : : Fresno............................................................: 2 (X) (D) 2 (D) 3 (X) 3,264 Glenn.............................................................: - (X) - - - 1 (X) (D) Inyo..............................................................: - (X) - - - 1 (X) (D) Kern..............................................................: 2 (X) (D) 2 (D) 9 (X) 1,951 Lake..............................................................: 1 (X) (D) 1 (D) 1 (X) (D) Los Angeles.......................................................: 4 (X) (D) 4 (D) 3 (X) (D) Madera............................................................: - (X) - - - 1 (X) (D) Mendocino.........................................................: 5 (X) 45 5 675,000 - (X) - Merced............................................................: 1 (X) (D) 1 (D) 1 (X) (D) Monterey..........................................................: 1 (X) (D) 1 (D) 1 (X) (D) : Placer............................................................: - (X) - - - 2 (X) (D) Riverside.........................................................: 8 (X) 3,058 8 30,316,166 7 (X) 3,806 Sacramento........................................................: 1 (X) (D) 1 (D) 4 (X) 560 San Benito........................................................: 1 (X) (D) 1 (D) 1 (X) (D) San Bernardino....................................................: 2 (X) (D) 2 (D) 1 (X) (D) San Diego.........................................................: 4 (X) (D) 4 (D) 2 (X) (D) San Joaquin.......................................................: 1 (X) (D) 1 (D) 2 (X) (D) San Luis Obispo...................................................: 1 (X) (D) 1 (D) 2 (X) (D) Santa Barbara.....................................................: 3 (X) 210 3 2,927,232 1 (X) (D) Santa Clara.......................................................: 2 (X) (D) 2 (D) 3 (X) 257 : Siskiyou..........................................................: 1 (X) (D) 1 (D) 1 (X) (D) Solano............................................................: 3 (X) 1,082 3 7,000,000 2 (X) (D) Stanislaus........................................................: 2 (X) (D) 2 (D) 2 (X) (D) Tulare............................................................: - (X) - - - 1 (X) (D) Ventura...........................................................: 3 (X) 3,037 3 36,500,000 2 (X) (D) Yolo..............................................................: - (X) - - - 1 (X) (D) : VEGETABLE SEEDS : : State Total : : California........................................................: 243 4,126,144 15,574 243 72,464,696 119 232,570 10,695 : Counties : : Alameda...........................................................: 2 (D) - 2 (D) - - - Butte.............................................................: 6 (D) 582 6 1,216,020 5 - 328 Calaveras.........................................................: 3 30 - 3 60 - - - Colusa............................................................: 8 - 3,985 8 8,902,052 10 - 3,466 El Dorado.........................................................: 3 - 1 3 5,330 - - - Fresno............................................................: 27 (D) 1,500 27 7,161,246 11 - 799 Glenn.............................................................: 12 - 2,137 12 5,153,436 8 - 1,442 Humboldt..........................................................: 15 9,600 21 15 50,650 1 - (D) Imperial..........................................................: 4 - (D) 4 (D) 2 - (D) Kern..............................................................: 7 - 632 7 1,282,753 5 - 278 : Kings.............................................................: 4 - 178 4 1,071,120 5 (D) 98 Los Angeles.......................................................: 11 - 11 11 19,800 - - - Marin.............................................................: 3 - 6 3 10,329 1 - (D) Mendocino.........................................................: 7 3,800 - 7 7,600 - - - Merced............................................................: 3 - 119 3 213,300 3 - 11 Monterey..........................................................: 17 - 802 17 3,001,472 8 - 878 Napa..............................................................: 5 1,440 - 5 2,880 - - - Nevada............................................................: 6 30,600 - 6 51,200 - - - Orange............................................................: 3 - 1 3 1,500 - - - Placer............................................................: 2 (D) - 2 (D) - - - : Riverside.........................................................: 1 (D) - 1 (D) - - - Sacramento........................................................: 4 16,950 (D) 4 27,050 - - - San Benito........................................................: 4 (D) 51 4 (D) 9 (D) 183 San Bernardino....................................................: 5 (D) 3 5 9,660 1 - (D) San Diego.........................................................: 9 - 201 9 211,020 5 (D) (D) San Joaquin.......................................................: - - - - - 1 - (D) San Luis Obispo...................................................: 2 - (D) 2 (D) 4 (D) 29 Santa Barbara.....................................................: 6 - 1,047 6 (D) 2 - (D) ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 34. Nursery, Greenhouse, Floriculture, Sod, Mushrooms, Vegetable Seeds, and Propagative Materials Grown For Sale: 2012 and 2007 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : 2012 : 2007 :--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : : 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 SEEDS - Con. : : Counties - Con. : : Santa Clara.......................................................: 11 (D) 354 11 834,810 1 - (D) Shasta............................................................: 1 - (D) 1 (D) 2 (D) - Siskiyou..........................................................: - - - - - 2 - (D) Solano............................................................: 5 97,376 (D) 5 1,193,622 2 (D) (D) Sonoma............................................................: 3 (D) (D) 3 (D) 1 - (D) Stanislaus........................................................: 2 - (D) 2 (D) - - - Sutter............................................................: 12 (D) 1,182 12 4,086,768 5 - (D) Tehama............................................................: 6 - 1 6 4,200 1 - (D) Tulare............................................................: 1 - (D) 1 (D) 7 - 123 Ventura...........................................................: 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) 3 - (D) : Yolo..............................................................: 20 - 1,870 20 3,987,098 14 (D) 1,286 Yuba..............................................................: 1 (D) - 1 (D) - - - : VEGETABLE TRANSPLANTS : : State Total : : California........................................................: 164 11,612,705 (D) 160 99,442,667 68 14,291,522 193 : Counties : : Butte.............................................................: 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) 1 (D) (D) Calaveras.........................................................: 1 (D) - 1 (D) - - - Contra Costa......................................................: 3 - 2 3 10,500 - - - Del Norte.........................................................: 7 3,040 - 7 7,052 - - - El Dorado.........................................................: 4 5,000 (D) 4 20,350 - - - Fresno............................................................: 14 (D) 60 14 (D) 3 (D) - Humboldt..........................................................: 4 (D) - 4 (D) - - - Kern..............................................................: 1 (D) - 1 (D) - - - Kings.............................................................: 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) - - - Lake..............................................................: 5 500 - 1 (D) 2 (D) (D) : Los Angeles.......................................................: 9 100 3 9 23,000 - - - Madera............................................................: 2 (D) - 2 (D) - - - Marin.............................................................: 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) 1 (D) - Mendocino.........................................................: 6 4,200 1 6 15,680 2 (D) - Merced............................................................: 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) 1 (D) (D) Monterey..........................................................: 5 1,792,004 9 5 (D) 7 2,753,021 (D) Nevada............................................................: 22 16,618 (D) 22 25,450 2 (D) - Placer............................................................: 2 - (D) 2 (D) - - - Plumas............................................................: 2 (D) - 2 (D) - - - Riverside.........................................................: - - - - - 2 (D) - : Sacramento........................................................: 3 30 - 3 900 - - - San Bernardino....................................................: 6 (D) 9 6 80,800 - - - San Diego.........................................................: 3 (D) (D) 3 (D) 1 (D) - San Joaquin.......................................................: 5 (D) 5 5 (D) 3 1,001,000 (D) San Luis Obispo...................................................: 8 (D) 43 8 (D) 7 (D) 47 San Mateo.........................................................: 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) 2 (D) - Santa Barbara.....................................................: 10 (D) 46 10 (D) 5 (D) 19 Santa Clara.......................................................: 1 (D) - 1 (D) 2 (D) (D) Santa Cruz........................................................: - - - - - 4 1,600,800 - Shasta............................................................: 1 (D) - 1 (D) - - - : Solano............................................................: - - - - - 1 (D) - Sonoma............................................................: 7 5,160 1 7 60,900 4 (D) 1 Stanislaus........................................................: 6 (D) (D) 6 (D) 3 (D) (D) Trinity...........................................................: - - - - - 1 (D) - Tulare............................................................: - - - - - 3 (D) (D) Tuolumne..........................................................: - - - - - 2 (D) - Ventura...........................................................: 15 1,089,938 (D) 15 3,330,907 7 700,000 37 Yolo..............................................................: 1 (D) - 1 (D) 2 (D) - Yuba..............................................................: 1 (D) - 1 (D) - - - ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Table 35. Cut Christmas Trees: 2012 and 2007 [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : 2012 : 2007 :-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : Acres in production : Trees cut : Acres in production : Trees cut :-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Geographic area : Farms : Acres :Acres irrigated : Farms : Number : Farms : Acres : Farms : Number ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- State Total : : California...............: 385 13,805 1,181 301 109,045 400 4,033 279 119,855 : Counties : : Alameda..................: 2 (D) - 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Amador...................: 4 51 13 3 (D) - - - - Butte....................: 15 2,854 19 10 1,512 15 174 11 1,622 Calaveras................: 13 161 94 13 3,699 9 79 5 1,332 Contra Costa.............: 2 (D) - 2 (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) Del Norte................: 4 20 - 4 48 - - - - El Dorado................: 85 1,029 243 68 15,484 91 758 66 15,913 Fresno...................: 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) 2 (D) 2 (D) Humboldt.................: 7 123 - 3 580 6 38 6 765 Kern.....................: 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) 1 (D) - - : Lake.....................: 13 5,415 - 11 1,008 12 35 9 670 Lassen...................: 2 (D) (D) - - - - - - Los Angeles..............: 11 13 13 9 2,573 5 11 4 (D) Madera...................: 1 (D) - 1 (D) 2 (D) 1 (D) Mendocino................: 6 17 8 6 334 8 30 7 650 Merced...................: 3 23 23 3 1,564 5 46 4 2,882 Monterey.................: 6 25 10 6 982 5 36 4 701 Napa.....................: 7 21 21 5 1,422 3 7 2 (D) Nevada...................: 17 161 76 15 3,003 22 143 14 2,888 Orange...................: 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) 2 (D) 1 (D) : Placer...................: 26 318 57 12 5,737 47 950 34 9,513 Plumas...................: 6 40 - - - 3 15 1 (D) Riverside................: 8 37 (D) 1 (D) 9 19 5 (D) Sacramento...............: 3 74 74 3 4,868 2 (D) 2 (D) San Bernardino...........: 9 85 23 7 1,561 11 83 6 490 San Diego................: 12 57 47 10 3,265 12 58 6 1,977 San Joaquin..............: 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) 4 20 4 1,270 San Luis Obispo..........: 6 44 36 6 3,247 5 33 4 (D) San Mateo................: 9 322 110 9 5,260 4 99 4 5,600 Santa Barbara............: - - - - - 3 10 - - : Santa Clara..............: 20 985 98 14 10,371 25 307 19 10,821 Santa Cruz...............: 29 329 49 27 12,965 24 206 17 10,472 Shasta...................: 8 163 - 6 1,506 9 105 4 343 Sierra...................: 1 (D) - 1 (D) - - - - Siskiyou.................: 7 325 - 7 4,005 4 92 - - Solano...................: 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) 3 34 1 (D) Sonoma...................: 19 102 42 17 6,666 19 179 16 9,001 Stanislaus...............: 1 (D) (D) - - - - - - Tehama...................: 3 (D) 7 3 (D) 3 (D) 3 (D) Trinity..................: - - - - - 5 126 2 (D) : Tulare...................: 2 (D) - - - 3 22 3 1,031 Tuolumne.................: 6 30 21 5 1,010 7 35 5 1,060 Ventura..................: 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) 4 43 3 6,839 Yolo.....................: 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) 2 (D) 2 (D) Yuba.....................: 1 (D) - 1 (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Table 36. Short Rotation Woody Crops: 2012 and 2007 [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : 2012 : 2007 :--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : 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 : : California....................: 65 542 158 38 186 97 2,086 631 53 420 : Counties : : Alameda.......................: - - - - - 1 (D) - - - Butte.........................: - - - - - 3 28 - 1 (D) Calaveras.....................: - - - - - 2 (D) - 2 (D) Contra Costa..................: 2 (D) - - - 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) El Dorado.....................: 3 7 - 1 (D) 3 20 (D) 2 (D) Fresno........................: 5 7 3 5 7 2 (D) - 2 (D) Glenn.........................: - - - - - 1 (D) - - - Humboldt......................: 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) 2 (D) (D) - - Kern..........................: 3 8 8 3 8 3 6 6 2 (D) Kings.........................: - - - - - 1 (D) - 1 (D) : Lake..........................: - - - - - 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) Los Angeles...................: 4 10 10 2 (D) - - - - - Mendocino.....................: 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) 4 341 (D) - - Napa..........................: 1 (D) - - - - - - - - Nevada........................: 4 16 (D) 4 4 1 (D) - 1 (D) Placer........................: 2 (D) - - - 1 (D) - - - Riverside.....................: 4 (D) (D) 1 (D) 9 89 86 6 58 San Benito....................: 7 64 - - - - - - - - San Diego.....................: 6 (D) (D) 5 (D) 23 281 71 11 45 San Joaquin...................: 2 (D) (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) : San Luis Obispo...............: 5 7 - 3 3 7 196 9 5 13 San Mateo.....................: - - - - - 2 (D) - 1 (D) Santa Barbara.................: - - - - - 3 85 (D) 1 (D) Santa Clara...................: - - - - - 2 (D) (D) - - Santa Cruz....................: 3 41 (D) 1 (D) - - - - - Shasta........................: - - - - - 3 5 - 1 (D) Solano........................: 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) - - - - - Sonoma........................: - - - - - 6 210 (D) 5 15 Stanislaus....................: 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) 4 24 20 2 (D) Sutter........................: 1 (D) - 1 (D) - - - - - : Tehama........................: 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) - - - - - Tulare........................: - - - - - 3 60 30 3 60 Tuolumne......................: 4 16 5 2 (D) 2 (D) - - - Ventura.......................: 3 31 31 3 7 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) Yolo..........................: - - - - - 3 5 5 3 3 Yuba..........................: - - - - - 2 (D) - - - ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Table 37. Maple Syrup: 2012 and 2007 [Not published for this State] Table 38. Grain Storage Capacity: 2012 and 2007 [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : : Farms with capacity by North : Grain storage capacity : American Industry : (see text) : Classification System :--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : : : : : Animal production : : : Average bushels : Crop production : and aquaculture Geographic area : Farms : Bushels : per farm : (111) : (112) ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- State Total : : California..............................................2012: 754 24,564,779 32,579 415 339 2007: 873 29,952,296 34,310 363 510 : Counties, 2012 : : Alameda.....................................................: 4 2,073 518 2 2 Amador......................................................: 2 (D) (D) - 2 Butte.......................................................: 42 2,895,016 68,929 40 2 Calaveras...................................................: 2 (D) (D) - 2 Colusa......................................................: 19 3,228,654 169,929 18 1 Contra Costa................................................: 2 (D) (D) 1 1 Del Norte...................................................: 4 472 118 3 1 El Dorado...................................................: 7 3,283 469 4 3 Fresno......................................................: 15 748,921 49,928 13 2 Glenn.......................................................: 86 5,900,834 68,614 77 9 : Humboldt....................................................: 7 22,361 3,194 4 3 Imperial....................................................: 19 2,487,992 130,947 9 10 Inyo........................................................: 2 (D) (D) - 2 Kern........................................................: 27 215,015 7,964 12 15 Kings.......................................................: 5 641,782 128,356 5 - Lake........................................................: 6 5,672 945 2 4 Lassen......................................................: 21 145,536 6,930 8 13 Los Angeles.................................................: 14 166,035 11,860 4 10 Madera......................................................: 2 (D) (D) - 2 Marin.......................................................: 7 19,782 2,826 3 4 : Mariposa....................................................: 4 2,546 637 - 4 Mendocino...................................................: 13 6,290 484 3 10 Merced......................................................: 8 264,126 33,016 5 3 Modoc.......................................................: 15 341,816 22,788 7 8 Mono........................................................: 1 (D) (D) - 1 Monterey....................................................: 23 186,544 8,111 11 12 Nevada......................................................: 11 3,527 321 - 11 Placer......................................................: 11 43,453 3,950 8 3 Plumas......................................................: 6 12,617 2,103 4 2 Riverside...................................................: 29 282,283 9,734 12 17 : Sacramento..................................................: 15 628,431 41,895 11 4 San Benito..................................................: 6 2,653 442 3 3 San Bernardino..............................................: 26 67,346 2,590 13 13 San Diego...................................................: 7 6,145 878 3 4 San Joaquin.................................................: 10 1,104,835 110,484 6 4 San Luis Obispo.............................................: 22 447,030 20,320 11 11 San Mateo...................................................: 2 (D) (D) - 2 Santa Barbara...............................................: 3 (D) (D) 2 1 Santa Clara.................................................: 2 (D) (D) 1 1 Santa Cruz..................................................: 3 16,365 5,455 3 - : Shasta......................................................: 14 19,720 1,409 - 14 Siskiyou....................................................: 43 1,510,730 35,133 26 17 Solano......................................................: 10 403,318 40,332 7 3 Sonoma......................................................: 28 28,162 1,006 7 21 Stanislaus..................................................: 48 866,000 18,042 13 35 Sutter......................................................: 13 274,908 21,147 7 6 Tehama......................................................: 29 182,290 6,286 8 21 Tulare......................................................: 26 415,828 15,993 16 10 Tuolumne....................................................: 1 (D) (D) - 1 Ventura.....................................................: 7 28,725 4,104 7 - : Yolo........................................................: 15 828,944 55,263 10 5 Yuba........................................................: 10 (D) (D) 6 4 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1/ 2007 data may not include storage capacity for pulse crops. Table 39. Commodities Raised and Delivered Under Production Contracts: 2012 [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Geographic area : Farms : Number :: Geographic area : Farms : Number ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- BROILERS AND OTHER MEAT-TYPE CHICKENS : :: REPLACEMENT DAIRY HEIFERS - Con. : : :: : State Total : :: Counties : : :: : California............................................: 41 31,520,639 :: Butte.................................................: 1 (D) : :: Fresno................................................: 7 1,276 Counties : :: Humboldt..............................................: 1 (D) : :: Imperial..............................................: 1 (D) Fresno................................................: 10 13,195,000 :: Kern..................................................: 1 (D) Kings.................................................: 1 (D) :: Kings.................................................: 6 171,992 Madera................................................: 3 1,630,000 :: Madera................................................: 1 (D) Merced................................................: 5 1,230,320 :: Merced................................................: 7 (D) Sacramento............................................: 3 (D) :: Modoc.................................................: 7 3,070 San Diego.............................................: 2 (D) :: San Bernardino........................................: 5 (D) San Joaquin...........................................: 5 1,107,000 :: : Sonoma................................................: 1 (D) :: San Joaquin...........................................: 5 2,531 Stanislaus............................................: 9 9,430,000 :: Sonoma................................................: 7 770 Tulare................................................: 1 (D) :: Stanislaus............................................: 6 4,560 Tuolumne..............................................: 1 (D) :: Tehama................................................: 5 1,480 : :: Tulare................................................: 8 21,540 EGGS, CHICKEN (DOZENS) : :: : : :: OTHER CATTLE, SHEEP, LIVESTOCK, OR : State Total : :: POULTRY (SEE TEXT) : : :: : California............................................: 5 4,613,725 :: State Total : : :: : Counties : :: California............................................: 65 (X) : :: : Los Angeles...........................................: 1 (D) :: Counties : San Joaquin...........................................: 3 (D) :: : Yolo..................................................: 1 (D) :: Alameda...............................................: 2 (X) : :: Contra Costa..........................................: 1 (X) LAYERS : :: Fresno................................................: 5 (X) : :: Kern..................................................: 2 (X) State Total : :: Madera................................................: 1 (X) : :: Mariposa..............................................: 1 (X) California............................................: 4 208,561 :: Merced................................................: 2 (X) : :: Monterey..............................................: 8 (X) Counties : :: Placer................................................: 1 (X) : :: Plumas................................................: 1 (X) Los Angeles...........................................: 1 (D) :: : San Joaquin...........................................: 3 (D) :: Riverside.............................................: 3 (X) : :: Sacramento............................................: 1 (X) PULLETS FOR LAYING FLOCK REPLACEMENT : :: San Benito............................................: 10 (X) : :: San Joaquin...........................................: 3 (X) State Total : :: Santa Barbara.........................................: 6 (X) : :: Santa Clara...........................................: 1 (X) California............................................: 2 (D) :: Shasta................................................: 1 (X) : :: Stanislaus............................................: 5 (X) Counties : :: Tulare................................................: 5 (X) : :: Yolo..................................................: 6 (X) San Joaquin...........................................: 1 (D) :: : Ventura...............................................: 1 (D) :: GRAINS AND OILSEEDS : : :: : TURKEYS : :: State Total : : :: : State Total : :: California............................................: 3 (X) : :: : California............................................: 17 3,676,925 :: Counties : : :: : Counties : :: Imperial..............................................: 3 (X) : :: : Fresno................................................: 3 421,000 :: VEGETABLES, MELONS, POTATOES, AND : Kings.................................................: 3 422,000 :: SWEET POTATOES : Madera................................................: 1 (D) :: : Merced................................................: 5 1,719,832 :: State Total : Sacramento............................................: 2 (D) :: : Stanislaus............................................: 2 (D) :: California............................................: 20 (X) Tulare................................................: 1 (D) :: : : :: Counties : CUSTOM FED CATTLE SHIPPED DIRECTLY : :: : FOR SLAUGHTER (SEE TEXT) : :: Fresno................................................: 3 (X) : :: Kern..................................................: 3 (X) State Total : :: Merced................................................: 3 (X) : :: Monterey..............................................: 2 (X) California............................................: 25 296,156 :: Riverside.............................................: 1 (X) : :: Sacramento............................................: 1 (X) Counties : :: San Joaquin...........................................: 1 (X) : :: San Luis Obispo.......................................: 2 (X) El Dorado.............................................: 5 900 :: Santa Barbara.........................................: 1 (X) Fresno................................................: 1 (D) :: Santa Cruz............................................: 1 (X) Imperial..............................................: 5 (D) :: Ventura...............................................: 2 (X) Kern..................................................: 1 (D) :: : Kings.................................................: 6 2,850 :: OTHER CROPS (SEE TEXT) : Mariposa..............................................: 1 (D) :: : Riverside.............................................: 2 (D) :: State Total : Tulare................................................: 4 8,259 :: : : :: California............................................: 6 (X) HOGS AND PIGS : :: : : :: Counties : State Total : :: : : :: Modoc.................................................: 3 (X) California............................................: 2 (D) :: San Bernardino........................................: 1 (X) : :: Santa Cruz............................................: 2 (X) Counties : :: : : :: : Riverside.............................................: 2 (D) :: : : :: : REPLACEMENT DAIRY HEIFERS : :: : : :: : State Total : :: : : :: : California............................................: 68 277,529 :: : ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Table 40. Machinery and Equipment on Operation: 2012 and 2007 [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : California : Alameda : Alpine : Amador : Butte : Calaveras : Colusa ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- VALUE OF MACHINERY AND EQUIPMENT : : Estimated market value of all machinery : and equipment ......................................farms, 2012: 77,851 452 3 461 2,056 663 782 2007: 81,017 525 7 479 2,048 631 814 $1,000, 2012: 9,709,545 21,376 61 23,659 278,776 27,008 234,816 2007: 8,761,575 27,868 500 22,500 222,854 31,682 184,959 Average per farm ..............................dollars, 2012: 124,720 47,291 20,333 51,320 135,591 40,737 300,276 2007: 108,145 53,082 71,453 46,973 108,816 50,209 227,223 : Farms by value group: : $1 to $9,999 ...........................................2012: 18,791 143 - 89 460 190 66 2007: 17,863 102 3 87 462 123 103 $10,000 to $19,999 .....................................2012: 13,025 91 2 72 378 113 103 2007: 12,858 93 - 74 338 131 61 $20,000 to $29,999 .....................................2012: 9,291 55 1 68 220 102 63 2007: 10,053 107 - 77 174 88 60 $30,000 to $49,999 .....................................2012: 9,535 52 - 94 236 79 89 2007: 11,186 68 1 95 293 102 105 : $50,000 to $69,999 .....................................2012: 7,016 42 - 41 176 62 52 2007: 7,705 47 - 55 170 63 39 $70,000 to $99,999 .....................................2012: 4,175 20 - 38 99 51 38 2007: 4,813 32 1 39 118 46 46 $100,000 to $199,999 ...................................2012: 6,916 27 - 45 174 49 125 2007: 7,413 55 1 32 211 54 121 $200,000 to $499,999 ...................................2012: 5,289 16 - 12 177 17 103 2007: 5,791 14 1 18 169 21 167 $500,000 or more .......................................2012: 3,813 6 - 2 136 - 143 2007: 3,335 7 - 2 113 3 112 : SELECTED MACHINERY AND EQUIPMENT : : Trucks, including pickups (see text) ................farms, 2012: 55,175 306 3 346 1,482 506 611 2007: 64,856 401 6 418 1,628 524 647 number, 2012: 132,455 572 (D) 588 2,962 745 1,895 2007: 141,131 719 17 678 3,158 774 1,883 : Tractors ............................................farms, 2012: 53,296 261 3 344 1,435 429 572 2007: 58,415 330 7 351 1,520 438 671 number, 2012: 147,163 534 4 575 3,252 701 2,105 2007: 149,901 596 12 588 3,465 681 2,398 : Less than 40 horsepower (PTO) .....................farms, 2012: 31,264 184 1 252 770 288 206 2007: 35,355 228 6 262 784 308 310 number, 2012: 49,313 285 (D) 324 968 391 360 2007: 53,949 309 (D) 337 996 391 488 : 40 to 99 horsepower (PTO) .........................farms, 2012: 30,456 127 3 151 806 189 364 2007: 32,186 154 1 165 843 181 402 number, 2012: 68,295 199 (D) 216 1,669 267 903 2007: 68,925 222 (D) 222 1,788 237 971 : 100 horsepower (PTO) or more ......................farms, 2012: 10,631 33 - 29 279 34 299 2007: 10,883 39 2 22 310 52 353 number, 2012: 29,555 50 - 35 615 43 842 2007: 27,027 65 (D) 29 681 53 939 : Grain and bean combines, self-propelled .............farms, 2012: 1,710 1 - 1 118 - 194 2007: 1,453 4 - 2 130 - 212 number, 2012: 2,497 (D) - (D) 175 - 344 2007: 2,188 5 - (D) 191 - 365 : Cotton pickers and strippers, self-propelled ........farms, 2012: 475 - - - - - 4 2007: 404 - - - - - 1 number, 2012: 870 - - - - - 5 2007: 868 - - - - - (D) : Forage harvesters, self-propelled ...................farms, 2012: 1,629 5 - 4 44 2 24 2007: 1,348 6 - 1 26 4 29 number, 2012: 2,188 5 - 4 49 (D) 33 2007: 1,633 10 - (D) 26 4 30 : Hay balers ..........................................farms, 2012: 3,674 27 - 6 61 17 30 2007: 3,432 25 - 7 55 19 39 number, 2012: 4,822 31 - 7 73 17 38 2007: 4,209 28 - 10 60 20 44 : 2012 INVENTORY : : Manufactured 2008 to 2012: : Trucks, including pickups ...............................farms: 14,758 80 - 59 343 104 314 number: 27,749 137 - 76 477 112 657 Tractors ................................................farms: 11,679 40 - 39 355 87 202 number: 26,338 54 - 51 586 103 465 Less than 40 horsepower (PTO) .........................farms: 4,257 28 - 19 94 45 30 number: 6,291 32 - (D) 100 51 36 40 to 99 horsepower (PTO) .............................farms: 6,603 12 - 21 218 45 113 number: 12,743 (D) - 28 343 48 223 100 horsepower (PTO) or more ..........................farms: 3,308 2 - 2 96 4 124 number: 7,304 (D) - (D) 143 4 206 : Grain and bean combines .................................farms: 338 - - - 37 - 45 number: 429 - - - 41 - 69 Cotton pickers and strippers ............................farms: 43 - - - - - 1 number: 69 - - - - - (D) Forage harvesters self-propelled.........................farms: 317 - - - 6 1 3 number: 406 - - - 8 (D) 3 Hay balers ..............................................farms: 431 1 - 1 5 1 5 number: 605 (D) - (D) 5 (D) 7 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 40. Machinery and Equipment on Operation: 2012 and 2007 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Contra Costa : Del Norte : El Dorado : Fresno : Glenn : Humboldt : Imperial ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- VALUE OF MACHINERY AND EQUIPMENT : : Estimated market value of all machinery : and equipment ......................................farms, 2012: 602 118 1,358 5,683 1,311 930 421 2007: 634 85 1,268 6,080 1,240 852 452 $1,000, 2012: 48,533 13,995 41,469 917,856 252,007 53,647 313,773 2007: 45,753 9,075 45,527 898,058 182,641 71,931 187,020 Average per farm ..............................dollars, 2012: 80,619 118,602 30,537 161,509 192,225 57,685 745,303 2007: 72,166 106,770 35,905 147,707 147,291 84,426 413,760 : Farms by value group: : $1 to $9,999 ...........................................2012: 195 31 424 1,094 240 270 54 2007: 120 30 285 1,272 192 212 40 $10,000 to $19,999 .....................................2012: 112 20 254 897 193 142 22 2007: 110 5 276 888 138 130 51 $20,000 to $29,999 .....................................2012: 62 15 210 656 117 102 33 2007: 74 11 175 644 133 104 33 $30,000 to $49,999 .....................................2012: 69 18 218 677 142 129 28 2007: 111 16 221 697 184 119 22 : $50,000 to $69,999 .....................................2012: 49 4 128 512 103 93 19 2007: 78 1 148 590 116 76 37 $70,000 to $99,999 .....................................2012: 31 7 52 386 78 44 13 2007: 41 4 76 385 77 62 20 $100,000 to $199,999 ...................................2012: 37 15 54 591 152 81 33 2007: 63 11 59 661 141 85 52 $200,000 to $499,999 ...................................2012: 30 3 18 507 140 63 88 2007: 28 3 28 593 160 60 85 $500,000 or more .......................................2012: 17 5 - 363 146 6 131 2007: 9 4 - 350 99 4 112 : SELECTED MACHINERY AND EQUIPMENT : : Trucks, including pickups (see text) ................farms, 2012: 480 86 921 4,160 999 708 319 2007: 501 79 990 4,818 1,041 719 380 number, 2012: 881 194 1,295 10,758 2,458 1,240 1,927 2007: 925 178 1,408 11,334 2,403 1,312 1,623 : Tractors ............................................farms, 2012: 437 79 920 4,440 1,022 613 284 2007: 483 72 898 5,064 1,013 541 346 number, 2012: 904 226 1,334 15,086 2,991 1,106 2,343 2007: 924 181 1,360 15,725 2,857 1,029 2,078 : Less than 40 horsepower (PTO) .....................farms, 2012: 299 62 723 2,170 454 346 83 2007: 307 50 711 2,628 488 339 127 number, 2012: 405 88 875 4,251 635 433 263 2007: 448 66 928 4,963 662 425 330 : 40 to 99 horsepower (PTO) .........................farms, 2012: 215 34 287 3,165 657 350 214 2007: 245 32 310 3,503 696 285 238 number, 2012: 378 95 400 7,795 1,478 543 1,010 2007: 397 94 375 7,879 1,359 463 988 : 100 horsepower (PTO) or more ......................farms, 2012: 47 15 51 1,083 353 86 186 2007: 42 10 45 1,062 324 69 203 number, 2012: 121 43 59 3,040 878 130 1,070 2007: 79 21 57 2,883 836 141 760 : Grain and bean combines, self-propelled .............farms, 2012: 7 - - 63 170 1 37 2007: 5 - - 51 170 - 12 number, 2012: 14 - - 96 264 (D) 51 2007: 5 - - 67 281 - 17 : Cotton pickers and strippers, self-propelled ........farms, 2012: - - - 162 7 - 2 2007: - - - 124 2 - 5 number, 2012: - - - 275 8 - (D) 2007: - - - 238 (D) - 9 : Forage harvesters, self-propelled ...................farms, 2012: 8 1 2 120 28 12 30 2007: 16 1 1 87 34 4 61 number, 2012: 28 (D) (D) 180 36 12 62 2007: 23 (D) (D) 111 37 4 106 : Hay balers ..........................................farms, 2012: 32 10 5 166 91 117 131 2007: 37 10 9 148 70 115 115 number, 2012: 42 15 7 225 118 133 263 2007: 41 11 9 169 87 124 228 : 2012 INVENTORY : : Manufactured 2008 to 2012: : Trucks, including pickups ...............................farms: 70 10 125 1,332 320 108 190 number: 102 11 135 2,645 594 130 740 Tractors ................................................farms: 75 11 135 1,143 296 90 154 number: 113 15 152 3,014 640 133 846 Less than 40 horsepower (PTO) .........................farms: 40 6 97 249 61 41 20 number: 43 (D) 109 549 72 52 59 40 to 99 horsepower (PTO) .............................farms: 31 5 40 783 164 43 100 number: 47 6 (D) 1,591 349 57 331 100 horsepower (PTO) or more ..........................farms: 11 1 1 415 132 16 107 number: 23 (D) (D) 874 219 24 456 : Grain and bean combines .................................farms: 2 - - 9 53 - 16 number: (D) - - 17 60 - 17 Cotton pickers and strippers ............................farms: - - - 5 - - - number: - - - 6 - - - Forage harvesters self-propelled.........................farms: - - - 19 7 4 19 number: - - - 24 7 4 29 Hay balers ..............................................farms: - 4 - 25 8 13 48 number: - 4 - 30 8 14 118 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 40. Machinery and Equipment on Operation: 2012 and 2007 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Inyo : Kern : Kings : Lake : Lassen : Los Angeles : Madera ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- VALUE OF MACHINERY AND EQUIPMENT : : Estimated market value of all machinery : and equipment ......................................farms, 2012: 125 1,937 1,056 838 448 1,294 1,507 2007: 94 2,117 1,129 845 459 1,734 1,708 $1,000, 2012: 10,836 645,276 359,519 46,522 50,662 59,401 274,307 2007: 6,743 536,141 277,429 38,820 49,576 116,191 238,551 Average per farm ..............................dollars, 2012: 86,689 333,132 340,453 55,515 113,085 45,905 182,022 2007: 71,730 253,255 245,730 45,940 108,010 67,008 139,667 : Farms by value group: : $1 to $9,999 ...........................................2012: 43 266 191 245 97 502 207 2007: 16 372 176 189 99 332 227 $10,000 to $19,999 .....................................2012: 17 181 122 133 65 280 210 2007: 20 213 139 175 67 266 196 $20,000 to $29,999 .....................................2012: 15 174 83 115 55 97 166 2007: 9 209 103 123 39 209 172 $30,000 to $49,999 .....................................2012: 9 217 123 107 55 145 159 2007: 12 232 121 147 64 387 245 : $50,000 to $69,999 .....................................2012: 5 188 82 72 43 86 183 2007: 6 200 74 87 54 168 200 $70,000 to $99,999 .....................................2012: 8 111 57 55 34 53 83 2007: 11 150 64 41 23 131 127 $100,000 to $199,999 ...................................2012: 16 274 123 49 48 85 212 2007: 12 254 138 51 57 143 265 $200,000 to $499,999 ...................................2012: 6 276 144 50 34 33 192 2007: 6 281 164 23 38 79 166 $500,000 or more .......................................2012: 6 250 131 12 17 13 95 2007: 2 206 150 9 18 19 110 : SELECTED MACHINERY AND EQUIPMENT : : Trucks, including pickups (see text) ................farms, 2012: 92 1,472 837 606 362 892 1,094 2007: 79 1,756 945 684 393 1,348 1,412 number, 2012: 237 6,323 3,030 1,113 743 1,714 2,941 2007: 217 5,995 2,941 1,237 940 2,705 3,181 : Tractors ............................................farms, 2012: 76 1,360 849 640 314 692 1,131 2007: 61 1,527 955 682 391 942 1,300 number, 2012: 155 6,350 3,456 1,417 745 1,413 3,872 2007: 148 6,026 3,768 1,362 954 1,851 4,123 : Less than 40 horsepower (PTO) .....................farms, 2012: 44 696 421 401 125 498 557 2007: 42 832 490 408 232 667 660 number, 2012: 65 1,259 702 582 164 721 1,010 2007: 61 1,401 856 600 347 973 1,332 : 40 to 99 horsepower (PTO) .........................farms, 2012: 43 894 554 349 221 267 808 2007: 34 850 620 375 230 371 895 number, 2012: 79 3,389 1,351 719 382 462 2,084 2007: 68 2,994 1,637 655 422 606 2,185 : 100 horsepower (PTO) or more ......................farms, 2012: 10 493 358 63 101 132 283 2007: 17 547 408 62 98 136 282 number, 2012: 11 1,702 1,403 116 199 230 778 2007: 19 1,631 1,275 107 185 272 606 : Grain and bean combines, self-propelled .............farms, 2012: - 52 44 6 14 25 12 2007: - 20 34 8 16 6 7 number, 2012: - 72 65 6 15 27 13 2007: - 27 43 8 19 9 11 : Cotton pickers and strippers, self-propelled ........farms, 2012: - 90 66 - - - 8 2007: - 91 65 - - - 8 number, 2012: - 158 182 - - - 11 2007: - 206 195 - - - 15 : Forage harvesters, self-propelled ...................farms, 2012: 10 57 34 16 60 16 24 2007: 9 29 32 11 56 12 24 number, 2012: 15 72 43 18 70 19 29 2007: 9 36 46 11 59 15 25 : Hay balers ..........................................farms, 2012: 12 98 75 65 129 31 42 2007: 12 113 71 53 168 37 41 number, 2012: 14 130 112 88 159 38 63 2007: 13 132 85 57 204 41 53 : 2012 INVENTORY : : Manufactured 2008 to 2012: : Trucks, including pickups ...............................farms: 33 650 335 81 66 197 390 number: 47 2,253 802 100 111 333 789 Tractors ................................................farms: 13 460 237 70 50 94 338 number: (D) 1,865 679 111 84 162 939 Less than 40 horsepower (PTO) .........................farms: 5 135 64 30 13 59 97 number: 6 300 115 34 17 64 167 40 to 99 horsepower (PTO) .............................farms: 8 309 123 46 26 40 236 number: (D) 1,043 200 72 36 60 558 100 horsepower (PTO) or more ..........................farms: - 182 133 5 22 7 97 number: - 522 364 5 31 38 214 : Grain and bean combines .................................farms: - 6 8 - - 2 - number: - 6 15 - - (D) - Cotton pickers and strippers ............................farms: - 6 11 - - - - number: - 13 21 - - - - Forage harvesters self-propelled.........................farms: 5 6 14 - 4 - 5 number: 5 8 15 - 6 - 5 Hay balers ..............................................farms: 1 13 19 2 13 3 7 number: (D) 18 25 (D) 15 3 10 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 40. Machinery and Equipment on Operation: 2012 and 2007 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Marin : Mariposa : Mendocino : Merced : Modoc : Mono : Monterey ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- VALUE OF MACHINERY AND EQUIPMENT : : Estimated market value of all machinery : and equipment ......................................farms, 2012: 323 364 1,220 2,484 437 72 1,179 2007: 255 302 1,136 2,604 448 84 1,199 $1,000, 2012: 22,360 16,286 63,290 587,824 54,649 10,420 467,834 2007: 21,307 15,968 65,008 515,990 54,986 7,226 365,924 Average per farm ..............................dollars, 2012: 69,225 44,742 51,877 236,644 125,055 144,720 396,806 2007: 83,556 52,874 57,225 198,153 122,736 86,028 305,191 : Farms by value group: : $1 to $9,999 ...........................................2012: 63 118 280 405 48 14 221 2007: 57 55 240 431 89 9 204 $10,000 to $19,999 .....................................2012: 33 45 217 363 54 11 124 2007: 29 41 180 344 44 25 132 $20,000 to $29,999 .....................................2012: 48 41 162 208 51 7 126 2007: 28 39 169 257 54 13 153 $30,000 to $49,999 .....................................2012: 34 38 205 268 55 10 149 2007: 42 51 190 323 49 3 144 : $50,000 to $69,999 .....................................2012: 51 43 129 219 68 5 103 2007: 22 46 107 262 42 8 110 $70,000 to $99,999 .....................................2012: 11 39 73 178 35 6 70 2007: 23 27 82 172 32 1 66 $100,000 to $199,999 ...................................2012: 57 37 95 328 53 4 130 2007: 22 37 102 279 64 13 132 $200,000 to $499,999 ...................................2012: 22 1 46 251 53 6 104 2007: 25 5 53 309 52 9 125 $500,000 or more .......................................2012: 4 2 13 264 20 9 152 2007: 7 1 13 227 22 3 133 : SELECTED MACHINERY AND EQUIPMENT : : Trucks, including pickups (see text) ................farms, 2012: 266 265 892 1,931 359 57 959 2007: 210 253 919 2,184 400 62 1,024 number, 2012: 669 533 1,702 5,993 1,054 174 4,499 2007: 508 485 1,753 5,550 1,050 165 3,818 : Tractors ............................................farms, 2012: 240 184 855 1,994 345 48 898 2007: 180 200 810 2,104 352 37 876 number, 2012: 546 295 1,906 7,350 892 160 5,681 2007: 409 280 1,690 6,976 1,012 134 4,700 : Less than 40 horsepower (PTO) .....................farms, 2012: 145 103 557 908 188 33 553 2007: 105 134 541 918 196 27 531 number, 2012: 199 154 801 1,565 260 47 1,386 2007: 155 160 713 1,420 312 43 1,152 : 40 to 99 horsepower (PTO) .........................farms, 2012: 156 97 460 1,464 220 29 501 2007: 116 82 405 1,597 239 25 531 number, 2012: 305 118 973 3,562 360 67 2,357 2007: 223 97 839 3,634 408 60 2,457 : 100 horsepower (PTO) or more ......................farms, 2012: 24 12 90 627 118 26 265 2007: 24 19 103 555 145 15 263 number, 2012: 42 23 132 2,223 272 46 1,938 2007: 31 23 138 1,922 292 31 1,091 : Grain and bean combines, self-propelled .............farms, 2012: 5 - 6 49 22 - 21 2007: 1 - - 37 31 - 16 number, 2012: 5 - 6 80 28 - 24 2007: (D) - - 54 38 - 24 : Cotton pickers and strippers, self-propelled ........farms, 2012: - - - 67 - - - 2007: - - - 49 - - - number, 2012: - - - 113 - - - 2007: - - - 101 - - - : Forage harvesters, self-propelled ...................farms, 2012: 1 1 6 99 63 17 34 2007: 3 - 9 78 66 11 20 number, 2012: (D) (D) 8 134 72 19 36 2007: 4 - 9 96 90 13 20 : Hay balers ..........................................farms, 2012: 21 6 101 148 157 26 61 2007: 12 3 78 150 175 22 58 number, 2012: 23 6 113 205 208 33 66 2007: 15 4 92 199 226 24 69 : 2012 INVENTORY : : Manufactured 2008 to 2012: : Trucks, including pickups ...............................farms: 78 57 153 646 70 13 361 number: 104 79 226 1,276 98 15 1,063 Tractors ................................................farms: 58 31 148 553 56 10 225 number: 87 32 211 1,559 82 10 1,189 Less than 40 horsepower (PTO) .........................farms: 17 17 74 118 22 - 82 number: 22 17 81 164 22 - 211 40 to 99 horsepower (PTO) .............................farms: 42 13 74 358 23 1 139 number: 55 (D) 117 688 27 (D) 509 100 horsepower (PTO) or more ..........................farms: 4 1 8 268 18 9 101 number: 10 (D) 13 707 33 (D) 469 : Grain and bean combines .................................farms: - - - 5 2 - 1 number: - - - 6 (D) - (D) Cotton pickers and strippers ............................farms: - - - 12 - - - number: - - - 17 - - - Forage harvesters self-propelled.........................farms: - - 2 27 3 9 4 number: - - (D) 41 4 10 4 Hay balers ..............................................farms: 3 - 7 19 14 3 4 number: 3 - 7 20 21 4 4 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 40. Machinery and Equipment on Operation: 2012 and 2007 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Napa : Nevada : Orange : Placer : Plumas : Riverside : Sacramento ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- VALUE OF MACHINERY AND EQUIPMENT : : Estimated market value of all machinery : and equipment ......................................farms, 2012: 1,685 742 312 1,355 141 2,949 1,352 2007: 1,638 690 325 1,488 142 3,454 1,393 $1,000, 2012: 143,450 23,133 22,142 48,640 13,487 224,152 115,803 2007: 125,311 27,603 53,952 58,872 9,672 229,417 131,972 Average per farm ..............................dollars, 2012: 85,134 31,177 70,967 35,896 95,651 76,009 85,653 2007: 76,502 40,004 166,005 39,564 68,115 66,421 94,739 : Farms by value group: : $1 to $9,999 ...........................................2012: 456 184 81 404 34 899 373 2007: 353 175 86 381 29 1,051 254 $10,000 to $19,999 .....................................2012: 246 166 73 324 23 508 268 2007: 221 118 43 300 36 535 233 $20,000 to $29,999 .....................................2012: 212 132 32 236 8 370 134 2007: 264 117 28 217 16 485 175 $30,000 to $49,999 .....................................2012: 169 118 39 177 18 373 135 2007: 241 124 46 247 20 546 206 : $50,000 to $69,999 .....................................2012: 170 59 21 87 17 316 125 2007: 140 69 37 147 9 297 120 $70,000 to $99,999 .....................................2012: 102 50 18 34 7 150 53 2007: 89 31 11 58 6 157 93 $100,000 to $199,999 ...................................2012: 187 27 21 55 15 165 134 2007: 172 35 30 103 15 184 132 $200,000 to $499,999 ...................................2012: 89 5 14 26 15 103 89 2007: 118 19 31 27 8 126 129 $500,000 or more .......................................2012: 54 1 13 12 4 65 41 2007: 40 2 13 8 3 73 51 : SELECTED MACHINERY AND EQUIPMENT : : Trucks, including pickups (see text) ................farms, 2012: 961 557 196 1,044 109 1,855 974 2007: 1,175 575 242 1,205 133 2,670 1,164 number, 2012: 1,885 691 536 1,432 340 4,091 2,104 2007: 2,277 866 728 1,765 305 4,951 2,547 : Tractors ............................................farms, 2012: 967 478 126 983 93 1,662 910 2007: 1,086 479 142 1,086 123 2,052 983 number, 2012: 2,324 663 537 1,577 235 3,831 2,444 2007: 2,416 684 565 1,622 225 4,361 2,567 : Less than 40 horsepower (PTO) .....................farms, 2012: 566 410 82 737 59 1,132 632 2007: 624 373 87 772 79 1,387 684 number, 2012: 958 501 313 950 101 1,689 1,044 2007: 953 421 242 963 97 1,903 1,039 : 40 to 99 horsepower (PTO) .........................farms, 2012: 543 116 69 342 55 732 460 2007: 581 165 72 401 63 808 494 number, 2012: 1,154 144 140 484 79 1,399 994 2007: 1,272 234 223 518 85 1,618 987 : 100 horsepower (PTO) or more ......................farms, 2012: 105 14 33 78 27 269 135 2007: 91 22 52 88 23 371 215 number, 2012: 212 18 84 143 55 743 406 2007: 191 29 100 141 43 840 541 : Grain and bean combines, self-propelled .............farms, 2012: 2 - 4 18 - 18 47 2007: 4 - - 16 - 15 60 number, 2012: (D) - 6 24 - 23 62 2007: 4 - - 22 - 18 86 : Cotton pickers and strippers, self-propelled ........farms, 2012: - - - - - 13 - 2007: - - - - - 10 - number, 2012: - - - - - 26 - 2007: - - - - - 17 - : Forage harvesters, self-propelled ...................farms, 2012: 5 3 - 15 16 42 48 2007: 4 - - 3 13 28 37 number, 2012: 8 3 - 15 21 62 66 2007: 5 - - 5 18 46 43 : Hay balers ..........................................farms, 2012: 11 14 3 42 32 65 102 2007: 11 18 1 27 30 67 93 number, 2012: 16 16 3 55 38 100 137 2007: 14 20 (D) 33 37 106 107 : 2012 INVENTORY : : Manufactured 2008 to 2012: : Trucks, including pickups ...............................farms: 242 85 28 132 24 535 245 number: 370 87 60 150 40 913 391 Tractors ................................................farms: 232 48 16 136 11 278 169 number: 425 60 30 165 13 653 303 Less than 40 horsepower (PTO) .........................farms: 90 42 4 103 6 157 84 number: 143 48 4 109 6 235 118 40 to 99 horsepower (PTO) .............................farms: 148 12 8 22 - 108 83 number: 257 12 8 28 - 236 134 100 horsepower (PTO) or more ..........................farms: 19 - 4 18 5 62 35 number: 25 - 18 28 7 182 51 : Grain and bean combines .................................farms: - - - 3 - 4 5 number: - - - 3 - 6 5 Cotton pickers and strippers ............................farms: - - - - - 3 - number: - - - - - (D) - Forage harvesters self-propelled.........................farms: - - - 4 1 17 4 number: - - - 4 (D) 28 5 Hay balers ..............................................farms: - - - 4 - 18 8 number: - - - 11 - 35 8 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 40. Machinery and Equipment on Operation: 2012 and 2007 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : San Benito :San Bernardino : San Diego : San Francisco : San Joaquin :San Luis Obispo: San Mateo :Santa Barbara ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- VALUE OF MACHINERY AND EQUIPMENT : : Estimated market value of all machinery : and equipment ......................................farms, 2012: 628 1,249 5,732 6 3,580 2,666 334 1,597 2007: 625 1,404 6,687 6 3,624 2,784 329 1,597 $1,000, 2012: 58,677 103,856 198,741 312 520,181 245,865 23,212 200,684 2007: 67,398 121,112 267,693 320 461,381 194,300 28,046 166,266 Average per farm ..............................dollars, 2012: 93,435 83,151 34,672 51,942 145,302 92,222 69,498 125,663 2007: 107,836 86,262 40,032 53,354 127,313 69,792 85,246 104,111 : Farms by value group: : $1 to $9,999 ...........................................2012: 119 354 2,382 3 698 533 58 372 2007: 123 416 2,488 2 650 507 52 386 $10,000 to $19,999 .....................................2012: 108 224 1,313 - 495 430 41 252 2007: 95 272 1,397 1 564 483 64 235 $20,000 to $29,999 .....................................2012: 92 210 710 - 375 339 50 227 2007: 94 156 891 2 425 380 61 165 $30,000 to $49,999 .....................................2012: 93 153 621 1 454 410 51 153 2007: 83 166 726 - 466 408 50 208 : $50,000 to $69,999 .....................................2012: 58 90 290 - 368 306 34 136 2007: 65 103 503 - 354 341 33 135 $70,000 to $99,999 .....................................2012: 38 49 131 - 230 140 26 104 2007: 49 88 182 - 246 171 13 105 $100,000 to $199,999 ...................................2012: 50 84 155 2 368 304 43 154 2007: 48 68 291 - 399 277 27 178 $200,000 to $499,999 ...................................2012: 46 58 92 - 356 120 27 131 2007: 46 84 157 1 305 162 23 130 $500,000 or more .......................................2012: 24 27 38 - 236 84 4 68 2007: 22 51 52 - 215 55 6 55 : SELECTED MACHINERY AND EQUIPMENT : : Trucks, including pickups (see text) ................farms, 2012: 478 790 3,246 1 2,537 1,971 250 1,097 2007: 522 1,073 4,896 1 2,948 2,287 272 1,242 number, 2012: 1,063 1,607 5,819 (D) 6,949 4,190 554 3,294 2007: 1,158 1,973 8,011 (D) 7,269 4,294 604 3,197 : Tractors ............................................farms, 2012: 486 733 2,450 - 2,855 2,057 224 1,053 2007: 500 840 3,263 - 3,068 2,190 245 1,045 number, 2012: 1,141 1,467 4,179 - 8,832 4,573 480 3,379 2007: 1,203 1,628 5,568 - 9,045 4,751 539 2,954 : Less than 40 horsepower (PTO) .....................farms, 2012: 302 502 1,850 - 1,491 1,306 169 635 2007: 326 540 2,503 - 1,742 1,493 168 646 number, 2012: 434 726 2,632 - 2,634 1,776 267 995 2007: 467 770 3,288 - 2,829 2,131 283 1,076 : 40 to 99 horsepower (PTO) .........................farms, 2012: 251 305 742 - 1,973 1,123 110 623 2007: 269 352 1,024 - 2,040 1,077 124 577 number, 2012: 522 487 1,235 - 4,665 2,201 178 1,597 2007: 567 557 1,682 - 4,735 2,025 215 1,310 : 100 horsepower (PTO) or more ......................farms, 2012: 93 140 191 - 572 299 26 215 2007: 82 187 321 - 556 319 25 212 number, 2012: 185 254 312 - 1,533 596 35 787 2007: 169 301 598 - 1,481 595 41 568 : Grain and bean combines, self-propelled .............farms, 2012: 7 1 8 - 113 47 5 14 2007: 6 4 8 - 54 42 2 18 number, 2012: 10 (D) 8 - 158 54 5 14 2007: 7 7 8 - 77 53 (D) 22 : Cotton pickers and strippers, self-propelled ........farms, 2012: - - - - 1 - - - 2007: - - - - - - - - number, 2012: - - - - (D) - - - 2007: - - - - - - - - : Forage harvesters, self-propelled ...................farms, 2012: 16 22 9 - 125 50 2 21 2007: 12 24 1 - 105 41 1 21 number, 2012: 21 27 11 - 193 67 (D) 23 2007: 12 33 (D) - 119 43 (D) 21 : Hay balers ..........................................farms, 2012: 31 32 27 - 124 191 20 73 2007: 40 36 37 - 114 145 15 66 number, 2012: 37 38 36 - 179 216 20 91 2007: 46 48 40 - 141 172 15 75 : 2012 INVENTORY : : Manufactured 2008 to 2012: : Trucks, including pickups ...............................farms: 115 184 662 - 813 410 57 296 number: 182 270 874 - 1,519 635 91 692 Tractors ................................................farms: 65 131 408 - 740 376 35 232 number: 120 190 617 - 1,551 577 56 565 Less than 40 horsepower (PTO) .........................farms: 24 101 307 - 195 177 23 96 number: 26 108 443 - 351 197 33 126 40 to 99 horsepower (PTO) .............................farms: 34 26 105 - 508 172 15 133 number: 62 44 143 - 872 267 16 279 100 horsepower (PTO) or more ..........................farms: 17 23 25 - 197 64 7 64 number: 32 38 31 - 328 113 7 160 : Grain and bean combines .................................farms: - - - - 16 1 - - number: - - - - 22 (D) - - Cotton pickers and strippers ............................farms: - - - - - - - - number: - - - - - - - - Forage harvesters self-propelled.........................farms: 2 7 - - 23 2 - 2 number: (D) 7 - - 27 (D) - (D) Hay balers ..............................................farms: 1 5 5 - 15 4 - 12 number: (D) 7 9 - 23 4 - 12 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 40. Machinery and Equipment on Operation: 2012 and 2007 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Santa Clara : Santa Cruz : Shasta : Sierra : Siskiyou : Solano : Sonoma : Stanislaus ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- VALUE OF MACHINERY AND EQUIPMENT : : Estimated market value of all machinery : and equipment ......................................farms, 2012: 1,003 667 1,544 48 929 860 3,579 4,143 2007: 1,068 682 1,473 50 846 890 3,429 4,114 $1,000, 2012: 69,454 76,000 56,433 4,459 113,320 126,222 282,615 488,088 2007: 83,102 69,143 64,096 3,395 94,448 88,749 233,650 491,728 Average per farm ..............................dollars, 2012: 69,247 113,943 36,550 92,903 121,981 146,770 78,965 117,810 2007: 77,811 101,383 43,514 67,892 111,641 99,718 68,139 119,526 : Farms by value group: : $1 to $9,999 ...........................................2012: 321 153 461 10 193 187 900 722 2007: 308 128 307 1 140 130 771 897 $10,000 to $19,999 .....................................2012: 164 106 341 3 164 133 637 742 2007: 172 78 331 19 129 159 607 548 $20,000 to $29,999 .....................................2012: 122 95 231 8 90 88 530 518 2007: 151 80 209 6 121 104 483 481 $30,000 to $49,999 .....................................2012: 132 87 208 8 115 103 389 480 2007: 128 107 241 1 118 114 479 577 : $50,000 to $69,999 .....................................2012: 97 62 155 2 112 93 306 386 2007: 101 76 138 3 98 124 345 426 $70,000 to $99,999 .....................................2012: 44 31 50 2 45 54 215 241 2007: 60 81 83 10 58 74 197 271 $100,000 to $199,999 ...................................2012: 72 60 66 11 114 89 347 471 2007: 79 52 120 7 82 93 326 380 $200,000 to $499,999 ...................................2012: 30 46 29 2 59 67 165 364 2007: 49 52 37 2 72 55 149 351 $500,000 or more .......................................2012: 21 27 3 2 37 46 90 219 2007: 20 28 7 1 28 37 72 183 : SELECTED MACHINERY AND EQUIPMENT : : Trucks, including pickups (see text) ................farms, 2012: 661 525 1,159 43 735 639 2,435 3,086 2007: 830 560 1,194 41 761 722 2,697 3,394 number, 2012: 1,339 1,535 1,757 88 1,939 1,662 4,786 6,840 2007: 1,662 1,462 1,860 (D) 2,004 1,656 5,209 6,930 : Tractors ............................................farms, 2012: 660 525 1,023 34 640 661 2,299 3,271 2007: 763 518 1,031 43 679 748 2,392 3,472 number, 2012: 1,460 1,671 1,608 68 1,685 2,039 5,181 8,233 2007: 1,588 1,339 1,570 96 1,592 1,854 5,260 8,214 : Less than 40 horsepower (PTO) .....................farms, 2012: 408 383 755 14 382 436 1,431 1,570 2007: 560 369 723 31 395 497 1,549 1,886 number, 2012: 663 777 940 (D) 559 690 2,108 2,249 2007: 860 701 922 (D) 522 704 2,283 2,642 : 40 to 99 horsepower (PTO) .........................farms, 2012: 342 257 435 20 355 346 1,191 2,273 2007: 332 234 420 31 329 361 1,173 2,207 number, 2012: 612 701 595 (D) 704 797 2,635 4,742 2007: 574 505 544 (D) 624 773 2,538 4,475 : 100 horsepower (PTO) or more ......................farms, 2012: 99 68 62 10 195 152 234 595 2007: 88 68 82 8 195 134 253 522 number, 2012: 185 193 73 11 422 552 438 1,242 2007: 154 133 104 (D) 446 377 439 1,097 : Grain and bean combines, self-propelled .............farms, 2012: 7 2 15 - 41 37 13 29 2007: 6 - 9 1 43 38 11 24 number, 2012: 8 (D) 15 - 49 59 15 37 2007: 6 - 12 (D) 56 50 14 30 : Cotton pickers and strippers, self-propelled ........farms, 2012: - - - - 1 - - - 2007: - - - - - - - 1 number, 2012: - - - - (D) - - - 2007: - - - - - - - (D) : Forage harvesters, self-propelled ...................farms, 2012: 22 1 31 11 113 35 36 105 2007: 21 1 22 5 81 23 26 71 number, 2012: 28 (D) 34 13 142 49 42 149 2007: 25 (D) 22 6 88 29 31 98 : Hay balers ..........................................farms, 2012: 40 4 130 19 264 59 72 144 2007: 38 6 128 17 234 42 64 109 number, 2012: 48 4 163 21 345 74 83 214 2007: 46 (D) 145 19 301 48 71 138 : 2012 INVENTORY : : Manufactured 2008 to 2012: : Trucks, including pickups ...............................farms: 175 110 171 12 130 149 493 916 number: 265 303 228 13 208 334 781 1,485 Tractors ................................................farms: 121 95 156 1 86 163 467 754 number: 210 226 185 (D) 137 341 896 1,423 Less than 40 horsepower (PTO) .........................farms: 73 60 100 - 34 58 193 167 number: 88 102 103 - 34 62 260 222 40 to 99 horsepower (PTO) .............................farms: 56 52 51 1 34 94 266 519 number: 89 108 69 (D) 45 135 506 840 100 horsepower (PTO) or more ..........................farms: 14 9 12 - 32 44 76 230 number: 33 16 13 - 58 144 130 361 : Grain and bean combines .................................farms: 1 - - - - 2 - - number: (D) - - - - (D) - - Cotton pickers and strippers ............................farms: - - - - - - - - number: - - - - - - - - Forage harvesters self-propelled.........................farms: 3 1 5 - 11 14 3 37 number: 6 (D) 5 - 12 17 3 45 Hay balers ..............................................farms: 5 - 7 - 13 18 3 30 number: 5 - 9 - 21 19 3 33 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 40. Machinery and Equipment on Operation: 2012 and 2007 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Sutter : Tehama : Trinity : Tulare : Tuolumne : Ventura : Yolo : Yuba ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- VALUE OF MACHINERY AND EQUIPMENT : : Estimated market value of all machinery : and equipment ......................................farms, 2012: 1,358 1,743 247 4,931 391 2,150 1,011 795 2007: 1,263 1,752 181 5,240 366 2,437 983 828 $1,000, 2012: 243,276 125,430 7,370 713,346 23,285 202,392 220,763 118,594 2007: 178,106 111,083 7,875 655,039 16,564 231,880 169,306 79,870 Average per farm ..............................dollars, 2012: 179,143 71,962 29,838 144,666 59,553 94,136 218,361 149,175 2007: 141,018 63,403 43,511 125,007 45,256 95,150 172,234 96,461 : Farms by value group: : $1 to $9,999 ...........................................2012: 159 410 66 1,204 78 660 183 178 2007: 164 387 43 1,120 101 599 153 134 $10,000 to $19,999 .....................................2012: 208 300 54 783 56 374 125 110 2007: 153 297 55 834 74 421 116 102 $20,000 to $29,999 .....................................2012: 108 216 66 500 67 246 136 91 2007: 160 257 9 614 45 353 133 114 $30,000 to $49,999 .....................................2012: 178 289 21 628 54 253 112 108 2007: 172 318 35 692 50 322 106 145 : $50,000 to $69,999 .....................................2012: 156 198 14 402 56 202 78 62 2007: 139 191 8 459 41 229 86 82 $70,000 to $99,999 .....................................2012: 80 107 16 302 16 78 52 40 2007: 75 85 14 306 12 145 74 72 $100,000 to $199,999 ...................................2012: 168 102 6 371 36 166 109 70 2007: 158 115 10 501 29 181 122 84 $200,000 to $499,999 ...................................2012: 179 85 4 415 28 98 100 55 2007: 156 79 6 439 12 117 103 64 $500,000 or more .......................................2012: 122 36 - 326 - 73 116 81 2007: 86 23 1 275 2 70 90 31 : SELECTED MACHINERY AND EQUIPMENT : : Trucks, including pickups (see text) ................farms, 2012: 1,026 1,388 185 3,322 292 1,300 734 568 2007: 1,024 1,519 152 4,095 306 1,840 803 692 number, 2012: 2,502 2,441 335 8,683 455 3,672 2,479 1,143 2007: 2,446 2,579 278 9,515 520 4,367 2,387 1,285 : Tractors ............................................farms, 2012: 1,118 1,259 151 3,314 228 1,253 774 544 2007: 1,086 1,233 119 3,839 220 1,606 816 597 number, 2012: 3,287 2,367 231 10,033 309 3,646 3,061 1,223 2007: 3,137 2,246 185 10,850 331 4,051 2,832 1,301 : Less than 40 horsepower (PTO) .....................farms, 2012: 490 713 107 1,915 137 839 418 326 2007: 489 730 79 2,249 165 1,081 474 323 number, 2012: 676 886 134 3,437 160 1,574 821 403 2007: 743 898 102 3,955 195 1,846 764 435 : 40 to 99 horsepower (PTO) .........................farms, 2012: 778 709 65 2,095 101 638 489 293 2007: 740 648 53 2,464 86 777 519 340 number, 2012: 1,646 1,231 89 4,564 115 1,499 1,279 608 2007: 1,618 1,111 71 5,013 113 1,702 1,239 668 : 100 horsepower (PTO) or more ......................farms, 2012: 320 190 8 779 32 207 269 117 2007: 284 160 11 740 20 204 247 96 number, 2012: 965 250 8 2,032 34 573 961 212 2007: 776 237 12 1,882 23 503 829 198 : Grain and bean combines, self-propelled .............farms, 2012: 172 25 - 80 1 5 100 51 2007: 131 16 - 49 - 3 89 42 number, 2012: 296 28 - 100 (D) 6 156 69 2007: 246 20 - 58 - (D) 150 69 : Cotton pickers and strippers, self-propelled ........farms, 2012: 2 - - 52 - - - - 2007: - - - 48 - - - - number, 2012: (D) - - 84 - - - - 2007: - - - 78 - - - - : Forage harvesters, self-propelled ...................farms, 2012: 25 41 8 61 - 5 30 13 2007: 31 53 4 45 1 4 30 10 number, 2012: 35 42 8 110 - 6 42 13 2007: 33 55 4 59 (D) 4 33 10 : Hay balers ..........................................farms, 2012: 44 145 40 139 6 27 72 37 2007: 47 138 26 115 18 18 66 24 number, 2012: 62 184 45 194 7 37 94 38 2007: 53 155 27 140 20 22 91 27 : 2012 INVENTORY : : Manufactured 2008 to 2012: : Trucks, including pickups ...............................farms: 333 318 30 1,069 45 367 273 154 number: 598 423 48 1,999 52 723 658 245 Tractors ................................................farms: 306 248 12 801 11 237 235 139 number: 618 400 12 1,821 13 686 598 250 Less than 40 horsepower (PTO) .........................farms: 67 96 3 277 10 149 48 50 number: 77 102 3 513 (D) 292 69 57 40 to 99 horsepower (PTO) .............................farms: 195 165 9 447 1 112 139 75 number: 311 277 9 849 (D) 281 266 124 100 horsepower (PTO) or more ..........................farms: 101 19 - 269 - 56 103 37 number: 230 21 - 459 - 113 263 69 : Grain and bean combines .................................farms: 59 - - 5 - 1 23 32 number: 72 - - 9 - (D) 27 42 Cotton pickers and strippers ............................farms: - - - 5 - - - - number: - - - 7 - - - - Forage harvesters self-propelled.........................farms: 6 5 - 25 - - 5 2 number: 8 5 - 39 - - 8 (D) Hay balers ..............................................farms: 6 12 6 25 - 3 8 4 number: 10 12 6 36 - 3 11 4 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 40. Machinery and Equipment on Operation: 2012 and 2007 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : California : Alameda : Alpine : Amador : Butte : Calaveras : Colusa ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 2012 INVENTORY - Con. : : Manufactured prior to 2008: : Trucks, including pickups (see text) ....................farms: 48,885 267 3 318 1,329 458 492 number: 104,706 435 (D) 512 2,485 633 1,238 Tractors ................................................farms: 48,545 231 3 324 1,301 380 524 number: 120,825 480 4 524 2,666 598 1,640 Less than 40 horsepower (PTO) .........................farms: 28,112 160 1 242 704 265 187 number: 43,022 253 (D) (D) 868 340 324 40 to 99 horsepower (PTO) .............................farms: 27,338 119 3 138 701 148 306 number: 55,552 (D) (D) 188 1,326 219 680 100 horsepower (PTO) or more ..........................farms: 9,139 31 - 27 240 33 254 number: 22,251 (D) - (D) 472 39 636 Grain and bean combines .................................farms: 1,472 1 - 1 93 - 168 number: 2,068 (D) - (D) 134 - 275 Cotton pickers and strippers ............................farms: 459 - - - - - 4 number: 801 - - - - - (D) Forage harvesters, self-propelled .......................farms: 1,409 5 - 4 38 1 21 number: 1,782 5 - 4 41 (D) 30 Hay balers ..............................................farms: 3,330 26 - 5 56 16 25 number: 4,217 (D) - (D) 68 (D) 31 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Contra Costa : Del Norte : El Dorado : Fresno : Glenn : Humboldt : Imperial ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 2012 INVENTORY - Con. : : Manufactured prior to 2008: : Trucks, including pickups (see text) ....................farms: 453 80 844 3,638 866 675 272 number: 779 183 1,160 8,113 1,864 1,110 1,187 Tractors ................................................farms: 396 74 827 4,075 923 576 249 number: 791 211 1,182 12,072 2,351 973 1,497 Less than 40 horsepower (PTO) .........................farms: 268 57 642 1,997 407 313 73 number: 362 (D) 766 3,702 563 381 204 40 to 99 horsepower (PTO) .............................farms: 200 31 264 2,852 581 328 180 number: 331 89 (D) 6,204 1,129 486 679 100 horsepower (PTO) or more ..........................farms: 45 14 50 864 302 71 155 number: 98 (D) (D) 2,166 659 106 614 Grain and bean combines .................................farms: 7 - - 55 135 1 23 number: (D) - - 79 204 (D) 34 Cotton pickers and strippers ............................farms: - - - 161 7 - 2 number: - - - 269 8 - (D) Forage harvesters, self-propelled .......................farms: 8 1 2 105 24 8 22 number: 28 (D) (D) 156 29 8 33 Hay balers ..............................................farms: 32 7 5 148 85 106 96 number: 42 11 7 195 110 119 145 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Inyo : Kern : Kings : Lake : Lassen : Los Angeles : Madera ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 2012 INVENTORY - Con. : : Manufactured prior to 2008: : Trucks, including pickups (see text) ....................farms: 76 1,265 731 555 330 793 916 number: 190 4,070 2,228 1,013 632 1,381 2,152 Tractors ................................................farms: 72 1,208 794 607 291 625 1,018 number: (D) 4,485 2,777 1,306 661 1,251 2,933 Less than 40 horsepower (PTO) .........................farms: 42 605 379 377 112 445 487 number: 59 959 587 548 147 657 843 40 to 99 horsepower (PTO) .............................farms: 40 765 503 324 202 238 697 number: (D) 2,346 1,151 647 346 402 1,526 100 horsepower (PTO) or more ..........................farms: 10 417 329 61 88 129 247 number: 11 1,180 1,039 111 168 192 564 Grain and bean combines .................................farms: - 49 36 6 14 23 12 number: - 66 50 6 15 (D) 13 Cotton pickers and strippers ............................farms: - 87 63 - - - 8 number: - 145 161 - - - 11 Forage harvesters, self-propelled .......................farms: 10 54 23 16 58 16 19 number: 10 64 28 18 64 19 24 Hay balers ..............................................farms: 11 88 61 63 117 28 37 number: (D) 112 87 (D) 144 35 53 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Marin : Mariposa : Mendocino : Merced : Modoc : Mono : Monterey ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 2012 INVENTORY - Con. : : Manufactured prior to 2008: : Trucks, including pickups (see text) ....................farms: 247 249 807 1,744 342 56 850 number: 565 454 1,476 4,717 956 159 3,436 Tractors ................................................farms: 225 159 807 1,868 326 47 820 number: 459 263 1,695 5,791 810 150 4,492 Less than 40 horsepower (PTO) .........................farms: 136 88 503 843 169 33 500 number: 177 137 720 1,401 238 47 1,175 40 to 99 horsepower (PTO) .............................farms: 141 87 441 1,313 209 28 450 number: 250 (D) 856 2,874 333 (D) 1,848 100 horsepower (PTO) or more ..........................farms: 22 12 87 518 112 26 231 number: 32 (D) 119 1,516 239 (D) 1,469 Grain and bean combines .................................farms: 5 - 6 46 22 - 21 number: 5 - 6 74 (D) - (D) Cotton pickers and strippers ............................farms: - - - 61 - - - number: - - - 96 - - - Forage harvesters, self-propelled .......................farms: 1 1 6 81 61 8 31 number: (D) (D) (D) 93 68 9 32 Hay balers ..............................................farms: 19 6 94 131 147 23 57 number: 20 6 106 185 187 29 62 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 40. Machinery and Equipment on Operation: 2012 and 2007 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Napa : Nevada : Orange : Placer : Plumas : Riverside : Sacramento ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 2012 INVENTORY - Con. : : Manufactured prior to 2008: : Trucks, including pickups (see text) ....................farms: 833 489 186 970 104 1,583 855 number: 1,515 604 476 1,282 300 3,178 1,713 Tractors ................................................farms: 863 440 119 901 88 1,513 813 number: 1,899 603 507 1,412 222 3,178 2,141 Less than 40 horsepower (PTO) .........................farms: 499 374 78 657 55 1,020 563 number: 815 453 309 841 95 1,454 926 40 to 99 horsepower (PTO) .............................farms: 471 107 62 324 55 668 417 number: 897 132 132 456 79 1,163 860 100 horsepower (PTO) or more ..........................farms: 88 14 33 72 26 249 127 number: 187 18 66 115 48 561 355 Grain and bean combines .................................farms: 2 - 4 15 - 14 43 number: (D) - 6 21 - 17 57 Cotton pickers and strippers ............................farms: - - - - - 12 - number: - - - - - (D) - Forage harvesters, self-propelled .......................farms: 5 3 - 11 16 27 44 number: 8 3 - 11 (D) 34 61 Hay balers ..............................................farms: 11 14 3 38 32 49 95 number: 16 16 3 44 38 65 129 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : San Benito :San Bernardino : San Diego : San Francisco : San Joaquin :San Luis Obispo: San Mateo :Santa Barbara ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 2012 INVENTORY - Con. : : Manufactured prior to 2008: : Trucks, including pickups (see text) ....................farms: 447 682 2,798 1 2,231 1,762 227 996 number: 881 1,337 4,945 (D) 5,430 3,555 463 2,602 Tractors ................................................farms: 459 651 2,152 - 2,620 1,846 208 950 number: 1,021 1,277 3,562 - 7,281 3,996 424 2,814 Less than 40 horsepower (PTO) .........................farms: 282 422 1,588 - 1,357 1,150 152 565 number: 408 618 2,189 - 2,283 1,579 234 869 40 to 99 horsepower (PTO) .............................farms: 230 288 666 - 1,789 1,017 100 562 number: 460 443 1,092 - 3,793 1,934 162 1,318 100 horsepower (PTO) or more ..........................farms: 85 129 173 - 477 251 21 194 number: 153 216 281 - 1,205 483 28 627 Grain and bean combines .................................farms: 7 1 8 - 104 47 5 14 number: 10 (D) 8 - 136 (D) 5 14 Cotton pickers and strippers ............................farms: - - - - 1 - - - number: - - - - (D) - - - Forage harvesters, self-propelled .......................farms: 14 15 9 - 113 49 2 19 number: (D) 20 11 - 166 (D) (D) (D) Hay balers ..............................................farms: 30 27 26 - 112 188 20 62 number: (D) 31 27 - 156 212 20 79 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Santa Clara : Santa Cruz : Shasta : Sierra : Siskiyou : Solano : Sonoma : Stanislaus ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 2012 INVENTORY - Con. : : Manufactured prior to 2008: : Trucks, including pickups (see text) ....................farms: 579 493 1,089 36 703 580 2,168 2,708 number: 1,074 1,232 1,529 75 1,731 1,328 4,005 5,355 Tractors ................................................farms: 587 485 929 34 607 609 2,052 3,047 number: 1,250 1,445 1,423 (D) 1,548 1,698 4,285 6,810 Less than 40 horsepower (PTO) .........................farms: 359 344 671 14 361 399 1,289 1,452 number: 575 675 837 (D) 525 628 1,848 2,027 40 to 99 horsepower (PTO) .............................farms: 303 231 401 20 331 300 1,034 2,069 number: 523 593 526 (D) 659 662 2,129 3,902 100 horsepower (PTO) or more ..........................farms: 93 63 53 10 186 141 179 460 number: 152 177 60 11 364 408 308 881 Grain and bean combines .................................farms: 7 2 15 - 41 35 13 29 number: (D) (D) 15 - 49 (D) 15 37 Cotton pickers and strippers ............................farms: - - - - 1 - - - number: - - - - (D) - - - Forage harvesters, self-propelled .......................farms: 19 - 26 11 104 26 35 82 number: 22 - 29 13 130 32 39 104 Hay balers ..............................................farms: 35 4 125 19 256 41 70 122 number: 43 4 154 21 324 55 80 181 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Sutter : Tehama : Trinity : Tulare : Tuolumne : Ventura : Yolo : Yuba ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 2012 INVENTORY - Con. : : Manufactured prior to 2008: : Trucks, including pickups (see text) ....................farms: 904 1,233 172 2,860 271 1,146 624 499 number: 1,904 2,018 287 6,684 403 2,949 1,821 898 Tractors ................................................farms: 1,013 1,130 143 2,990 220 1,152 697 477 number: 2,669 1,967 219 8,212 296 2,960 2,463 973 Less than 40 horsepower (PTO) .........................farms: 432 622 105 1,716 129 746 394 282 number: 599 784 131 2,924 (D) 1,282 752 346 40 to 99 horsepower (PTO) .............................farms: 684 628 56 1,864 101 579 436 256 number: 1,335 954 80 3,715 (D) 1,218 1,013 484 100 horsepower (PTO) or more ..........................farms: 284 174 8 656 32 181 211 94 number: 735 229 8 1,573 34 460 698 143 Grain and bean combines .................................farms: 132 25 - 75 1 4 84 21 number: 224 28 - 91 (D) (D) 129 27 Cotton pickers and strippers ............................farms: 2 - - 50 - - - - number: (D) - - 77 - - - - Forage harvesters, self-propelled .......................farms: 19 36 8 50 - 5 26 11 number: 27 37 8 71 - 6 34 (D) Hay balers ..............................................farms: 41 136 34 121 6 26 65 33 number: 52 172 39 158 7 34 83 34 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Table 41. Fertilizers and Chemicals Applied: 2012 and 2007 [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : California : Alameda : Alpine : Amador : Butte : Calaveras : Colusa ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Commercial fertilizer, lime, and soil : conditioners .......................................farms, 2012: 32,646 88 1 111 972 109 568 2007: 43,321 159 - 157 1,251 124 588 acres treated, 2012: 6,314,533 9,675 (D) 7,763 176,608 1,938 218,126 2007: 6,728,011 9,867 - 6,348 181,135 3,625 229,193 Cropland fertilized, except cropland pasture ......farms, 2012: 31,244 78 1 94 937 95 557 2007: 41,286 151 - 137 1,202 114 574 acres treated, 2012: 6,167,491 2,223 (D) 4,791 176,175 1,273 216,767 2007: 6,581,577 7,249 - 5,698 179,081 1,770 224,533 Pastureland and rangeland fertilized ..............farms, 2012: 1,918 10 - 18 43 14 14 2007: 2,600 10 - 23 70 13 16 acres treated, 2012: 147,042 7,452 - 2,972 433 665 1,359 2007: 146,434 2,618 - 650 2,054 1,855 4,660 Manure ..............................................farms, 2012: 6,794 31 - 35 110 36 31 2007: 6,686 17 1 21 110 39 41 acres treated, 2012: 712,975 889 - 913 2,465 141 5,281 2007: 645,305 247 (D) 1,031 4,674 1,122 9,870 : Acres treated to control-- : Insects ...........................................farms, 2012: 25,064 57 - 70 809 75 490 2007: 30,850 112 - 111 924 69 434 acres, 2012: 5,293,093 5,654 - 3,433 169,999 1,909 179,680 2007: 5,780,492 6,457 - 5,042 146,735 1,885 166,589 Weeds, grass, or brush ............................farms, 2012: 32,402 99 - 135 1,015 137 545 2007: 30,656 144 1 138 972 122 497 acres, 2012: 6,116,162 4,574 - 6,836 176,540 2,689 189,201 2007: 4,819,747 4,813 (D) 4,956 158,149 2,002 170,606 Nematodes .........................................farms, 2012: 4,485 6 - 9 125 8 40 2007: 3,012 15 - 11 84 2 30 acres, 2012: 725,589 97 - 76 6,905 29 20,584 2007: 412,659 114 - 140 7,917 (D) 10,390 : Diseases in crops and orchards ....................farms, 2012: 14,196 36 - 65 636 32 300 2007: 14,877 68 - 56 633 52 254 acres, 2012: 2,038,769 518 - 1,810 90,197 491 83,095 2007: 2,168,502 3,246 - 1,632 90,749 495 64,594 : Chemicals used to control growth, thin fruit, : ripen, or defoliate ...............................farms, 2012: 9,810 30 - 35 269 22 75 2007: 7,018 26 - 41 113 20 34 acres on which used, 2012: 1,460,135 1,077 - 943 19,880 1,096 7,826 2007: 1,237,257 447 - 729 12,785 245 8,791 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Contra Costa : Del Norte : El Dorado : Fresno : Glenn : Humboldt : Imperial ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Commercial fertilizer, lime, and soil : conditioners .......................................farms, 2012: 153 20 358 3,083 768 200 286 2007: 218 26 498 4,024 750 194 332 acres treated, 2012: 20,743 2,432 2,920 817,742 194,712 3,091 378,191 2007: 20,816 2,961 4,060 925,804 195,963 6,269 330,122 Cropland fertilized, except cropland pasture ......farms, 2012: 144 18 312 3,039 723 175 279 2007: 207 17 433 3,939 712 155 324 acres treated, 2012: 20,498 1,655 1,922 806,183 192,811 1,628 376,552 2007: 17,885 1,789 3,441 922,480 190,096 3,870 330,064 Pastureland and rangeland fertilized ..............farms, 2012: 9 5 58 71 58 31 11 2007: 12 13 77 109 57 44 10 acres treated, 2012: 245 777 998 11,559 1,901 1,463 1,639 2007: 2,931 1,172 619 3,324 5,867 2,399 58 Manure ..............................................farms, 2012: 30 18 161 639 85 153 53 2007: 33 13 131 561 96 102 87 acres treated, 2012: 319 1,743 1,472 71,200 6,879 3,965 21,495 2007: 645 999 819 72,928 5,999 3,351 21,765 : Acres treated to control-- : Insects ...........................................farms, 2012: 107 17 248 2,955 629 98 221 2007: 137 7 287 4,001 647 35 251 acres, 2012: 13,181 330 1,617 727,171 167,330 913 322,713 2007: 12,719 353 3,409 903,987 141,999 1,144 277,518 Weeds, grass, or brush ............................farms, 2012: 178 12 456 3,272 774 130 245 2007: 159 8 432 3,164 671 58 225 acres, 2012: 32,223 651 3,847 777,797 196,886 2,138 301,320 2007: 12,485 569 4,714 643,140 160,151 2,382 213,794 Nematodes .........................................farms, 2012: 30 9 36 602 60 25 57 2007: 2 4 17 355 21 1 21 acres, 2012: 3,680 240 (D) 110,150 16,005 168 34,885 2007: (D) 348 148 41,172 4,185 (D) 13,892 : Diseases in crops and orchards ....................farms, 2012: 80 13 220 1,335 407 74 45 2007: 75 4 219 1,510 347 39 37 acres, 2012: 5,271 244 1,253 290,199 117,751 470 34,187 2007: 3,639 348 1,963 318,567 82,225 128 16,428 : Chemicals used to control growth, thin fruit, : ripen, or defoliate ...............................farms, 2012: 37 - 115 1,634 203 10 22 2007: 25 1 91 1,370 136 8 20 acres on which used, 2012: 4,210 - 1,147 303,441 50,409 82 5,429 2007: 476 (D) 860 270,845 16,139 48 9,516 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 41. Fertilizers and Chemicals Applied: 2012 and 2007 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Inyo : Kern : Kings : Lake : Lassen : Los Angeles : Madera ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Commercial fertilizer, lime, and soil : conditioners .......................................farms, 2012: 24 814 604 198 127 313 694 2007: 18 1,069 690 487 122 474 990 acres treated, 2012: 7,073 554,170 354,291 7,573 23,699 32,913 228,389 2007: 2,358 700,240 392,321 13,497 25,127 19,624 236,840 Cropland fertilized, except cropland pasture ......farms, 2012: 22 788 576 189 109 305 684 2007: 15 1,034 667 468 108 452 958 acres treated, 2012: 5,468 553,616 353,800 7,317 21,358 (D) 225,858 2007: 1,818 699,482 391,912 12,938 23,579 18,170 231,661 Pastureland and rangeland fertilized ..............farms, 2012: 7 31 47 14 29 9 12 2007: 6 39 37 22 28 23 36 acres treated, 2012: 1,605 554 491 256 2,341 (D) 2,531 2007: 540 758 409 559 1,548 1,454 5,179 Manure ..............................................farms, 2012: 14 127 205 69 23 70 113 2007: 7 144 193 54 24 82 114 acres treated, 2012: (D) 51,832 36,101 839 3,511 3,474 30,486 2007: 498 61,313 44,718 954 707 1,318 19,495 : Acres treated to control-- : Insects ...........................................farms, 2012: 6 728 454 157 36 248 622 2007: 2 945 543 229 37 252 971 acres, 2012: 3,506 520,133 310,013 6,795 11,381 26,726 213,431 2007: (D) 662,484 337,985 12,376 14,241 16,547 228,494 Weeds, grass, or brush ............................farms, 2012: 19 825 603 199 124 236 702 2007: 15 735 481 196 119 229 766 acres, 2012: 4,096 610,938 371,830 9,371 26,532 30,231 197,240 2007: 7,160 479,518 278,025 7,611 24,595 16,992 152,691 Nematodes .........................................farms, 2012: 1 167 75 26 1 34 95 2007: 1 120 32 10 2 24 76 acres, 2012: (D) 128,014 21,492 1,306 (D) 14,025 15,909 2007: (D) 82,647 12,632 823 (D) 3,436 8,078 : Diseases in crops and orchards ....................farms, 2012: 1 380 135 93 10 103 370 2007: 1 471 146 101 8 108 448 acres, 2012: (D) 217,275 36,790 5,519 2,110 2,783 107,553 2007: (D) 353,116 46,109 6,950 (D) 4,437 102,407 : Chemicals used to control growth, thin fruit, : ripen, or defoliate ...............................farms, 2012: - 415 154 102 2 55 331 2007: 1 383 171 43 1 24 200 acres on which used, 2012: - 269,863 122,352 5,021 (D) 912 33,072 2007: (D) 336,262 145,257 1,430 (D) 1,267 33,371 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Marin : Mariposa : Mendocino : Merced : Modoc : Mono : Monterey ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Commercial fertilizer, lime, and soil : conditioners .......................................farms, 2012: 57 36 358 1,401 138 7 471 2007: 51 33 510 1,675 162 12 611 acres treated, 2012: 9,535 727 22,148 390,625 83,194 3,312 254,521 2007: 5,845 430 21,755 413,483 44,789 3,985 214,139 Cropland fertilized, except cropland pasture ......farms, 2012: 39 27 338 1,350 125 7 460 2007: 42 20 482 1,612 145 12 596 acres treated, 2012: 1,268 404 16,337 386,777 68,914 3,312 253,566 2007: 2,036 189 20,467 407,174 43,401 3,985 211,761 Pastureland and rangeland fertilized ..............farms, 2012: 18 9 25 65 31 - 15 2007: 9 13 36 83 30 - 23 acres treated, 2012: 8,267 323 5,811 3,848 14,280 - 955 2007: 3,809 241 1,288 6,309 1,388 - 2,378 Manure ..............................................farms, 2012: 55 24 107 446 23 7 66 2007: 34 22 107 470 22 - 65 acres treated, 2012: 9,451 245 1,008 123,155 6,608 490 12,306 2007: 5,372 346 2,084 83,556 1,672 - 4,357 : Acres treated to control-- : Insects ...........................................farms, 2012: 29 15 202 1,152 62 9 423 2007: 19 16 241 1,535 70 7 443 acres, 2012: 524 260 8,913 328,774 51,393 5,015 234,354 2007: 1,136 157 21,155 380,031 27,215 2,247 218,168 Weeds, grass, or brush ............................farms, 2012: 41 39 280 1,427 130 12 417 2007: 27 46 234 1,334 129 10 327 acres, 2012: 1,989 677 14,306 392,999 80,886 5,759 155,322 2007: 2,136 1,159 18,867 308,598 38,303 3,548 125,399 Nematodes .........................................farms, 2012: 7 3 47 223 10 - 128 2007: 1 1 32 205 13 - 90 acres, 2012: 53 48 774 51,607 3,558 - 45,516 2007: (D) (D) 1,119 15,049 2,100 - 46,543 : Diseases in crops and orchards ....................farms, 2012: 23 10 163 604 7 - 199 2007: 12 8 160 701 17 2 188 acres, 2012: 465 252 10,691 122,338 1,454 - 73,325 2007: 115 52 11,248 127,492 2,988 (D) 65,500 : Chemicals used to control growth, thin fruit, : ripen, or defoliate ...............................farms, 2012: 3 2 111 376 6 - 88 2007: - 1 56 226 8 1 44 acres on which used, 2012: 347 (D) 4,699 79,583 818 - 8,840 2007: - (D) 1,637 68,088 (D) (D) 8,437 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 41. Fertilizers and Chemicals Applied: 2012 and 2007 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Napa : Nevada : Orange : Placer : Plumas : Riverside : Sacramento ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Commercial fertilizer, lime, and soil : conditioners .......................................farms, 2012: 788 158 122 314 17 1,054 392 2007: 1,214 172 148 463 19 1,704 452 acres treated, 2012: 34,201 1,439 9,471 18,786 5,288 135,080 73,293 2007: 43,832 2,576 7,441 22,329 4,648 151,979 97,228 Cropland fertilized, except cropland pasture ......farms, 2012: 788 136 118 233 15 1,033 356 2007: 1,203 125 146 334 11 1,647 398 acres treated, 2012: 34,146 548 9,380 15,337 (D) 134,745 67,882 2007: 43,466 1,698 7,430 19,092 4,347 151,504 93,319 Pastureland and rangeland fertilized ..............farms, 2012: 4 24 6 92 2 24 43 2007: 21 52 3 143 8 63 67 acres treated, 2012: 55 891 91 3,449 (D) 335 5,411 2007: 366 878 11 3,237 301 475 3,909 Manure ..............................................farms, 2012: 107 76 20 132 4 244 104 2007: 65 97 8 127 20 228 127 acres treated, 2012: 5,874 557 101 1,926 395 21,235 4,408 2007: 1,950 637 294 3,190 (D) 11,891 7,713 : Acres treated to control-- : Insects ...........................................farms, 2012: 690 88 94 184 9 650 305 2007: 806 52 113 172 2 960 266 acres, 2012: 30,694 346 7,961 10,212 (D) 122,163 45,396 2007: 48,405 373 6,784 9,265 (D) 125,480 77,071 Weeds, grass, or brush ............................farms, 2012: 762 171 108 326 26 871 421 2007: 821 125 96 313 28 894 350 acres, 2012: 36,319 982 7,876 13,487 8,481 128,029 68,620 2007: 30,092 2,047 5,105 11,816 5,035 102,574 88,706 Nematodes .........................................farms, 2012: 176 12 18 16 4 95 51 2007: 156 5 17 14 - 69 29 acres, 2012: 4,855 49 1,003 591 20 18,180 2,280 2007: 3,284 5 1,076 187 - 21,391 9,122 : Diseases in crops and orchards ....................farms, 2012: 559 79 60 95 4 294 135 2007: 629 45 58 86 - 354 121 acres, 2012: 24,642 220 3,443 4,416 (D) 29,431 21,123 2007: 28,423 191 2,720 3,498 - 29,306 27,855 : Chemicals used to control growth, thin fruit, : ripen, or defoliate ...............................farms, 2012: 375 15 15 31 - 290 55 2007: 215 18 12 25 - 212 44 acres on which used, 2012: 14,038 143 341 239 - 42,779 9,903 2007: 13,439 100 799 762 - 33,849 7,851 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : San Benito :San Bernardino : San Diego : San Francisco : San Joaquin :San Luis Obispo: San Mateo :Santa Barbara ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Commercial fertilizer, lime, and soil : conditioners .......................................farms, 2012: 160 323 2,602 - 1,978 997 111 755 2007: 221 520 4,309 4 2,411 1,266 87 957 acres treated, 2012: 16,904 13,595 35,051 - 365,902 90,570 2,198 79,242 2007: 24,861 18,261 58,108 4 404,608 101,057 3,415 79,694 Cropland fertilized, except cropland pasture ......farms, 2012: 149 313 2,582 - 1,915 951 109 727 2007: 209 503 4,257 4 2,350 1,183 85 914 acres treated, 2012: 16,511 13,366 33,272 - 360,659 86,083 (D) 76,660 2007: 23,600 17,964 56,107 4 391,762 96,752 3,276 78,070 Pastureland and rangeland fertilized ..............farms, 2012: 25 15 34 - 102 77 2 43 2007: 15 25 75 - 82 105 4 58 acres treated, 2012: 393 229 1,779 - 5,243 4,487 (D) 2,582 2007: 1,261 297 2,001 - 12,846 4,305 139 1,624 Manure ..............................................farms, 2012: 35 140 352 - 210 202 29 87 2007: 34 137 427 - 278 200 22 128 acres treated, 2012: 860 6,767 3,584 - 21,611 6,743 217 2,669 2007: 372 7,858 4,230 - 33,165 4,599 458 2,887 : Acres treated to control-- : Insects ...........................................farms, 2012: 116 259 1,190 - 1,786 708 69 519 2007: 161 304 1,741 1 2,091 851 54 568 acres, 2012: 13,860 8,460 25,797 - 314,105 50,571 2,118 70,633 2007: 25,166 14,832 46,018 (D) 342,778 78,336 3,009 78,913 Weeds, grass, or brush ............................farms, 2012: 162 322 1,948 - 2,135 1,012 101 663 2007: 171 343 2,124 - 1,933 918 46 509 acres, 2012: 15,160 14,524 27,685 - 364,973 81,826 3,309 69,117 2007: 16,438 13,868 26,680 - 271,636 76,338 1,692 47,128 Nematodes .........................................farms, 2012: 14 35 130 - 359 128 24 124 2007: 11 14 79 - 284 70 6 59 acres, 2012: 2,128 502 2,304 - 43,645 13,030 389 14,952 2007: 2,720 1,326 2,640 - 21,355 7,414 477 8,359 : Diseases in crops and orchards ....................farms, 2012: 85 109 631 - 1,056 365 47 278 2007: 71 74 720 - 1,164 310 26 225 acres, 2012: 6,372 2,054 6,957 - 154,393 22,986 795 37,598 2007: 5,120 1,164 13,179 - 160,928 24,170 871 25,626 : Chemicals used to control growth, thin fruit, : ripen, or defoliate ...............................farms, 2012: 42 63 435 - 699 266 3 147 2007: 34 64 389 - 357 136 4 85 acres on which used, 2012: 1,663 1,219 6,539 - 78,933 22,658 (D) 10,944 2007: 2,003 788 9,592 - 37,066 12,275 (D) 8,123 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 41. Fertilizers and Chemicals Applied: 2012 and 2007 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Santa Clara : Santa Cruz : Shasta : Sierra : Siskiyou : Solano : Sonoma : Stanislaus ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Commercial fertilizer, lime, and soil : conditioners .......................................farms, 2012: 388 300 329 7 229 271 1,289 2,091 2007: 427 390 463 8 288 379 1,812 2,494 acres treated, 2012: 16,531 28,450 15,644 692 87,533 109,962 53,903 258,756 2007: 18,235 19,742 18,703 827 67,499 104,301 68,512 287,703 Cropland fertilized, except cropland pasture ......farms, 2012: 361 296 233 6 189 246 1,246 1,991 2007: 407 383 302 8 225 340 1,750 2,330 acres treated, 2012: 15,997 (D) 13,183 (D) 83,024 99,113 48,846 248,845 2007: 17,726 19,611 14,145 827 59,987 95,118 59,839 272,620 Pastureland and rangeland fertilized ..............farms, 2012: 35 10 115 1 71 32 56 134 2007: 21 7 184 - 100 48 72 229 acres treated, 2012: 534 (D) 2,461 (D) 4,509 10,849 5,057 9,911 2007: 509 131 4,558 - 7,512 9,183 8,673 15,083 Manure ..............................................farms, 2012: 63 82 98 2 85 54 349 494 2007: 66 55 142 2 56 69 290 542 acres treated, 2012: 400 1,376 1,702 (D) 10,821 7,350 21,062 53,674 2007: 1,243 754 1,603 (D) 3,970 1,949 16,962 57,323 : Acres treated to control-- : Insects ...........................................farms, 2012: 310 250 136 2 120 184 778 1,743 2007: 235 265 137 - 106 261 1,054 2,108 acres, 2012: 14,341 22,038 8,316 (D) 44,463 59,677 38,045 226,082 2007: 15,218 18,928 3,489 - 33,772 58,850 63,588 265,155 Weeds, grass, or brush ............................farms, 2012: 420 288 295 9 200 338 1,259 2,245 2007: 293 166 256 9 174 280 1,271 2,132 acres, 2012: 18,219 15,553 14,783 1,178 82,752 143,276 50,994 272,224 2007: 9,027 8,262 9,333 869 48,829 72,462 50,199 220,704 Nematodes .........................................farms, 2012: 78 72 20 - 18 28 193 324 2007: 18 32 7 - 14 12 133 264 acres, 2012: 2,183 7,949 173 - 13,416 4,687 8,279 26,415 2007: 1,402 6,085 (D) - 6,331 1,056 3,830 12,966 : Diseases in crops and orchards ....................farms, 2012: 193 184 91 - 21 120 797 1,142 2007: 175 179 53 - 21 142 801 1,167 acres, 2012: 6,553 8,792 722 - 8,877 20,656 33,804 126,100 2007: 4,237 8,692 748 - 7,693 16,018 35,693 128,759 : Chemicals used to control growth, thin fruit, : ripen, or defoliate ...............................farms, 2012: 70 68 29 - 4 88 392 554 2007: 45 48 8 - 2 42 275 203 acres on which used, 2012: 3,802 2,982 415 - 650 8,849 13,879 48,387 2007: 520 1,278 38 - (D) 6,165 20,676 11,867 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Sutter : Tehama : Trinity : Tulare : Tuolumne : Ventura : Yolo : Yuba ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Commercial fertilizer, lime, and soil : conditioners .......................................farms, 2012: 879 494 57 2,527 48 1,172 502 333 2007: 923 709 50 3,494 72 1,757 528 355 acres treated, 2012: 224,249 50,123 (D) 429,872 1,698 75,189 216,103 58,363 2007: 197,758 52,348 915 488,344 1,307 93,052 222,895 55,233 Cropland fertilized, except cropland pasture ......farms, 2012: 838 434 44 2,496 26 1,164 480 298 2007: 894 616 43 3,433 47 1,737 516 310 acres treated, 2012: 223,199 44,543 201 428,312 240 73,405 214,812 57,320 2007: 196,612 44,635 690 486,481 517 92,149 221,854 53,846 Pastureland and rangeland fertilized ..............farms, 2012: 55 81 15 43 22 18 33 50 2007: 43 115 8 86 26 29 21 51 acres treated, 2012: 1,050 5,580 (D) 1,560 1,458 1,784 1,291 1,043 2007: 1,146 7,713 225 1,863 790 903 1,041 1,387 Manure ..............................................farms, 2012: 55 86 45 606 33 146 56 67 2007: 37 119 28 526 21 139 63 43 acres treated, 2012: 6,654 4,266 155 119,481 913 4,589 4,041 2,350 2007: 4,611 5,273 254 110,218 848 2,714 6,938 1,191 : Acres treated to control-- : Insects ...........................................farms, 2012: 713 347 37 2,398 37 803 361 259 2007: 741 464 19 3,148 22 1,225 375 223 acres, 2012: 196,198 26,680 244 376,841 95 68,929 141,104 52,498 2007: 139,403 39,631 (D) 429,218 245 88,959 141,543 35,461 Weeds, grass, or brush ............................farms, 2012: 858 476 40 2,877 69 1,102 530 316 2007: 683 508 26 2,995 63 1,197 415 278 acres, 2012: 210,114 34,490 331 491,634 1,701 66,210 219,336 56,101 2007: 155,045 35,762 (D) 368,037 2,342 67,367 185,024 44,751 Nematodes .........................................farms, 2012: 73 33 12 373 6 165 48 32 2007: 62 19 - 292 4 130 21 21 acres, 2012: 9,382 733 24 42,110 12 18,553 9,605 1,299 2007: 3,195 1,044 - 27,182 67 15,038 1,311 649 : Diseases in crops and orchards ....................farms, 2012: 478 226 28 1,018 18 396 194 152 2007: 433 266 13 1,294 12 475 161 137 acres, 2012: 85,628 16,666 113 101,622 68 34,096 52,513 22,062 2007: 54,562 26,384 102 154,821 79 39,633 43,114 18,330 : Chemicals used to control growth, thin fruit, : ripen, or defoliate ...............................farms, 2012: 239 136 5 1,219 8 295 115 55 2007: 107 85 4 1,240 7 232 48 33 acres on which used, 2012: 28,961 23,880 148 168,631 (D) 14,984 26,473 7,088 2007: 7,632 3,436 (D) 113,525 36 13,211 6,567 3,655 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Table 42. Organic Agriculture: 2012 [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : California : Alameda : Alpine : Amador : Butte : Calaveras : Colusa ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- TYPE OF PRODUCTION : : USDA National Organic Program certified : organic production .......................................farms: 2,831 5 - 6 62 4 27 USDA National Organic Program organic : production exempt from certification .....................farms: 590 1 - 2 16 15 - Acres transitioning into USDA National Organic Program : organic production .......................................farms: 465 6 - 4 8 2 1 : VALUE OF SALES OF CERTIFIED OR EXEMPT : ORGANICALLY PRODUCED COMMODITIES : : Total organic product sales (see text) ....................farms: 3,008 5 - 6 66 14 27 $1,000: 1,355,207 1,006 - 2,443 9,508 (D) 8,544 : By value of sales: : : $1 to $4,999 ..........................................farms: 817 - - - 17 12 - $1,000: 1,680 - - - 30 9 - $5,000 or more ........................................farms: 2,191 5 - 6 49 2 27 $1,000: 1,353,527 1,006 - 2,443 9,478 (D) 8,544 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Contra Costa : Del Norte : El Dorado : Fresno : Glenn : Humboldt : Imperial ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- TYPE OF PRODUCTION : : USDA National Organic Program certified : organic production .......................................farms: 11 10 16 154 29 125 27 USDA National Organic Program organic : production exempt from certification .....................farms: 3 5 28 23 - 45 - Acres transitioning into USDA National Organic Program : organic production .......................................farms: 2 - 2 28 4 10 7 : VALUE OF SALES OF CERTIFIED OR EXEMPT : ORGANICALLY PRODUCED COMMODITIES : : Total organic product sales (see text) ....................farms: 14 11 35 162 27 150 27 $1,000: 2,782 (D) 687 68,783 10,170 59,034 106,171 : By value of sales: : : $1 to $4,999 ..........................................farms: 8 4 24 33 - 48 - $1,000: 27 2 37 75 - 78 - $5,000 or more ........................................farms: 6 7 11 129 27 102 27 $1,000: 2,756 (D) 650 68,709 10,170 58,957 106,171 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Inyo : Kern : Kings : Lake : Lassen : Los Angeles : Madera ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- TYPE OF PRODUCTION : : USDA National Organic Program certified : organic production .......................................farms: 1 41 22 93 4 21 60 USDA National Organic Program organic : production exempt from certification .....................farms: 1 2 - 18 1 5 - Acres transitioning into USDA National Organic Program : organic production .......................................farms: - 6 3 9 4 7 3 : VALUE OF SALES OF CERTIFIED OR EXEMPT : ORGANICALLY PRODUCED COMMODITIES : : Total organic product sales (see text) ....................farms: 2 41 19 97 4 23 57 $1,000: (D) 34,659 10,076 5,904 904 242 14,630 : By value of sales: : : $1 to $4,999 ..........................................farms: 2 9 2 21 - 11 3 $1,000: (D) 9 (D) 47 - 17 10 $5,000 or more ........................................farms: - 32 17 76 4 12 54 $1,000: - 34,649 (D) 5,857 904 225 14,620 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Marin : Mariposa : Mendocino : Merced : Modoc : Mono : Monterey ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- TYPE OF PRODUCTION : : USDA National Organic Program certified : organic production .......................................farms: 71 2 125 54 15 - 107 USDA National Organic Program organic : production exempt from certification .....................farms: 3 - 26 2 1 - 10 Acres transitioning into USDA National Organic Program : organic production .......................................farms: 9 - 8 4 1 - 20 : VALUE OF SALES OF CERTIFIED OR EXEMPT : ORGANICALLY PRODUCED COMMODITIES : : Total organic product sales (see text) ....................farms: 64 2 132 55 15 - 94 $1,000: 49,190 (D) 11,435 59,758 1,833 - 150,835 : By value of sales: : : $1 to $4,999 ..........................................farms: 9 2 35 5 2 - 15 $1,000: 18 (D) 89 6 (D) - 24 $5,000 or more ........................................farms: 55 - 97 50 13 - 79 $1,000: 49,172 - 11,346 59,753 (D) - 150,810 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 42. Organic Agriculture: 2012 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Napa : Nevada : Orange : Placer : Plumas : Riverside : Sacramento ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- TYPE OF PRODUCTION : : USDA National Organic Program certified : organic production .......................................farms: 82 28 5 17 2 152 21 USDA National Organic Program organic : production exempt from certification .....................farms: 9 13 5 17 - 19 12 Acres transitioning into USDA National Organic Program : organic production .......................................farms: 17 14 3 14 - 32 4 : VALUE OF SALES OF CERTIFIED OR EXEMPT : ORGANICALLY PRODUCED COMMODITIES : : Total organic product sales (see text) ....................farms: 63 36 10 34 2 152 30 $1,000: 15,421 811 700 3,606 (D) 56,979 6,710 : By value of sales: : : $1 to $4,999 ..........................................farms: 11 12 6 19 - 46 16 $1,000: 10 21 24 39 - 108 31 $5,000 or more ........................................farms: 52 24 4 15 2 106 14 $1,000: 15,411 790 675 3,567 (D) 56,871 6,678 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : San Benito :San Bernardino : San Diego : San Francisco : San Joaquin :San Luis Obispo: San Mateo :Santa Barbara ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- TYPE OF PRODUCTION : : USDA National Organic Program certified : organic production .......................................farms: 53 15 317 - 34 118 20 105 USDA National Organic Program organic : production exempt from certification .....................farms: - 25 57 - 7 32 7 16 Acres transitioning into USDA National Organic Program : organic production .......................................farms: 9 3 41 - 7 7 2 14 : VALUE OF SALES OF CERTIFIED OR EXEMPT : ORGANICALLY PRODUCED COMMODITIES : : Total organic product sales (see text) ....................farms: 52 39 334 - 36 130 25 105 $1,000: 33,739 1,859 55,635 - 9,783 13,948 914 34,252 : By value of sales: : : $1 to $4,999 ..........................................farms: 16 29 108 - 4 63 7 15 $1,000: 22 60 258 - 5 108 11 42 $5,000 or more ........................................farms: 36 10 226 - 32 67 18 90 $1,000: 33,717 1,799 55,377 - 9,778 13,841 902 34,210 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Santa Clara : Santa Cruz : Shasta : Sierra : Siskiyou : Solano : Sonoma : Stanislaus ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- TYPE OF PRODUCTION : : USDA National Organic Program certified : organic production .......................................farms: 17 84 12 - 30 35 230 40 USDA National Organic Program organic : production exempt from certification .....................farms: 3 22 20 - 3 13 35 5 Acres transitioning into USDA National Organic Program : organic production .......................................farms: 10 8 9 - 1 3 63 1 : VALUE OF SALES OF CERTIFIED OR EXEMPT : ORGANICALLY PRODUCED COMMODITIES : : Total organic product sales (see text) ....................farms: 18 85 27 - 30 46 225 39 $1,000: 13,500 76,790 274 - 8,459 11,730 196,782 20,463 : By value of sales: : : $1 to $4,999 ..........................................farms: 4 18 21 - 3 13 50 13 $1,000: 8 36 48 - 6 23 129 53 $5,000 or more ........................................farms: 14 67 6 - 27 33 175 26 $1,000: 13,492 76,754 227 - 8,453 11,707 196,653 20,410 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Sutter : Tehama : Trinity : Tulare : Tuolumne : Ventura : Yolo : Yuba ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- TYPE OF PRODUCTION : : USDA National Organic Program certified : organic production .......................................farms: 34 18 2 84 2 92 79 11 USDA National Organic Program organic : production exempt from certification .....................farms: - 8 3 26 - 8 4 14 Acres transitioning into USDA National Organic Program : organic production .......................................farms: 11 3 - 10 - 10 18 3 : VALUE OF SALES OF CERTIFIED OR EXEMPT : ORGANICALLY PRODUCED COMMODITIES : : Total organic product sales (see text) ....................farms: 29 23 2 100 2 91 71 23 $1,000: 15,204 5,381 (D) 48,563 (D) 57,403 35,648 3,404 : By value of sales: : : $1 to $4,999 ..........................................farms: 1 13 2 30 1 16 5 13 $1,000: (D) 24 (D) 36 (D) 38 13 28 $5,000 or more ........................................farms: 28 10 - 70 1 75 66 10 $1,000: (D) 5,357 - 48,527 (D) 57,365 35,635 3,376 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Table 43. Selected Practices: 2012 [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ : : : : : : : Marketed : : : Received : : Harvested : Practiced : Marketed : : products : : : irrigation : Practiced : biomass : rotational : products : Produced : through : Raised : : water from : alley : for use : or : directly : and : community : or : : the U.S. : cropping : in : management- : to : sold : supported : sold : On-farm : Bureau of : or : renewable : intensive : retail : value-added : agriculture : veal : packing : Reclamation : silvopasture : energy : grazing : outlets : commodities : (CSA) : calves : facility Geographic area : (farms) : (farms) : (farms) : (farms) : (farms) : (farms) : (farms) : (farms) : (farms) ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ State Total : : California....................: 7,451 69 287 5,889 4,432 4,281 1,015 218 1,920 : Counties : : Alameda.......................: 13 1 2 68 24 49 4 2 5 Alpine........................: - - - - 2 - - - - Amador........................: 20 - 1 76 39 51 10 1 7 Butte.........................: 162 1 14 118 92 104 23 5 41 Calaveras.....................: 8 1 - 100 46 62 3 1 13 Colusa........................: 342 - 6 40 11 23 11 - 4 Contra Costa..................: 45 1 2 49 54 30 11 - 18 Del Norte.....................: 1 - - 40 12 20 5 3 7 El Dorado.....................: 51 - 13 168 94 137 27 1 47 Fresno........................: 1,118 - 36 188 157 131 41 10 157 : Glenn.........................: 458 1 7 102 37 44 8 4 26 Humboldt......................: - 3 9 177 129 105 30 25 48 Imperial......................: 88 - 1 - 17 11 5 - 12 Inyo..........................: - - - 30 3 6 7 - 6 Kern..........................: 217 - 6 111 57 89 12 3 44 Kings.........................: 134 2 9 30 18 38 6 6 13 Lake..........................: 5 2 - 64 46 39 14 5 8 Lassen........................: 11 - 3 94 4 25 - - 2 Los Angeles...................: 18 - 5 24 85 50 15 - 25 Madera........................: 279 - 5 94 35 44 14 1 15 : Marin.........................: 1 8 - 107 64 51 17 3 21 Mariposa......................: 3 2 - 77 16 25 6 1 4 Mendocino.....................: 35 2 - 136 132 131 28 - 27 Merced........................: 362 - 7 127 38 61 16 41 40 Modoc.........................: 49 - 1 114 21 14 - - 1 Mono..........................: - - - 14 1 - - - - Monterey......................: 12 - 2 159 99 88 16 2 38 Napa..........................: 13 2 6 49 204 299 3 - 23 Nevada........................: 67 - - 159 102 96 39 - 35 Orange........................: 16 - - 1 28 10 3 - 13 : Placer........................: 189 - 4 228 91 139 25 4 54 Plumas........................: 5 - 1 58 7 20 6 - 5 Riverside.....................: 142 - 2 40 179 79 20 2 82 Sacramento....................: 56 1 - 112 64 53 19 1 18 San Benito....................: 56 - 2 87 24 45 8 1 23 San Bernardino................: 22 - 7 18 59 50 26 7 56 San Diego.....................: 108 3 13 82 419 196 76 2 175 San Francisco.................: - - - - 1 - - - - San Joaquin...................: 364 3 8 170 107 106 29 6 62 San Luis Obispo...............: 3 12 12 283 255 236 48 1 91 : San Mateo.....................: 3 2 2 42 42 43 8 - 19 Santa Barbara.................: 49 - 3 131 166 95 26 - 49 Santa Clara...................: 20 - - 69 95 66 23 - 48 Santa Cruz....................: 16 2 2 36 101 58 24 - 55 Shasta........................: 333 2 12 277 64 151 22 8 23 Sierra........................: - - - 10 7 2 1 - - Siskiyou......................: 55 - 2 157 34 55 12 2 10 Solano........................: 136 1 5 106 73 59 25 1 30 Sonoma........................: 43 10 15 376 383 376 75 10 101 Stanislaus....................: 585 1 11 255 77 126 25 20 41 : Sutter........................: 274 - 4 74 41 24 2 4 17 Tehama........................: 128 - 8 256 55 93 18 - 20 Trinity.......................: 3 - 3 71 34 39 8 - 19 Tulare........................: 980 4 22 137 117 141 50 22 102 Tuolumne......................: 13 - 2 59 25 31 1 6 2 Ventura.......................: 78 2 3 48 113 57 23 1 68 Yolo..........................: 153 - 7 77 89 46 27 5 27 Yuba..........................: 109 - 2 114 43 62 14 1 23 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Table 44. Farms by North American Industry Classification System: 2012 [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : California : Alameda : Alpine : Amador : Butte : Calaveras : Colusa ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Total farms ..............................................: 77,857 452 3 461 2,056 663 782 : Oilseed and grain farming (1111) ...............................: 2,296 - - 1 186 - 347 Vegetable and melon farming (1112) .............................: 4,191 31 - 18 58 25 8 Fruit and tree nut farming (1113) ..............................: 35,945 106 - 149 1,093 149 265 Greenhouse, nursery, and floriculture : production (1114) .............................................: 3,390 18 - 14 46 20 1 Other crop farming (1119) ......................................: 5,815 21 2 23 113 15 52 Tobacco farming (11191) ......................................: - - - - - - - Cotton farming (11192) .......................................: 194 - - - - - 1 Sugarcane farming, hay farming, and all other : crop farming (11193,11194,11199) ............................: 5,621 21 2 23 113 15 51 : Beef cattle ranching and farming (112111) ......................: 11,767 153 1 157 236 255 42 Cattle feedlots (112112) .......................................: 156 - - 5 2 5 - Dairy cattle and milk production (11212) .......................: 1,594 - - - 10 - 2 Hog and pig farming (1122) .....................................: 446 2 - - 13 - 4 Poultry and egg production (1123) ..............................: 1,202 3 - 15 34 24 5 Sheep and goat farming (1124) ..................................: 3,246 38 - 34 98 80 18 Animal aquaculture and other animal : production (1125,1129) ........................................: 7,809 80 - 45 167 90 38 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Contra Costa : Del Norte : El Dorado : Fresno : Glenn : Humboldt : Imperial ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Total farms ..............................................: 602 121 1,358 5,683 1,311 930 421 : Oilseed and grain farming (1111) ...............................: 5 - 2 32 257 5 19 Vegetable and melon farming (1112) .............................: 48 12 74 410 17 116 72 Fruit and tree nut farming (1113) ..............................: 185 4 524 3,562 547 116 30 Greenhouse, nursery, and floriculture : production (1114) .............................................: 32 10 119 72 10 76 10 Other crop farming (1119) ......................................: 50 11 42 520 116 66 207 Tobacco farming (11191) ......................................: - - - - - - - Cotton farming (11192) .......................................: - - - 70 1 - - Sugarcane farming, hay farming, and all other : crop farming (11193,11194,11199) ............................: 50 11 42 450 115 66 207 : Beef cattle ranching and farming (112111) ......................: 117 48 212 511 201 305 16 Cattle feedlots (112112) .......................................: - - 5 13 2 2 17 Dairy cattle and milk production (11212) .......................: - 10 9 73 34 69 - Hog and pig farming (1122) .....................................: 8 - 11 21 7 6 4 Poultry and egg production (1123) ..............................: 6 5 29 50 13 15 4 Sheep and goat farming (1124) ..................................: 28 9 118 143 36 55 11 Animal aquaculture and other animal : production (1125,1129) ........................................: 123 12 213 276 71 99 31 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Inyo : Kern : Kings : Lake : Lassen : Los Angeles : Madera ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Total farms ..............................................: 125 1,938 1,056 838 448 1,294 1,507 : Oilseed and grain farming (1111) ...............................: - 41 86 2 5 4 17 Vegetable and melon farming (1112) .............................: 10 96 14 53 - 128 35 Fruit and tree nut farming (1113) ..............................: 4 722 350 496 16 265 884 Greenhouse, nursery, and floriculture : production (1114) .............................................: 1 45 8 16 5 265 17 Other crop farming (1119) ......................................: 16 228 209 69 133 77 88 Tobacco farming (11191) ......................................: - - - - - - - Cotton farming (11192) .......................................: - 32 34 - - - - Sugarcane farming, hay farming, and all other : crop farming (11193,11194,11199) ............................: 16 196 175 69 133 77 88 : Beef cattle ranching and farming (112111) ......................: 50 356 145 71 167 69 236 Cattle feedlots (112112) .......................................: - 6 7 2 7 - 1 Dairy cattle and milk production (11212) .......................: - 54 116 - - 1 33 Hog and pig farming (1122) .....................................: 1 11 8 6 10 9 - Poultry and egg production (1123) ..............................: - 34 15 25 7 48 14 Sheep and goat farming (1124) ..................................: 6 88 31 40 34 57 56 Animal aquaculture and other animal : production (1125,1129) ........................................: 37 257 67 58 64 371 126 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Marin : Mariposa : Mendocino : Merced : Modoc : Mono : Monterey ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Total farms ..............................................: 323 364 1,220 2,486 437 72 1,179 : Oilseed and grain farming (1111) ...............................: - - 1 107 11 - 17 Vegetable and melon farming (1112) .............................: 25 - 95 156 9 1 180 Fruit and tree nut farming (1113) ..............................: 54 48 455 1,111 3 2 307 Greenhouse, nursery, and floriculture : production (1114) .............................................: 14 3 56 15 8 2 109 Other crop farming (1119) ......................................: 21 16 86 302 150 15 91 Tobacco farming (11191) ......................................: - - - - - - - Cotton farming (11192) .......................................: - - - 41 - - - Sugarcane farming, hay farming, and all other : crop farming (11193,11194,11199) ............................: 21 16 86 261 150 15 91 : Beef cattle ranching and farming (112111) ......................: 92 189 242 301 175 30 296 Cattle feedlots (112112) .......................................: 5 2 - 1 1 - 3 Dairy cattle and milk production (11212) .......................: 48 - 5 229 - - 1 Hog and pig farming (1122) .....................................: - 3 5 11 - - 2 Poultry and egg production (1123) ..............................: 9 13 28 35 2 - 12 Sheep and goat farming (1124) ..................................: 19 20 119 69 29 3 53 Animal aquaculture and other animal : production (1125,1129) ........................................: 36 70 128 149 49 19 108 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 44. Farms by North American Industry Classification System: 2012 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Napa : Nevada : Orange : Placer : Plumas : Riverside : Sacramento ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Total farms ..............................................: 1,685 742 312 1,355 141 2,949 1,352 : Oilseed and grain farming (1111) ...............................: 1 2 10 30 - 15 57 Vegetable and melon farming (1112) .............................: 39 90 34 78 11 110 138 Fruit and tree nut farming (1113) ..............................: 1,445 132 86 276 - 1,463 215 Greenhouse, nursery, and floriculture : production (1114) .............................................: 16 44 78 53 9 203 50 Other crop farming (1119) ......................................: 33 17 19 51 17 187 103 Tobacco farming (11191) ......................................: - - - - - - - Cotton farming (11192) .......................................: - - - - - 4 - Sugarcane farming, hay farming, and all other : crop farming (11193,11194,11199) ............................: 33 17 19 51 17 183 103 : Beef cattle ranching and farming (112111) ......................: 66 158 5 444 64 157 307 Cattle feedlots (112112) .......................................: - - - 2 1 - 1 Dairy cattle and milk production (11212) .......................: - 12 - 1 - 34 26 Hog and pig farming (1122) .....................................: 6 5 2 12 - 23 8 Poultry and egg production (1123) ..............................: 8 32 4 18 - 51 43 Sheep and goat farming (1124) ..................................: 30 76 - 159 11 117 106 Animal aquaculture and other animal : production (1125,1129) ........................................: 41 174 74 231 28 589 298 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : San Benito :San Bernardino : San Diego : San Francisco : San Joaquin :San Luis Obispo: San Mateo :Santa Barbara ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Total farms ..............................................: 628 1,249 5,732 6 3,580 2,666 334 1,597 : Oilseed and grain farming (1111) ...............................: 10 7 16 - 104 35 3 12 Vegetable and melon farming (1112) .............................: 53 82 192 - 120 224 38 178 Fruit and tree nut farming (1113) ..............................: 168 447 3,915 2 2,239 1,036 57 773 Greenhouse, nursery, and floriculture : production (1114) .............................................: 26 67 701 - 47 119 72 127 Other crop farming (1119) ......................................: 46 78 155 1 267 297 23 68 Tobacco farming (11191) ......................................: - - - - - - - - Cotton farming (11192) .......................................: - - - - - - - - Sugarcane farming, hay farming, and all other : crop farming (11193,11194,11199) ............................: 46 78 155 1 267 297 23 68 : Beef cattle ranching and farming (112111) ......................: 203 120 195 - 377 525 55 219 Cattle feedlots (112112) .......................................: 2 3 2 - - 1 - 2 Dairy cattle and milk production (11212) .......................: 1 71 7 - 104 3 - 9 Hog and pig farming (1122) .....................................: - 35 9 - 6 28 - 8 Poultry and egg production (1123) ..............................: 7 44 57 - 32 38 10 3 Sheep and goat farming (1124) ..................................: 41 58 69 - 95 83 9 26 Animal aquaculture and other animal : production (1125,1129) ........................................: 71 237 414 3 189 277 67 172 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Santa Clara : Santa Cruz : Shasta : Sierra : Siskiyou : Solano : Sonoma : Stanislaus ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Total farms ..............................................: 1,003 667 1,544 48 929 860 3,579 4,143 : Oilseed and grain farming (1111) ...............................: - 2 22 - 17 24 1 145 Vegetable and melon farming (1112) .............................: 167 57 73 - 44 43 224 64 Fruit and tree nut farming (1113) ..............................: 355 313 267 - 18 272 1,950 2,159 Greenhouse, nursery, and floriculture : production (1114) .............................................: 102 129 29 2 22 21 173 37 Other crop farming (1119) ......................................: 48 15 111 13 258 116 82 241 Tobacco farming (11191) ......................................: - - - - - - - - Cotton farming (11192) .......................................: - - - - - - - - Sugarcane farming, hay farming, and all other : crop farming (11193,11194,11199) ............................: 48 15 111 13 258 116 82 241 : Beef cattle ranching and farming (112111) ......................: 172 34 620 28 329 166 464 750 Cattle feedlots (112112) .......................................: - 6 6 1 6 3 8 7 Dairy cattle and milk production (11212) .......................: - 6 6 - 3 2 99 234 Hog and pig farming (1122) .....................................: 10 - 10 - 11 4 30 14 Poultry and egg production (1123) ..............................: 5 7 46 - 28 14 81 71 Sheep and goat farming (1124) ..................................: 36 24 132 - 45 63 206 134 Animal aquaculture and other animal : production (1125,1129) ........................................: 108 74 222 4 148 132 261 287 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Sutter : Tehama : Trinity : Tulare : Tuolumne : Ventura : Yolo : Yuba ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Total farms ..............................................: 1,358 1,743 247 4,931 391 2,150 1,011 795 : Oilseed and grain farming (1111) ...............................: 275 18 - 105 5 - 123 112 Vegetable and melon farming (1112) .............................: 46 39 40 88 9 89 98 32 Fruit and tree nut farming (1113) ..............................: 788 577 28 3,297 53 1,605 329 233 Greenhouse, nursery, and floriculture : production (1114) .............................................: 10 16 6 53 18 145 15 8 Other crop farming (1119) ......................................: 48 136 31 351 9 46 189 20 Tobacco farming (11191) ......................................: - - - - - - - - Cotton farming (11192) .......................................: - - - 11 - - - - Sugarcane farming, hay farming, and all other : crop farming (11193,11194,11199) ............................: 48 136 31 340 9 46 189 20 : Beef cattle ranching and farming (112111) ......................: 81 543 72 457 154 81 72 176 Cattle feedlots (112112) .......................................: 1 4 1 11 - 1 1 - Dairy cattle and milk production (11212) .......................: - 25 - 239 - - 3 15 Hog and pig farming (1122) .....................................: 8 30 10 5 8 5 3 14 Poultry and egg production (1123) ..............................: 11 41 6 22 17 13 34 14 Sheep and goat farming (1124) ..................................: 35 136 19 62 41 18 62 61 Animal aquaculture and other animal : production (1125,1129) ........................................: 55 178 34 241 77 147 82 110 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Table 45. Selected Operation and Operator Characteristics: 2012 and 2007 [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : California : Alameda : Alpine : Amador : Butte : Calaveras : Colusa ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- FARMS : : Land in farms .......................................farms, 2012: 77,857 452 3 461 2,056 663 782 2007: 81,033 525 7 479 2,048 631 814 acres, 2012: 25,569,001 177,798 (D) 155,187 381,019 212,140 453,061 2007: 25,364,695 204,633 1,810 163,482 373,786 201,026 474,092 Harvested cropland ................................farms, 2012: 53,372 194 3 217 1,510 235 654 2007: 53,000 237 4 189 1,460 193 661 acres, 2012: 8,007,461 9,901 (D) 8,521 203,573 4,165 263,675 2007: 7,633,173 10,759 490 7,457 200,943 2,872 276,588 TENURE : : Full owners .........................................farms, 2012: 60,492 337 1 362 1,628 511 401 2007: 63,777 370 6 366 1,582 495 429 acres, 2012: 10,081,540 64,616 (D) 49,351 190,156 61,588 134,851 2007: 10,082,984 38,259 (D) 50,946 161,974 81,747 126,915 Harvested cropland ................................farms, 2012: 41,179 152 1 186 1,178 197 301 2007: 41,451 189 3 171 1,088 166 305 acres, 2012: 3,191,573 2,613 (D) 6,044 107,440 2,659 54,380 2007: 3,032,616 4,308 (D) 5,201 85,186 2,137 59,950 : Part owners .........................................farms, 2012: 9,490 60 - 73 256 103 165 2007: 9,843 73 1 84 275 109 175 acres, 2012: 11,310,115 84,172 - 95,055 122,622 115,026 201,139 2007: 11,480,879 127,192 (D) 102,587 161,046 105,748 212,723 Owned land in farms ...............................acres, 2012: 4,199,637 16,538 - 20,398 49,060 26,637 85,675 2007: 4,312,543 50,635 (D) 36,009 66,368 15,980 73,694 Rented land in farms ..............................acres, 2012: 7,110,478 67,634 - 74,657 73,562 88,389 115,464 2007: 7,168,336 76,557 (D) 66,578 94,678 89,768 139,029 Harvested cropland ................................farms, 2012: 6,716 24 - 17 195 21 157 2007: 6,676 20 1 9 224 12 163 acres, 2012: 3,405,764 6,281 - 954 52,943 774 120,117 2007: 3,216,666 4,907 (D) (D) 71,821 358 125,599 : Tenants .............................................farms, 2012: 7,875 55 2 26 172 49 216 2007: 7,413 82 - 29 191 27 210 acres, 2012: 4,177,346 29,010 (D) 10,781 68,241 35,526 117,071 2007: 3,800,832 39,182 - 9,949 50,766 13,531 134,454 Harvested cropland ................................farms, 2012: 5,477 18 2 14 137 17 196 2007: 4,873 28 - 9 148 15 193 acres, 2012: 1,410,124 1,007 (D) 1,523 43,190 732 89,178 2007: 1,383,891 1,544 - (D) 43,936 377 91,039 2012 NUMBER OF ALL OPERATORS : : Total operators ..........................................number: 126,099 792 6 778 3,230 1,093 1,372 : Farms by number of operators: : 1 operator .................................................: 40,197 200 - 207 1,091 294 332 2 operators ................................................: 30,790 205 3 204 831 322 365 3 operators ................................................: 5,058 31 - 41 92 33 60 4 operators ................................................: 1,137 9 - 5 25 14 10 5 or more operators ........................................: 675 7 - 4 17 - 15 : Total women operators ..................................number: 41,256 298 3 321 1,093 421 390 : Farms by number of women operators: : 1 operator ...............................................: 35,652 248 3 251 950 365 343 2 operators ..............................................: 2,226 25 - 29 53 22 16 3 operators ..............................................: 253 - - - 11 4 5 4 operators ..............................................: 44 - - 3 1 - - 5 or more operators ......................................: 37 - - - - - - : 2007 NUMBER OF ALL OPERATORS : : Total operators ..........................................number: 130,756 875 10 782 3,281 1,036 1,403 : Farms by number of operators: : 1 operator .................................................: 41,998 260 4 222 1,056 292 368 2 operators ................................................: 31,976 212 3 225 827 299 364 3 operators ................................................: 5,248 46 - 24 126 29 53 4 operators ................................................: 1,137 2 - 5 19 4 14 5 or more operators ........................................: 674 5 - 3 20 7 15 : Total women operators ..................................number: 43,239 317 3 315 1,112 412 401 : Farms by number of women operators: : 1 operator ...............................................: 37,150 249 3 267 969 356 336 2 operators ..............................................: 2,357 31 - 21 56 25 15 3 operators ..............................................: 324 2 - 2 7 2 9 4 operators ..............................................: 36 - - - - - 2 5 or more operators ......................................: 45 - - - 2 - - : PRINCIPAL OPERATOR CHARACTERISTICS : : Sex of operator: : Male ..............................................farms, 2012: 63,873 334 3 363 1,682 522 708 2007: 66,068 406 7 369 1,670 498 730 acres, 2012: 23,292,124 158,175 (D) 144,894 362,607 192,229 433,714 2007: 23,305,862 193,883 1,810 155,627 348,012 174,971 448,461 : Female ............................................farms, 2012: 13,984 118 - 98 374 141 74 2007: 14,965 119 - 110 378 133 84 acres, 2012: 2,276,877 19,623 - 10,293 18,412 19,911 19,347 2007: 2,058,833 10,750 - 7,855 25,774 26,055 25,631 Primary occupation: : Farming ..................................................2012: 42,469 220 - 227 1,222 309 482 2007: 40,910 197 2 236 1,057 288 464 Other ....................................................2012: 35,388 232 3 234 834 354 300 2007: 40,123 328 5 243 991 343 350 Place of residence: : On farm operated .........................................2012: 54,775 332 1 330 1,488 502 412 2007: 59,464 354 4 379 1,478 532 404 Not on farm operated .....................................2012: 23,082 120 2 131 568 161 370 2007: 21,569 171 3 100 570 99 410 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 45. Selected Operation and Operator Characteristics: 2012 and 2007 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Contra Costa : Del Norte : El Dorado : Fresno : Glenn : Humboldt : Imperial ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- FARMS : : Land in farms .......................................farms, 2012: 602 121 1,358 5,683 1,311 930 421 2007: 634 85 1,268 6,081 1,242 852 452 acres, 2012: 127,670 (D) 128,365 1,721,202 668,784 593,597 515,783 2007: 146,993 18,168 107,080 1,636,224 489,186 597,477 427,349 Harvested cropland ................................farms, 2012: 330 53 769 4,480 999 547 337 2007: 289 29 645 4,736 924 389 365 acres, 2012: 33,420 6,321 5,898 992,479 244,761 12,253 466,877 2007: 23,876 3,244 5,930 978,948 228,533 13,358 375,904 TENURE : : Full owners .........................................farms, 2012: 401 97 1,242 4,205 873 639 169 2007: 454 68 1,167 4,643 810 579 188 acres, 2012: 23,004 6,286 68,649 651,317 109,289 307,342 70,616 2007: 58,562 (D) 49,005 615,320 183,293 230,393 48,135 Harvested cropland ................................farms, 2012: 210 34 726 3,246 631 359 103 2007: 213 20 605 3,525 566 251 125 acres, 2012: 4,855 257 5,093 421,190 60,725 3,310 55,164 2007: 5,252 (D) 4,619 395,665 80,211 2,987 36,092 : Part owners .........................................farms, 2012: 96 20 75 924 241 157 134 2007: 92 15 66 907 271 162 145 acres, 2012: 73,166 13,728 46,349 885,037 414,518 170,013 301,999 2007: 59,474 10,577 54,166 794,439 202,873 215,990 279,608 Owned land in farms ...............................acres, 2012: 14,131 9,375 8,852 471,956 112,471 39,146 79,230 2007: 13,544 6,912 18,832 375,092 89,417 95,242 81,690 Rented land in farms ..............................acres, 2012: 59,035 4,353 37,497 413,081 302,047 130,867 222,769 2007: 45,930 3,665 35,334 419,347 113,456 120,748 197,918 Harvested cropland ................................farms, 2012: 59 15 22 785 204 101 123 2007: 42 8 24 754 225 83 133 acres, 2012: 21,213 5,837 602 449,057 112,594 6,688 283,015 2007: 15,098 2,222 1,110 440,868 91,016 8,361 252,356 : Tenants .............................................farms, 2012: 105 4 41 554 197 134 118 2007: 88 2 35 531 161 111 119 acres, 2012: 31,500 (D) 13,367 184,848 144,977 116,242 143,168 2007: 28,957 (D) 3,909 226,465 103,020 151,094 99,606 Harvested cropland ................................farms, 2012: 61 4 21 449 164 87 111 2007: 34 1 16 457 133 55 107 acres, 2012: 7,352 227 203 122,232 71,442 2,255 128,698 2007: 3,526 (D) 201 142,415 57,306 2,010 87,456 2012 NUMBER OF ALL OPERATORS : : Total operators ..........................................number: 901 221 2,289 9,000 2,122 1,531 676 : Farms by number of operators: : 1 operator .................................................: 347 37 562 3,128 691 489 253 2 operators ................................................: 214 72 692 2,031 502 353 117 3 operators ................................................: 38 10 82 396 81 64 36 4 operators ................................................: 3 1 14 74 23 18 10 5 or more operators ........................................: - 1 8 54 14 6 5 : Total women operators ..................................number: 322 86 990 2,409 636 616 133 : Farms by number of women operators: : 1 operator ...............................................: 298 84 859 2,119 538 503 113 2 operators ..............................................: 9 1 49 114 43 46 7 3 operators ..............................................: 2 - 11 15 4 3 - 4 operators ..............................................: - - - 3 - 3 - 5 or more operators ......................................: - - - 1 - - 1 : 2007 NUMBER OF ALL OPERATORS : : Total operators ..........................................number: 1,005 174 2,077 9,535 2,024 1,347 734 : Farms by number of operators: : 1 operator .................................................: 331 20 550 3,440 614 441 253 2 operators ................................................: 252 48 637 2,081 506 351 134 3 operators ................................................: 42 11 73 410 96 41 53 4 operators ................................................: 6 5 6 101 21 15 6 5 or more operators ........................................: 3 1 2 49 5 4 6 : Total women operators ..................................number: 400 68 903 2,598 604 491 121 : Farms by number of women operators: : 1 operator ...............................................: 311 62 817 2,275 536 432 109 2 operators ..............................................: 34 3 40 120 28 25 6 3 operators ..............................................: 1 - 2 19 4 3 - 4 operators ..............................................: 1 - - 4 - - - 5 or more operators ......................................: 2 - - 2 - - - : PRINCIPAL OPERATOR CHARACTERISTICS : : Sex of operator: : Male ..............................................farms, 2012: 433 92 1,017 5,042 1,149 702 371 2007: 431 65 903 5,359 1,085 675 424 acres, 2012: 121,476 (D) 109,665 1,623,223 637,344 463,295 504,638 2007: 130,602 (D) 93,976 1,500,766 458,852 536,725 424,100 : Female ............................................farms, 2012: 169 29 341 641 162 228 50 2007: 203 20 365 722 157 177 28 acres, 2012: 6,194 (D) 18,700 97,979 31,440 130,302 11,145 2007: 16,391 (D) 13,104 135,458 30,334 60,752 3,249 Primary occupation: : Farming ..................................................2012: 313 70 707 3,389 824 522 292 2007: 265 37 543 3,471 730 466 321 Other ....................................................2012: 289 51 651 2,294 487 408 129 2007: 369 48 725 2,610 512 386 131 Place of residence: : On farm operated .........................................2012: 440 106 1,215 3,593 933 734 139 2007: 452 67 1,104 4,121 942 665 165 Not on farm operated .....................................2012: 162 15 143 2,090 378 196 282 2007: 182 18 164 1,960 300 187 287 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 45. Selected Operation and Operator Characteristics: 2012 and 2007 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Inyo : Kern : Kings : Lake : Lassen : Los Angeles : Madera ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- FARMS : : Land in farms .......................................farms, 2012: 125 1,938 1,056 838 448 1,294 1,507 2007: 94 2,117 1,129 845 459 1,734 1,708 acres, 2012: 330,840 2,330,233 673,634 150,721 482,680 91,689 653,584 2007: 292,552 2,361,765 680,662 124,199 459,126 108,463 679,729 Harvested cropland ................................farms, 2012: 37 1,115 767 641 199 718 1,066 2007: 25 1,169 805 638 197 632 1,123 acres, 2012: (D) 740,061 415,706 24,175 40,182 40,796 289,693 2007: (D) 764,929 419,964 18,800 46,908 25,829 264,767 TENURE : : Full owners .........................................farms, 2012: 45 1,372 719 763 355 987 1,230 2007: 35 1,574 798 769 340 1,429 1,398 acres, 2012: 15,786 835,873 308,684 106,597 186,409 40,639 316,892 2007: 119,533 966,629 326,046 86,483 125,188 52,077 277,319 Harvested cropland ................................farms, 2012: 12 784 477 574 150 486 881 2007: 13 854 540 584 135 446 930 acres, 2012: (D) 379,109 221,413 16,475 15,840 16,903 187,815 2007: 1,705 403,763 209,112 12,131 21,460 5,042 164,391 : Part owners .........................................farms, 2012: 24 321 235 55 67 64 196 2007: 20 310 212 60 86 106 211 acres, 2012: 195,087 1,162,974 206,294 17,992 231,308 27,505 264,794 2007: 88,683 1,041,839 270,120 31,174 301,938 (D) 350,928 Owned land in farms ...............................acres, 2012: 10,154 389,865 96,615 9,603 109,989 6,125 103,521 2007: 2,948 389,485 193,349 13,661 120,339 16,167 154,780 Rented land in farms ..............................acres, 2012: 184,933 773,109 109,679 8,389 121,319 21,380 161,273 2007: 85,735 652,354 76,771 17,513 181,599 (D) 196,148 Harvested cropland ................................farms, 2012: 5 197 216 51 37 37 124 2007: 4 188 193 44 52 58 134 acres, 2012: (D) 266,046 138,067 5,789 22,693 11,702 74,368 2007: (D) 262,802 157,247 4,707 22,542 10,909 77,696 : Tenants .............................................farms, 2012: 56 245 102 20 26 243 81 2007: 39 233 119 16 33 199 99 acres, 2012: 119,967 331,386 158,656 26,132 64,963 23,545 71,898 2007: 84,336 353,297 84,496 6,542 32,000 (D) 51,482 Harvested cropland ................................farms, 2012: 20 134 74 16 12 195 61 2007: 8 127 72 10 10 128 59 acres, 2012: 5,315 94,906 56,226 1,911 1,649 12,191 27,510 2007: 1,860 98,364 53,605 1,962 2,906 9,878 22,680 2012 NUMBER OF ALL OPERATORS : : Total operators ..........................................number: 179 3,356 1,941 1,270 785 2,148 2,444 : Farms by number of operators: : 1 operator .................................................: 76 902 498 461 175 643 802 2 operators ................................................: 44 794 420 332 234 532 522 3 operators ................................................: 5 167 80 38 25 91 148 4 operators ................................................: - 39 23 4 10 7 25 5 or more operators ........................................: - 36 35 3 4 21 10 : Total women operators ..................................number: 58 1,013 452 457 318 878 688 : Farms by number of women operators: : 1 operator ...............................................: 58 858 354 407 275 720 590 2 operators ..............................................: - 65 21 25 20 70 46 3 operators ..............................................: - 7 7 - 1 6 2 4 operators ..............................................: - 1 5 - - - - 5 or more operators ......................................: - - 3 - - - - : 2007 NUMBER OF ALL OPERATORS : : Total operators ..........................................number: 166 3,643 1,892 1,356 807 2,971 2,675 : Farms by number of operators: : 1 operator .................................................: 49 1,003 586 428 179 785 964 2 operators ................................................: 28 837 422 358 230 767 599 3 operators ................................................: 12 192 71 50 45 148 103 4 operators ................................................: - 57 27 8 3 21 24 5 or more operators ........................................: 5 28 23 1 2 13 18 : Total women operators ..................................number: 52 1,052 474 508 323 1,311 741 : Farms by number of women operators: : 1 operator ...............................................: 48 876 395 434 283 1,085 651 2 operators ..............................................: 2 62 18 33 20 86 36 3 operators ..............................................: - 12 6 - - 13 6 4 operators ..............................................: - 4 - - - - - 5 or more operators ......................................: - - 5 1 - 3 - : PRINCIPAL OPERATOR CHARACTERISTICS : : Sex of operator: : Male ..............................................farms, 2012: 87 1,589 968 666 349 917 1,318 2007: 73 1,761 1,037 642 353 1,140 1,477 acres, 2012: 329,935 2,184,297 658,154 90,808 442,289 85,367 631,729 2007: 291,281 2,213,881 659,949 111,132 388,888 92,611 652,383 : Female ............................................farms, 2012: 38 349 88 172 99 377 189 2007: 21 356 92 203 106 594 231 acres, 2012: 905 145,936 15,480 59,913 40,391 6,322 21,855 2007: 1,271 147,884 20,713 13,067 70,238 15,852 27,346 Primary occupation: : Farming ..................................................2012: 79 1,225 697 368 232 784 872 2007: 47 1,215 652 352 242 621 929 Other ....................................................2012: 46 713 359 470 216 510 635 2007: 47 902 477 493 217 1,113 779 Place of residence: : On farm operated .........................................2012: 81 1,023 710 621 389 845 851 2007: 56 1,179 827 674 403 1,305 1,036 Not on farm operated .....................................2012: 44 915 346 217 59 449 656 2007: 38 938 302 171 56 429 672 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 45. Selected Operation and Operator Characteristics: 2012 and 2007 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Marin : Mariposa : Mendocino : Merced : Modoc : Mono : Monterey ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- FARMS : : Land in farms .......................................farms, 2012: 323 364 1,220 2,486 437 72 1,179 2007: 255 302 1,136 2,607 448 84 1,199 acres, 2012: 170,876 283,611 770,257 978,667 523,522 56,386 1,268,144 2007: 133,275 212,524 608,674 1,041,115 597,740 44,610 1,327,972 Harvested cropland ................................farms, 2012: 135 66 758 1,903 257 30 694 2007: 86 34 729 1,946 267 28 685 acres, 2012: 7,868 835 31,411 480,103 123,008 10,591 282,694 2007: 4,007 286 31,609 466,304 103,467 8,144 227,834 TENURE : : Full owners .........................................farms, 2012: 180 251 1,017 1,635 315 49 725 2007: 131 223 971 1,826 296 56 747 acres, 2012: 40,014 83,861 404,822 338,898 282,011 19,556 499,631 2007: 28,913 50,766 362,104 339,853 264,171 14,309 546,728 Harvested cropland ................................farms, 2012: 89 57 643 1,214 170 19 364 2007: 54 33 624 1,319 161 17 353 acres, 2012: 901 439 18,646 175,578 70,648 (D) 64,249 2007: 434 (D) 20,597 174,200 51,016 (D) 44,583 : Part owners .........................................farms, 2012: 56 69 118 530 103 15 157 2007: 46 62 93 492 104 18 162 acres, 2012: 60,450 106,666 290,165 534,408 231,969 33,163 502,490 2007: 52,235 142,295 119,058 558,040 304,069 27,910 505,251 Owned land in farms ...............................acres, 2012: 21,597 28,522 66,829 245,358 125,193 13,099 171,812 2007: 18,909 41,797 51,177 282,052 118,915 7,560 257,061 Rented land in farms ..............................acres, 2012: 38,853 78,144 223,336 289,050 106,776 20,064 330,678 2007: 33,326 100,498 67,881 275,988 185,154 20,350 248,190 Harvested cropland ................................farms, 2012: 22 5 80 444 79 10 96 2007: 14 1 64 425 80 9 100 acres, 2012: 4,294 243 10,693 260,425 50,797 7,608 118,090 2007: 1,706 (D) 9,121 229,246 48,940 6,480 92,190 : Tenants .............................................farms, 2012: 87 44 85 321 19 8 297 2007: 78 17 72 289 48 10 290 acres, 2012: 70,412 93,084 75,270 105,361 9,542 3,667 266,023 2007: 52,127 19,463 127,512 143,222 29,500 2,391 275,993 Harvested cropland ................................farms, 2012: 24 4 35 245 8 1 234 2007: 18 - 41 202 26 2 232 acres, 2012: 2,673 153 2,072 44,100 1,563 (D) 100,355 2007: 1,867 - 1,891 62,858 3,511 (D) 91,061 2012 NUMBER OF ALL OPERATORS : : Total operators ..........................................number: 546 575 2,019 4,170 725 128 2,092 : Farms by number of operators: : 1 operator .................................................: 159 171 610 1,294 189 32 609 2 operators ................................................: 124 175 504 859 223 35 405 3 operators ................................................: 28 18 76 213 17 4 109 4 operators ................................................: 7 - 20 102 6 - 26 5 or more operators ........................................: 5 - 10 18 2 1 30 : Total women operators ..................................number: 212 239 755 975 296 35 582 : Farms by number of women operators: : 1 operator ...............................................: 178 214 668 851 268 29 454 2 operators ..............................................: 10 8 35 47 14 3 56 3 operators ..............................................: 2 3 3 10 - - 4 4 operators ..............................................: 2 - - - - - 1 5 or more operators ......................................: - - 1 - - - - : 2007 NUMBER OF ALL OPERATORS : : Total operators ..........................................number: 418 526 1,888 4,263 742 133 2,102 : Farms by number of operators: : 1 operator .................................................: 132 121 557 1,380 204 43 632 2 operators ................................................: 95 144 482 941 200 36 435 3 operators ................................................: 22 34 74 217 38 4 78 4 operators ................................................: 5 1 14 51 6 - 19 5 or more operators ........................................: 1 2 9 18 - 1 35 : Total women operators ..................................number: 176 248 682 1,059 270 42 575 : Farms by number of women operators: : 1 operator ...............................................: 139 184 576 924 244 34 441 2 operators ..............................................: 17 20 44 55 13 2 46 3 operators ..............................................: 1 8 2 3 - - 6 4 operators ..............................................: - - 1 - - 1 1 5 or more operators ......................................: - - 1 3 - - 3 : PRINCIPAL OPERATOR CHARACTERISTICS : : Sex of operator: : Male ..............................................farms, 2012: 232 281 901 2,287 335 61 1,006 2007: 172 208 878 2,405 358 65 1,000 acres, 2012: 141,670 230,579 653,029 907,625 466,794 55,686 1,141,534 2007: 105,776 182,024 516,255 982,877 522,863 41,620 1,261,311 : Female ............................................farms, 2012: 91 83 319 199 102 11 173 2007: 83 94 258 202 90 19 199 acres, 2012: 29,206 53,032 117,228 71,042 56,728 700 126,610 2007: 27,499 30,500 92,419 58,238 74,877 2,990 66,661 Primary occupation: : Farming ..................................................2012: 189 189 608 1,603 264 42 728 2007: 151 135 583 1,551 269 38 768 Other ....................................................2012: 134 175 612 883 173 30 451 2007: 104 167 553 1,056 179 46 431 Place of residence: : On farm operated .........................................2012: 269 306 951 1,681 380 44 666 2007: 190 272 918 1,857 381 67 697 Not on farm operated .....................................2012: 54 58 269 805 57 28 513 2007: 65 30 218 750 67 17 502 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 45. Selected Operation and Operator Characteristics: 2012 and 2007 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Napa : Nevada : Orange : Placer : Plumas : Riverside : Sacramento ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- FARMS : : Land in farms .......................................farms, 2012: 1,685 742 312 1,355 141 2,949 1,352 2007: 1,638 690 325 1,488 142 3,463 1,393 acres, 2012: 253,370 42,114 60,497 91,403 174,210 344,044 246,840 2007: 223,246 70,167 87,435 132,221 120,253 354,753 328,593 Harvested cropland ................................farms, 2012: 1,521 312 217 508 62 1,962 660 2007: 1,503 218 200 487 33 2,096 583 acres, 2012: 52,180 1,555 10,058 19,535 11,767 156,469 92,090 2007: 51,860 2,621 7,846 21,990 7,692 163,783 113,315 TENURE : : Full owners .........................................farms, 2012: 1,470 625 216 1,141 101 2,579 940 2007: 1,429 580 230 1,250 120 3,047 1,013 acres, 2012: 148,227 22,113 50,237 31,204 (D) 119,533 60,251 2007: 124,570 25,958 79,896 42,720 (D) 159,605 137,936 Harvested cropland ................................farms, 2012: 1,358 262 138 436 49 1,729 362 2007: 1,320 181 117 416 28 1,873 340 acres, 2012: 28,222 1,076 3,811 4,051 3,843 48,266 25,673 2007: 31,907 2,103 3,427 5,363 2,805 48,751 34,407 : Part owners .........................................farms, 2012: 117 56 22 127 36 181 186 2007: 142 83 14 152 18 228 200 acres, 2012: 85,782 12,106 7,104 40,787 112,088 94,449 128,920 2007: 78,543 39,212 3,680 55,138 72,501 117,273 133,266 Owned land in farms ...............................acres, 2012: 33,692 2,848 1,673 12,554 46,328 36,740 47,198 2007: 38,476 7,284 1,429 14,640 31,190 53,921 47,131 Rented land in farms ..............................acres, 2012: 52,090 9,258 5,431 28,233 65,760 57,709 81,722 2007: 40,067 31,928 2,251 40,498 41,311 63,352 86,135 Harvested cropland ................................farms, 2012: 94 16 21 40 13 134 132 2007: 123 27 14 35 5 134 120 acres, 2012: 22,614 355 3,838 7,890 7,924 62,654 44,793 2007: 17,723 (D) 2,000 5,223 4,887 74,684 47,995 : Tenants .............................................farms, 2012: 98 61 74 87 4 189 226 2007: 67 27 81 86 4 188 180 acres, 2012: 19,361 7,895 3,156 19,412 (D) 130,062 57,669 2007: 20,133 4,997 3,859 34,363 (D) 77,875 57,391 Harvested cropland ................................farms, 2012: 69 34 58 32 - 99 166 2007: 60 10 69 36 - 89 123 acres, 2012: 1,344 124 2,409 7,594 - 45,549 21,624 2007: 2,230 (D) 2,419 11,404 - 40,348 30,913 2012 NUMBER OF ALL OPERATORS : : Total operators ..........................................number: 2,843 1,239 487 2,294 236 4,787 2,301 : Farms by number of operators: : 1 operator .................................................: 875 297 182 530 70 1,449 601 2 operators ................................................: 610 401 94 751 54 1,243 661 3 operators ................................................: 140 37 29 47 13 208 59 4 operators ................................................: 36 6 5 16 3 34 15 5 or more operators ........................................: 24 1 2 11 1 15 16 : Total women operators ..................................number: 838 573 162 1,034 85 1,761 871 : Farms by number of women operators: : 1 operator ...............................................: 701 517 128 882 63 1,496 731 2 operators ..............................................: 31 28 7 54 11 122 46 3 operators ..............................................: 8 - 4 8 - 7 2 4 operators ..............................................: 4 - 2 5 - - 3 5 or more operators ......................................: 7 - - - - - 5 : 2007 NUMBER OF ALL OPERATORS : : Total operators ..........................................number: 2,748 1,181 518 2,476 262 5,480 2,362 : Farms by number of operators: : 1 operator .................................................: 854 265 184 600 43 1,758 651 2 operators ................................................: 570 378 103 813 86 1,454 609 3 operators ................................................: 164 35 32 59 6 219 84 4 operators ................................................: 34 8 2 11 6 16 35 5 or more operators ........................................: 16 4 4 5 1 16 14 : Total women operators ..................................number: 790 562 168 1,115 116 2,095 910 : Farms by number of women operators: : 1 operator ...............................................: 653 479 142 1,010 95 1,826 746 2 operators ..............................................: 33 37 6 45 6 109 53 3 operators ..............................................: 18 3 2 5 3 13 17 4 operators ..............................................: 1 - 2 - - 3 - 5 or more operators ......................................: 2 - - - - - 1 : PRINCIPAL OPERATOR CHARACTERISTICS : : Sex of operator: : Male ..............................................farms, 2012: 1,393 525 230 979 122 2,274 1,066 2007: 1,381 455 243 1,063 108 2,549 1,075 acres, 2012: 216,571 32,114 59,564 80,078 173,177 322,421 221,917 2007: 193,935 60,076 85,560 114,369 114,218 318,348 304,105 : Female ............................................farms, 2012: 292 217 82 376 19 675 286 2007: 257 235 82 425 34 914 318 acres, 2012: 36,799 10,000 933 11,325 1,033 21,623 24,923 2007: 29,311 10,091 1,875 17,852 6,035 36,405 24,488 Primary occupation: : Farming ..................................................2012: 588 346 183 617 62 1,448 652 2007: 678 295 133 670 70 1,662 667 Other ....................................................2012: 1,097 396 129 738 79 1,501 700 2007: 960 395 192 818 72 1,801 726 Place of residence: : On farm operated .........................................2012: 1,111 662 177 1,212 111 1,982 1,002 2007: 1,115 627 169 1,331 127 2,563 1,093 Not on farm operated .....................................2012: 574 80 135 143 30 967 350 2007: 523 63 156 157 15 900 300 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 45. Selected Operation and Operator Characteristics: 2012 and 2007 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : San Benito :San Bernardino : San Diego : San Francisco : San Joaquin :San Luis Obispo: San Mateo :Santa Barbara ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- FARMS : : Land in farms .......................................farms, 2012: 628 1,249 5,732 6 3,580 2,666 334 1,597 2007: 625 1,405 6,687 6 3,624 2,784 329 1,597 acres, 2012: 604,319 77,199 221,538 12 787,015 1,338,874 48,160 701,039 2007: 579,851 514,234 303,889 7 737,503 1,369,604 57,089 727,050 Harvested cropland ................................farms, 2012: 355 691 4,933 3 2,875 1,664 202 1,165 2007: 324 709 5,522 6 2,843 1,557 161 1,132 acres, 2012: 24,016 22,699 51,097 (D) 484,804 113,141 4,033 98,772 2007: 32,571 27,516 67,279 (D) 444,670 105,492 4,909 93,280 TENURE : : Full owners .........................................farms, 2012: 413 1,038 5,265 6 2,712 2,090 208 1,148 2007: 435 1,168 6,162 4 2,746 2,219 200 1,201 acres, 2012: 211,642 31,870 173,937 12 240,052 579,905 27,814 308,790 2007: 185,076 67,282 221,692 (D) 234,296 673,740 31,467 250,546 Harvested cropland ................................farms, 2012: 240 584 4,570 3 2,120 1,311 119 826 2007: 222 585 5,161 4 2,137 1,288 90 829 acres, 2012: 8,213 12,864 36,836 (D) 170,899 50,443 1,984 26,127 2007: 9,952 14,582 52,875 (D) 155,261 48,004 1,933 27,482 : Part owners .........................................farms, 2012: 122 66 176 - 541 285 46 123 2007: 116 93 239 1 584 263 36 131 acres, 2012: 309,610 28,172 24,232 - 424,007 498,382 10,592 183,126 2007: 327,102 (D) 56,486 (D) 391,864 487,413 9,461 343,017 Owned land in farms ...............................acres, 2012: 110,855 13,548 11,342 - 204,424 239,311 3,548 47,737 2007: 161,285 (D) 19,993 (D) 154,724 148,925 2,181 96,171 Rented land in farms ..............................acres, 2012: 198,755 14,624 12,890 - 219,583 259,071 7,044 135,389 2007: 165,817 (D) 36,493 (D) 237,140 338,488 7,280 246,846 Harvested cropland ................................farms, 2012: 59 33 146 - 477 158 30 90 2007: 62 50 168 1 497 119 26 94 acres, 2012: 10,451 4,500 6,463 - 209,877 39,715 1,210 31,922 2007: 15,922 8,990 8,798 (D) 203,371 33,969 1,314 30,108 : Tenants .............................................farms, 2012: 93 145 291 - 327 291 80 326 2007: 74 144 286 1 294 302 93 265 acres, 2012: 83,067 17,157 23,369 - 122,956 260,587 9,754 209,123 2007: 67,673 (D) 25,711 (D) 111,343 208,451 16,161 133,487 Harvested cropland ................................farms, 2012: 56 74 217 - 278 195 53 249 2007: 40 74 193 1 209 150 45 209 acres, 2012: 5,352 5,335 7,798 - 104,028 22,983 839 40,723 2007: 6,697 3,944 5,606 (D) 86,038 23,519 1,662 35,690 2012 NUMBER OF ALL OPERATORS : : Total operators ..........................................number: 1,015 2,006 8,542 6 5,685 4,330 535 2,553 : Farms by number of operators: : 1 operator .................................................: 311 637 3,369 6 1,983 1,378 175 898 2 operators ................................................: 275 507 2,054 - 1,245 1,050 132 543 3 operators ................................................: 32 87 247 - 281 175 20 108 4 operators ................................................: 8 9 35 - 46 36 6 30 5 or more operators ........................................: 2 9 27 - 25 27 1 18 : Total women operators ..................................number: 341 749 2,864 1 1,491 1,518 216 794 : Farms by number of women operators: : 1 operator ...............................................: 301 648 2,621 1 1,318 1,284 155 686 2 operators ..............................................: 11 37 106 - 71 93 26 48 3 operators ..............................................: 6 9 9 - 9 4 3 4 4 operators ..............................................: - - 1 - 1 1 - - 5 or more operators ......................................: - - - - - 5 - - : 2007 NUMBER OF ALL OPERATORS : : Total operators ..........................................number: 948 2,272 10,293 6 5,673 4,559 541 2,580 : Farms by number of operators: : 1 operator .................................................: 367 720 3,657 6 2,040 1,389 167 883 2 operators ................................................: 210 552 2,647 - 1,248 1,124 136 575 3 operators ................................................: 39 106 282 - 257 205 16 90 4 operators ................................................: 5 15 61 - 63 42 6 29 5 or more operators ........................................: 4 12 40 - 16 24 4 20 : Total women operators ..................................number: 288 862 3,687 - 1,512 1,694 211 775 : Farms by number of women operators: : 1 operator ...............................................: 255 713 3,279 - 1,313 1,435 138 652 2 operators ..............................................: 12 55 162 - 86 113 18 49 3 operators ..............................................: 3 9 25 - 9 11 7 3 4 operators ..............................................: - 3 1 - - - 1 2 5 or more operators ......................................: - - 1 - - - 2 1 : PRINCIPAL OPERATOR CHARACTERISTICS : : Sex of operator: : Male ..............................................farms, 2012: 534 937 4,657 5 3,147 2,150 235 1,269 2007: 516 1,041 5,275 6 3,188 2,173 243 1,286 acres, 2012: 509,144 59,247 202,123 (D) 754,756 1,144,961 41,735 654,182 2007: 489,430 506,711 247,431 7 704,265 1,136,136 53,713 670,354 : Female ............................................farms, 2012: 94 312 1,075 1 433 516 99 328 2007: 109 364 1,412 - 436 611 86 311 acres, 2012: 95,175 17,952 19,415 (D) 32,259 193,913 6,425 46,857 2007: 90,421 7,523 56,458 - 33,238 233,468 3,376 56,696 Primary occupation: : Farming ..................................................2012: 366 712 2,730 5 2,112 1,254 187 826 2007: 347 679 2,530 2 2,026 1,380 160 813 Other ....................................................2012: 262 537 3,002 1 1,468 1,412 147 771 2007: 278 726 4,157 4 1,598 1,404 169 784 Place of residence: : On farm operated .........................................2012: 507 880 3,946 5 2,624 1,947 215 1,037 2007: 498 1,071 5,285 - 2,665 2,170 216 1,110 Not on farm operated .....................................2012: 121 369 1,786 1 956 719 119 560 2007: 127 334 1,402 6 959 614 113 487 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 45. Selected Operation and Operator Characteristics: 2012 and 2007 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Santa Clara : Santa Cruz : Shasta : Sierra : Siskiyou : Solano : Sonoma : Stanislaus ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- FARMS : : Land in farms .......................................farms, 2012: 1,003 667 1,544 48 929 860 3,579 4,143 2007: 1,068 682 1,473 50 846 890 3,429 4,114 acres, 2012: 229,927 99,983 376,306 39,141 722,855 407,101 589,771 768,046 2007: 299,866 47,489 390,812 28,782 597,534 358,225 530,895 788,954 Harvested cropland ................................farms, 2012: 691 522 626 21 435 499 2,507 2,921 2007: 647 522 510 21 381 506 2,386 2,833 acres, 2012: 23,128 29,900 24,254 (D) 128,647 133,171 91,307 319,190 2007: 23,381 20,698 21,942 2,412 102,647 120,410 91,197 307,992 TENURE : : Full owners .........................................farms, 2012: 785 453 1,295 32 759 618 2,908 3,135 2007: 841 440 1,204 44 649 646 2,805 3,110 acres, 2012: 133,358 45,588 213,643 (D) 347,389 106,740 303,581 264,285 2007: 131,709 25,476 177,899 (D) 245,690 98,311 273,652 258,549 Harvested cropland ................................farms, 2012: 532 337 536 16 329 349 2,084 2,186 2007: 501 324 422 21 261 366 2,007 2,133 acres, 2012: 9,022 3,116 13,795 2,261 49,170 26,665 41,644 137,840 2007: 7,787 3,063 12,664 2,412 33,005 19,958 45,490 128,728 : Part owners .........................................farms, 2012: 74 90 187 13 122 134 360 642 2007: 106 72 215 4 146 137 349 631 acres, 2012: 60,854 25,855 151,868 23,803 348,753 191,803 166,655 397,350 2007: 133,636 12,975 190,620 13,362 313,183 178,254 159,642 450,551 Owned land in farms ...............................acres, 2012: 15,810 13,517 50,180 8,203 144,606 35,752 80,007 131,044 2007: 34,267 4,358 70,182 2,147 119,663 36,784 68,667 123,475 Rented land in farms ..............................acres, 2012: 45,044 12,338 101,688 15,600 204,147 156,051 86,648 266,306 2007: 99,369 8,617 120,438 11,215 193,520 141,470 90,975 327,076 Harvested cropland ................................farms, 2012: 52 81 66 4 91 93 227 480 2007: 68 59 74 - 96 83 234 460 acres, 2012: 7,519 18,922 9,806 (D) 67,494 73,565 40,146 143,261 2007: 8,655 10,305 7,839 - 56,398 70,608 40,789 134,706 : Tenants .............................................farms, 2012: 144 124 62 3 48 108 311 366 2007: 121 170 54 2 51 107 275 373 acres, 2012: 35,715 28,540 10,795 (D) 26,713 108,558 119,535 106,411 2007: 34,521 9,038 22,293 (D) 38,661 81,660 97,601 79,854 Harvested cropland ................................farms, 2012: 107 104 24 1 15 57 196 255 2007: 78 139 14 - 24 57 145 240 acres, 2012: 6,587 7,862 653 (D) 11,983 32,941 9,517 38,089 2007: 6,939 7,330 1,439 - 13,244 29,844 4,918 44,558 2012 NUMBER OF ALL OPERATORS : : Total operators ..........................................number: 1,499 1,098 2,488 72 1,656 1,395 5,872 6,567 : Farms by number of operators: : 1 operator .................................................: 594 340 711 29 366 418 1,897 2,245 2 operators ................................................: 340 272 763 16 488 376 1,315 1,486 3 operators ................................................: 58 35 44 1 35 43 277 326 4 operators ................................................: 7 6 20 2 21 19 50 68 5 or more operators ........................................: 4 14 6 - 19 4 40 18 : Total women operators ..................................number: 496 347 1,088 25 636 515 2,017 1,876 : Farms by number of women operators: : 1 operator ...............................................: 445 309 957 21 542 439 1,632 1,683 2 operators ..............................................: 24 14 58 2 25 29 127 80 3 operators ..............................................: 1 2 1 - 13 6 19 8 4 operators ..............................................: - 1 3 - - - 2 1 5 or more operators ......................................: - - - - 1 - 10 1 : 2007 NUMBER OF ALL OPERATORS : : Total operators ..........................................number: 1,692 1,136 2,443 77 1,443 1,456 5,417 6,417 : Farms by number of operators: : 1 operator .................................................: 600 354 608 26 355 433 1,907 2,228 2 operators ................................................: 370 259 789 22 416 401 1,235 1,574 3 operators ................................................: 77 43 53 1 52 44 212 239 4 operators ................................................: 9 14 18 1 16 4 44 50 5 or more operators ........................................: 12 12 5 - 7 8 31 23 : Total women operators ..................................number: 585 379 1,063 30 544 517 1,775 1,816 : Farms by number of women operators: : 1 operator ...............................................: 462 323 939 25 485 471 1,476 1,638 2 operators ..............................................: 37 21 58 1 25 15 118 73 3 operators ..............................................: 7 2 1 1 3 2 15 9 4 operators ..............................................: 2 2 - - - 1 - - 5 or more operators ......................................: 4 - 1 - - 1 3 1 : PRINCIPAL OPERATOR CHARACTERISTICS : : Sex of operator: : Male ..............................................farms, 2012: 803 537 1,122 38 773 653 2,840 3,642 2007: 840 535 1,085 44 698 726 2,738 3,612 acres, 2012: 201,375 96,074 270,020 36,959 672,274 352,315 527,049 714,383 2007: 282,960 43,948 343,381 (D) 548,539 347,325 482,669 758,583 : Female ............................................farms, 2012: 200 130 422 10 156 207 739 501 2007: 228 147 388 6 148 164 691 502 acres, 2012: 28,552 3,909 106,286 2,182 50,581 54,786 62,722 53,663 2007: 16,906 3,541 47,431 (D) 48,995 10,900 48,226 30,371 Primary occupation: : Farming ..................................................2012: 562 414 693 27 541 462 1,836 2,450 2007: 501 422 689 36 450 470 1,621 2,224 Other ....................................................2012: 441 253 851 21 388 398 1,743 1,693 2007: 567 260 784 14 396 420 1,808 1,890 Place of residence: : On farm operated .........................................2012: 751 418 1,384 40 759 674 2,602 3,317 2007: 803 437 1,332 38 695 652 2,569 3,308 Not on farm operated .....................................2012: 252 249 160 8 170 186 977 826 2007: 265 245 141 12 151 238 860 806 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 45. Selected Operation and Operator Characteristics: 2012 and 2007 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Sutter : Tehama : Trinity : Tulare : Tuolumne : Ventura : Yolo : Yuba ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- FARMS : : Land in farms .......................................farms, 2012: 1,358 1,743 247 4,931 391 2,150 1,011 795 2007: 1,263 1,752 181 5,240 366 2,437 983 828 acres, 2012: 375,174 616,521 175,948 1,239,000 87,813 281,046 460,824 187,638 2007: 359,802 532,206 124,943 1,168,684 117,085 259,055 479,858 160,898 Harvested cropland ................................farms, 2012: 1,165 877 113 4,013 99 1,880 731 428 2007: 1,055 826 81 4,158 78 2,078 682 377 acres, 2012: 262,556 72,847 862 609,270 921 89,321 263,697 68,297 2007: 241,597 60,556 1,040 560,320 714 96,889 258,261 62,510 TENURE : : Full owners .........................................farms, 2012: 945 1,363 197 4,144 301 1,843 661 592 2007: 856 1,388 142 4,417 272 2,082 692 635 acres, 2012: 105,498 257,826 49,935 576,776 29,427 146,004 137,266 72,745 2007: 91,623 228,740 48,519 638,595 31,357 113,256 142,574 76,580 Harvested cropland ................................farms, 2012: 799 687 101 3,430 85 1,640 441 276 2007: 703 651 72 3,540 67 1,806 451 245 acres, 2012: 76,006 44,014 726 345,899 441 39,593 57,885 26,269 2007: 61,922 36,346 757 323,870 (D) 43,329 55,885 25,314 : Part owners .........................................farms, 2012: 201 280 37 505 69 101 165 112 2007: 237 275 20 530 87 121 142 114 acres, 2012: 194,447 302,467 125,020 545,413 50,504 53,234 235,397 89,246 2007: 192,606 220,014 75,902 404,728 80,115 65,920 230,906 53,980 Owned land in farms ...............................acres, 2012: 68,500 86,117 19,781 276,261 18,458 21,335 66,058 20,459 2007: 72,883 82,994 21,768 165,163 19,249 26,116 73,434 15,022 Rented land in farms ..............................acres, 2012: 125,947 216,350 105,239 269,152 32,046 31,899 169,339 68,787 2007: 119,723 137,020 54,134 239,565 60,866 39,804 157,472 38,958 Harvested cropland ................................farms, 2012: 181 142 12 416 14 75 139 74 2007: 202 138 6 431 10 96 119 61 acres, 2012: 122,887 22,324 136 233,610 480 22,079 129,673 27,947 2007: 122,124 17,786 (D) 187,331 (D) 29,689 115,311 19,263 : Tenants .............................................farms, 2012: 212 100 13 282 21 206 185 91 2007: 170 89 19 293 7 234 149 79 acres, 2012: 75,229 56,228 993 116,811 7,882 81,808 88,161 25,647 2007: 75,573 83,452 522 125,361 5,613 79,879 106,378 30,338 Harvested cropland ................................farms, 2012: 185 48 - 167 - 165 151 78 2007: 150 37 3 187 1 176 112 71 acres, 2012: 63,663 6,509 - 29,761 - 27,649 76,139 14,081 2007: 57,551 6,424 (D) 49,119 (D) 23,871 87,065 17,933 2012 NUMBER OF ALL OPERATORS : : Total operators ..........................................number: 2,297 2,841 416 7,550 635 3,385 1,759 1,321 : Farms by number of operators: : 1 operator .................................................: 673 798 104 2,792 193 1,224 476 324 2 operators ................................................: 522 827 124 1,762 168 739 428 430 3 operators ................................................: 101 92 14 308 14 136 77 31 4 operators ................................................: 50 19 4 46 16 30 13 6 5 or more operators ........................................: 12 7 1 23 - 21 17 4 : Total women operators ..................................number: 659 1,094 165 2,016 264 1,075 524 485 : Farms by number of women operators: : 1 operator ...............................................: 544 994 134 1,825 224 901 431 441 2 operators ..............................................: 53 50 14 82 17 68 39 19 3 operators ..............................................: 3 - 1 9 2 8 5 2 4 operators ..............................................: - - - - - 1 - - 5 or more operators ......................................: - - - - - 2 - - : 2007 NUMBER OF ALL OPERATORS : : Total operators ..........................................number: 2,152 2,825 278 8,170 603 3,851 1,647 1,385 : Farms by number of operators: : 1 operator .................................................: 636 863 95 2,983 164 1,370 496 382 2 operators ................................................: 489 774 77 1,785 178 846 370 373 3 operators ................................................: 87 72 7 373 13 161 78 50 4 operators ................................................: 33 28 2 59 11 34 22 19 5 or more operators ........................................: 18 15 - 40 - 26 17 4 : Total women operators ..................................number: 616 1,107 115 2,152 279 1,183 512 523 : Farms by number of women operators: : 1 operator ...............................................: 482 975 103 1,881 236 1,014 422 446 2 operators ..............................................: 56 54 6 107 14 53 42 35 3 operators ..............................................: 5 8 - 11 5 16 2 1 4 operators ..............................................: - - - 3 - - - 1 5 or more operators ......................................: 1 - - 2 - 3 - - : PRINCIPAL OPERATOR CHARACTERISTICS : : Sex of operator: : Male ..............................................farms, 2012: 1,144 1,383 178 4,352 295 1,738 821 616 2007: 1,096 1,392 135 4,615 263 2,011 822 663 acres, 2012: 337,034 540,528 163,467 1,172,092 71,449 252,857 446,255 175,119 2007: 344,810 494,290 115,365 1,089,589 101,247 223,015 463,869 134,674 : Female ............................................farms, 2012: 214 360 69 579 96 412 190 179 2007: 167 360 46 625 103 426 161 165 acres, 2012: 38,140 75,993 12,481 66,908 16,364 28,189 14,569 12,519 2007: 14,992 37,916 9,578 79,095 15,838 36,040 15,989 26,224 Primary occupation: : Farming ..................................................2012: 874 912 120 2,877 159 1,048 598 351 2007: 748 877 61 2,786 173 1,163 530 417 Other ....................................................2012: 484 831 127 2,054 232 1,102 413 444 2007: 515 875 120 2,454 193 1,274 453 411 Place of residence: : On farm operated .........................................2012: 735 1,474 229 2,981 324 1,459 606 562 2007: 768 1,487 147 3,428 310 1,633 659 629 Not on farm operated .....................................2012: 623 269 18 1,950 67 691 405 233 2007: 495 265 34 1,812 56 804 324 199 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 45. Selected Operation and Operator Characteristics: 2012 and 2007 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : California : Alameda : Alpine : Amador : Butte : Calaveras : Colusa ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- PRINCIPAL OPERATOR CHARACTERISTICS - Con. : : Days worked off farm: : None .....................................................2012: 31,311 186 - 182 853 243 327 2007: 26,322 153 3 149 675 175 231 Any ......................................................2012: 46,546 266 3 279 1,203 420 455 2007: 54,711 372 4 330 1,373 456 583 1 to 49 days ...........................................2012: 7,304 40 - 51 227 71 59 2007: 10,663 80 - 61 266 77 81 50 to 99 days ..........................................2012: 4,230 14 - 33 173 36 37 2007: 5,353 42 - 36 142 46 71 100 to 199 days ........................................2012: 7,065 32 - 40 164 67 81 2007: 8,185 53 2 68 186 93 124 200 days or more .......................................2012: 27,947 180 3 155 639 246 278 2007: 30,510 197 2 165 779 240 307 Years on present farm: : 2 years or less ..........................................2012: 3,151 34 - 20 80 37 30 2007: 3,793 28 - 36 96 20 21 3 or 4 years .............................................2012: 4,634 14 - 14 118 39 49 2007: 6,780 44 - 25 203 42 79 5 to 9 years .............................................2012: 12,863 71 - 74 351 86 126 2007: 16,286 135 - 123 398 170 125 10 years or more .........................................2012: 57,209 333 3 353 1,507 501 577 2007: 54,174 318 7 295 1,351 399 589 Average years on present farm ............................2012: 20.2 19.9 22.7 20.9 20.6 18.3 20.4 2007: 18.6 17.6 26.1 17.7 18.2 17.2 18.9 Years operating any farm (see text): : 2 years or less ..........................................2012: 2,182 25 - 16 59 25 16 2007: (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) 3 or 4 years .............................................2012: 3,648 12 - 12 97 36 29 2007: (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) 5 to 9 years .............................................2012: 10,663 63 - 62 259 69 120 2007: (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) 10 years or more .........................................2012: 61,364 352 3 371 1,641 533 617 2007: (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) Average years on any farm ................................2012: 22.7 21.8 22.7 23.4 23.6 20.7 23.0 2007: (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) Age group: : Under 25 years ...........................................2012: 253 2 - - 6 4 20 2007: 292 - - 3 4 - 11 25 to 34 years ...........................................2012: 2,968 14 - 10 62 19 76 2007: 2,466 6 - 11 86 16 53 35 to 44 years ...........................................2012: 6,255 37 - 23 158 46 74 2007: 8,279 57 - 40 242 76 91 : 45 to 54 years ...........................................2012: 15,946 98 1 69 436 151 124 2007: 20,672 139 1 113 523 158 215 55 to 59 years ...........................................2012: 11,513 55 - 76 297 104 147 2007: 12,442 89 3 60 333 98 148 60 to 64 years ...........................................2012: 11,869 106 2 60 311 80 114 2007: 11,752 56 2 72 340 87 95 : 65 to 69 years ...........................................2012: 10,683 30 - 76 321 101 80 2007: 9,264 73 - 76 198 87 89 70 years and over ........................................2012: 18,370 110 - 147 465 158 147 2007: 15,866 105 1 104 322 109 112 Average age ..............................................2012: 60.1 59.9 56.0 63.8 60.4 59.8 56.6 2007: 58.4 59.0 59.3 59.7 57.0 58.4 55.6 INTERNET ACCESS (SEE TEXT) : : Internet access ............................................2012: 59,543 350 3 353 1,716 519 653 2007: 53,738 332 6 354 1,413 433 560 Dial-up service ...................................farms, 2012: 4,703 26 - 32 115 50 41 DSL service .......................................farms, 2012: 20,030 101 1 117 564 207 380 Cable modem service ...............................farms, 2012: 9,578 68 2 21 300 28 64 Fiber-optic service ...............................farms, 2012: 1,719 6 - 10 22 4 22 Mobile broadband plan for computer : or cell phone ....................................farms, 2012: 12,454 50 2 46 318 70 132 Satellite service .................................farms, 2012: 15,193 111 - 114 489 200 179 Broadband over Power Lines (BPL) ..................farms, 2012: 2,135 6 - 3 99 1 31 Other Internet service ............................farms, 2012: 2,805 26 - 41 145 15 10 : TYPE OF ORGANIZATION (SEE TEXT) : : Operation with over 50 percent ownership interest held : by operator and/or persons related to operator by : blood/marriage/adoption ............................farms, 2012: 72,641 424 3 442 1,945 637 696 acres, 2012: 20,951,605 170,751 1,259 149,614 329,392 203,610 350,362 Limited Liability Corporation .......................farms, 2012: 4,453 32 - 13 58 23 31 acres, 2012: 2,772,951 13,546 - 2,231 8,989 13,184 24,548 OPERATION'S LEGAL STATUS FOR TAX : PURPOSES (SEE TEXT) : : Family or individual ................................farms, 2012: 59,732 341 3 378 1,647 572 556 2007: 64,001 416 3 406 1,612 548 582 acres, 2012: 12,000,544 102,390 (D) 132,769 204,091 189,135 230,143 2007: 12,828,975 101,440 (D) 131,926 183,218 166,239 256,669 Partnership .........................................farms, 2012: 8,984 38 - 38 222 44 163 2007: 9,552 55 3 38 253 45 161 acres, 2012: 6,934,159 31,069 - 12,780 111,681 9,470 165,977 2007: 7,085,500 81,631 1,380 21,229 108,852 27,594 160,734 Corporation: : Family-held .......................................farms, 2012: 5,345 24 - 27 107 21 35 2007: 4,603 34 - 22 114 23 37 acres, 2012: 4,209,678 4,421 - (D) 39,258 6,240 37,892 2007: 3,340,414 20,468 - (D) 43,026 5,646 36,094 Other than family held ............................farms, 2012: 1,016 7 - 4 9 - 9 2007: 1,147 10 1 4 21 7 22 acres, 2012: 1,149,993 31 - (D) 13,469 - 2,167 2007: 1,168,852 356 (D) (D) 30,652 108 9,233 Other - cooperative, estate or trust, : institutional, etc. ................................farms, 2012: 2,780 42 - 14 71 26 19 2007: 1,730 10 - 9 48 8 12 acres, 2012: 1,274,627 39,887 - 6,149 12,520 7,295 16,882 2007: 940,954 738 - 5,025 8,038 1,439 11,362 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 45. Selected Operation and Operator Characteristics: 2012 and 2007 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Contra Costa : Del Norte : El Dorado : Fresno : Glenn : Humboldt : Imperial ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- PRINCIPAL OPERATOR CHARACTERISTICS - Con. : : Days worked off farm: : None .....................................................2012: 216 59 501 2,258 607 371 192 2007: 201 29 400 2,083 486 324 199 Any ......................................................2012: 386 62 857 3,425 704 559 229 2007: 433 56 868 3,998 756 528 253 1 to 49 days ...........................................2012: 52 8 128 480 126 106 46 2007: 84 7 157 739 130 98 43 50 to 99 days ..........................................2012: 49 - 186 262 65 58 29 2007: 30 5 106 437 50 52 15 100 to 199 days ........................................2012: 64 9 135 567 109 127 20 2007: 51 12 162 590 117 96 25 200 days or more .......................................2012: 221 45 408 2,116 404 268 134 2007: 268 32 443 2,232 459 282 170 Years on present farm: : 2 years or less ..........................................2012: 11 16 83 232 45 24 16 2007: 22 2 92 310 40 32 11 3 or 4 years .............................................2012: 51 11 124 311 71 58 38 2007: 40 9 135 438 74 53 22 5 to 9 years .............................................2012: 95 15 257 915 210 161 62 2007: 116 18 369 923 210 132 72 10 years or more .........................................2012: 445 79 894 4,225 985 687 305 2007: 456 56 672 4,410 918 635 347 Average years on present farm ............................2012: 21.8 17.9 16.2 21.8 21.3 21.9 22.5 2007: 19.8 19.0 14.3 21.1 20.3 21.0 23.3 Years operating any farm (see text): : 2 years or less ..........................................2012: 11 16 66 122 24 17 12 2007: (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) 3 or 4 years .............................................2012: 41 6 107 243 65 50 27 2007: (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) 5 to 9 years .............................................2012: 87 19 237 715 174 133 48 2007: (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) 10 years or more .........................................2012: 463 80 948 4,603 1,048 730 334 2007: (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) Average years on any farm ................................2012: 23.4 18.8 18.1 25.0 23.9 23.9 25.8 2007: (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) Age group: : Under 25 years ...........................................2012: - - 6 33 4 3 - 2007: - - 5 35 3 6 4 25 to 34 years ...........................................2012: 8 4 16 248 83 70 28 2007: 24 4 22 255 70 34 7 35 to 44 years ...........................................2012: 52 15 113 512 159 133 34 2007: 52 10 82 629 123 71 44 : 45 to 54 years ...........................................2012: 112 35 274 1,215 257 141 93 2007: 157 28 352 1,430 341 200 129 55 to 59 years ...........................................2012: 75 21 171 887 193 114 79 2007: 82 11 191 1,026 167 145 82 60 to 64 years ...........................................2012: 95 7 225 872 219 163 66 2007: 116 10 225 751 143 143 50 : 65 to 69 years ...........................................2012: 92 23 262 609 132 131 38 2007: 85 6 163 710 153 97 47 70 years and over ........................................2012: 168 16 291 1,307 264 175 83 2007: 118 16 228 1,245 242 156 89 Average age ..............................................2012: 61.6 56.0 60.7 59.4 57.8 57.9 57.8 2007: 58.8 56.3 59.0 58.2 57.4 58.2 58.0 INTERNET ACCESS (SEE TEXT) : : Internet access ............................................2012: 501 94 1,164 4,053 1,049 654 352 2007: 414 63 967 3,433 783 561 361 Dial-up service ...................................farms, 2012: 18 4 101 290 54 42 18 DSL service .......................................farms, 2012: 206 11 337 1,447 347 207 134 Cable modem service ...............................farms, 2012: 116 57 76 381 63 195 83 Fiber-optic service ...............................farms, 2012: 17 - 15 230 66 21 6 Mobile broadband plan for computer : or cell phone ....................................farms, 2012: 55 26 271 1,251 274 98 79 Satellite service .................................farms, 2012: 112 10 443 911 290 133 64 Broadband over Power Lines (BPL) ..................farms, 2012: 10 1 27 189 18 15 15 Other Internet service ............................farms, 2012: 24 - 83 148 45 26 12 : TYPE OF ORGANIZATION (SEE TEXT) : : Operation with over 50 percent ownership interest held : by operator and/or persons related to operator by : blood/marriage/adoption ............................farms, 2012: 582 115 1,325 5,241 1,241 870 373 acres, 2012: 116,585 20,180 126,268 1,408,367 605,723 485,569 442,026 Limited Liability Corporation .......................farms, 2012: 31 6 61 264 18 25 37 acres, 2012: 9,431 477 8,160 146,444 17,864 28,924 65,676 OPERATION'S LEGAL STATUS FOR TAX : PURPOSES (SEE TEXT) : : Family or individual ................................farms, 2012: 499 95 1,162 4,289 1,042 767 243 2007: 515 66 1,117 4,700 936 735 268 acres, 2012: 77,382 (D) 82,126 670,951 252,336 338,549 213,784 2007: (D) (D) 78,500 736,792 217,887 348,975 199,469 Partnership .........................................farms, 2012: 52 13 82 729 167 96 66 2007: 60 10 98 828 218 64 80 acres, 2012: 26,409 3,221 32,382 542,768 303,493 176,799 131,391 2007: 17,928 3,227 21,823 460,846 141,029 126,081 81,588 Corporation: : Family-held .......................................farms, 2012: 31 6 50 419 71 38 65 2007: 30 7 32 401 60 24 64 acres, 2012: 13,152 2,184 8,235 341,727 61,200 54,527 115,979 2007: 8,896 1,765 1,561 343,226 77,992 104,531 111,578 Other than family held ............................farms, 2012: 4 5 18 38 10 3 27 2007: 14 2 8 37 13 8 22 acres, 2012: (D) 1,990 670 74,435 7,258 7,804 38,651 2007: (D) (D) 140 47,865 (D) 6,136 18,970 Other - cooperative, estate or trust, : institutional, etc. ................................farms, 2012: 16 2 46 208 21 26 20 2007: 15 - 13 115 15 21 18 acres, 2012: (D) (D) 4,952 91,321 44,497 15,918 15,978 2007: (D) - 5,056 47,495 (D) 11,754 15,744 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 45. Selected Operation and Operator Characteristics: 2012 and 2007 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Inyo : Kern : Kings : Lake : Lassen : Los Angeles : Madera ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- PRINCIPAL OPERATOR CHARACTERISTICS - Con. : : Days worked off farm: : None .....................................................2012: 47 900 453 339 160 581 713 2007: 29 727 388 254 148 501 612 Any ......................................................2012: 78 1,038 603 499 288 713 794 2007: 65 1,390 741 591 311 1,233 1,096 1 to 49 days ...........................................2012: 2 130 56 122 23 99 110 2007: 10 225 171 141 47 216 202 50 to 99 days ..........................................2012: - 66 30 43 25 45 50 2007: 6 87 60 60 22 75 118 100 to 199 days ........................................2012: 7 266 72 64 67 132 131 2007: 7 175 78 101 55 145 137 200 days or more .......................................2012: 69 576 445 270 173 437 503 2007: 42 903 432 289 187 797 639 Years on present farm: : 2 years or less ..........................................2012: 22 89 45 31 11 73 48 2007: 8 113 63 20 33 94 91 3 or 4 years .............................................2012: 2 112 72 49 25 64 88 2007: 5 168 79 75 54 149 136 5 to 9 years .............................................2012: 5 262 160 132 87 230 245 2007: 20 407 217 180 114 388 252 10 years or more .........................................2012: 96 1,475 779 626 325 927 1,126 2007: 61 1,429 770 570 258 1,103 1,229 Average years on present farm ............................2012: 21.8 20.9 21.6 20.3 20.0 18.7 21.3 2007: 20.3 18.7 20.3 18.9 15.7 16.8 20.7 Years operating any farm (see text): : 2 years or less ..........................................2012: 21 59 33 25 10 54 33 2007: (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) 3 or 4 years .............................................2012: 1 72 30 42 21 57 78 2007: (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) 5 to 9 years .............................................2012: 4 185 135 109 58 176 169 2007: (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) 10 years or more .........................................2012: 99 1,622 858 662 359 1,007 1,227 2007: (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) Average years on any farm ................................2012: 23.0 24.5 24.6 22.6 22.8 20.8 25.0 2007: (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) Age group: : Under 25 years ...........................................2012: 6 10 5 - - 4 5 2007: 2 7 4 2 9 3 14 25 to 34 years ...........................................2012: 8 64 37 26 27 38 93 2007: - 45 61 6 15 32 56 35 to 44 years ...........................................2012: 7 170 155 35 27 75 118 2007: 6 239 160 60 75 181 157 : 45 to 54 years ...........................................2012: 21 397 264 137 122 354 281 2007: 21 600 293 202 94 528 401 55 to 59 years ...........................................2012: 21 278 132 118 71 259 192 2007: 21 278 162 149 78 300 316 60 to 64 years ...........................................2012: 21 298 150 136 69 172 285 2007: 15 321 152 150 73 182 236 : 65 to 69 years ...........................................2012: 23 286 117 151 38 147 184 2007: 11 267 113 75 48 215 165 70 years and over ........................................2012: 18 435 196 235 94 245 349 2007: 18 360 184 201 67 293 363 Average age ..............................................2012: 56.8 59.7 57.5 62.6 57.9 59.1 59.3 2007: 59.4 57.7 56.3 60.4 55.8 57.7 58.6 INTERNET ACCESS (SEE TEXT) : : Internet access ............................................2012: 105 1,433 824 618 358 901 1,163 2007: 60 1,400 786 520 324 1,160 1,091 Dial-up service ...................................farms, 2012: 14 192 62 64 15 28 74 DSL service .......................................farms, 2012: 32 345 122 284 205 416 401 Cable modem service ...............................farms, 2012: 51 275 176 82 23 257 261 Fiber-optic service ...............................farms, 2012: - 34 10 8 4 58 26 Mobile broadband plan for computer : or cell phone ....................................farms, 2012: 18 307 223 73 47 105 348 Satellite service .................................farms, 2012: 5 453 297 135 72 106 299 Broadband over Power Lines (BPL) ..................farms, 2012: 1 49 25 15 4 15 74 Other Internet service ............................farms, 2012: 2 35 56 29 11 30 36 : TYPE OF ORGANIZATION (SEE TEXT) : : Operation with over 50 percent ownership interest held : by operator and/or persons related to operator by : blood/marriage/adoption ............................farms, 2012: 117 1,697 963 802 420 1,215 1,366 acres, 2012: 327,440 1,601,496 386,509 145,896 329,625 74,153 546,493 Limited Liability Corporation .......................farms, 2012: 8 180 27 36 9 50 141 acres, 2012: 3,068 360,273 17,618 58,550 33,320 5,602 46,191 OPERATION'S LEGAL STATUS FOR TAX : PURPOSES (SEE TEXT) : : Family or individual ................................farms, 2012: 77 1,246 752 740 375 989 1,079 2007: 66 1,412 845 740 393 1,382 1,264 acres, 2012: 100,517 714,132 (D) 90,080 214,032 45,148 338,039 2007: (D) 924,498 (D) 90,738 273,203 62,063 429,337 Partnership .........................................farms, 2012: 17 403 201 39 36 95 265 2007: 18 431 198 66 32 149 273 acres, 2012: 108,794 869,515 258,130 6,539 186,915 4,999 209,692 2007: 108,465 886,379 249,633 22,687 117,457 19,010 141,740 Corporation: : Family-held .......................................farms, 2012: 19 178 70 27 21 118 89 2007: 6 162 54 19 12 124 93 acres, 2012: 113,609 466,726 72,457 8,667 34,044 8,012 74,838 2007: 26,668 372,431 47,366 7,541 37,994 15,047 86,444 Other than family held ............................farms, 2012: - 55 10 7 8 34 19 2007: - 49 18 2 10 53 27 acres, 2012: - 130,510 (D) 1,082 10,794 31,082 12,817 2007: - 119,199 (D) (D) (D) 11,002 9,591 Other - cooperative, estate or trust, : institutional, etc. ................................farms, 2012: 12 56 23 25 8 58 55 2007: 4 63 14 18 12 26 51 acres, 2012: 7,920 149,350 16,342 44,353 36,895 2,448 18,198 2007: (D) 59,258 5,279 (D) (D) 1,341 12,617 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 45. Selected Operation and Operator Characteristics: 2012 and 2007 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Marin : Mariposa : Mendocino : Merced : Modoc : Mono : Monterey ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- PRINCIPAL OPERATOR CHARACTERISTICS - Con. : : Days worked off farm: : None .....................................................2012: 148 147 535 1,042 188 31 446 2007: 90 94 369 951 167 31 372 Any ......................................................2012: 175 217 685 1,444 249 41 733 2007: 165 208 767 1,656 281 53 827 1 to 49 days ...........................................2012: 15 23 143 175 60 1 94 2007: 24 40 127 287 56 4 121 50 to 99 days ..........................................2012: 23 16 91 133 35 1 76 2007: 15 15 101 159 30 13 87 100 to 199 days ........................................2012: 38 43 105 172 20 11 140 2007: 31 38 146 260 35 14 112 200 days or more .......................................2012: 99 135 346 964 134 28 423 2007: 95 115 393 950 160 22 507 Years on present farm: : 2 years or less ..........................................2012: 10 25 31 96 6 1 65 2007: 7 8 42 112 38 4 68 3 or 4 years .............................................2012: 30 21 45 119 16 1 67 2007: 23 40 78 195 27 1 100 5 to 9 years .............................................2012: 52 80 191 357 71 5 158 2007: 43 58 222 433 60 21 256 10 years or more .........................................2012: 231 238 953 1,914 344 65 889 2007: 182 196 794 1,867 323 58 775 Average years on present farm ............................2012: 22.8 19.7 21.9 21.3 22.8 21.5 20.1 2007: 23.5 17.5 19.5 20.3 21.2 19.2 17.8 Years operating any farm (see text): : 2 years or less ..........................................2012: 9 18 18 46 3 1 35 2007: (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) 3 or 4 years .............................................2012: 25 19 33 95 10 - 56 2007: (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) 5 to 9 years .............................................2012: 46 65 166 298 63 5 140 2007: (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) 10 years or more .........................................2012: 243 262 1,003 2,047 361 66 948 2007: (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) Average years on any farm ................................2012: 24.4 23.0 24.4 24.0 26.5 23.4 22.8 2007: (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) Age group: : Under 25 years ...........................................2012: 3 - 2 20 - - 8 2007: - - 3 3 3 - 5 25 to 34 years ...........................................2012: 11 19 33 135 20 - 59 2007: 7 7 15 129 31 - 38 35 to 44 years ...........................................2012: 30 35 91 213 40 1 77 2007: 21 33 68 373 34 9 172 : 45 to 54 years ...........................................2012: 62 67 196 537 58 21 315 2007: 72 58 267 651 116 30 382 55 to 59 years ...........................................2012: 60 24 148 337 87 16 184 2007: 40 53 196 386 60 14 167 60 to 64 years ...........................................2012: 52 60 199 439 51 14 168 2007: 26 57 203 354 78 6 140 : 65 to 69 years ...........................................2012: 22 51 196 304 71 4 140 2007: 33 28 138 303 36 6 109 70 years and over ........................................2012: 83 108 355 501 110 16 228 2007: 56 66 246 408 90 19 186 Average age ..............................................2012: 60.0 61.3 62.1 58.4 60.5 61.5 58.4 2007: 59.7 59.3 60.6 56.4 57.4 58.0 56.0 INTERNET ACCESS (SEE TEXT) : : Internet access ............................................2012: 286 307 969 1,703 353 57 958 2007: 175 225 809 1,608 314 56 781 Dial-up service ...................................farms, 2012: 36 23 98 109 35 9 87 DSL service .......................................farms, 2012: 53 162 305 581 189 9 304 Cable modem service ...............................farms, 2012: 45 24 125 211 21 4 112 Fiber-optic service ...............................farms, 2012: 7 6 7 19 2 - 22 Mobile broadband plan for computer : or cell phone ....................................farms, 2012: 76 19 135 533 65 5 201 Satellite service .................................farms, 2012: 86 91 303 413 90 23 341 Broadband over Power Lines (BPL) ..................farms, 2012: 4 - 25 75 5 13 37 Other Internet service ............................farms, 2012: 16 5 52 90 14 1 22 : TYPE OF ORGANIZATION (SEE TEXT) : : Operation with over 50 percent ownership interest held : by operator and/or persons related to operator by : blood/marriage/adoption ............................farms, 2012: 308 348 1,155 2,290 415 69 1,060 acres, 2012: 154,607 255,751 703,660 785,191 486,320 53,716 975,082 Limited Liability Corporation .......................farms, 2012: 25 23 60 131 19 11 119 acres, 2012: 24,570 21,593 110,960 76,027 72,639 11,845 365,633 OPERATION'S LEGAL STATUS FOR TAX : PURPOSES (SEE TEXT) : : Family or individual ................................farms, 2012: 221 320 971 1,835 342 52 773 2007: 190 266 937 1,991 380 64 776 acres, 2012: 90,494 196,876 444,620 438,961 234,887 (D) 535,782 2007: (D) 192,613 344,908 605,106 312,948 12,926 609,680 Partnership .........................................farms, 2012: 54 20 131 415 41 9 203 2007: 34 26 114 392 38 11 216 acres, 2012: 47,014 59,220 109,207 326,042 117,132 13,970 420,725 2007: (D) (D) 126,670 242,267 146,298 10,728 446,089 Corporation: : Family-held .......................................farms, 2012: 34 11 73 141 22 6 140 2007: 20 5 53 123 16 7 135 acres, 2012: 29,944 23,485 157,166 162,468 137,159 26,546 196,891 2007: 13,502 1,449 69,485 148,188 36,302 (D) 139,601 Other than family held ............................farms, 2012: 1 1 10 27 4 - 37 2007: 3 3 5 43 6 - 45 acres, 2012: (D) (D) 1,334 24,641 1,108 - 77,745 2007: 200 21 3,197 28,200 (D) - 111,747 Other - cooperative, estate or trust, : institutional, etc. ................................farms, 2012: 13 12 35 68 28 5 26 2007: 8 2 27 58 8 2 27 acres, 2012: (D) (D) 57,930 26,555 33,236 (D) 37,001 2007: 818 (D) 64,414 17,354 (D) (D) 20,855 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 45. Selected Operation and Operator Characteristics: 2012 and 2007 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Napa : Nevada : Orange : Placer : Plumas : Riverside : Sacramento ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- PRINCIPAL OPERATOR CHARACTERISTICS - Con. : : Days worked off farm: : None .....................................................2012: 631 230 153 568 42 1,110 481 2007: 410 190 123 494 55 1,187 446 Any ......................................................2012: 1,054 512 159 787 99 1,839 871 2007: 1,228 500 202 994 87 2,276 947 1 to 49 days ...........................................2012: 259 93 17 144 7 279 174 2007: 368 87 27 160 13 420 162 50 to 99 days ..........................................2012: 103 39 9 64 9 160 53 2007: 130 64 20 88 1 273 70 100 to 199 days ........................................2012: 156 71 41 142 17 231 97 2007: 186 80 21 189 14 310 121 200 days or more .......................................2012: 536 309 92 437 66 1,169 547 2007: 544 269 134 557 59 1,273 594 Years on present farm: : 2 years or less ..........................................2012: 79 29 18 60 7 130 93 2007: 61 44 7 58 5 167 73 3 or 4 years .............................................2012: 108 88 24 86 2 197 102 2007: 117 92 38 95 7 366 130 5 to 9 years .............................................2012: 270 166 37 175 33 522 220 2007: 429 178 61 355 53 853 267 10 years or more .........................................2012: 1,228 459 233 1,034 99 2,100 937 2007: 1,031 376 219 980 77 2,077 923 Average years on present farm ............................2012: 17.9 15.1 24.2 21.3 19.6 18.3 19.8 2007: 16.4 14.5 20.3 18.8 17.7 15.9 18.1 Years operating any farm (see text): : 2 years or less ..........................................2012: 64 23 17 45 5 99 77 2007: (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) 3 or 4 years .............................................2012: 84 70 19 64 4 163 76 2007: (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) 5 to 9 years .............................................2012: 220 151 39 158 31 447 195 2007: (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) 10 years or more .........................................2012: 1,317 498 237 1,088 101 2,240 1,004 2007: (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) Average years on any farm ................................2012: 19.9 17.8 25.7 23.3 21.7 20.5 22.3 2007: (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) Age group: : Under 25 years ...........................................2012: - 3 - 3 2 13 - 2007: - - 2 6 - 9 8 25 to 34 years ...........................................2012: 63 39 3 48 9 73 92 2007: 35 10 3 38 3 109 26 35 to 44 years ...........................................2012: 146 57 25 105 13 183 132 2007: 127 86 22 143 7 359 167 : 45 to 54 years ...........................................2012: 230 161 66 300 37 661 292 2007: 379 209 97 407 45 868 395 55 to 59 years ...........................................2012: 215 148 39 181 24 426 188 2007: 273 118 51 216 12 477 171 60 to 64 years ...........................................2012: 303 80 56 206 18 417 212 2007: 256 124 44 218 29 532 235 : 65 to 69 years ...........................................2012: 300 122 48 185 15 427 173 2007: 209 65 27 166 19 375 147 70 years and over ........................................2012: 428 132 75 327 23 749 263 2007: 359 78 79 294 27 734 244 Average age ..............................................2012: 61.5 58.3 62.2 60.4 56.9 61.0 57.8 2007: 59.9 56.6 60.2 58.4 59.7 58.6 57.6 INTERNET ACCESS (SEE TEXT) : : Internet access ............................................2012: 1,391 646 223 1,093 125 2,173 1,002 2007: 1,173 543 229 1,116 102 2,288 1,020 Dial-up service ...................................farms, 2012: 78 54 14 66 12 139 45 DSL service .......................................farms, 2012: 607 208 75 294 68 880 560 Cable modem service ...............................farms, 2012: 265 25 112 93 6 394 160 Fiber-optic service ...............................farms, 2012: 35 55 13 6 4 238 14 Mobile broadband plan for computer : or cell phone ....................................farms, 2012: 250 107 27 313 20 331 150 Satellite service .................................farms, 2012: 278 197 13 321 29 346 123 Broadband over Power Lines (BPL) ..................farms, 2012: 43 39 7 96 - 56 29 Other Internet service ............................farms, 2012: 76 47 4 85 - 58 35 : TYPE OF ORGANIZATION (SEE TEXT) : : Operation with over 50 percent ownership interest held : by operator and/or persons related to operator by : blood/marriage/adoption ............................farms, 2012: 1,469 731 272 1,329 134 2,764 1,291 acres, 2012: 194,561 40,054 13,230 74,780 115,034 296,225 231,815 Limited Liability Corporation .......................farms, 2012: 319 13 17 26 10 161 93 acres, 2012: 35,053 337 (D) 1,716 21,388 56,006 22,511 OPERATION'S LEGAL STATUS FOR TAX : PURPOSES (SEE TEXT) : : Family or individual ................................farms, 2012: 1,049 654 208 1,206 98 2,335 1,102 2007: 1,089 628 231 1,323 114 2,800 1,154 acres, 2012: 113,185 35,158 11,554 59,218 48,378 179,177 108,848 2007: 133,425 54,526 (D) 101,772 (D) 143,269 175,875 Partnership .........................................farms, 2012: 300 53 35 69 15 232 127 2007: 256 36 34 95 15 327 112 acres, 2012: 49,070 5,583 3,935 14,963 79,074 49,121 78,846 2007: 29,056 12,908 25,875 17,183 74,721 70,548 94,852 Corporation: : Family-held .......................................farms, 2012: 190 22 45 41 18 241 78 2007: 171 14 37 39 6 186 61 acres, 2012: 67,718 574 42,514 15,200 44,665 73,698 49,485 2007: 38,184 1,980 1,598 8,173 21,572 72,917 38,750 Other than family held ............................farms, 2012: 44 1 9 5 - 45 16 2007: 53 8 11 10 1 63 33 acres, 2012: 17,504 (D) 1,975 162 - 23,708 5,683 2007: 14,759 43 (D) 1,625 (D) 16,783 15,053 Other - cooperative, estate or trust, : institutional, etc. ................................farms, 2012: 102 12 15 34 10 96 29 2007: 69 4 12 21 6 87 33 acres, 2012: 5,893 (D) 519 1,860 2,093 18,340 3,978 2007: 7,822 710 709 3,468 628 51,236 4,063 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 45. Selected Operation and Operator Characteristics: 2012 and 2007 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : San Benito :San Bernardino : San Diego : San Francisco : San Joaquin :San Luis Obispo: San Mateo :Santa Barbara ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- PRINCIPAL OPERATOR CHARACTERISTICS - Con. : : Days worked off farm: : None .....................................................2012: 235 496 1,845 5 1,711 933 131 717 2007: 187 471 1,780 3 1,306 850 114 543 Any ......................................................2012: 393 753 3,887 1 1,869 1,733 203 880 2007: 438 934 4,907 3 2,318 1,934 215 1,054 1 to 49 days ...........................................2012: 57 134 695 - 269 216 29 140 2007: 83 157 1,324 - 418 413 19 234 50 to 99 days ..........................................2012: 30 51 281 - 156 174 13 99 2007: 35 62 526 - 219 189 19 91 100 to 199 days ........................................2012: 52 168 443 - 371 245 34 120 2007: 73 125 630 - 420 332 32 143 200 days or more .......................................2012: 254 400 2,468 1 1,073 1,098 127 521 2007: 247 590 2,427 3 1,261 1,000 145 586 Years on present farm: : 2 years or less ..........................................2012: 27 62 168 - 127 74 14 67 2007: 25 59 334 - 137 133 7 73 3 or 4 years .............................................2012: 40 88 305 - 183 186 37 67 2007: 35 163 659 3 219 218 15 146 5 to 9 years .............................................2012: 79 224 1,297 1 481 498 40 229 2007: 96 272 1,636 - 589 659 62 333 10 years or more .........................................2012: 482 875 3,962 5 2,789 1,908 243 1,234 2007: 469 911 4,058 3 2,679 1,774 245 1,045 Average years on present farm ............................2012: 21.0 19.1 17.6 17.5 23.6 18.6 21.4 19.8 2007: 18.6 17.6 15.8 14.8 22.0 17.1 20.9 17.3 Years operating any farm (see text): : 2 years or less ..........................................2012: 16 49 117 - 77 56 13 42 2007: (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) 3 or 4 years .............................................2012: 32 68 259 - 137 130 27 48 2007: (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) 5 to 9 years .............................................2012: 64 194 1,191 1 321 426 47 194 2007: (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) 10 years or more .........................................2012: 516 938 4,165 5 3,045 2,054 247 1,313 2007: (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) Average years on any farm ................................2012: 23.7 20.8 19.3 17.5 26.6 21.1 22.5 22.4 2007: (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) Age group: : Under 25 years ...........................................2012: - - 3 - 6 7 - 3 2007: 3 5 13 - 17 3 - 8 25 to 34 years ...........................................2012: 39 34 114 - 127 73 24 25 2007: 24 34 119 - 101 70 3 44 35 to 44 years ...........................................2012: 51 85 261 1 247 213 31 143 2007: 46 129 531 1 371 238 45 169 : 45 to 54 years ...........................................2012: 100 259 1,171 - 735 475 55 311 2007: 158 360 1,678 3 921 687 79 383 55 to 59 years ...........................................2012: 118 210 800 - 546 375 51 224 2007: 103 219 1,087 2 510 454 55 206 60 to 64 years ...........................................2012: 99 193 872 - 484 449 58 249 2007: 103 217 938 - 514 456 58 259 : 65 to 69 years ...........................................2012: 74 169 1,006 5 462 407 54 220 2007: 75 128 787 - 433 307 41 178 70 years and over ........................................2012: 147 299 1,505 - 973 667 61 422 2007: 113 313 1,534 - 757 569 48 350 Average age ..............................................2012: 59.4 60.6 62.3 61.2 61.0 61.2 58.6 61.2 2007: 58.3 58.9 60.0 48.0 58.8 59.2 57.9 59.0 INTERNET ACCESS (SEE TEXT) : : Internet access ............................................2012: 415 925 4,113 1 2,549 2,211 264 1,283 2007: 397 895 4,521 3 2,331 2,004 238 1,100 Dial-up service ...................................farms, 2012: 38 57 307 - 262 128 25 59 DSL service .......................................farms, 2012: 100 302 1,277 - 709 587 77 376 Cable modem service ...............................farms, 2012: 46 217 945 - 354 263 49 443 Fiber-optic service ...............................farms, 2012: 2 134 84 - 15 65 3 15 Mobile broadband plan for computer : or cell phone ....................................farms, 2012: 72 149 741 - 705 381 59 172 Satellite service .................................farms, 2012: 180 127 1,002 - 576 904 57 313 Broadband over Power Lines (BPL) ..................farms, 2012: 7 19 90 1 205 37 14 29 Other Internet service ............................farms, 2012: 21 9 143 1 160 105 24 41 : TYPE OF ORGANIZATION (SEE TEXT) : : Operation with over 50 percent ownership interest held : by operator and/or persons related to operator by : blood/marriage/adoption ............................farms, 2012: 581 1,181 5,522 6 3,302 2,500 293 1,436 acres, 2012: 557,544 73,370 150,908 12 656,599 1,071,424 41,367 503,520 Limited Liability Corporation .......................farms, 2012: 60 68 251 - 147 224 18 173 acres, 2012: 129,880 7,616 18,022 - 55,182 172,653 5,572 108,143 OPERATION'S LEGAL STATUS FOR TAX : PURPOSES (SEE TEXT) : : Family or individual ................................farms, 2012: 516 1,014 4,757 4 2,703 1,984 216 1,065 2007: 510 1,158 5,686 5 2,765 2,214 247 1,131 acres, 2012: (D) 55,407 98,941 (D) 395,029 728,206 23,036 250,785 2007: (D) (D) 156,705 (D) 350,124 700,284 37,899 344,776 Partnership .........................................farms, 2012: 60 122 317 2 464 279 36 165 2007: 56 142 440 - 519 286 29 184 acres, 2012: 102,680 9,542 27,295 (D) 170,524 301,043 8,744 88,597 2007: 130,038 (D) 56,450 - 180,678 411,437 14,884 218,405 Corporation: : Family-held .......................................farms, 2012: 33 59 357 - 288 240 51 229 2007: 36 60 328 - 252 184 45 206 acres, 2012: 22,262 4,970 25,330 - 177,448 144,935 6,314 144,370 2007: 22,000 11,106 28,364 - 161,798 121,986 3,267 107,433 Other than family held ............................farms, 2012: 8 21 85 - 30 69 2 49 2007: 9 15 76 - 27 41 5 29 acres, 2012: (D) 3,568 29,291 - 32,419 114,668 (D) 87,330 2007: (D) 648 43,750 - 34,598 4,497 (D) 16,767 Other - cooperative, estate or trust, : institutional, etc. ................................farms, 2012: 11 33 216 - 95 94 29 89 2007: 14 30 157 1 61 59 3 47 acres, 2012: (D) 3,712 40,681 - 11,595 50,022 (D) 129,957 2007: 20,745 3,745 18,620 (D) 10,305 131,400 (D) 39,669 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 45. Selected Operation and Operator Characteristics: 2012 and 2007 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Santa Clara : Santa Cruz : Shasta : Sierra : Siskiyou : Solano : Sonoma : Stanislaus ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- PRINCIPAL OPERATOR CHARACTERISTICS - Con. : : Days worked off farm: : None .....................................................2012: 448 303 470 21 407 431 1,436 2,073 2007: 322 252 474 20 307 317 1,048 1,449 Any ......................................................2012: 555 364 1,074 27 522 429 2,143 2,070 2007: 746 430 999 30 539 573 2,381 2,665 1 to 49 days ...........................................2012: 97 66 137 4 96 81 394 316 2007: 142 73 183 6 112 84 560 444 50 to 99 days ..........................................2012: 34 31 85 1 49 43 254 196 2007: 81 56 105 - 51 41 232 261 100 to 199 days ........................................2012: 55 65 211 3 95 66 334 266 2007: 87 36 161 7 108 94 362 388 200 days or more .......................................2012: 369 202 641 19 282 239 1,161 1,292 2007: 436 265 550 17 268 354 1,227 1,572 Years on present farm: : 2 years or less ..........................................2012: 27 24 62 8 47 36 162 118 2007: 46 29 67 - 27 17 172 158 3 or 4 years .............................................2012: 72 60 79 6 43 60 259 215 2007: 116 49 146 7 69 91 259 273 5 to 9 years .............................................2012: 156 83 304 7 176 103 550 554 2007: 204 140 401 9 137 198 740 709 10 years or more .........................................2012: 748 500 1,099 27 663 661 2,608 3,256 2007: 702 464 859 34 613 584 2,258 2,974 Average years on present farm ............................2012: 20.4 20.3 18.6 17.7 20.5 21.2 19.2 22.3 2007: 18.7 19.2 16.0 19.3 19.8 18.3 18.0 20.4 Years operating any farm (see text): : 2 years or less ..........................................2012: 19 16 42 8 25 20 124 81 2007: (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) 3 or 4 years .............................................2012: 67 46 57 1 34 43 210 163 2007: (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) 5 to 9 years .............................................2012: 129 74 253 11 145 101 493 463 2007: (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) 10 years or more .........................................2012: 788 531 1,192 28 725 696 2,752 3,436 2007: (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) Average years on any farm ................................2012: 22.5 22.3 21.1 19.5 23.2 23.8 21.3 24.6 2007: (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) Age group: : Under 25 years ...........................................2012: - - 3 - - 1 1 10 2007: - - - - - 6 12 14 25 to 34 years ...........................................2012: 18 11 47 7 39 15 143 178 2007: 25 22 53 - 30 17 103 164 35 to 44 years ...........................................2012: 56 48 92 - 77 86 276 356 2007: 92 71 189 - 82 84 267 490 : 45 to 54 years ...........................................2012: 166 167 334 8 145 158 777 919 2007: 278 198 380 12 193 217 810 1,084 55 to 59 years ...........................................2012: 176 90 219 7 184 123 470 636 2007: 190 100 236 11 145 139 481 609 60 to 64 years ...........................................2012: 194 102 212 2 134 140 549 578 2007: 139 87 188 12 137 140 610 554 : 65 to 69 years ...........................................2012: 153 82 283 12 136 109 473 518 2007: 131 84 180 5 99 153 410 470 70 years and over ........................................2012: 240 167 354 12 214 228 890 948 2007: 213 120 247 10 160 134 736 729 Average age ..............................................2012: 62.0 60.6 60.5 59.6 60.2 60.8 60.1 59.3 2007: 59.3 57.8 57.2 61.5 58.5 58.5 59.4 57.3 INTERNET ACCESS (SEE TEXT) : : Internet access ............................................2012: 776 557 1,169 41 753 706 2,965 3,297 2007: 736 485 1,051 30 603 600 2,442 2,640 Dial-up service ...................................farms, 2012: 151 28 92 - 54 37 155 493 DSL service .......................................farms, 2012: 285 257 661 11 389 164 846 831 Cable modem service ...............................farms, 2012: 99 111 50 8 85 54 871 333 Fiber-optic service ...............................farms, 2012: 13 7 8 - 14 17 68 39 Mobile broadband plan for computer : or cell phone ....................................farms, 2012: 119 85 120 18 115 213 698 771 Satellite service .................................farms, 2012: 135 118 256 13 186 255 540 926 Broadband over Power Lines (BPL) ..................farms, 2012: 14 16 35 1 8 35 96 133 Other Internet service ............................farms, 2012: 60 30 28 1 19 51 139 175 : TYPE OF ORGANIZATION (SEE TEXT) : : Operation with over 50 percent ownership interest held : by operator and/or persons related to operator by : blood/marriage/adoption ............................farms, 2012: 937 619 1,482 48 885 814 3,350 3,914 acres, 2012: 123,605 83,500 342,016 39,141 588,196 354,340 504,184 695,384 Limited Liability Corporation .......................farms, 2012: 64 41 73 - 28 36 385 178 acres, 2012: 54,380 5,813 70,618 - 53,555 26,106 96,858 27,915 OPERATION'S LEGAL STATUS FOR TAX : PURPOSES (SEE TEXT) : : Family or individual ................................farms, 2012: 784 477 1,376 34 750 670 2,716 3,316 2007: 838 496 1,360 48 702 728 2,690 3,394 acres, 2012: 76,201 59,093 269,281 13,700 323,214 176,810 275,807 483,835 2007: 178,232 17,985 (D) (D) 260,798 190,347 303,625 522,070 Partnership .........................................farms, 2012: 105 74 76 5 79 86 393 426 2007: 116 92 64 - 80 95 398 440 acres, 2012: 83,719 15,457 19,832 (D) 195,456 127,587 103,117 151,086 2007: 62,753 18,328 29,100 - 220,358 97,648 103,980 128,677 Corporation: : Family-held .......................................farms, 2012: 60 72 41 3 46 54 263 258 2007: 55 63 25 2 33 43 199 212 acres, 2012: 48,710 10,821 61,804 (D) 173,358 69,549 158,638 110,246 2007: 32,877 6,465 22,727 (D) 106,737 60,956 82,342 126,296 Other than family held ............................farms, 2012: 13 23 8 3 9 16 61 27 2007: 25 21 7 - 8 14 76 23 acres, 2012: 834 10,283 2,832 465 11,123 7,003 17,474 14,736 2007: 2,482 1,010 5,597 - 1,611 8,590 14,489 7,519 Other - cooperative, estate or trust, : institutional, etc. ................................farms, 2012: 41 21 43 3 45 34 146 116 2007: 34 10 17 - 23 10 66 45 acres, 2012: 20,463 4,329 22,557 (D) 19,704 26,152 34,735 8,143 2007: 23,522 3,701 (D) - 8,030 684 26,459 4,392 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 45. Selected Operation and Operator Characteristics: 2012 and 2007 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Sutter : Tehama : Trinity : Tulare : Tuolumne : Ventura : Yolo : Yuba ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- PRINCIPAL OPERATOR CHARACTERISTICS - Con. : : Days worked off farm: : None .....................................................2012: 519 744 92 1,667 157 824 434 272 2007: 458 592 47 1,640 86 715 303 292 Any ......................................................2012: 839 999 155 3,264 234 1,326 577 523 2007: 805 1,160 134 3,600 280 1,722 680 536 1 to 49 days ...........................................2012: 154 153 45 395 30 261 74 41 2007: 158 194 31 602 44 460 108 83 50 to 99 days ..........................................2012: 113 81 16 241 18 113 47 91 2007: 93 111 14 379 27 172 44 19 100 to 199 days ........................................2012: 146 147 25 404 66 162 80 69 2007: 150 165 27 487 74 259 100 91 200 days or more .......................................2012: 426 618 69 2,224 120 790 376 322 2007: 404 690 62 2,132 135 831 428 343 Years on present farm: : 2 years or less ..........................................2012: 70 78 12 175 11 73 58 54 2007: 73 114 6 261 18 84 80 47 3 or 4 years .............................................2012: 102 89 19 258 29 93 82 46 2007: 82 186 6 479 38 217 78 87 5 to 9 years .............................................2012: 242 328 22 929 71 315 155 138 2007: 176 414 41 840 98 505 183 186 10 years or more .........................................2012: 944 1,248 194 3,569 280 1,669 716 557 2007: 932 1,038 128 3,660 212 1,631 642 508 Average years on present farm ............................2012: 20.8 19.5 19.4 20.5 18.9 20.7 19.1 19.4 2007: 21.3 17.0 18.0 19.2 16.5 17.9 19.0 17.5 Years operating any farm (see text): : 2 years or less ..........................................2012: 50 53 4 113 6 50 49 48 2007: (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) 3 or 4 years .............................................2012: 75 80 21 202 26 82 53 43 2007: (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) 5 to 9 years .............................................2012: 199 274 12 661 71 263 122 108 2007: (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) 10 years or more .........................................2012: 1,034 1,336 210 3,955 288 1,755 787 596 2007: (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) Average years on any farm ................................2012: 23.5 21.9 23.5 23.7 20.1 22.9 22.1 21.8 2007: (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) Age group: : Under 25 years ...........................................2012: 14 3 - 17 - 4 13 6 2007: 8 3 - 23 4 11 11 - 25 to 34 years ...........................................2012: 80 101 19 194 15 36 81 13 2007: 54 66 - 157 15 43 34 34 35 to 44 years ...........................................2012: 136 157 26 498 31 90 95 108 2007: 139 194 22 723 27 172 69 112 : 45 to 54 years ...........................................2012: 273 340 25 1,081 87 398 196 181 2007: 320 421 43 1,290 119 601 299 237 55 to 59 years ...........................................2012: 229 209 43 802 46 352 140 96 2007: 185 311 24 692 55 393 152 110 60 to 64 years ...........................................2012: 182 265 47 663 58 341 148 124 2007: 177 225 27 708 58 375 130 119 : 65 to 69 years ...........................................2012: 166 226 39 579 71 297 126 117 2007: 147 192 37 575 31 306 84 72 70 years and over ........................................2012: 278 442 48 1,097 83 632 212 150 2007: 233 340 28 1,072 57 536 204 144 Average age ..............................................2012: 58.2 59.4 59.0 59.2 60.0 62.6 57.7 58.8 2007: 57.5 57.8 58.9 58.1 56.8 59.8 58.0 56.6 INTERNET ACCESS (SEE TEXT) : : Internet access ............................................2012: 1,040 1,284 187 3,343 298 1,742 813 662 2007: 806 1,189 116 2,943 262 1,624 653 609 Dial-up service ...................................farms, 2012: 100 150 36 241 22 78 71 74 DSL service .......................................farms, 2012: 214 421 16 959 129 714 365 181 Cable modem service ...............................farms, 2012: 161 72 28 569 12 524 50 58 Fiber-optic service ...............................farms, 2012: 11 5 2 50 1 89 85 5 Mobile broadband plan for computer : or cell phone ....................................farms, 2012: 324 239 37 810 24 260 189 128 Satellite service .................................farms, 2012: 331 450 103 795 124 326 160 239 Broadband over Power Lines (BPL) ..................farms, 2012: 51 68 3 125 - 66 41 14 Other Internet service ............................farms, 2012: 26 48 5 264 11 54 70 41 : TYPE OF ORGANIZATION (SEE TEXT) : : Operation with over 50 percent ownership interest held : by operator and/or persons related to operator by : blood/marriage/adoption ............................farms, 2012: 1,228 1,692 241 4,516 389 1,936 925 735 acres, 2012: 317,692 584,185 175,152 1,039,768 85,413 237,350 367,992 157,599 Limited Liability Corporation .......................farms, 2012: 55 41 3 248 7 174 68 34 acres, 2012: 12,753 38,224 (D) 66,625 2,750 38,778 50,528 11,798 OPERATION'S LEGAL STATUS FOR TAX : PURPOSES (SEE TEXT) : : Family or individual ................................farms, 2012: 967 1,515 210 3,479 350 1,466 726 619 2007: 904 1,568 148 3,976 329 1,759 726 670 acres, 2012: 152,034 425,177 108,719 535,658 65,089 147,990 200,427 94,454 2007: 151,406 371,813 (D) 522,500 96,923 130,562 231,762 (D) Partnership .........................................farms, 2012: 250 122 23 848 25 310 126 121 2007: 221 98 18 865 24 335 155 109 acres, 2012: 145,969 114,808 51,734 387,493 12,631 60,815 128,617 61,031 2007: 133,127 78,081 23,549 369,273 10,879 55,729 127,649 (D) Corporation: : Family-held .......................................farms, 2012: 92 59 4 346 5 190 92 25 2007: 85 49 11 232 2 189 71 30 acres, 2012: 68,480 62,407 (D) 240,086 7,855 44,257 92,418 17,037 2007: 57,978 70,227 17,299 178,676 (D) 48,468 87,970 14,146 Other than family held ............................farms, 2012: 11 6 - 52 - 40 7 9 2007: 18 6 1 49 5 61 10 9 acres, 2012: 3,445 3,500 - 13,584 - 11,628 9,965 3,595 2007: 10,565 1,784 (D) 12,904 8,875 13,729 18,847 2,623 Other - cooperative, estate or trust, : institutional, etc. ................................farms, 2012: 38 41 10 206 11 144 60 21 2007: 35 31 3 118 6 93 21 10 acres, 2012: 5,246 10,629 (D) 62,179 2,238 16,356 29,397 11,521 2007: 6,726 10,301 2,016 85,331 (D) 10,567 13,630 (D) ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Table 46. Women Principal Operators - Selected Farm Characteristics: 2012 [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : : : Market : Farms by economic class and primary occupation : : : value of :----------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : Land in farms : Harvested cropland :agricultural : Farming : Other than farming :-------------------------------------------------------: products :----------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : : : : : sold : Less than : $2,500 to : $10,000 or : Less than : $2,500 to : $10,000 or Geographic area : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : ($1,000) : $2,500 : $9,999 : more : $2,500 : $9,999 : more ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- State Total : : California..........................: 13,984 2,276,877 7,276 311,279 1,577,249 2,445 1,416 3,078 2,914 1,689 2,442 : Counties : : Alameda.............................: 118 19,623 52 4,195 28,786 30 11 20 33 5 19 Alpine..............................: - - - - - - - - - - - Amador..............................: 98 10,293 37 495 3,746 15 15 19 26 8 15 Butte...............................: 374 18,412 209 10,510 31,006 90 16 93 72 37 66 Calaveras...........................: 141 19,911 39 758 2,457 33 11 21 42 18 16 Colusa..............................: 74 19,347 64 9,270 15,621 7 4 28 1 9 25 Contra Costa........................: 169 6,194 58 635 2,110 46 13 35 49 16 10 Del Norte...........................: 29 (D) 17 205 87 14 3 1 6 5 - El Dorado...........................: 341 18,700 141 719 5,349 105 45 51 73 23 44 Fresno..............................: 641 97,979 431 31,230 120,720 74 36 197 115 64 155 : Glenn...............................: 162 31,440 90 9,089 30,152 18 15 47 22 16 44 Humboldt............................: 228 130,302 150 1,516 6,684 32 37 41 66 25 27 Imperial............................: 50 11,145 27 10,506 61,405 6 - 12 11 2 19 Inyo................................: 38 905 6 (D) 147 10 8 1 14 5 - Kern................................: 349 145,936 115 13,814 78,353 60 28 89 123 25 24 Kings...............................: 88 15,480 51 12,686 43,371 9 12 27 10 12 18 Lake................................: 172 59,913 110 1,964 12,263 39 7 31 28 21 46 Lassen..............................: 99 40,391 24 1,919 2,750 14 13 11 37 19 5 Los Angeles.........................: 377 6,322 151 642 24,259 120 60 46 71 47 33 Madera..............................: 189 21,855 94 9,935 50,851 22 18 44 41 11 53 : Marin...............................: 91 29,206 43 1,116 18,336 17 8 28 12 12 14 Mariposa............................: 83 53,032 15 126 2,877 15 10 16 18 20 4 Mendocino...........................: 319 117,228 163 2,778 13,769 68 20 69 69 34 59 Merced..............................: 199 71,042 121 19,037 131,874 26 14 79 19 14 47 Modoc...............................: 102 56,728 28 6,320 5,331 4 3 33 31 15 16 Mono................................: 11 700 3 (D) 97 1 3 1 3 3 - Monterey............................: 173 126,610 58 11,047 121,921 47 14 32 31 30 19 Napa................................: 292 36,799 221 3,677 41,158 17 17 70 42 38 108 Nevada..............................: 217 10,000 66 262 1,480 48 24 19 62 39 25 Orange..............................: 82 933 28 45 1,786 24 10 14 11 11 12 : Placer..............................: 376 11,325 113 1,377 8,586 63 52 64 125 48 24 Plumas..............................: 19 1,033 5 8 (D) 6 4 - 6 3 - Riverside...........................: 675 21,623 301 5,742 27,831 188 51 97 112 77 150 Sacramento..........................: 286 24,923 77 4,694 26,594 69 20 42 94 29 32 San Benito..........................: 94 95,175 48 4,032 22,263 21 10 25 13 11 14 San Bernardino......................: 312 17,952 117 1,105 6,440 73 42 39 81 43 34 San Diego...........................: 1,075 19,415 782 5,729 100,721 136 183 196 187 202 171 San Francisco.......................: 1 (D) 1 (D) (D) - 1 - - - - San Joaquin.........................: 433 32,259 284 13,520 74,837 43 35 152 39 54 110 San Luis Obispo.....................: 516 193,913 263 5,705 48,360 92 46 111 121 61 85 : San Mateo...........................: 99 6,425 43 452 3,355 28 3 33 23 1 11 Santa Barbara.......................: 328 46,857 200 4,484 27,812 53 29 85 58 53 50 Santa Clara.........................: 200 28,552 118 1,003 3,428 35 35 51 38 23 18 Santa Cruz..........................: 130 3,909 87 957 13,279 15 24 29 28 10 24 Shasta..............................: 422 106,286 116 3,068 19,031 98 51 33 165 46 29 Sierra..............................: 10 2,182 5 215 (D) - - 2 2 2 4 Siskiyou............................: 156 50,581 51 3,812 3,452 35 17 37 39 16 12 Solano..............................: 207 54,786 80 9,128 10,188 40 11 56 50 10 40 Sonoma..............................: 739 62,722 429 5,587 55,183 115 90 173 138 86 137 Stanislaus..........................: 501 53,663 282 14,105 84,878 79 37 151 75 49 110 : Sutter..............................: 214 38,140 145 26,121 56,151 6 15 94 22 27 50 Tehama..............................: 360 75,993 149 4,756 12,895 69 34 74 79 40 64 Trinity.............................: 69 12,481 35 283 560 16 14 15 13 11 - Tulare..............................: 579 66,908 420 17,877 71,233 45 60 163 84 76 151 Tuolumne............................: 96 16,364 25 110 1,068 21 10 10 36 11 8 Ventura.............................: 412 28,189 328 4,949 26,357 40 29 103 52 70 118 Yolo................................: 190 14,569 95 4,580 7,408 21 18 41 46 27 37 Yuba................................: 179 12,519 65 3,073 5,897 27 20 27 50 19 36 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Table 47. Women Operators: 2012 [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : All farms with a woman operator 1/ : Farms with a woman principal operator :--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : : Women : Land in farms : : Land in farms Geographic area : Farms : operators : (acres) : Farms : (acres) -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- State Total : : California..............................: 37,960 40,072 9,555,184 13,984 2,276,877 : Counties : : Alameda.................................: 271 290 109,222 118 19,623 Alpine..................................: 3 3 (D) - - Amador..................................: 283 313 42,318 98 10,293 Butte...................................: 1,011 1,064 135,664 374 18,412 Calaveras...............................: 390 416 104,257 141 19,911 Colusa..................................: 361 374 158,732 74 19,347 Contra Costa............................: 309 321 42,632 169 6,194 Del Norte...............................: 85 86 15,370 29 (D) El Dorado...............................: 919 980 89,989 341 18,700 Fresno..................................: 2,230 2,330 594,771 641 97,979 : Glenn...................................: 576 605 296,253 162 31,440 Humboldt................................: 555 605 388,068 228 130,302 Imperial................................: 117 118 99,448 50 11,145 Inyo....................................: 58 58 110,927 38 905 Kern....................................: 918 973 825,729 349 145,936 Kings...................................: 378 404 82,166 88 15,480 Lake....................................: 432 453 85,810 172 59,913 Lassen..................................: 294 310 264,797 99 40,391 Los Angeles.............................: 790 857 25,200 377 6,322 Madera..................................: 633 673 217,122 189 21,855 : Marin...................................: 192 206 77,095 91 29,206 Mariposa................................: 225 239 200,850 83 53,032 Mendocino...............................: 702 738 330,130 319 117,228 Merced..................................: 885 934 278,984 199 71,042 Modoc...................................: 282 290 210,438 102 56,728 Mono....................................: 32 35 16,378 11 700 Monterey................................: 499 541 484,975 173 126,610 Napa....................................: 748 794 99,431 292 36,799 Nevada..................................: 544 571 27,604 217 10,000 Orange..................................: 141 156 45,604 82 933 : Placer..................................: 948 1,004 44,846 376 11,325 Plumas..................................: 74 85 50,988 19 1,033 Riverside...............................: 1,615 1,728 60,500 675 21,623 Sacramento..............................: 787 835 96,670 286 24,923 San Benito..............................: 317 338 250,681 94 95,175 San Bernardino..........................: 690 732 40,144 312 17,952 San Diego...............................: 2,734 2,829 61,587 1,075 19,415 San Francisco...........................: 1 1 (D) 1 (D) San Joaquin.............................: 1,387 1,445 166,813 433 32,259 San Luis Obispo.........................: 1,377 1,446 576,797 516 193,913 : San Mateo...............................: 181 209 14,801 99 6,425 Santa Barbara...........................: 725 768 165,412 328 46,857 Santa Clara.............................: 468 491 75,185 200 28,552 Santa Cruz..............................: 321 334 53,120 130 3,909 Shasta..................................: 1,019 1,069 197,833 422 106,286 Sierra..................................: 23 23 23,941 10 2,182 Siskiyou................................: 578 604 362,083 156 50,581 Solano..................................: 471 499 125,037 207 54,786 Sonoma..................................: 1,773 1,929 230,550 739 62,722 Stanislaus..............................: 1,770 1,834 271,901 501 53,663 : Sutter..................................: 589 621 143,902 214 38,140 Tehama..................................: 1,042 1,088 336,604 360 75,993 Trinity.................................: 148 158 25,989 69 12,481 Tulare..................................: 1,905 1,978 326,219 579 66,908 Tuolumne................................: 243 259 37,401 96 16,364 Ventura.................................: 977 1,039 105,885 412 28,189 Yolo....................................: 474 508 169,752 190 14,569 Yuba....................................: 460 481 79,315 179 12,519 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1/ Data were collected for a maximum of three operators per farm. Table 48. Women Principal Operators - Tenure: 2012 [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ : : Full owners : Part owners : Tenants : :----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : : : Land in : Harvested : : Land in : Harvested : : Land in : Harvested : Total : : farms : cropland : : farms : cropland : : farms : cropland Geographic area : farms : Farms : (acres) : (acres) : Farms : (acres) : (acres) : Farms : (acres) : (acres) ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ State Total : : California..............................: 13,984 11,920 1,190,633 176,293 959 874,726 90,991 1,105 211,518 43,995 : Counties : : Alameda.................................: 118 90 7,769 108 16 11,481 4,065 12 373 22 Alpine..................................: - - - - - - - - - - Amador..................................: 98 84 6,126 393 14 4,167 102 - - - Butte...................................: 374 324 10,618 5,075 32 5,540 3,445 18 2,254 1,990 Calaveras...............................: 141 117 10,836 (D) 11 8,353 - 13 722 (D) Colusa..................................: 74 56 8,096 5,331 3 5,954 956 15 5,297 2,983 Contra Costa............................: 169 112 2,442 206 20 1,022 400 37 2,730 29 Del Norte...............................: 29 26 (D) (D) 3 (D) (D) - - - El Dorado...............................: 341 310 14,595 (D) 22 4,021 (D) 9 84 (D) Fresno..................................: 641 526 43,292 16,564 61 49,192 10,358 54 5,495 4,308 : Glenn...................................: 162 136 12,053 6,111 17 17,507 2,027 9 1,880 951 Humboldt................................: 228 186 69,179 833 22 23,336 199 20 37,787 484 Imperial................................: 50 39 7,299 6,982 - - - 11 3,846 3,524 Inyo....................................: 38 26 219 (D) 4 19 - 8 667 - Kern....................................: 349 284 63,891 10,139 23 76,516 (D) 42 5,529 (D) Kings...................................: 88 66 (D) 2,629 10 6,657 (D) 12 (D) (D) Lake....................................: 172 160 (D) 1,747 11 704 217 1 (D) - Lassen..................................: 99 88 (D) 916 7 (D) (D) 4 (D) (D) Los Angeles.............................: 377 314 4,982 504 8 1,182 (D) 55 158 (D) Madera..................................: 189 166 15,824 7,025 18 3,593 (D) 5 2,438 (D) : Marin...................................: 91 57 6,656 (D) 5 3,738 (D) 29 18,812 670 Mariposa................................: 83 59 25,797 40 16 23,930 (D) 8 3,305 (D) Mendocino...............................: 319 275 80,024 2,190 25 (D) 442 19 (D) 146 Merced..................................: 199 156 23,746 9,285 17 45,948 8,684 26 1,348 1,068 Modoc...................................: 102 76 23,443 4,544 18 33,167 1,776 8 118 - Mono....................................: 11 8 (D) (D) 2 (D) - 1 (D) - Monterey................................: 173 133 64,279 1,056 15 50,363 9,361 25 11,968 630 Napa....................................: 292 259 24,811 (D) 14 8,503 (D) 19 3,485 (D) Nevada..................................: 217 198 6,156 (D) 5 456 - 14 3,388 (D) Orange..................................: 82 70 876 31 - - - 12 57 14 : Placer..................................: 376 338 6,928 620 18 1,670 275 20 2,727 482 Plumas..................................: 19 18 (D) 8 1 (D) - - - - Riverside...............................: 675 631 14,287 3,363 25 7,220 2,322 19 116 57 Sacramento..............................: 286 238 13,573 2,694 15 8,805 (D) 33 2,545 (D) San Benito..............................: 94 66 35,877 702 14 54,337 3,175 14 4,961 155 San Bernardino..........................: 312 281 4,145 1,088 10 11,285 (D) 21 2,522 (D) San Diego...............................: 1,075 1,010 17,101 5,217 22 1,058 350 43 1,256 162 San Francisco...........................: 1 1 (D) (D) - - - - - - San Joaquin.............................: 433 366 18,992 8,377 27 8,569 3,379 40 4,698 1,764 San Luis Obispo.........................: 516 446 127,853 4,794 41 60,016 (D) 29 6,044 (D) : San Mateo...............................: 99 76 5,254 352 6 979 (D) 17 192 (D) Santa Barbara...........................: 328 273 28,738 2,534 17 11,845 337 38 6,274 1,613 Santa Clara.............................: 200 161 (D) 446 11 (D) (D) 28 4,610 (D) Santa Cruz..............................: 130 112 3,402 637 6 265 132 12 242 188 Shasta..................................: 422 354 23,783 (D) 48 78,390 (D) 20 4,113 7 Sierra..................................: 10 8 (D) 215 - - - 2 (D) - Siskiyou................................: 156 133 23,628 2,197 15 26,320 (D) 8 633 (D) Solano..................................: 207 171 43,626 5,045 25 6,280 (D) 11 4,880 (D) Sonoma..................................: 739 577 44,167 4,006 69 9,726 990 93 8,829 591 Stanislaus..............................: 501 453 17,332 9,006 25 35,679 4,921 23 652 178 : Sutter..................................: 214 168 19,147 13,356 20 15,830 10,116 26 3,163 2,649 Tehama..................................: 360 300 51,490 1,691 43 20,991 3,047 17 3,512 18 Trinity.................................: 69 63 5,572 283 6 6,909 - - - - Tulare..................................: 579 523 31,609 13,054 27 34,277 4,291 29 1,022 532 Tuolumne................................: 96 66 5,267 75 23 10,199 35 7 898 - Ventura.................................: 412 384 18,145 4,703 6 442 199 22 9,602 47 Yolo....................................: 190 161 9,481 2,728 10 3,623 581 19 1,465 1,271 Yuba....................................: 179 141 4,670 (D) 10 3,691 (D) 28 4,158 2,234 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Table 49. Spanish, Hispanic, or Latino Origin Operators: 2012 [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : All farms with a Spanish, : Farms with a Spanish, Hispanic, : Hispanic, or Latino operator 1/ : or Latino principal operator :--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : : Spanish, Hispanic, : Land in farms : : Land in farms Geographic area : Farms :or Latino operators : (acres) : Farms : (acres) -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- State Total : : California..............................: 12,030 15,123 2,430,874 9,815 1,608,488 : Counties : : Alameda.................................: 69 89 19,238 43 7,374 Alpine..................................: - - - - - Amador..................................: 49 51 5,281 36 4,687 Butte...................................: 251 295 28,993 227 26,413 Calaveras...............................: 62 68 44,105 50 43,471 Colusa..................................: 115 151 42,911 90 26,544 Contra Costa............................: 67 83 4,369 54 3,716 Del Norte...............................: 7 8 (D) 1 (D) El Dorado...............................: 89 114 9,803 55 7,620 Fresno..................................: 1,250 1,616 294,108 1,086 180,969 : Glenn...................................: 216 272 23,024 193 15,773 Humboldt................................: 32 39 19,470 23 3,000 Imperial................................: 122 148 78,123 107 65,708 Inyo....................................: 9 9 354 9 354 Kern....................................: 268 364 273,518 210 199,514 Kings...................................: 180 235 24,551 148 13,607 Lake....................................: 80 96 8,438 67 3,639 Lassen..................................: 22 40 36,429 15 32,415 Los Angeles.............................: 354 483 36,943 280 8,364 Madera..................................: 246 320 114,025 197 100,992 : Marin...................................: 19 22 4,398 11 2,122 Mariposa................................: 40 52 11,905 37 10,537 Mendocino...............................: 107 117 42,950 77 11,141 Merced..................................: 430 572 69,524 380 43,777 Modoc...................................: 32 33 47,032 26 38,577 Mono....................................: 5 6 3,480 4 (D) Monterey................................: 254 349 102,512 205 78,728 Napa....................................: 225 270 31,698 126 10,481 Nevada..................................: 29 29 4,009 18 3,610 Orange..................................: 56 80 4,507 36 1,176 : Placer..................................: 102 110 2,707 71 1,789 Plumas..................................: 21 22 16,250 10 7,928 Riverside...............................: 650 831 90,846 514 67,894 Sacramento..............................: 145 159 19,610 124 15,857 San Benito..............................: 154 179 24,526 134 8,318 San Bernardino..........................: 240 300 11,153 211 9,235 San Diego...............................: 993 1,172 72,971 752 33,724 San Francisco...........................: - - - - - San Joaquin.............................: 484 580 53,932 387 33,603 San Luis Obispo.........................: 373 433 85,949 291 53,376 : San Mateo...............................: 46 51 1,527 35 1,043 Santa Barbara...........................: 345 438 138,088 281 94,533 Santa Clara.............................: 118 147 10,776 99 9,350 Santa Cruz..............................: 124 158 13,347 109 8,738 Shasta..................................: 149 169 18,677 134 6,208 Sierra..................................: 11 11 (D) 10 2,077 Siskiyou................................: 51 63 14,190 34 9,777 Solano..................................: 122 161 36,168 115 22,811 Sonoma..................................: 314 375 46,964 217 25,855 Stanislaus..............................: 612 762 45,645 524 26,710 : Sutter..................................: 129 179 56,159 109 35,136 Tehama..................................: 225 285 42,514 198 38,205 Trinity.................................: 7 7 1,287 - - Tulare..................................: 1,249 1,664 74,451 1,143 60,205 Tuolumne................................: 37 47 2,445 27 2,066 Ventura.................................: 405 515 38,399 289 19,612 Yolo....................................: 173 222 102,374 127 61,680 Yuba....................................: 66 72 9,576 59 7,434 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1/ Data were collected for a maximum of three operators per farm. Table 50. American Indian or Alaska Native Operators: 2012 [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : All farms with an American Indian : Farms with an American Indian or : or Alaska Native operator 1/ : Alaska Native principal operator :--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : : American Indian : : : : : or Alaska Native : Land in farms : : Land in farms Geographic area : Farms : operators : (acres) : Farms : (acres) -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- State Total : : California..............................: 1,591 1,761 353,167 1,192 241,808 : Counties : : Alameda.................................: 6 10 30 6 30 Amador..................................: 7 7 234 5 186 Butte...................................: 62 70 4,451 51 3,560 Calaveras...............................: 8 10 7,197 7 1,687 Colusa..................................: 8 10 13,364 4 (D) Contra Costa............................: 12 14 (D) 10 (D) Del Norte...............................: 11 13 1,471 4 (D) El Dorado...............................: 36 43 3,376 35 3,374 Fresno..................................: 129 140 20,945 119 20,016 Glenn...................................: 15 19 759 8 (D) : Humboldt................................: 22 26 17,713 19 (D) Imperial................................: 9 9 (D) 9 (D) Inyo....................................: 6 6 206 2 (D) Kern....................................: 56 62 56,794 38 21,080 Kings...................................: 25 29 21,446 20 744 Lake....................................: 12 12 76 5 (D) Lassen..................................: 10 10 549 6 (D) Los Angeles.............................: 10 14 59 8 55 Madera..................................: 22 24 2,225 19 2,105 Mariposa................................: 14 14 6,196 9 (D) : Mendocino...............................: 38 40 19,698 19 (D) Merced..................................: 40 41 13,469 37 4,210 Modoc...................................: 9 9 (D) 8 (D) Monterey................................: 26 26 7,972 24 7,002 Napa....................................: 5 5 161 5 161 Nevada..................................: 15 15 682 8 60 Orange..................................: 3 9 15 3 15 Placer..................................: 33 34 3,670 21 2,908 Plumas..................................: 10 16 (D) 10 (D) Riverside...............................: 40 43 1,724 20 1,094 : Sacramento..............................: 22 23 539 14 (D) San Benito..............................: 18 18 (D) 17 226 San Bernardino..........................: 25 28 454 18 379 San Diego...............................: 78 89 33,205 64 33,109 San Joaquin.............................: 53 61 3,948 40 3,716 San Luis Obispo.........................: 40 43 1,677 28 (D) San Mateo...............................: 1 1 (D) 1 (D) Santa Barbara...........................: 16 16 4,187 16 4,187 Santa Clara.............................: 7 8 (D) 7 (D) Santa Cruz..............................: 8 12 146 8 146 : Shasta..................................: 77 78 2,883 61 1,582 Siskiyou................................: 28 33 14,200 19 9,134 Solano..................................: 14 18 (D) 13 (D) Sonoma..................................: 36 43 2,845 25 2,364 Stanislaus..............................: 106 106 13,263 95 12,104 Sutter..................................: 36 41 10,128 32 9,568 Tehama..................................: 67 74 8,704 61 8,165 Trinity.................................: 34 50 3,366 22 (D) Tulare..................................: 156 161 8,338 75 4,115 Tuolumne................................: 1 1 (D) 1 (D) : Ventura.................................: 16 17 3,902 13 1,985 Yolo....................................: 20 20 1,522 6 438 Yuba....................................: 33 40 5,475 17 4,879 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1/ Data were collected for a maximum of three operators per farm. Table 51. Asian Operators: 2012 [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : All farms with an Asian operator 1/ :Farms with an Asian principal operator :--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : : Asian : Land in farms : : Land in farms Geographic area : Farms : operators : (acres) : Farms : (acres) -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- State Total : : California..............................: 5,382 7,474 785,658 4,802 593,187 : Counties : : Alameda.................................: 38 43 2,406 22 (D) Amador..................................: 2 2 (D) - - Butte...................................: 100 141 13,625 89 13,391 Calaveras...............................: 7 9 169 4 124 Colusa..................................: 36 44 15,730 30 13,204 Contra Costa............................: 26 44 7,753 23 (D) El Dorado...............................: 76 86 1,995 24 450 Fresno..................................: 1,021 1,499 129,232 997 109,871 Glenn...................................: 52 64 10,487 46 10,102 Humboldt................................: 11 11 7,331 5 166 : Imperial................................: 11 11 11,394 9 11,352 Inyo....................................: 1 1 (D) - - Kern....................................: 144 192 86,865 129 50,443 Kings...................................: 40 74 6,671 35 4,681 Lake....................................: 23 31 2,121 18 1,975 Los Angeles.............................: 143 208 1,372 120 859 Madera..................................: 168 234 22,994 153 22,415 Mendocino...............................: 21 21 8,412 11 1,543 Merced..................................: 225 323 46,251 209 38,912 Modoc...................................: 2 2 (D) 1 (D) : Monterey................................: 81 128 37,344 68 15,736 Napa....................................: 37 44 8,451 31 8,268 Nevada..................................: 3 3 (D) 3 (D) Orange..................................: 77 110 5,229 72 3,123 Placer..................................: 85 127 1,628 80 1,593 Riverside...............................: 278 368 20,463 238 16,161 Sacramento..............................: 191 282 15,971 176 15,745 San Benito..............................: 19 24 986 12 (D) San Bernardino..........................: 115 157 2,804 109 2,640 San Diego...............................: 349 465 35,800 293 5,847 : San Francisco...........................: 1 1 (D) 1 (D) San Joaquin.............................: 236 341 25,581 215 24,065 San Luis Obispo.........................: 86 118 9,159 78 8,718 San Mateo...............................: 22 25 (D) 21 (D) Santa Barbara...........................: 66 83 4,626 55 606 Santa Clara.............................: 203 277 4,446 183 4,227 Santa Cruz..............................: 61 82 10,405 54 9,919 Shasta..................................: 10 10 (D) 9 (D) Siskiyou................................: 4 6 7,081 4 7,081 Solano..................................: 29 40 8,449 23 7,159 : Sonoma..................................: 103 121 3,406 85 2,495 Stanislaus..............................: 115 153 20,255 100 18,599 Sutter..................................: 318 479 35,804 310 34,645 Tehama..................................: 17 31 9,988 17 9,988 Trinity.................................: 2 2 (D) - - Tulare..................................: 408 504 52,281 348 43,162 Tuolumne................................: 1 1 (D) - - Ventura.................................: 170 225 19,364 157 17,229 Yolo....................................: 66 113 46,989 62 27,299 Yuba....................................: 82 114 15,318 73 14,245 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1/ Data were collected for a maximum of three operators per farm. Table 52. Black or African American Operators: 2012 [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : All farms with a Black or : Farms with a Black or African : African American operator 1/ : American principal operator :--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : : Black or African : Land in farms : : Land in farms Geographic area : Farms :American operators : (acres) : Farms : (acres) -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- State Total : : California..............................: 424 526 42,868 345 32,932 : Counties : : Butte...................................: 4 4 87 3 15 Calaveras...............................: 10 14 2,799 10 2,799 Colusa..................................: 2 2 (D) 2 (D) Contra Costa............................: 1 1 (D) - - El Dorado...............................: 8 14 (D) 6 (D) Fresno..................................: 30 52 1,333 27 825 Glenn...................................: 9 11 1,138 8 1,106 Imperial................................: 1 1 (D) 1 (D) Kern....................................: 17 17 7,808 11 3,986 Kings...................................: 13 13 383 13 383 : Lake....................................: 8 11 201 6 183 Lassen..................................: 1 1 (D) 1 (D) Los Angeles.............................: 25 30 1,021 22 361 Madera..................................: 10 15 2,473 10 2,473 Mariposa................................: 6 7 904 6 904 Mendocino...............................: 4 4 36 4 36 Merced..................................: 12 13 2,856 10 300 Modoc...................................: 3 7 138 3 138 Monterey................................: 10 10 2,224 10 2,224 Napa....................................: 8 8 115 4 69 : Nevada..................................: 2 4 (D) 2 (D) Orange..................................: 2 2 (D) 2 (D) Placer..................................: 1 1 (D) - - Riverside...............................: 33 41 1,364 22 226 Sacramento..............................: 8 9 (D) 7 (D) San Benito..............................: 2 3 (D) 2 (D) San Bernardino..........................: 9 9 588 7 586 San Diego...............................: 16 19 240 9 23 San Joaquin.............................: 19 21 316 17 306 San Luis Obispo.........................: 4 4 (D) 4 (D) : San Mateo...............................: 12 17 161 6 (D) Santa Barbara...........................: 8 8 1,390 8 1,390 Santa Clara.............................: 4 7 495 3 480 Santa Cruz..............................: 2 2 (D) 2 (D) Shasta..................................: 1 1 (D) 1 (D) Siskiyou................................: 1 1 (D) - - Solano..................................: 14 20 (D) 14 (D) Sonoma..................................: 27 30 3,745 20 3,592 Stanislaus..............................: 18 18 115 15 (D) Sutter..................................: 3 3 48 3 48 : Tehama..................................: 11 23 388 9 342 Tulare..................................: 23 23 1,513 23 1,513 Ventura.................................: 9 10 246 2 (D) Yolo....................................: 13 15 862 10 829 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1/ Data were collected for a maximum of three operators per farm. Table 53. Native Hawaiian or Other Pacific Islander Operators: 2012 [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : All farms with a Native Hawaiian : Farms with a Native Hawaiian or Other : or Other Pacific Islander operator 1/ : Pacific Islander principal operator :--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : : Native Hawaiian : : : : : or Other Pacific : Land in farms : : Land in farms Geographic area : Farms :Islander operators : (acres) : Farms : (acres) -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- State Total : : California..............................: 407 455 48,074 321 32,930 : Counties : : Alameda.................................: 1 1 (D) 1 (D) Amador..................................: 4 6 (D) 4 (D) Butte...................................: 4 4 18 - - Calaveras...............................: 3 3 6 3 6 Colusa..................................: 5 8 848 4 368 Contra Costa............................: 2 2 (D) 2 (D) El Dorado...............................: 17 17 1,355 11 (D) Fresno..................................: 28 36 2,108 25 1,789 Glenn...................................: 1 1 (D) 1 (D) Imperial................................: 3 3 (D) 3 (D) : Kern....................................: 1 1 (D) - - Kings...................................: 7 7 360 7 360 Lake....................................: 7 7 528 2 (D) Lassen..................................: 5 5 6,800 5 6,800 Los Angeles.............................: 10 13 231 - - Madera..................................: 8 8 346 7 (D) Mariposa................................: 1 1 (D) 1 (D) Merced..................................: 28 35 4,914 26 3,315 Monterey................................: 10 15 3,445 6 (D) Napa....................................: 2 2 (D) 2 (D) : Nevada..................................: 4 8 8 4 8 Orange..................................: 4 4 980 2 (D) Riverside...............................: 17 17 128 14 115 Sacramento..............................: 1 1 (D) 1 (D) San Bernardino..........................: 4 4 17 3 12 San Diego...............................: 38 40 361 31 201 San Joaquin.............................: 15 15 1,920 15 1,920 San Luis Obispo.........................: 11 11 376 9 296 San Mateo...............................: 1 1 (D) - - Santa Barbara...........................: 9 9 2,958 9 2,958 : Santa Clara.............................: 24 26 1,349 20 1,284 Santa Cruz..............................: 4 4 (D) 4 (D) Shasta..................................: 14 14 130 10 84 Siskiyou................................: 15 15 2,283 10 350 Sonoma..................................: 4 4 71 1 (D) Stanislaus..............................: 22 31 1,071 21 (D) Sutter..................................: 10 13 968 10 968 Tehama..................................: 23 23 1,384 17 839 Tulare..................................: 22 22 1,482 17 1,310 Ventura.................................: 8 8 (D) 7 (D) : Yolo....................................: 7 7 653 3 612 Yuba....................................: 3 3 30 3 30 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1/ Data were collected for a maximum of three operators per farm. Table 54. White Operators: 2012 [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : All farms with : Farms with a White : a White operator 1/ : principal operator :--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : : White : Land in farms : : Land in farms Geographic area : Farms : operators : (acres) : Farms : (acres) -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- State Total : : California..............................: 71,920 111,141 24,727,738 70,537 24,500,865 : Counties : : Alameda.................................: 433 697 175,609 423 175,499 Alpine..................................: 3 6 (D) 3 (D) Amador..................................: 449 743 147,491 445 (D) Butte...................................: 1,937 2,908 365,448 1,893 363,034 Calaveras...............................: 644 1,033 210,001 633 207,347 Colusa..................................: 746 1,246 437,187 738 429,976 Contra Costa............................: 566 834 118,811 566 118,811 Del Norte...............................: 120 203 (D) 116 19,712 El Dorado...............................: 1,302 2,061 123,781 1,258 122,496 Fresno..................................: 4,617 6,964 1,602,549 4,465 1,582,980 : Glenn...................................: 1,250 1,935 656,099 1,234 651,936 Humboldt................................: 912 1,408 578,209 902 (D) Imperial................................: 396 602 504,098 392 493,360 Inyo....................................: 123 172 (D) 123 (D) Kern....................................: 1,787 2,908 2,279,273 1,744 2,251,598 Kings...................................: 988 1,621 669,410 973 667,374 Lake....................................: 802 1,185 148,616 800 148,432 Lassen..................................: 441 742 475,085 435 474,858 Los Angeles.............................: 1,155 1,778 90,701 1,123 90,360 Madera..................................: 1,331 2,106 630,719 1,314 624,596 : Marin...................................: 323 527 170,876 323 170,876 Mariposa................................: 355 551 281,359 347 276,690 Mendocino...............................: 1,180 1,839 700,933 1,165 699,938 Merced..................................: 2,228 3,585 934,967 2,193 931,273 Modoc...................................: 427 687 502,469 420 493,743 Mono....................................: 72 116 56,386 71 (D) Monterey................................: 1,089 1,725 1,242,004 1,066 1,239,732 Napa....................................: 1,654 2,629 252,009 1,639 244,143 Nevada..................................: 716 1,179 40,874 713 40,849 Orange..................................: 247 353 57,221 233 56,958 : Placer..................................: 1,289 2,080 87,844 1,244 86,796 Plumas..................................: 129 209 172,354 128 171,774 Riverside...............................: 2,683 4,204 327,358 2,635 325,940 Sacramento..............................: 1,171 1,855 231,018 1,136 228,221 San Benito..............................: 600 939 603,276 595 602,926 San Bernardino..........................: 1,120 1,742 73,705 1,098 73,360 San Diego...............................: 5,381 7,741 212,187 5,302 181,773 San Francisco...........................: 5 5 (D) 5 (D) San Joaquin.............................: 3,335 5,051 761,080 3,270 754,403 San Luis Obispo.........................: 2,561 3,981 1,327,502 2,519 1,321,575 : San Mateo...............................: 315 474 47,630 304 47,407 Santa Barbara...........................: 1,505 2,291 686,986 1,469 685,481 Santa Clara.............................: 800 1,154 224,617 784 221,465 Santa Cruz..............................: 602 937 91,905 592 89,666 Shasta..................................: 1,476 2,283 374,000 1,426 371,804 Sierra..................................: 48 68 39,141 47 (D) Siskiyou................................: 908 1,484 711,641 878 703,597 Solano..................................: 820 1,280 395,877 801 389,472 Sonoma..................................: 3,472 5,406 584,177 3,434 580,529 Stanislaus..............................: 3,926 6,089 738,891 3,875 734,512 : Sutter..................................: 1,037 1,641 340,274 999 329,734 Tehama..................................: 1,678 2,638 599,569 1,630 596,777 Trinity.................................: 228 345 (D) 222 (D) Tulare..................................: 4,508 6,710 1,191,861 4,446 1,187,416 Tuolumne................................: 385 606 (D) 383 (D) Ventura.................................: 1,985 2,971 267,081 1,953 260,900 Yolo....................................: 941 1,486 430,124 922 428,367 Yuba....................................: 719 1,128 170,548 690 168,022 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1/ Data were collected for a maximum of three operators per farm. Table 55. Operators Reporting More Than One Race: 2012 [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : All farms with an operator : Farms with a principal operator : reporting more than one race 1/ : reporting more than one race :--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : :Operators reporting: Land in farms : : Land in farms Geographic area : Farms :more than one race : (acres) : Farms : (acres) -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- State Total : : California..............................: 930 1,030 255,849 660 167,279 : Counties : : Amador..................................: 7 7 (D) 7 (D) Butte...................................: 22 28 1,031 20 1,019 Calaveras...............................: 6 10 177 6 177 Colusa..................................: 7 7 (D) 4 (D) Contra Costa............................: 3 3 (D) 1 (D) Del Norte...............................: 1 1 (D) 1 (D) El Dorado...............................: 33 37 (D) 24 781 Fresno..................................: 64 71 10,458 50 5,721 Glenn...................................: 18 19 5,123 14 4,913 Humboldt................................: 10 14 15,505 4 (D) : Imperial................................: 13 14 11,517 7 10,917 Kern....................................: 34 36 3,757 16 3,126 Kings...................................: 8 8 92 8 92 Lake....................................: 14 14 262 7 61 Lassen..................................: 2 2 (D) 1 (D) Los Angeles.............................: 21 21 54 21 54 Madera..................................: 6 8 1,726 4 (D) Mariposa................................: 2 2 (D) 1 (D) Mendocino...............................: 30 32 71,123 21 (D) Merced..................................: 14 14 1,162 11 657 : Modoc...................................: 5 5 (D) 5 (D) Mono....................................: 1 1 (D) 1 (D) Monterey................................: 10 10 740 5 (D) Napa....................................: 7 7 (D) 4 (D) Nevada..................................: 20 22 636 12 472 Placer..................................: 12 12 108 10 106 Plumas..................................: 3 4 (D) 3 (D) Riverside...............................: 28 33 610 20 508 Sacramento..............................: 20 23 3,938 18 1,968 San Benito..............................: 3 3 682 2 (D) : San Bernardino..........................: 25 26 328 14 222 San Diego...............................: 41 50 660 33 585 San Joaquin.............................: 35 40 2,751 23 2,605 San Luis Obispo.........................: 32 35 2,408 28 2,218 San Mateo...............................: 2 2 (D) 2 (D) Santa Barbara...........................: 43 45 6,549 40 6,417 Santa Clara.............................: 9 9 305 6 (D) Santa Cruz..............................: 10 12 118 7 112 Shasta..................................: 46 61 2,367 37 1,903 Sierra..................................: 2 2 (D) 1 (D) : Siskiyou................................: 24 28 2,801 18 2,693 Solano..................................: 10 10 901 9 173 Sonoma..................................: 22 24 (D) 14 (D) Stanislaus..............................: 56 56 3,188 37 1,683 Sutter..................................: 28 29 3,351 4 211 Tehama..................................: 17 17 636 9 410 Trinity.................................: 12 12 (D) 3 (D) Tulare..................................: 27 27 1,821 22 1,484 Tuolumne................................: 10 11 (D) 7 (D) Ventura.................................: 25 32 753 18 615 : Yolo....................................: 11 12 5,999 8 3,279 Yuba....................................: 19 22 532 12 462 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1/ Data were collected for a maximum of three operators per farm. 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 operators 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 Census Mail List (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, and telephone number 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 lists 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 field offices routinely contact these potential farms to determine whether they meet the farm definition. For the 2012 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 2012 CML started in 2009 by updating list information from respondents to the 2007 Census of Agriculture. Between 2010 and 2012, NASS conducted a series of National Agricultural Classification Surveys (NACS) on approximately 1.7 million records, which included nonrespondents from the 2007 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 the United States Postal Service's National Change of Address Registry and the Locatable Address Conversion System to ensure they were correct and complete. 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 2012 Census of Agriculture was established on September 1, 2012. The list contained 3,009,641 records. There were 2,387,326 records that were thought to meet the NASS farm definition and 622,315 potential farm records, which included NACS nonrespondents, other records added to the CML by the NASS 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 Agricultural Survey (JAS) to quantify the number and types of farms not on the CML. The tracts in the JAS that are not on the CML are said to be in the Not on the Mail List (NML) domain. If a tract in the NML domain is determined to be a farm during the census, it is an NML farm. The NML farms are used to estimate the undercoverage associated with the census. The NASS area frame, which is used for the JAS, covers all land in the U.S. and includes all farms. The land in the U.S. is stratified by characteristics of the land. A probability sample of segments is drawn within each stratum for the JAS. Segments of approximately equal size are delineated within each stratum and designated on aerial photographs. The JAS sample of segments is allocated to strata to provide accurate measures of acres planted to widely 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 2012 JAS sample was increased to improve the farm counts for operations that produced specialty commodities or had socially disadvantaged or minority operators. The total sample consisted of 14,376 segments of which 3,291 were additional segments added to facilitate the use of the JAS as an Agricultural Coverage Evaluation Survey (ACES). The additional segments were added based upon multivariate sample allocations to target specific items at the U.S. level. The 2012 JAS consisted of sample segments from all States, with the exception of Alaska where NASS does not maintain an area frame. During the JAS prescreening operation, each tract is identified as either agricultural or non-agricultural. Each JAS agricultural tract is identified as a farm or non-farm in June based on the farm definition. 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 2012 JAS were matched to the CML. Those from the JAS 2012 survey 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 36,021 records. An additional 403 June area tracts linked to Census records that were Undeliverable as Addressed (UAA) were later added to the NML domain. A total of 36,424 NML records were summarized of which 5,565 records were truly 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 operators provided a measure of the undercoverage of farms on the CML. The percentage of farms not represented on the CML varied considerably 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 2012 Census of Agriculture, to increase the level of awareness and response among all U.S. agricultural producers. • Phase 1 ran from October 2011 - July 2012. 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 2012 - December 2012. It notified farm operators and agricultural organizations that the census would be mailed in December, and encouraged communications regarding the census. • Phase 3 ran from December 2012 - July 2013. It focused on census data collection with messaging urging response, reminding operators that it's- not-too-late-to-respond, and thank-you messaging. • Phase 4 began in February 2014. It communicated information about the data release plan, which has four phases: ? Phase A (November 2012 - December 2013) focused on thanking farmers for their participation in the census and partners for their leadership. ? Phase B (January 2014 - February 2014) drew attention to the preliminary census release. ? Phase C (February 2014 through May 2014) focused on the final census release. ? Phase D (ongoing) continues to focus on the census findings as they are released. As part of the plan, NASS targeted selective communications and outreach efforts on beginning and minority farm operators. All of these efforts were accomplished through an integrated communications program that focused on four primary areas: partnership building, local-level outreach, public relations, and paid media. External support was provided by a private agricultural communications agency. The unifying force behind the 2012 communications campaign was the theme "There's Strength in Numbers." 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: Grow Your Farm Future - Shape Your Farm Programs - Boost Your Rural Services - Fill out your Census of Agriculture - Do your part to be counted - There's strength in numbers. Partnership and Local-Level Outreach At the national level, NASS officials met with leaders from dozens of key 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 2012 Census of Agriculture through publications, 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. All 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 more than 40 television and radio public service announcements (PSAs) featuring the U.S. Secretary of Agriculture, State secretaries, directors, and commissioners of agriculture and leaders from community-based organizations. The PSAs, available in both English and Spanish, encouraged farmers and ranchers to respond to the 2012 Census of Agriculture. Coverage of American Indian and Alaska Native Farm Operators To maximize coverage of American Indian and Alaska Native farm operators, special procedures were followed in the census. A concerted effort was made to get individual reports from every American Indian and Alaska Native farm operator 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 reviewed these data and removed duplication with any data reported by American Indian or Alaska Native farm operators who responded on an individual census report form. Additionally NASS obtained, from knowledgeable reservation officials, the count of American Indian and Alaska Native farm operators (on reservations) who were not counted through individual census report forms, but whose agricultural activity was included in the reservation-level report form. This information is summarized in Table D, American Indian and Alaska Native Operators: 2012, providing the number of farm operators (for up to three operators per farm) 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, plus the total number of American Indian or Alaska Native operators farming on reservations as reported by reservation officials. The count from the individual report forms is summarized in the "Individually reported" column. It includes operators on or off reservations. The "Other" column provides counts of operators 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 and the contractor worked with internal and external stakeholders to equip them with communications tools and resources to deliver the census communications message to their audiences. NASS utilized its Intranet to deliver materials to the 12 regional and 46 field offices and created a "Partner to Promote the Census" portal on the census website to deliver public relations materials and tools to external stakeholders. The materials included, but were not limited to: customizable news releases, feature stories, newsletter articles, blogs; drop-in advertisements; website buttons and banners; PowerPoint templates; brochures; and more. In addition, at the national level NASS issued a dozen news releases citing department and agency spokespeople and published timely and relevant pieces to the USDA blog highlighting the census. These public relations efforts at the national, State, and local levels helped ensure that NASS's 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 For the 2012 Census of Agriculture, NASS placed special emphasis on reaching new and beginning farmers, while continuing efforts to improve its reach within previously under-represented populations. Even with increasingly limited budgets and resources, NASS was able to apply a portion of funds towards paid media. Strategically, NASS purchased limited print and online advertising in areas where there was the potential for high concentrations of under-represented populations and new and beginning farmers and ranchers. DATA COLLECTION Method of Enumeration Data collection was accomplished primarily by mailout/mailback, but supplemented with Electronic Data Reporting (EDR) 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 Interviewing (CATI) and Computer-Assisted Personal Interviewing (CAPI). Enumerators at the NASS National Operations Center in St. Louis, MO 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 2012 Census of Agriculture, NASS implemented a pre-notification strategy in an effort to increase awareness, improve overall responses, and encourage respondents to report early to avoid continued correspondence. All records in the initial mailout received either a postcard or pre-recorded voice message announcing the census mail packets were coming. Report Forms There were seven regionalized versions of the report forms used for the 2012 Census of Agriculture. The report form versions were designed to facilitate reporting crops most commonly grown within each report form region. Additionally, an American Indian report form was developed to facilitate reporting for operations on reservations in Arizona, New Mexico, and Utah. The regional report form numbers are: 12-A101, 12-A102, 12-A103, 12-A104, 12- A105, 12-A106 and 12-A107 (HI). The American Indian report form is 12-A200. All of the forms allowed respondents to write in specific commodities that were not listed on their form. Report Form Mailings Pre-notification by postcard or pre-recorded message began December 10, 2012. Approximately 3.0 million mail packets were mailed in December 2012. 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 postcard that was delivered in January 2013 to all operations that received mail packets. First follow-up mail packets were mailed in mid-February 2013 to approximately 1.0 million nonrespondents. Second follow-up mail packets were mailed in mid- March 2013 to approximately 750,000 nonrespondents. Personal Follow-up Operating concurrently with NPC's mail data collection efforts, NASS telephone call centers targeted selected groups of census nonrespondents for telephone enumeration. NASS field offices targeted selected groups of census records for in-person enumeration. These efforts were referred to as: • Suspicious Out of Scope Follow-up • Criteria Record Follow-up • Must Case Follow-up • American Indian and Alaska Native Farm Operator Follow-up • Low Response County Follow-up • Last Call Nonresponse Follow-up • Not on Mail List (NML) Follow-up Suspicious Out-of-Scope Follow-up. The Suspi-cious Out-of-Scope Follow-up was a phone follow-up that began in February 2013 and was conducted through May 2013. It included records that mailed their form back with a response that they were no longer farming. These operations had reported agricultural information in another survey during 2012. The operations were re-contacted with a CATI instrument to either verify the respondent was not farming or complete a census report form. Criteria Record Follow-up. Nonrespondents and refusals to the National Agricultural Classification Surveys received unique coding on the CML and are referred to collectively as Criteria Records for follow-up data collection. These Criteria Records typically had a lower probability of meeting the farm definition and were less likely to respond. It was critical to identify those records in this group that represented farms to provide coverage of the small farm population. Small farms make up a significant portion of the overall U.S. farm population. For the 2012 Census of Agriculture, 276,043 Criteria Records were included in the Census Mail List (CML). A sample of 23,739 Criteria Records was selected for targeted data collection efforts. The sampled records were first contacted by telephone using the census CATI instrument beginning in February 2013 after the initial mail returns were processed. Certified mail to 18,831 respondents was used for those who could not be contacted by telephone. Data collection resulted in 10,887 returns from both telephone and certified mail. The in-scope rate from the returns was applied to the remaining criteria records during replication, which is described in the next sub-section. Must Case Follow-up. Must cases were known large operations, the absence of which could have significantly affected the accuracy of census results. For the 2012 Census of Agriculture, 118,533 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 operation, its nonfarm status was documented. CATI calling of nonrespondent Must cases was undertaken by call centers from March 2013 through May 2013, after the initial and first follow-up mailing. Following the CATI calling, the remaining nonresponse Must cases were assigned to 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 and Alaska Native Farm Operator Follow-up. The American Indian report form (12-A200) was mailed to all operations in Arizona, New Mexico and Utah thought to have an American Indian or Alaska Native operator. 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 and Alaska Native farm operator 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. The NASS reviewed these data and removed any duplicate data reported by American Indian or Alaska Native farm operators from that reservation who responded on an individual census report form. Additionally NASS obtained, from knowledgeable reservation officials, the count of American Indian and Alaska Native farm operators (on the reservations) who were not counted through individual census report forms, but whose agricultural activity was included in the reservation-level report form. Low Response County Follow-up. The Low Response County (LRC) follow-up activity was used to increase the response rate in all counties to at least 75 percent. CATI was used for this follow-up activity. NASS utilized an adaptive design technique to identify particular records for telephone contact, in an effort to increase coverage on minority operations and operations known to produce specialty commodities. In early April 2013, NASS identified nonresponse cases in counties with a response rate of less than 75 percent. Nonresponse records in these counties were then prioritized so that minority operations and specialty commodity producers were the primary records delivered to phone enumerators. Nonrespondent telephone contact information was transmitted electronically to NASS call centers and incorporated into their CATI instrument. CATI follow-up activities began in mid-April 2013 and continued through mid-June 2012. Automated procedures were employed biweekly to ensure that the record selection procedures were targeting counties that would meet the goals of increasing minority operation coverage and to monitor the number of respondents needed to reach the 75 percent county response rate. When the required number of completions was achieved for a given county, LRC activity was suspended in that county. Last Call Nonresponse Follow-up. The Last Call Nonresponse Follow-up activity was utilized to increase the national response rate to 80 percent. All remaining nonresponse records with an expected value of sales greater than $50,000 in counties that had not achieved a 75-percent response rate were eligible for this phone follow-up activity. CATI was used for this activity and began in mid-July 2013 and lasted until August 1, 2013. Automated procedures were employed to monitor the number of respondents needed and completed. When a 75 percent response rate was achieved for a given county, follow-up in that county was suspended. NASS achieved its goal of an 80- percent national response rate utilizing Last Call Nonresponse Follow-up. Not on the Mail List (NML) Follow-up. To account for farming operations not on the CML, NASS used its 2012 JAS supplemented sample from the NASS area frame. The NASS area frame covers all land in the U.S. with the exception of Alaska and includes all farms. As previously described, the NASS conducted a record linkage operation between the CML records and the records from the 2012 JAS. Those 2012 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 2013. Beginning in March 2013, CATI was used for nonresponse follow-up for NML nonrespondents. Replication Replication is utilized to improve efficiency and reduce respondent burden. To adjust for nonresponse associated with criteria records in the 2007 Census of Agriculture, NASS replicated a set of respondents determined to be in- scope from the last mailing of the Agricultural Identification Survey (AIS), conducted in December 2006. The replicated records represented operations that were relatively small in size and homogeneous in nature. Replicated records were assumed to be in-scope, based on their AIS reported data. For the 2012 Census of Agriculture, a first mailing was sent to the criteria records, a subpopulation consisting of all of the approximately 74,000 respondents to the 2011 NACS mailing. This included pre-notification using a pre-recorded message, the first mailing, and the thank-you reminder post card. No further follow-up efforts were conducted on this subpopulation. As in 2007, the agricultural operations in this subpopulation were relatively small in size and homogeneous in nature. The responses from the criteria records were used to estimate the in-scope rate for the 20,168 nonrespondents from this subpopulation. Records were selected randomly for replication or coding as out-of-scope based on the estimated in-scope rate. The use of the in-scope rate after one mailing is supported by analysis of 2007 census data, which indicated the early in-scope rate was a reasonable proxy for the in-scope rate for the subpopulation of criteria records that did not respond to the NACS immediately preceding the census mailing. Of the 20,168 NACS records with no response, 16,762 records were selected to be in-scope. Data relationships between the 2012 responses and their respective NACS data were applied to the NACS data for the nonrespondents selected to be in-scope to derive values to seed replication. Then replication was conducted through imputation. Criteria records with no response to the December 2011 NACS were excluded in the capture-recapture adjustments for coverage, response, or correct classification. The in-scope records were each given an initial weight of one. However, for calibration, the replicated in-scope records were eligible for a coverage adjustment. 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 field offices and headquarters on a flow basis. The images were available for use in all stages of review. Images were computer generated for reports obtained from the telephone interviews and the Internet. Editing Data Captured data were processed through a computer formatting program, which verified that records were valid - that the record identification 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 the NPC, the NASS Electronic Data Reporting (EDR) web utility, 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 to 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 overlooked item. 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 were categorized as out-of-scope for the census; that is, they were classified as being a nonfarm. Out-of-scope records that NASS had reason to believe might be in-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 mailout, NASS established a group of 90 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. 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. 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 operators who had not changed in five years, demographic variables such as race and sex 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 proved inadequate, data from a reporting farm of similar type, size, and location (a donor farm) 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 2007 census data, reconfigured to emulate 2012 data and then edited using 2012 logic. Data from the 2010 Census Content Test were similarly remapped and edited before being added to the original donor pools. As 2012 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 2012 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 was no satisfactory donor 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, a program provided values from a table of donor pool averages in lieu of values from an individual donor, wherever possible. This 'failover' utility was new 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 2012 records, ensuring that 2012 data were used in imputations for these 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 inflate or reduce the donor record's value for the imputed field. 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. 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 researched and, when necessary, corrections were made and the record interactively edited again. When NASS summarizes the census of agriculture, it assigns the data from an individual report to the "principal" county. The principal county is based on the operator's response to a census question and is the one county in which the majority of agricultural products are produced. Because some large operations have significant production in multiple counties, some reports were broken up into multiple source counties, to more accurately allocate the data. Similarly, large farms operating in more than one State were treated as distinct, state-specific operations. A separate report form was completed for each county or State and a separate record was added. ACCOUNTING FOR UNDERCOVERAGE, NONRESPONSE, AND MISCLASSIFICATION Although much effort was expended making the CML as complete as possible, the CML did not include all U.S. farms, resulting in list undercoverage. Some farm operators who were on the CML did not respond to the census, despite numerous attempts to contact them. In addition, although each operation was classified as a farm or a nonfarm based on the responses to the census report form, some were misclassified; that is, some nonfarms were classified as farms and some farms were classified as nonfarms. NASS's goal was to produce agricultural census totals for publication that were fully adjusted for list undercoverage, nonresponse and misclassification at the county level. In the 2007 Census of Agriculture, adjustments for undercoverage and nonresponse were estimated independently. In 2007, as in earlier censuses, the NASS area frame was used to adjust for undercoverage. This process assumed that the area frame provided complete coverage and that all operations were correctly classified as farm/nonfarm. To determine the extent of undercoverage in 2007, the CML records were matched to the area-frame tracts designated as agricultural, non-agricultural with potential, or non- agricultural with potential unknown in June. The area-frame tracts that did not match a CML record were designated as being in the Not on the Mail List (NML) domain. In 2007, tracts that were determined to be non-agricultural without potential during the pre-screening phase of the June Agricultural Survey (JAS) were not considered in the NML domain construction. The NML domain tracts were sent a census form and, if a tract was associated with a farm, then that farm contributed to the correction for undercoverage. To adjust for nonresponse in 2007, each responding CML record was given a probability of being a farm using a classification tree. The inverse of this probability became the nonresponse weight for that record. For undercoverage, the adjustment provided State-level values. A State-level estimate was based on the weighted sum of the responders with an adjustment for the non- responders within that State plus the State-level undercoverage adjustment. Because State-level farm count estimates based on this two-step process sometimes had high standard errors and apparent biases, the national-level adjusted estimates were smoothed across States, producing initial State-level farm operation coverage targets. Research following the 2007 Census of Agriculture led to the realization that some area-frame operations were misclassified as farm/nonfarm, which was in conflict with the previous assumption that the JAS farm classification was the accurate classification. Further, because nonresponse could only occur if the operation was on the CML, undercoverage and nonresponse were dependent. Thus in 2012, NASS used capture-recapture methodology to adjust for undercoverage, nonresponse, and misclassification. To implement capture- recapture methods, two independent surveys were required. The 2012 Census of Agriculture (based on the CML) and the 2012 JAS (based on the area frame) were those two surveys. Historically, NASS has been careful to maintain the independence of these two surveys. A second assumption was that the proportion of JAS farms with a given set of characteristics captured by the census was equal to the proportion of U.S. farms with those same characteristics captured by the census. 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, based on the census response, be classified as a farm; that is, the capture probability pC is of interest: = 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, = 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 questionnaire. To estimate the capture and correct census farm classification probabilities, a matched dataset consisting of JAS records and census records was created. Records in the 2012 JAS sample were matched to the 2012 census using probabilistic record linkage. The CML records that matched with JAS tracts represent the Census sample. Note: The Census Sample is a subset of the CML records and includes only those records matching a JAS tract. Both agricultural and non-agricultural tracts were included in the matched dataset. (This differs from the 2007 processes, which considered only the agricultural tracts and non-agricultural tracts with potential or with potential unknown. It also included CML records that responded to the census as a farm or nonfarm and CML records that did not respond to the census.) Resolving Farm Status The farm status based on census responses to either the CML or NML census data collection and 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) by the census through either 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; one identified as a nonfarm is referred to as out- of-scope. From the set of matched records, three 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, and 3) in-scope JAS records that did not have a census response. The records with conflicting farm status were sent to 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. Not all of the records with conflicting farm status could be resolved. In 2012, 11.6 percent of the records in the Census Sample had unresolved farm status. Of these, 18.9 percent were from nonresponse to the census report form. The probability an operation is a farm was estimated for the records with unresolved farm status. Using the 2012 matched dataset, a logistic model of the probability an operation is a farm based on the records with resolved farm status was developed; that is, the operations where the farm (or nonfarm) status agreed between the JAS and the census were used to develop a missing data model, which was then used to resolve farm status. The final missing data model was used to impute the probability that each of the agricultural operations with unresolved farm status is a farm. For the resolved farms and nonfarms, the probability of the operation being a farm was 1 and 0, respectively. Five-fold cross-validation was used to develop and to compare competing models. The accuracy of the model was thereby not overstated due to fitting and evaluating the model on the same set of data. To ensure that each of the cross-validation samples covered the U.S., the five cross-validation samples of JAS segments were drawn within State-stratum combinations. Characteristics of the JAS tracts were considered as potential covariates in the model. Because limited information is available for JAS nonfarm tracts, county-level socio-demographic variables from the most recent U.S. population census were also considered. The sample weight associated with each JAS tract was multiplied by the probability of being a farm. This adjusted weight was used 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 the census report form and, based on the census response, be classified as a farm. These adjustments are dependent so that 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) The probability of capturing a farm depends on the characteristics of the farm. Using five-fold cross-validation, three logistic models were developed based on the matched dataset. The first model estimated the probability of a farm being on the CML. The second model estimated the probability that a farm on the CML responded to the census report form. The final model estimated the probability that a farm that was on the CML and responded to the census was identified as a farm based on its response. The probability that a farm is captured by the census of agriculture is then the product of the three conditional probabilities that a farm is on the CML, responds, and is identified as a farm. Note 1: Responses were required for Must cases. These operations were only included in modeling the probability of a farm being on the CML. Consequently, the weight associated with a Must record was the reciprocal of the probability of a farm being on the CML. Note 2: Two sets of models were created. One set estimated the probability of capture for Texas farms. The other set provided estimated capture probabilities for farms in the remaining States, except for Alaska. Note 3: 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 final logistic model was developed. Given that an operation was classified as a farm on the CML, the probability of its being a farm was modeled based on its characteristics. Five-fold cross-validation was used to ensure that the model was not over-fitted. CALIBRATION Each operation identified as being in-scope on the CML was given a weight equal to the probability of misclassification 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 and land in farms for 63 different categories of 8 characteristics of the farm operation or the farm operator -- value of agricultural sales (8); age (2); female; race (4); Hispanic origin of principal farm operator ; 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 65 categories. To reduce the intercensal variation at the State level, the State targets were smoothed by averaging the 2012 estimates from capture-recapture and the published 2007 state estimates with the restrictions that the smoothed targets were within one standard error of the capture-recapture estimates. The smoothed State targets were rescaled so that they summed to the national capture-recapture 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. Commodity coverage targets with acceptable ranges were established by subject-matter experts for each State, with New England treated as a State. 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. To ensure that the calibration process converged with so many constraints, it was desirable to provide some tolerance ranges for each target. Although full calibration to a single point estimate would assure that the weighted total among census respondents equaled its target for each calibration variable in either set, it was not always possible to calibrate to such a large number of target values while ensuring that farm weights were within a reasonable range and not less than one. Because of this and because calibration targets are estimates themselves 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. This tolerance strategy made it possible for the calibration algorithm to produce a set of satisfactory, adjusted weights. Ranges for the farm operation coverage targets were determined differently from the commodity targets. The State target for number of farms had no tolerance range. The tolerance range for the 64 other State farm operation coverage targets was the estimated smoothed State total for the variable plus or minus one-half of the standard error of the capture-recapture estimate. This choice limited the cumulative deviation from the estimated total for a variable when State totals were summed to a U.S. level total. The commodity target tolerance ranges were determined by subject-matter experts, based on the amount of confidence in the source, and usually were less than plus or minus two percent of the target. Ranges were not necessarily symmetric around the target value. Census data collection was assumed to be complete for very large and unique farms with their weight being controlled to 1 during the calibration adjustment process. For all other farms, adjustment weights were obtained using truncated linear calibration which forced the final census record weights to fall in the interval [1,6]. Adjustments began with the nonresponse and misclassification adjusted weights. Through calibration, a second stage weight that simultaneously satisfied all farm operation coverage and commodity coverage calibration targets was obtained. Calibration was seldom able to adjust weights so that all State targets were met. Within the calibration process, the highest priority for meeting a target was given to the number of farms, total land in farms, and top cash-receipt commodities accounting for 80 percent of the State's production. All remaining targets associated with commodities and characteristics of farms and farm operators had equal priority. If a value within the tolerance range of any variable could not be achieved in a given State, the variable was removed as a target in that State and the calibration algorithm was rerun. Weight computations in the final algorithms were performed to several decimals. Thus, the fully-adjusted weights were non-integer numbers. To ensure that all subdomains for which NASS publishes summed to their grand total, fully-adjusted weights were integerized. This eliminated the need for rounding individual cell values and ensured that marginal totals always added correctly to the grand total. As an example of how the integerization process worked, assume there were five census records in a county with final noninteger coverage weights of 2.2, for a total of 11. The integerization process randomly selected four of these records and rounded their final weight down to 2.0 and rounded the fifth record up to 3.0, for a total of 11. The proportions of selected census data items that are 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. Cell suppression was used to protect the cells that were determined to be sensitive to a disclosure of information. Farm counts are not considered sensitive and are not subject to disclosure controls. Based on agency standards, data cells were determined to be sensitive to a disclosure of information if they violated either of two criteria rules. The threshold rule was violated 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 was violated 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 were 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 in all linear relationships in all tables. These data cells were referred to as complementary suppressions. These cells were 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 could not determine whether a cell with a (D) represented a primary or a complementary suppression. Field office analysts reviewed all complementary suppressions to ensure no cells had been withheld that were vital to the data users. In instances where complimentary 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 operators 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. There are many ways to measure the quality of a census. 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 2012 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 recently in the literature. Because the CML contains both farm and nonfarm records, the response rate is an indicator of replying to the census data collection effort, but does not reflect whether those responding met the farm definition. The response rate for the 2012 Census of Agriculture CML is 80.1 percent as compared with a response rate of 85.2 percent for the 2007 Census of Agriculture and 88.0 for the 2002 Census of Agriculture. The 2012 Census of Agriculture response rate used the fourth response rate formula from the American Association of Public Opinion Research 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 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 to be 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 operator. 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 percentages 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 Although the census of agriculture does not inherently rely on a sample, it 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 and in making adjustments 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 June Agricultural Survey. The largest contribution to error in the census estimates is due to the adjustments for nonresponse, undercoverage, misclassification, calibration and integerization. Variability in Census Estimates due to Statistical Adjustment In conducting the 2012 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, for calibration, and for integerization. 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. Because Texas and Alaska were modeled separately from the other States, the variances of a national-level data item for these two States were computed separately and added to the variance of that data item for the rest of the U.S. The standard error was then the square root of the total variance. In each case, standard errors were computed using the group jackknife approach. To conduct the jackknifing, k mutually exclusive and exhaustive groups of JAS segments were formed. The groups were selected using a stratified random design so that each group reflected the survey design, including State and agricultural strata within a State. In turn, each group, j = 1, 2, ..., k, was deleted and the capture- recapture estimate CRi(j) was computed for each data item i at the specified geographical level, such as nation, State, or county, using the remaining (k - 1) groups. Estimates of the variance and standard error associated with the capture-recapture estimate CRi are then, respectively, Increasing k improves the estimate of the variance but, as k increases, the observations become too sparse to reflect the survey design and to provide country-wide coverage. Based on 2007 data, k = 10 was determined to be the largest number of groups that could be formed and still have each group provide adequate coverage within all States and agricultural strata. Thus, 10 jackknife groups were used to provide standard errors for 2012 State and national estimates. To capture the additional variability from calibration and integerization, the standard errors were computed using the calibrated, integerized capture-recapture estimates from the jackknife groups. 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 jackknife group. When the constraints of the calibration process produced an artificially small standard error, the more conservative capture-recapture standard error was used. Note that the jackknife groups must only be 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(CRi) 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 (GCVs) 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 error variation in the value of that estimated data item based on the possible outcomes of the census collection, including variants as to who was on the CML, who returned a census form, who was misclassified either as a farm or as a nonfarm, and the uncertainty associated with calibration and integerization. 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. 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, sampling errors can be introduced from the coverage, nonresponse and misclassification adjustment procedures. This error is measureable. 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 give rounded numbers, 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 operators 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 operator's absence from the farm during the data collection period, and the operator'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 it was previously reported data, administrative data, the nearest neighbor algorithm, or manually imputed by an analyst, 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 operators 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 Agricultural Survey tract operator names to the CML. Area operators 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 operator was on the CML) or undercounts (excluding a tract whose operator 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 operators were mailed a report form printed in a different color. In order to attempt 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 2012 JAS were matched to the 2012 census using probabilistic record linkage. The records of operations with unresolved farm status were reviewed by the 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, with the exception of model uncertainty, was accounted for, but errors not found through this process were not. Model Uncertainty Error Five logistic models were developed in the process of adjusting the farm numbers for undercoverage, nonresponse, and misclassification. One model estimated the probability of an agricultural operation with unresolved farm status being a farm. The remaining four models estimated the probability of coverage, response, and correct classification of farms and of nonfarms. Each model was fit independently by two people. For some models, both statisticians obtained the same model. Although the covariates in the two selected models differed some for the other logistic models, the estimated probabilities were similar, but not identical. The reported standard errors account for the variability in the parameter estimates of the selected models, but not for the additional variation due to model uncertainty. They also do not account for any bias associated with a model. Table A. Summary of State Coverage, Nonresponse, and Misclassification Adjustments: 2012 [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: 77,857 7,760 40.3 15.8 17.1 7.4 Land in farms ...................................................acres: 25,569,001 1,460,449 21.0 3.3 15.7 2.1 : Farms by size: : 1 to 9 acres ..................................................farms: 24,637 4,129 48.5 23.5 15.1 9.9 acres: 95,670 15,471 48.2 23.2 15.5 9.6 10 to 49 acres ................................................farms: 25,811 1,872 42.2 18.0 15.5 8.8 acres: 584,643 40,397 40.7 17.1 15.2 8.4 50 to 69 acres ................................................farms: 3,700 287 40.6 10.0 24.1 6.4 acres: 212,480 16,342 40.5 10.0 24.1 6.4 70 to 99 acres ................................................farms: 3,601 307 38.7 8.9 24.1 5.7 acres: 294,439 24,893 38.6 8.9 24.0 5.7 100 to 139 acres ..............................................farms: 3,222 276 37.6 9.4 22.8 5.4 acres: 369,985 31,413 37.5 9.5 22.6 5.4 140 to 179 acres ..............................................farms: 2,533 202 35.6 9.9 20.8 5.0 acres: 398,520 31,867 35.7 9.9 20.8 5.0 180 to 219 acres ..............................................farms: 1,477 96 31.1 6.9 20.0 4.2 acres: 292,751 18,947 31.1 6.9 20.0 4.2 220 to 259 acres ..............................................farms: 1,189 81 28.8 6.9 18.3 3.6 acres: 282,281 19,093 28.8 6.9 18.3 3.6 260 to 499 acres ..............................................farms: 3,983 289 27.0 6.1 17.6 3.3 acres: 1,428,792 103,224 26.7 6.0 17.4 3.2 500 to 999 acres ..............................................farms: 3,230 286 23.3 4.0 16.7 2.6 acres: 2,244,264 195,584 23.0 3.9 16.5 2.6 1,000 to 1,999 acres ..........................................farms: 2,040 151 20.0 2.7 15.2 2.1 acres: 2,800,180 200,569 20.1 2.7 15.3 2.1 2,000 acres or more ...........................................farms: 2,434 187 20.7 1.8 17.3 1.6 acres: 16,564,996 939,291 18.0 1.9 14.7 1.3 : Irrigated land use: : Harvested cropland ............................................farms: 47,972 3,176 34.8 11.9 16.4 6.5 acres: 7,371,411 139,656 17.4 2.7 12.6 2.1 Pastureland and other land ....................................farms: 7,884 1,160 47.8 20.2 19.9 7.8 acres: 490,553 45,867 22.8 3.4 17.0 2.3 : Market value of agricultural : products sold .................................................$1,000: 42,627,472 725,882 12.2 2.3 8.9 1.1 : Farms by value of sales: : Less than $1,000 ..............................................farms: 15,396 3,537 60.7 32.3 17.0 11.5 $1,000: 1,673 562 64.8 40.6 15.0 9.2 $1,000 to $2,499 ..............................................farms: 4,590 693 47.6 22.5 15.1 10.1 $1,000: 7,596 1,130 47.6 22.2 15.3 10.1 $2,500 to $4,999 ..............................................farms: 5,736 727 48.8 21.0 16.5 11.3 $1,000: 20,356 2,550 48.9 20.9 16.5 11.4 $5,000 to $9,999 ..............................................farms: 7,718 876 47.6 20.2 16.1 11.3 $1,000: 53,701 6,066 47.7 20.2 16.2 11.3 $10,000 to $19,999 ............................................farms: 7,455 872 40.8 12.7 21.7 6.4 $1,000: 103,217 12,014 41.0 12.6 21.9 6.5 $20,000 to $24,999 ............................................farms: 2,682 296 40.5 11.9 22.2 6.4 1,000: 58,665 6,475 40.4 11.8 22.1 6.4 $25,000 to $39,999 ............................................farms: 4,780 347 37.2 12.9 16.6 7.7 $1,000: 148,840 10,729 37.0 12.9 16.5 7.6 $40,000 to $49,999 ............................................farms: 2,263 168 35.4 11.7 16.6 7.2 $1,000: 99,296 7,406 35.5 11.7 16.7 7.2 $50,000 to $99,999 ............................................farms: 6,679 503 34.6 11.2 16.9 6.5 $1,000: 469,861 35,040 34.4 11.1 16.8 6.4 $100,000 to $249,999 ..........................................farms: 6,922 251 24.2 4.0 18.1 2.1 $1,000: 1,103,202 39,695 24.4 3.9 18.4 2.1 $250,000 to $499,999 ..........................................farms: 4,117 160 24.6 3.3 19.2 2.0 $1,000: 1,444,378 55,792 24.6 3.3 19.3 2.0 $500,000 to $999,999 ..........................................farms: 3,186 170 23.2 2.1 18.2 2.9 $1,000: 2,245,124 117,119 23.0 2.1 18.1 2.8 $1,000,000 or more ............................................farms: 6,333 184 14.8 1.6 11.8 1.4 $1,000: 36,871,564 551,451 10.0 1.9 7.4 0.7 : Net cash farm income of operations (see text): : Farms with gains of 1/ - : Less than $1,000 ............................................farms: 1,602 206 44.9 18.5 16.1 10.3 $1,000: 762 89 44.7 18.8 15.5 10.3 $1,000 to $4,999 ............................................farms: 4,785 487 44.4 17.5 17.4 9.5 $1,000: 13,480 1,342 44.0 17.1 17.5 9.4 $5,000 to $9,999 ............................................farms: 3,597 344 41.2 14.5 18.8 7.8 $1,000: 26,156 2,498 40.9 14.2 18.9 7.7 $10,000 to $24,999 ..........................................farms: 5,723 452 37.0 12.0 18.2 6.8 $1,000: 95,178 7,349 37.1 12.1 18.2 6.8 $25,000 to $49,999 ..........................................farms: 4,813 307 33.3 10.7 16.9 5.7 $1,000: 173,881 10,949 33.1 10.5 17.0 5.6 $50,000 or more .............................................farms: 15,763 443 22.4 3.9 16.0 2.6 $1,000: 11,085,441 241,228 13.1 2.2 9.7 1.3 : Farms with losses of - : Less than $1,000 ............................................farms: 1,982 254 48.7 21.5 16.2 11.0 1,000: 1,004 132 48.5 21.4 16.2 11.0 $1,000 to $4,999 ............................................farms: 8,924 1,399 51.5 24.7 16.4 10.4 1,000: 26,202 4,192 51.6 24.9 16.5 10.2 $5,000 to $9,999 ............................................farms: 7,815 1,717 51.3 25.0 16.8 9.5 1,000: 57,166 12,850 51.3 24.9 16.8 9.6 $10,000 to $24,999 ..........................................farms: 10,269 1,578 49.2 22.3 17.7 9.2 1,000: 164,982 24,529 48.9 22.1 17.6 9.1 $25,000 to $49,999 ..........................................farms: 5,478 650 46.2 19.3 18.1 8.9 1,000: 192,542 22,525 46.1 19.1 18.1 8.8 $50,000 or more .............................................farms: 7,106 485 37.3 11.1 19.2 7.0 1,000: 2,429,717 82,223 23.2 5.7 14.2 3.4 : Farms by legal status for tax purposes: : Family or individual ..........................................farms: 59,732 6,755 43.2 17.6 17.4 8.2 acres: 12,000,544 1,013,584 23.5 3.7 17.5 2.3 Partnership ...................................................farms: 8,984 481 30.3 9.0 16.4 4.9 acres: 6,934,159 266,381 17.7 2.4 13.6 1.7 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table A. Summary of State Coverage, Nonresponse, and Misclassification Adjustments: 2012 (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 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Farms by legal status for tax purposes: - Con. : : Corporation: : Family held .................................................farms: 5,345 291 29.1 7.9 16.4 4.8 acres: 4,209,678 118,937 19.1 2.8 14.4 1.9 Other than family held ......................................farms: 1,016 68 29.4 10.2 14.3 4.9 acres: 1,149,993 39,808 17.1 4.8 10.3 2.0 Other - cooperative, estate or : trust, institutional, etc. ...................................farms: 2,780 228 36.1 15.4 14.9 5.8 acres: 1,274,627 64,700 25.4 5.4 17.4 2.6 : Tenure: : Full owners ...................................................farms: 60,492 6,171 41.8 17.8 15.8 8.1 acres: 10,081,540 488,038 25.7 5.9 16.7 3.1 Part owners ...................................................farms: 9,490 675 29.5 6.8 18.8 3.9 acres: 11,310,115 717,128 15.7 1.7 12.7 1.3 Tenants .......................................................farms: 7,875 1,009 42.2 12.9 22.2 7.1 acres: 4,177,346 283,309 24.0 3.2 18.5 2.3 : Principal operator characteristics by- : Sex of operator: : Male ........................................................farms: 63,873 5,934 39.2 14.4 17.6 7.3 acres: 23,292,124 1,318,730 20.6 3.0 15.5 2.0 Female ......................................................farms: 13,984 1,943 45.4 22.0 15.1 8.3 acres: 2,276,877 156,485 25.5 5.7 17.0 2.8 : Primary occupation: : Farming .....................................................farms: 42,469 3,390 37.1 13.1 17.2 6.8 Other .......................................................farms: 35,388 4,448 44.2 18.9 17.1 8.2 : Spanish, Hispanic, or : Latino origin (see text) .....................................farms: 9,815 1,057 59.6 15.2 30.1 14.3 acres: 1,608,488 90,154 32.8 3.4 24.2 5.2 : Race: : American Indian or : Alaska Native ..............................................farms: 1,192 189 53.2 12.0 29.2 12.0 acres: 241,808 49,572 33.5 3.0 26.5 4.0 Asian .......................................................farms: 4,802 977 52.5 9.6 26.0 17.0 acres: 593,187 58,955 31.1 3.1 21.9 6.1 Black or African American ...................................farms: 345 89 43.5 14.7 20.1 8.7 acres: 32,932 5,752 20.7 3.2 14.7 2.8 Native Hawaiian or : Other Pacific Islander .....................................farms: 321 65 56.1 12.9 25.4 17.8 acres: 32,930 8,625 43.4 3.9 30.9 8.6 White .......................................................farms: 70,537 6,906 39.2 16.1 16.3 6.8 acres: 24,500,865 1,387,691 20.7 3.3 15.5 2.0 More than one race reported .................................farms: 660 158 39.7 31.4 12.3 -4.0 acres: 167,279 12,787 6.4 2.8 3.5 0.1 : Reporting primary occupation as : farming by age group: : Under 25 years ..............................................farms: 151 32 70.9 24.5 34.9 11.5 25 to 34 years ..............................................farms: 1,663 351 62.3 24.7 25.6 12.0 35 to 44 years ..............................................farms: 3,117 504 45.2 11.9 25.5 7.9 45 to 54 years ..............................................farms: 7,658 662 39.0 11.8 22.4 4.7 55 to 64 years ..............................................farms: 12,433 854 34.7 11.9 17.2 5.7 65 years and over ...........................................farms: 17,447 1,096 33.8 14.1 11.4 8.2 : Reporting primary occupation as : other than farming by age group: : Under 25 years ..............................................farms: 102 31 71.6 30.6 28.8 12.2 25 to 34 years ..............................................farms: 1,305 403 66.4 28.6 25.8 11.9 35 to 44 years ..............................................farms: 3,138 754 54.7 18.6 25.5 10.6 45 to 54 years ..............................................farms: 8,288 1,468 48.2 19.8 22.0 6.4 55 to 64 years ..............................................farms: 10,949 1,085 41.8 19.0 15.4 7.3 65 years and over ...........................................farms: 11,606 936 38.1 17.8 10.5 9.8 : All operators by age group 2/: : Under 25 years ................................................farms: 1,292 250 53.6 22.4 23.6 7.6 25 to 34 years ................................................farms: 6,329 1,206 52.4 20.8 22.3 9.3 35 to 44 years ................................................farms: 12,100 2,044 45.8 14.6 22.9 8.2 45 to 54 years ................................................farms: 26,896 3,126 42.4 15.9 20.6 5.9 55 to 64 years ................................................farms: 36,342 3,030 37.9 15.3 16.0 6.5 65 to 74 years ................................................farms: 25,653 1,934 36.4 16.4 11.4 8.6 75 years and over .............................................farms: 13,775 911 35.1 13.9 12.6 8.6 : Livestock and poultry: : Cattle and calves inventory ...................................farms: 16,764 2,985 44.3 16.6 21.4 6.2 number: 5,370,531 180,596 6.6 0.9 5.3 0.4 Beef cows inventory ...........................................farms: 10,925 2,137 36.1 13.4 17.7 5.0 number: 583,594 74,857 2.5 0.4 1.9 0.2 Milk cows inventory ...........................................frams: 1,931 1,076 28.2 4.7 20.6 2.9 number: 1,815,655 61,345 6.8 0.2 6.5 (Z) Hog and pigs inventory ........................................farms: 1,437 719 57.8 31.3 19.9 6.6 number: 111,893 5,917 8.8 3.6 4.3 0.8 Layers inventory ............................................. farms: 6,744 1,406 55.0 28.4 18.0 8.6 number: 19,000,779 772,755 0.4 0.3 0.1 (Z) Broilers sold .................................................farms: 421 110 45.8 25.0 12.7 8.2 number: 273,277,272 11,758,803 0.8 0.8 (Z) (Z) Aquaculture sold ..............................................farms: 229 46 38.9 22.8 11.5 4.6 $1,000: 103,016 20,289 21.7 13.3 7.2 1.2 : Selected crops harvested: : Corn for grain ................................................farms: 733 36 21.8 4.2 13.8 3.9 acres: 180,672 3,425 4.2 0.4 3.4 0.4 Wheat, winter .................................................farms: 1,020 31 24.3 4.5 16.4 3.5 acres: 316,109 11,089 21.8 2.5 16.9 2.5 Wheat, durum ..................................................farms: 375 15 21.9 3.1 14.8 3.9 acres: 135,540 7,261 18.8 2.5 12.7 3.6 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table A. Summary of State Coverage, Nonresponse, and Misclassification Adjustments: 2012 (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. : : Wheat, spring .................................................farms: 179 12 29.6 6.4 18.4 4.8 acres: 40,197 4,872 23.5 3.3 16.8 3.4 Soybeans for beans ............................................farms: 2 1 (Z) (Z) (Z) (Z) acres: (D) (D) (D) (D) (D) (D) Sorghum for grain .............................................farms: 74 10 28.4 5.7 18.3 4.4 acres: 13,908 2,512 23.5 3.6 17.9 2.0 Rice ..........................................................farms: 1,392 77 30.1 3.2 24.3 2.6 acres: 561,968 21,934 27.7 2.1 23.9 1.8 Cotton ........................................................farms: 630 34 11.7 2.0 7.8 1.9 acres: 367,766 9,572 7.1 0.8 5.3 1.0 Peanuts .......................................................farms: 15 8 73.3 8.4 52.8 12.1 acres: 27 15 74.1 8.9 52.1 13.1 Barley ........................................................farms: 264 14 26.9 6.1 16.6 4.3 acres: 81,954 6,846 24.3 3.0 18.1 3.2 Oats ..........................................................farms: 240 13 18.8 3.4 12.2 3.2 acres: 25,065 944 3.4 0.3 2.9 0.2 : Forage - land used for all hay and all : haylage, grass silage, and : greenchop (see text) .........................................farms: 7,903 722 32.3 8.0 18.7 5.6 acres: 1,670,027 92,539 20.2 2.5 14.7 3.0 Land in vegetables (see text) .................................farms: 6,055 972 54.9 22.4 22.5 10.0 acres: 985,735 23,063 11.7 2.7 7.7 1.2 Potatoes ....................................................farms: 441 70 50.8 22.2 21.2 7.4 acres: 42,660 2,913 28.1 5.4 21.3 1.5 Tomatoes in the open ........................................farms: 3,176 509 55.1 24.2 21.6 9.3 acres: 295,247 14,932 4.2 1.2 2.5 0.5 Sweet corn ..................................................farms: 441 58 50.6 21.6 21.3 7.6 acres: 32,667 1,907 14.0 2.0 10.2 1.7 Lettuce .....................................................farms: 1,486 258 53.4 23.7 21.0 8.8 acres: 232,842 17,361 7.0 1.9 4.6 0.5 Land in orchards ..............................................farms: 38,098 2,169 33.1 12.0 14.8 6.3 acres: 3,138,943 72,047 17.2 3.5 11.8 1.9 Apples ......................................................farms: 2,527 255 46.9 20.0 17.7 9.1 acres: 18,205 1,047 23.1 5.5 14.5 3.2 Grapes ......................................................farms: 11,462 585 30.1 10.8 14.3 5.0 acres: 940,177 24,260 16.6 3.3 11.6 1.7 Oranges .....................................................farms: 5,204 350 36.3 13.9 14.6 7.8 acres: 193,087 8,418 21.4 5.1 13.7 2.6 Almonds .....................................................farms: 6,841 258 27.8 8.1 15.4 4.3 acres: 935,804 36,080 16.8 3.3 11.8 1.7 Land in berries ...............................................farms: 1,985 181 47.2 18.2 20.9 8.0 acres: 52,626 4,833 26.0 4.1 19.2 2.7 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 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. 2/ Data were collected for a maximum of three operators per farm. Table B. Reliability Estimates of State Totals: 2012 [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : :Coefficient :: : :Coefficient : :of variation:: : :of variation Item : Total : (percent) :: Item : Total : (percent) ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Farms .....................................................number: 77,857 10.0 :: Farms by legal status for tax purposes: - Con. : Land in farms ..............................................acres: 25,569,001 5.7 :: : : :: Partnership ..............................................farms: 8,984 5.3 Farms by size: : :: acres: 6,934,159 3.8 1 to 9 acres .............................................farms: 24,637 16.8 :: Corporation: : acres: 95,670 16.2 :: Family held ............................................farms: 5,345 5.4 10 to 49 acres ...........................................farms: 25,811 7.3 :: acres: 4,209,678 2.8 acres: 584,643 6.9 :: Other than family held .................................farms: 1,016 6.7 50 to 69 acres ...........................................farms: 3,700 7.7 :: acres: 1,149,993 3.5 acres: 212,480 7.7 :: Other - cooperative, estate or : 70 to 99 acres ...........................................farms: 3,601 8.5 :: trust, institutional, etc. ..............................farms: 2,780 8.2 acres: 294,439 8.5 :: acres: 1,274,627 5.1 100 to 139 acres .........................................farms: 3,222 8.6 :: : acres: 369,985 8.5 :: Tenure: : 140 to 179 acres .........................................farms: 2,533 8.0 :: Full owners ..............................................farms: 60,492 10.2 acres: 398,520 8.0 :: acres: 10,081,540 4.8 180 to 219 acres .........................................farms: 1,477 6.5 :: Part owners ..............................................farms: 9,490 7.1 acres: 292,751 6.5 :: acres: 11,310,115 6.3 220 to 259 acres .........................................farms: 1,189 6.8 :: Tenants ..................................................farms: 7,875 12.8 acres: 282,281 6.8 :: acres: 4,177,346 6.8 260 to 499 acres .........................................farms: 3,983 7.3 :: : acres: 1,428,792 7.2 :: Principal operator characteristics by- : 500 to 999 acres .........................................farms: 3,230 8.8 :: Sex of operator: : acres: 2,244,264 8.7 :: Male ...................................................farms: 63,873 9.3 1,000 to 1,999 acres .....................................farms: 2,040 7.4 :: acres: 23,292,124 5.7 acres: 2,800,180 7.2 :: Female .................................................farms: 13,984 13.9 2,000 acres or more ......................................farms: 2,434 7.7 :: acres: 2,276,877 6.9 acres: 16,564,996 5.7 :: : : :: Primary occupation: : Irrigated land use: : :: Farming ................................................farms: 42,469 8.0 Harvested cropland .......................................farms: 47,972 6.6 :: Other ..................................................farms: 35,388 12.6 acres: 7,371,411 1.9 :: : Pastureland and other land ...............................farms: 7,884 14.7 :: Spanish, Hispanic, or : acres: 490,553 9.3 :: Latino origin (see text) ................................farms: 9,815 10.8 : :: acres: 1,608,488 5.6 Market value of agricultural : :: : products sold ............................................$1,000: 42,627,472 1.7 :: Race: : : :: American Indian or : Farms by value of sales: : :: Alaska Native .........................................farms: 1,192 15.9 Less than $1,000 .........................................farms: 15,396 23.0 :: acres: 241,808 20.5 $1,000: 1,673 33.6 :: Asian ..................................................farms: 4,802 20.3 $1,000 to $2,499 .........................................farms: 4,590 15.1 :: acres: 593,187 9.9 $1,000: 7,596 14.9 :: Black or African American ..............................farms: 345 25.9 $2,500 to $4,999 .........................................farms: 5,736 12.7 :: acres: 32,932 17.5 $1,000: 20,356 12.5 :: Native Hawaiian or : $5,000 to $9,999 .........................................farms: 7,718 11.3 :: Other Pacific Islander ................................farms: 321 20.4 $1,000: 53,701 11.3 :: acres: 32,930 26.2 $10,000 to $19,999 .......................................farms: 7,455 11.7 :: White ..................................................farms: 70,537 9.8 $1,000: 103,217 11.6 :: acres: 24,500,865 5.7 $20,000 to $24,999 .......................................farms: 2,682 11.0 :: More than one race reported ............................farms: 660 23.9 1,000: 58,665 11.0 :: acres: 167,279 7.6 $25,000 to $39,999 .......................................farms: 4,780 7.3 :: : $1,000: 148,840 7.2 :: Reporting primary occupation as : $40,000 to $49,999 .......................................farms: 2,263 7.4 :: farming by age group: : $1,000: 99,296 7.5 :: Under 25 years .........................................farms: 151 21.3 $50,000 to $99,999 .......................................farms: 6,679 7.5 :: 25 to 34 years .........................................farms: 1,663 21.1 $1,000: 469,861 7.5 :: 35 to 44 years .........................................farms: 3,117 16.2 $100,000 to $249,999 .....................................farms: 6,922 3.6 :: 45 to 54 years .........................................farms: 7,658 8.6 $1,000: 1,103,202 3.6 :: 55 to 64 years .........................................farms: 12,433 6.9 $250,000 to $499,999 .....................................farms: 4,117 3.9 :: 65 years and over ......................................farms: 17,447 6.3 $1,000: 1,444,378 3.9 :: : $500,000 to $999,999 .....................................farms: 3,186 5.3 :: Reporting primary occupation as : $1,000: 2,245,124 5.2 :: other than farming by age group: : $1,000,000 or more .......................................farms: 6,333 2.9 :: Under 25 years .........................................farms: 102 30.7 $1,000: 36,871,564 1.5 :: 25 to 34 years .........................................farms: 1,305 30.9 : :: 35 to 44 years .........................................farms: 3,138 24.0 Net cash farm income of operations (see text): : :: 45 to 54 years .........................................farms: 8,288 17.7 Farms with gains of 1/ - : :: 55 to 64 years .........................................farms: 10,949 9.9 Less than $1,000 .......................................farms: 1,602 12.8 :: 65 years and over ......................................farms: 11,606 8.1 $1,000: 762 11.7 :: : $1,000 to $4,999 .......................................farms: 4,785 10.2 :: All operators by age group 2/: : $1,000: 13,480 10.0 :: Under 25 years ...........................................farms: 1,292 19.3 $5,000 to $9,999 .......................................farms: 3,597 9.6 :: 25 to 34 years ...........................................farms: 6,329 19.1 $1,000: 26,156 9.5 :: 35 to 44 years ...........................................farms: 12,100 16.9 $10,000 to $24,999 .....................................farms: 5,723 7.9 :: 45 to 54 years ...........................................farms: 26,896 11.6 $1,000: 95,178 7.7 :: 55 to 64 years ...........................................farms: 36,342 8.3 $25,000 to $49,999 .....................................farms: 4,813 6.4 :: 65 to 74 years ...........................................farms: 25,653 7.5 $1,000: 173,881 6.3 :: 75 years and over ........................................farms: 13,775 6.6 $50,000 or more ........................................farms: 15,763 2.8 :: : $1,000: 11,085,441 2.2 :: Livestock and poultry: : : :: Cattle and calves inventory ..............................farms: 16,764 17.8 Farms with losses of - : :: number: 5,370,531 3.4 Less than $1,000 .......................................farms: 1,982 12.8 :: Beef cows inventory ......................................farms: 10,925 19.6 1,000: 1,004 13.1 :: number: 583,594 12.8 $1,000 to $4,999 .......................................farms: 8,924 15.7 :: Milk cows inventory ......................................frams: 1,931 55.7 1,000: 26,202 16.0 :: number: 1,815,655 3.4 $5,000 to $9,999 .......................................farms: 7,815 22.0 :: Hog and pigs inventory ...................................farms: 1,437 50.0 1,000: 57,166 22.5 :: number: 111,893 5.3 $10,000 to $24,999 .....................................farms: 10,269 15.4 :: Layers inventory ........................................ farms: 6,744 20.8 1,000: 164,982 14.9 :: number: 19,000,779 4.1 $25,000 to $49,999 .....................................farms: 5,478 11.9 :: Broilers sold ............................................farms: 421 26.2 1,000: 192,542 11.7 :: number: 273,277,272 4.3 $50,000 or more ........................................farms: 7,106 6.8 :: Aquaculture sold .........................................farms: 229 20.2 1,000: 2,429,717 3.4 :: $1,000: 103,016 19.7 : :: : Farms by legal status for tax purposes: : :: Selected crops harvested: : Family or individual .....................................farms: 59,732 11.3 :: Corn for grain ...........................................farms: 733 4.9 acres: 12,000,544 8.4 :: acres: 180,672 1.9 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table B. Reliability Estimates of State Totals: 2012 (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. : : :: : Wheat, winter ............................................farms: 1,020 3.1 :: Land in vegetables (see text) ............................farms: 6,055 16.1 acres: 316,109 3.5 :: acres: 985,735 2.3 Wheat, durum .............................................farms: 375 3.9 :: Potatoes ...............................................farms: 441 16.0 acres: 135,540 5.4 :: acres: 42,660 6.8 Wheat, spring ............................................farms: 179 6.9 :: Tomatoes in the open ...................................farms: 3,176 16.0 acres: 40,197 12.1 :: acres: 295,247 5.1 Soybeans for beans .......................................farms: 2 6.4 :: Sweet corn .............................................farms: 441 13.2 acres: (D) (D) :: acres: 32,667 5.8 Sorghum for grain ........................................farms: 74 14.1 :: Lettuce ................................................farms: 1,486 17.4 acres: 13,908 18.1 :: acres: 232,842 7.5 Rice .....................................................farms: 1,392 5.5 :: Land in orchards .........................................farms: 38,098 5.7 acres: 561,968 3.9 :: acres: 3,138,943 2.3 Cotton ...................................................farms: 630 5.4 :: Apples .................................................farms: 2,527 10.1 acres: 367,766 2.6 :: acres: 18,205 5.8 Peanuts ..................................................farms: 15 56.6 :: Grapes .................................................farms: 11,462 5.1 acres: 27 57.1 :: acres: 940,177 2.6 Barley ...................................................farms: 264 5.3 :: Oranges ................................................farms: 5,204 6.7 acres: 81,954 8.4 :: acres: 193,087 4.4 Oats .....................................................farms: 240 5.4 :: Almonds ................................................farms: 6,841 3.8 acres: 25,065 3.8 :: acres: 935,804 3.9 : :: Land in berries ..........................................farms: 1,985 9.1 Forage - land used for all hay and all : :: acres: 52,626 9.2 haylage, grass silage, and : :: : greenchop (see text) ....................................farms: 7,903 9.1 :: : acres: 1,670,027 5.5 :: : ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1/ Farms with 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. 2/ Data were collected for a maximum of three operators per farm. Table C. Summary of Coverage, Nonresponse, and Misclassification Adjustments by County: 2012 [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 : : State Total : : California............................................................: 77,857 7,760 40.3 15.8 17.1 7.4 : Counties : : Alameda...............................................................: 452 69 38.3 15.9 16.6 5.8 Alpine................................................................: 3 2 20.4 (Z) 20.4 (Z) Amador................................................................: 461 56 38.8 15.7 17.0 6.1 Butte.................................................................: 2,056 194 40.1 17.2 16.5 6.4 Calaveras.............................................................: 663 93 46.3 21.5 18.0 6.8 Colusa................................................................: 782 46 35.0 8.3 21.9 4.8 Contra Costa..........................................................: 602 79 44.3 18.1 17.6 8.6 Del Norte.............................................................: 121 23 52.9 28.6 18.5 5.9 El Dorado.............................................................: 1,358 200 47.6 24.3 15.2 8.0 Fresno................................................................: 5,683 426 38.2 12.3 18.3 7.7 : Glenn.................................................................: 1,311 124 38.3 13.1 19.3 5.9 Humboldt..............................................................: 930 122 45.9 18.1 21.4 6.4 Imperial..............................................................: 421 24 36.2 11.2 17.3 7.8 Inyo..................................................................: 125 24 46.2 19.2 19.2 7.8 Kern..................................................................: 1,938 172 35.4 12.9 16.4 6.1 Kings.................................................................: 1,056 84 36.5 13.5 16.7 6.3 Lake..................................................................: 838 83 41.4 18.7 15.5 7.2 Lassen................................................................: 448 75 43.7 16.1 20.9 6.7 Los Angeles...........................................................: 1,294 181 51.5 23.5 16.8 11.1 Madera................................................................: 1,507 101 34.7 11.1 17.4 6.2 : Marin.................................................................: 323 38 38.4 12.7 21.3 4.4 Mariposa..............................................................: 364 61 46.5 18.8 21.1 6.5 Mendocino.............................................................: 1,220 134 41.5 17.1 18.0 6.5 Merced................................................................: 2,486 162 34.7 10.8 17.9 6.0 Modoc.................................................................: 437 60 37.2 9.0 22.6 5.6 Mono..................................................................: 72 8 40.4 14.8 18.9 6.7 Monterey..............................................................: 1,179 112 40.2 13.8 19.6 6.8 Napa..................................................................: 1,685 107 29.4 12.7 11.8 4.9 Nevada................................................................: 742 265 50.7 26.2 16.7 7.8 Orange................................................................: 312 38 48.5 15.9 18.0 14.5 : Placer................................................................: 1,355 222 50.2 24.5 16.7 9.0 Plumas................................................................: 141 18 45.6 14.0 26.5 5.1 Riverside.............................................................: 2,949 322 44.0 17.9 15.8 10.3 Sacramento............................................................: 1,352 207 48.9 19.4 19.2 10.4 San Benito............................................................: 628 73 43.9 16.4 19.7 7.8 San Bernardino........................................................: 1,249 165 47.0 21.5 16.0 9.6 San Diego.............................................................: 5,732 587 40.2 17.4 13.8 9.0 San Francisco.........................................................: 6 3 42.6 25.6 8.5 8.5 San Joaquin...........................................................: 3,580 276 33.7 11.1 16.2 6.5 San Luis Obispo.......................................................: 2,666 266 42.4 16.6 18.2 7.6 : San Mateo.............................................................: 334 39 44.9 17.8 18.1 9.0 Santa Barbara.........................................................: 1,597 124 39.4 13.7 17.9 7.9 Santa Clara...........................................................: 1,003 131 46.5 17.0 19.1 10.3 Santa Cruz............................................................: 667 59 39.5 16.4 16.1 6.9 Shasta................................................................: 1,544 264 50.7 24.1 18.1 8.4 Sierra................................................................: 48 13 29.7 9.2 13.0 7.6 Siskiyou..............................................................: 929 142 44.5 18.1 19.5 6.9 Solano................................................................: 860 87 41.4 16.9 16.8 7.6 Sonoma................................................................: 3,579 373 39.4 17.8 15.2 6.4 Stanislaus............................................................: 4,143 296 38.5 14.0 17.9 6.6 : Sutter................................................................: 1,358 97 36.6 11.1 18.9 6.6 Tehama................................................................: 1,743 259 46.2 19.3 19.2 7.7 Trinity...............................................................: 247 39 56.5 25.8 22.3 8.5 Tulare................................................................: 4,931 719 37.2 11.7 18.0 7.5 Tuolumne..............................................................: 391 70 46.0 20.8 19.0 6.3 Ventura...............................................................: 2,150 157 32.2 12.7 12.7 6.8 Yolo..................................................................: 1,011 112 39.2 14.3 18.3 6.6 Yuba..................................................................: 795 144 44.4 19.4 17.6 7.4 : LAND IN FARMS : : State Total : : California............................................................: 25,569,001 1,460,449 21.0 3.3 15.6 2.1 : Counties : : Alameda...............................................................: 177,798 25,094 6.2 1.0 4.6 0.5 Alpine................................................................: (D) (D) (D) (D) (D) (D) Amador................................................................: 155,187 12,386 13.9 2.8 9.7 1.4 Butte.................................................................: 381,019 14,434 24.5 4.6 17.5 2.4 Calaveras.............................................................: 212,140 38,280 19.0 3.1 14.3 1.6 Colusa................................................................: 453,061 18,220 19.8 2.2 15.8 1.7 Contra Costa..........................................................: 127,670 21,651 17.0 1.7 14.1 1.2 Del Norte.............................................................: (D) (D) (D) (D) (D) (D) El Dorado.............................................................: 128,365 10,816 28.6 8.9 16.0 3.8 Fresno................................................................: 1,721,202 80,748 19.1 2.8 14.5 1.9 : Glenn.................................................................: 668,784 28,849 30.0 3.9 24.0 2.1 Humboldt..............................................................: 593,597 63,603 21.9 3.0 17.4 1.6 Imperial..............................................................: 515,783 15,198 28.9 4.0 17.3 7.7 Inyo..................................................................: 330,840 48,734 24.8 3.0 20.0 1.9 Kern..................................................................: 2,330,233 90,533 14.0 2.5 10.3 1.2 Kings.................................................................: 673,634 11,781 22.1 3.9 15.6 2.7 Lake..................................................................: 150,721 16,958 30.5 7.1 20.2 3.3 Lassen................................................................: 482,680 36,502 18.8 2.9 14.3 1.6 Los Angeles...........................................................: 91,689 5,581 41.1 11.2 23.8 6.1 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table C. Summary of Coverage, Nonresponse, and Misclassification Adjustments by County: 2012 (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 - Con. : : Counties - Con. : : Madera................................................................: 653,584 24,972 14.4 2.6 10.5 1.3 Marin.................................................................: 170,876 17,843 31.5 3.0 26.7 1.8 Mariposa..............................................................: 283,611 23,877 29.7 5.5 21.3 2.9 Mendocino.............................................................: 770,257 52,374 26.5 4.8 19.0 2.6 Merced................................................................: 978,667 66,802 14.8 2.0 11.5 1.3 Modoc.................................................................: 523,522 84,333 22.2 1.4 18.9 1.9 Mono..................................................................: 56,386 4,974 30.1 4.4 22.8 2.9 Monterey..............................................................: 1,268,144 65,271 18.7 3.3 13.7 1.6 Napa..................................................................: 253,370 13,453 19.0 3.7 13.4 1.9 Nevada................................................................: 42,114 5,596 39.5 12.0 22.0 5.5 : Orange................................................................: 60,497 3,697 45.5 14.2 26.2 5.1 Placer................................................................: 91,403 13,657 25.2 5.2 17.1 2.9 Plumas................................................................: 174,210 20,336 25.4 2.3 20.4 2.6 Riverside.............................................................: 344,044 17,346 30.7 4.0 20.3 6.4 Sacramento............................................................: 246,840 20,591 14.5 1.7 11.2 1.7 San Benito............................................................: 604,319 33,447 16.3 2.6 12.3 1.4 San Bernardino........................................................: 77,199 6,123 27.4 5.2 18.0 4.2 San Diego.............................................................: 221,538 29,696 26.3 7.0 15.5 3.7 San Francisco.........................................................: 12 5 27.1 19.4 3.9 3.9 San Joaquin...........................................................: 787,015 26,004 12.3 1.8 9.2 1.4 : San Luis Obispo.......................................................: 1,338,874 61,525 24.7 5.4 16.7 2.6 San Mateo.............................................................: 48,160 6,058 33.4 8.7 20.2 4.5 Santa Barbara.........................................................: 701,039 38,892 24.3 3.5 18.0 2.8 Santa Clara...........................................................: 229,927 17,201 9.7 1.9 6.8 1.0 Santa Cruz............................................................: 99,983 6,786 49.0 9.1 34.4 5.5 Shasta................................................................: 376,306 39,827 22.6 4.0 15.8 2.7 Sierra................................................................: 39,141 4,191 2.8 0.4 2.1 0.3 Siskiyou..............................................................: 722,855 54,812 23.4 3.8 17.0 2.5 Solano................................................................: 407,101 17,584 17.7 2.7 12.9 2.1 Sonoma................................................................: 589,771 34,988 28.0 5.5 20.0 2.5 : Stanislaus............................................................: 768,046 54,164 18.1 2.2 14.7 1.2 Sutter................................................................: 375,174 29,205 21.6 1.7 17.3 2.6 Tehama................................................................: 616,521 55,129 18.8 2.5 14.4 1.8 Trinity...............................................................: 175,948 47,571 28.6 6.9 19.8 1.9 Tulare................................................................: 1,239,000 51,041 22.5 3.2 16.9 2.4 Tuolumne..............................................................: 87,813 14,909 23.8 4.1 17.8 2.0 Ventura...............................................................: 281,046 29,639 24.2 3.5 18.7 2.1 Yolo..................................................................: 460,824 23,366 16.0 2.3 11.9 1.7 Yuba..................................................................: 187,638 10,937 37.3 5.3 27.6 4.4 : SALES : : State Total : : California............................................................: 42,627,472 725,882 12.2 2.3 8.9 1.1 : Counties : : Alameda...............................................................: 57,522 12,648 27.1 8.6 16.4 2.2 Alpine................................................................: 265 55 11.7 1.2 9.7 0.8 Amador................................................................: 31,968 3,013 20.7 4.6 13.6 2.5 Butte.................................................................: 541,274 23,829 22.2 3.9 16.2 2.0 Calaveras.............................................................: 26,004 8,883 32.6 5.5 23.9 3.2 Colusa................................................................: 577,313 105,541 17.0 2.3 13.5 1.2 Contra Costa..........................................................: 89,358 5,561 13.4 1.7 10.1 1.6 Del Norte.............................................................: 35,651 1,982 4.7 0.5 3.5 0.6 El Dorado.............................................................: 30,507 2,028 32.1 8.7 18.6 4.8 Fresno................................................................: 4,973,041 73,967 10.3 2.3 7.1 0.9 : Glenn.................................................................: 637,363 51,401 23.0 2.8 18.7 1.5 Humboldt..............................................................: 203,260 7,480 19.0 1.8 16.5 0.6 Imperial..............................................................: 1,888,639 66,079 16.4 4.5 8.6 3.3 Inyo..................................................................: 19,613 1,029 27.2 3.7 21.1 2.5 Kern..................................................................: 3,998,990 74,325 7.7 2.3 4.8 0.6 Kings.................................................................: 1,829,236 101,820 9.9 2.1 7.0 0.8 Lake..................................................................: 99,463 14,913 11.7 3.0 7.4 1.3 Lassen................................................................: 72,671 11,678 15.7 1.9 12.1 1.7 Los Angeles...........................................................: 193,097 8,523 24.1 4.8 15.0 4.4 Madera................................................................: 1,602,766 64,621 9.8 1.1 8.2 0.5 : Marin.................................................................: 91,809 9,077 51.3 2.2 48.2 0.9 Mariposa..............................................................: 22,321 2,133 25.8 3.0 20.3 2.5 Mendocino.............................................................: 148,897 11,710 23.0 4.0 16.7 2.3 Merced................................................................: 2,967,523 49,434 10.8 1.9 8.4 0.5 Modoc.................................................................: 106,606 11,742 28.8 2.4 23.1 3.4 Mono..................................................................: 17,976 5,178 39.9 4.8 28.4 6.6 Monterey..............................................................: 2,979,735 158,739 9.9 2.0 7.3 0.7 Napa..................................................................: 536,147 25,301 9.9 2.0 6.9 1.0 Nevada................................................................: 9,094 1,123 35.0 13.4 17.4 4.3 Orange................................................................: 158,513 30,937 21.8 3.8 13.9 4.0 : Placer................................................................: 43,437 4,340 24.7 5.1 16.2 3.3 Plumas................................................................: 22,617 1,362 14.6 1.4 11.3 1.9 Riverside.............................................................: 1,038,949 42,090 12.9 2.1 9.0 1.9 Sacramento............................................................: 326,588 48,201 8.7 1.3 6.5 0.9 San Benito............................................................: 164,032 15,660 12.7 1.6 10.0 1.1 San Bernardino........................................................: 582,229 26,434 15.9 1.5 13.5 0.9 San Diego.............................................................: 725,996 29,341 10.5 2.6 6.5 1.4 San Francisco.........................................................: (D) (D) (D) (D) (D) (D) San Joaquin...........................................................: 2,250,158 102,985 11.9 1.9 8.9 1.1 San Luis Obispo.......................................................: 664,984 33,806 10.2 2.3 6.9 1.0 San Mateo.............................................................: 75,889 6,460 4.5 1.0 2.9 0.6 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table C. Summary of Coverage, Nonresponse, and Misclassification Adjustments by County: 2012 (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 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- SALES - Con. : : Counties - Con. : : Santa Barbara.........................................................: 1,177,916 62,208 14.2 2.1 10.9 1.2 Santa Clara...........................................................: 243,829 20,645 12.8 2.5 8.6 1.7 Santa Cruz............................................................: 565,835 31,365 11.7 2.4 8.1 1.2 Shasta................................................................: 65,622 9,386 17.4 4.4 11.1 2.0 Sierra................................................................: (D) (D) (D) (D) (D) (D) Siskiyou..............................................................: 223,096 34,503 20.8 2.9 14.7 3.2 Solano................................................................: 307,418 40,541 10.8 1.9 7.6 1.3 Sonoma................................................................: 974,393 34,332 17.7 4.1 12.4 1.2 Stanislaus............................................................: 2,228,135 43,554 13.9 2.7 10.3 0.9 Sutter................................................................: 508,175 14,978 18.4 2.4 13.9 2.0 : Tehama................................................................: 240,818 21,111 21.1 2.8 16.3 1.9 Trinity...............................................................: 5,161 2,010 16.6 9.2 6.1 1.3 Tulare................................................................: 4,017,073 62,043 9.6 1.6 7.1 0.9 Tuolumne..............................................................: 27,652 1,704 3.1 0.7 2.2 0.2 Ventura...............................................................: 1,440,132 111,748 11.6 2.7 7.5 1.4 Yolo..................................................................: 561,241 54,636 14.6 1.9 11.3 1.4 Yuba..................................................................: 193,449 9,878 21.7 3.2 16.3 2.2 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Table D. American Indian or Alaska Native Operators: 2012 [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- :American Indian or Alaska Native farm operators:: :American Indian or Alaska Native farm operators :-----------------------------------------------:: :----------------------------------------------- : : Individually : :: : : Individually : Geographic area : Total : reported 1/ : Other 2/ :: Geographic area : Total : reported 1/ : Other 2/ ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- State Total : :: Counties - Con. : : :: : California......................: 2,483 2,482 1 :: Nevada..........................: 27 27 - : :: Orange..........................: 9 9 - Counties : :: Placer..........................: 43 43 - : :: Plumas..........................: 20 20 - Alameda.........................: 10 10 - :: Riverside.......................: 73 73 - Amador..........................: 8 8 - :: Sacramento......................: 39 39 - Butte...........................: 86 86 - :: San Benito......................: 20 20 - Calaveras.......................: 19 19 - :: San Bernardino..................: 43 43 - Colusa..........................: 17 17 - :: San Diego.......................: 115 115 - Contra Costa....................: 17 17 - :: San Joaquin.....................: 95 95 - Del Norte.......................: 14 14 - :: : El Dorado.......................: 79 79 - :: San Luis Obispo.................: 65 65 - Fresno..........................: 183 183 - :: San Mateo.......................: 3 3 - Glenn...........................: 27 27 - :: Santa Barbara...................: 42 42 - : :: Santa Clara.....................: 15 15 - Humboldt........................: 37 37 - :: Santa Cruz......................: 23 23 - Imperial........................: 20 20 - :: Shasta..........................: 137 137 - Inyo............................: 6 6 - :: Sierra..........................: 2 2 - Kern............................: 80 80 - :: Siskiyou........................: 61 61 - Kings...........................: 34 34 - :: Solano..........................: 23 23 - Lake............................: 21 21 - :: Sonoma..........................: 62 62 - Lassen..........................: 11 11 - :: : Los Angeles.....................: 32 32 - :: Stanislaus......................: 147 147 - Madera..........................: 28 28 - :: Sutter..........................: 46 46 - Mariposa........................: 15 15 - :: Tehama..........................: 87 87 - : :: Trinity.........................: 62 62 - Mendocino.......................: 65 65 - :: Tulare..........................: 179 178 1 Merced..........................: 48 48 - :: Tuolumne........................: 12 12 - Modoc...........................: 14 14 - :: Ventura.........................: 33 33 - Mono............................: 1 1 - :: Yolo............................: 26 26 - Monterey........................: 33 33 - :: Yuba............................: 59 59 - Napa............................: 10 10 - :: : ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1/ Data were collected for a maximum of three operators per farm. 2/ Data represent American Indian or Alaska Native farm or ranch operators 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 Prior to release of the results from the 2007 Census of Agriculture, NASS was preparing for the 2012 Census of Agriculture. The first team established was the 2012 Census Content Team. This team was tasked with content determination and report form development. They reviewed the 2007 report form content, solicited input from internal and external customers, developed criteria for determining acceptance and/or rejection of content for the 2012 Census of Agriculture report forms, tested the effectiveness of the report forms for various modes of data collection (mail, telephone, personal interview, and electronic data reporting), and made recommendations to NASS senior executives for final determination. Throughout development NASS sought 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 the 2010 Census of Agriculture Content Test in early 2011. The test consisted of three phases: cognitive pretesting, national mail-out, and follow-up interviews. Results from the testing produced one final report form type -- a 24-page regionalized form with 7 versions (12-A101 thru 12- A107). The regionalized report forms include crop sections designed to facilitate reporting crops most commonly grown within a report form region. Many items in these sections are either prelisted in the tables or listed below the tables. A sample copy of the 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: • Miscanthus harvested • Switchgrass harvested • Camelina harvested • Mint for tea leaves harvested • Total square feet under protection and acres in the open for nursery, greenhouse, floriculture, sod, mushrooms, vegetable seeds, and propagative materials. • Cropland acres planted to a cover crop Items listed separately on the 2012 report form that were reported in conjunction with similar crop items on the 2007 report form include: • Hay and forage crops sales • Fruit and nuts sales • Berries sales • Cut Christmas Tree value of sales • Short rotation woody crops value of sales • Maple syrup sales Livestock and Poultry Data Changes Deleted items include: • Aquaculture pounds and number sold • Bee colonies sold • Layers and pullets combined sold • Mink, including pelts • Rabbits, including pelts • Total horses sold Added items include: • Chukars inventory and number sold or moved • Guineas inventory and number sold or moved • Hungarian partridge inventory and number sold or moved • Peacocks or peahens inventory and number sold or moved • Rheas inventory and number sold or moved • Roosters inventory and number sold or moved • Type of poultry hatched • Largest number of bee colonies owned for all purposes • Largest number of honey producing bee colonies owned • Owned horses sold • Value of owned horses sold • Type of equine operation, including race track, boarding, training, riding facility, breeding service place, not a boarding facility but horses kept for others' personal use, or other Items listed individually in the 2012 report form that were reported in conjunction with similar livestock or poultry items on the 2007 report form include: • Milk from cows, value of sales • Sheep and lambs value of sales • Angora goats and kids value of sales • Milk goats and kids value of sales • Meat goats and kids and other goats and kids value of sales • Wool shorn value of sales • Mohair clipped value of sales • Milk from sheep and goats value of sales • Horses and ponies owned value of sales • Horses and ponies not owned value of sales • Horse breeding and stud fees, including semen and other equine products • Mules, burros, and donkeys value of sales • Alpacas value of sales • Llamas value of sales • Bison value of sales • Deer in captivity value of sales • Elk in captivity value of sales • Live mink and their value of sales • Live rabbits and their value of sales • Honey value of sales • Bantams • Turkeys raised for meat production and turkey brooders Economic, Energy, Land Use Practices, Selected Practices, Organic, Operator Characteristics, and Type of Organization/Legal Status Data Changes Deleted items include: • Use of more than 500 gallons of water in any one day for any purpose • Barns built before 1960 • Organic cropland harvested • Sales for organic crops • Acres used for organic production Added items include: • USDA NOP certified or exempt organic commodities value of sales • Number of unpaid workers • Layers moved under production contracts and amount received • Replacement dairy heifers moved under production contracts and amount received • Renewable energy producing systems, including solar panels, wind turbines, methane digesters, geoexchange systems, small hydro systems, biodiesel, and ethanol • Wind rights leased to others • Acres drained by tile • Acres artificially drained by ditches • Acres under a conservation easement • Cropland acres on which no-till practices were used • Cropland acres on which conservation tillage, excluding no-till, practices were used • Cropland acres on which conventional tillage practices were used • Cropland acres planted to cover crop (excluding CRP) • More than 50 percent ownership interest held by operator and/or persons related by blood, marriage, and/or adoption • Limited Liability Corporation • Type of internet service, including dial up, DSL, Cable modem, fiber optic, mobile broadband plan for computer or cell phone, satellite services, Broadband over Power Lines (BPL), or other • Acres transitioning into USDA National Organic Program organic production 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 regional version. 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, nursery and greenhouse crops in the open, vegetables including potatoes and sweet potatoes, fruit and nut crops including land in orchards, and berries; and in Hawaii, coffee. 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. An exception to this procedure was hay. 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 was 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'' section on the report form under the appropriate cropland items - cropland on which all crops failed or were abandoned, cropland in cultivated 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 cut Christmas trees, and acres in production for short rotation woody crops that were not harvested. Acreage in these commodities were included in cropland harvested whether the crop was harvested or not. Abandoned orchards were reported as cropland idle, not as harvested cropland, and the individual abandoned orchard crop acres were not reported. Crops that were only hogged or grazed 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 2012 harvest and later hogged or grazed was reported as cropland harvested and not as other pasture and grazing land that could have been used for crops. Quantity harvested was not obtained for crops such as fruits and nuts, berries, vegetables and melons, and nursery and greenhouse crops. Age of operator. See Farms by age and primary occupation of operator. Agri-tourism and recreational services. See Total income from farm-related sources, gross before taxes and expenses. Agricultural products sold directly to individuals for human consumption. See Value of agricultural products sold directly to individuals for human consumption. All (multiple) operators. See Operator. All haylage, grass silage, and greenchop (tons). See Haylage, grass silage, and greenchop, all. All other production expenses. See Total farm production expenses. American Indian and Alaska Native farm operators, total. Data are reported in Chapter 1, tables 60 through 70, and Chapter 2, table 50. In Chapter 1, table 60 data include farm characteristics for principal operator reporting one race only, table 61 data include farm characteristics reported for a maximum of three operators reporting American Indian or Alaska Native alone or in combination with other races, table 62 data are reported for principal operator only, table 63 include data for a maximum of three operators for those operators that reported only one race. In Chapter 2, table 50 data are reported for a maximum of three operators reported in the operator characteristics section. The individual operators were added to the census mail list for most reservations. Those reservations that did not include all the individual operators on the census mail list were identified and the data for the entire reservation, including the data for the operators that would have met the definition of a farm, were collected on one report form. The count of reservations and the number of operators that were reported on these reservations are included in Appendix A, Table D. Amount from State and local government agricultural program payments. See Total income from farm-related sources, gross before taxes and expenses. 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 spent to repay CCC loans. This is a new item for 2012. 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. 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 include 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 value. See Aquaculture. Bantams. This is a new item for 2012. In 2007 bantams were reported as other poultry. See layers. Bees. See Colonies of bees and Honey collected. Berries. In 2012, the value of sales was collected; in 2007 it was combined with fruits and nuts. Biodiesel. See Renewable energy producing systems. Breeding livestock. See Total farm production expenses. By economic class. See Economic class of farms. Camelina. This is a new item for 2012. In 2007 and previous censuses, data were included in other field crops. Other field crops data are comparable. Cattle on feed. Cattle on feed is defined as cattle and calves that were fed a ration of grain or other concentrates that will be shipped directly from the feedlot to the slaughter market and are expected to produce a carcass that will grade select or better. This category excludes cattle that were pastured only, background feeder cattle, and veal calves. Cattle on feed sold. Data are for cattle on feed sold that weighed 500 pounds or more and 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. 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, cut. Data are for acres of Christmas trees in production, either cut or to be cut, the number of these acres that were irrigated, and the number of trees cut along with the value of sales of the harvested trees. Christmas trees, live. These data were reported as nursery stock. They are generally sold as balled and burlapped trees from the operation. Chukars. (Chukkars) This is a new item for 2012. In 2007, chukars were reported as other poultry. Coffee. Data were collected only in Hawaii. Colonies of bees. Colonies of bees were tabulated in the county where the bees' owner had the largest value of all agricultural products raised or produced. Colonies are often moved from farm-to-farm over a wide geographic area. Package bees are not included as separate colonies. Colonies of bees were collected in their own section to clarify to respondents that only "owned" colonies were to be reported versus any colonies on the operation. Published colonies inventory is the total number of colonies owned on December 31, 2012. 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. 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. This is a new item for 2012. Replacement dairy heifers under production contract. This is a new item for 2012. In 2007, replacement dairy heifers were included in "Other cattle, livestock, poultry, or aquaculture under 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. Layers and replacement dairy heifers were included in 2007, but were reported individually on the 2012 report form. Data are not comparable to 2007. Vegetables, melons, and potatoes under production contract. This category is the number of farms that produced and delivered vegetables, melons, and potatoes grown under a production contract. Other crops under production contract. Data are for the total number of farms that have production contracts for other crops. This category includes all crops except grains, oilseeds, vegetables, melons, and potatoes. 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, small chickpeas, peanuts, sunflower seed, flaxseed, canola and other rapeseed, safflower, mustard seed, crambe, sesame seed, wool and mohair. These commodities differ from those included in the 2007 census due to changes created by the 2008 Farm Bill. Crop and livestock insurance payments received. See Total income from farm- related sources, gross before taxes and expenses. Crop units of measure. The regional report forms allowed the operator to report the quantity of field crops harvested in a unit of measure commonly used in the region. When the operator 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 2012 except for citrus crops and sugarcane for sugar; limes in region three States; avocados in Florida and California; olives in California and Arizona; and pineapples and coffee in Hawaii. 1. Avocados. The data for Florida relate to the quantity in the April 2012 through March 2013 harvest season; for California and Arizona, the November 2011 through November 2012 harvest season. 2. Citrus crops. The data for region three relate to the quantity harvested in the September 2011 through August 2012 harvest season, except limes that were harvested in the April 2012 through March 2013 harvest season. The data for California and Arizona relate to the 2011 through 2012 harvest season. 3. Olives. The data for California and Arizona relate to the September 2011 through March 2012 harvest season. 4. Pineapples. The data for Hawaii relate to the quantity harvested in the year ending May 31, 2012. 5. Sugarcane for sugar. The data for Florida, Louisiana, and Texas relate to the cuttings from September 2012 through April 2013. 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 2012. 3. Land occupied with growing crops for harvest in 2013 or later years but not harvested or summer fallowed in 2012 (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 2013 and no crop was harvested from these acres in 2012. 4. Land in "skipped" rows between rows of crops or field strips. Cropland, irrigated. See Irrigated land. 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. 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, gross before taxes and expenses. Cuttings, seedlings, liners, and plugs. See Nursery, greenhouse, floriculture, sod, mushrooms, vegetable seeds, and propagative materials. Cut Christmas trees. See Christmas trees, cut. 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 of the operation and operator. 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. Energy. See Renewable energy producing systems. Ethanol. See Renewable energy producing systems. Expenses. See Total farm production expenses. Farm or ranch operator. See Operator characteristics. Farms by age and primary occupation of operator. Data on age and primary occupation were obtained from up to three operators per farm. When compared with 2007 results, the average age of farmers increased slightly. Older operators may be "retired" (with little if any sales) and still report farming as their primary occupation since they often have limited opportunity for off-farm jobs. See Primary occupation of the operator. 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, State, and local programs other than the CRP, WRP, FWP, and CREP, and Commodity Credit Corporation loans. See Total market value of agricultural products sold and government payments. The Average Crop Revenue Election (ACRE) program allows producers to enroll a farm in the program based upon an agreement to forgo counter- cyclical payments, receive a 20 percent reduction in their direct payments, and a reduction in their marketing assistance loan (MAL) rates by 30 percent for all commodities produced on the farm. The ACRE program provides eligible producers with state level revenue guarantees based on the 5-year state average yield and the 2-year national average price. The program is designed to provide revenue support to farmers as an alternative to the price support that farmers are use to receiving from commodity programs. 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 2012 census. In 2007 this category was referred to as Farms by type of organization. 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, partnership was further subclassified into: a. Family held or other than family held. b. More than 10 stockholders. 4. Other, cooperative, estate or trust, institutional, 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 2012 census, all agricultural production establishments (farms, ranches, nurseries, greenhouses, etc.) were classified by type of activity or activities using the NAICS code. The 2012 census is the fourth 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 Three, (ISIC, Revision 3) for some sixty high level groupings. Following are explanations of the major classifications used in 2012. 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 (11121). 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. 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 (112120). This industry comprises establishments primarily engaged in milking dairy cattle. 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 establish- ments primarily engaged in raising sheep, lambs, and goats, or feeding lambs for fattening. Animal 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 farm. Data were reported by the principal operator only. Households that received funds because they were only landlords, custom equipment operators, or provided other production services were not included. Published data can exceed the number of operators listed under Operators, 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 operator. All farms were classified by tenure of operators. 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 operator, 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 type of organization. This is a new item for 2012. The data categorizes an operation's ownership and legal farming status. Operation with 50 percent or more ownership interest held by operator and/or persons related by blood, marriage, or adoption. The data are used to measure the principal operator ownership interest in the organization. Limited Liability Corporation. 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 2012 report form. Foliage plants, indoor (including hanging baskets). For 2012, (including hanging baskets) was added to the description for clarity. Data are comparable. 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 tame, small grain, and wild 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 nuts tree. Total acres, bearing age acres, and nonbearing age acres were collected. In 2012, the value of sales was collected; in 2007, it was combined with berries. Geoexchange system. See Renewable energy producing systems Government payments. This category consists of direct payments as defined by the 2008 Farm Bill; 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 operators. 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. The Average Crop Revenue Election (ACRE) Program is a program administered by USDA's Farm Service Agency (FSA). Producers can sign up for this optional, revenue-based counter-cyclical program, which is an alternative to receiving counter-cyclical payments (CCPs). Grain and bean combines. Data were collected for self-propelled combines only. Grain storage capacity. Data include the capacity of all storage structures on the operation and normally used to store whole grains, oilseeds, and pulse crops. These structures can be bins, silos, buildings, trailers, etc. The capacity or usage of any off-farm public or commercial storage facilities was excluded. For 2012, pulse crops text was added to the Grain Storage screener question for clarity. Pulse crops include dry beans, dry peas, lentils, lupines, and other minor pulse crops. Data are comparable. 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. 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, sod, mushrooms, vegetable seeds, and propagative materials. Gross cash rent or share payments. See Total income from farm-related sources, gross before taxes and expenses. Guineas. This is a new item for 2012. In 2007, guineas were reported as other poultry. 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 2012 census definition for harvested cropland is the same as the 2007 definition. Hay, all hay including alfalfa, other tame, small grain, and wild. 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 is 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 tame 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 (excluding small grains). Hay, wild dry. Data shown represent acreage and dry tons of hay harvested that was predominately wild or native grasses, even if it had some fill-in seeding of other grasses. Haylage, grass silage, and greenchop, all. Data shown represent the acreage and quantity harvested of all types (alfalfa and all other). 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. Hired farm labor. Data are for total hired farm workers, including paid family members, by number of days worked. Data exclude contract laborers. 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 bees. Horses and ponies, owned. See "Owned horses and ponies." Hungarian partridge. This is a new item for 2012. In 2007, Hungarian partridge were reported as other poultry. Income. Net cash farm income is published for the operation and operator. The difference between net cash income and net cash returns is that net cash returns does not include government payments and other farm-related income as income. See Net cash farm income of the operations and Net cash farm income of the operators. Income from farm-related sources. See Total income from farm-related sources, gross before taxes and expenses. 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. 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 waste water 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, 2012. 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. Data are comparable with 2007. 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 and offers landowners financial incentives for conservation practices. 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. Respondents also reported harvested acres and not harvested 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 operator'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 many 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. Respondents were instructed not to report abandoned plantings and plantings of fewer than 20 total fruit, citrus, or nut trees or grapevines. Land in two or more counties. With few exceptions, the land in each farm was tabulated as being in the operator'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. This is a new category for 2012. It 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 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 tillage. Conserves the soil by reducing erosion and decreasing water pollution. Conventional tillage. Refers to tillage operations that use standard practices for a specific location and crop to bury crop residues. Cover crop. A crop planted primarily to manage soil fertility, soil quality, water, weeds, pests, diseases, or wildlife. 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. 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. 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 2012 regardless of who received the payment. It is equivalent to total sales and it includes sales by the operators as well as the value of any shares received by partners, landlords, contractors, or others associated with the operation. It includes value of 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. Also, 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 2012 does not necessarily represent the sales from crops harvested in 2012. Data may include sales from crops produced in earlier years and may exclude some crops produced in 2007 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 2012. The value of agricultural products sold was requested of all operators. If the operators 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 2012 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. 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 2012. Migrant farm labor on farms with hired labor. Operators 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. This is a new item for 2012. The 2007 census did not collect a 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. Milk from cows, value of sales. This is a new item for 2012. In 2007, milk from cows value of sales also included other dairy products from cows. Data are not comparable. Milk from sheep and goats, value. This is a new item for 2012. In 2007, milk from sheep and goats value of sales was included in Other livestock products. Data are not comparable. Mink, live. For the 2012 census, data are for inventory and sales of live mink. Mink pelts are included in Other livestock products. In 2007, mink and their pelts were reported together. Mint for tea leaves. This is a new item for 2012. In 2007 and previous censuses, data were included in other field crops. Miscanthus. This is a new item for 2012. In 2007 and previous censuses, data were included in other field crops. Miscellaneous poultry. Poultry other than chickens or turkeys. Listed 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 for more information on production reported on the census. More than one race reported. This category represents those operators who chose to report more than one race on the census form. 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 the operators. This value is the operators' 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 operators. Net cash farm income of the operator 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 operators that broke even). 2. Farms with net losses. Noncitrus fruit, all. This is a summation of all acres reported in the commodities defined as noncitrus such as apples, grapes, and plums. Noncitrus fruit, other. See other noncitrus fruit. Nursery, greenhouse, floriculture, sod, mushrooms, vegetable seeds, and propagative materials. 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 Primary occupation of operator and/or Farms by age and primary occupation of operator. Operations legal status for tax purposes. See Farms by legal status. Operator. The term operator designates a person who operates a farm, either doing the work or making day-to-day decisions about such things as planting, harvesting, feeding, and marketing. The operator 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 operator only of the land which is retained for his/her own operation. The census collected information on the total number of operators, the total number of women operators, and demographic information for up to three operators per farm. Operator characteristics. Operators (up to three operators per farm) were asked to report primary occupation, sex, age, race, place of residence, if retired, number of days worked off farm, year in which his/her operation of the farm began, year began operating any farm, hired manager, number of persons living in the operators' households, internet access and type of services, and Spanish, Hispanic, or Latino origin. Information on the total number of operators and total number of women operators was collected from each operation. The principal operator was asked to report the percentage of total household income that came from the farm operation. In addition, operators two and three were asked if they were the spouse of the principal operator. Operators, number. Demographic and other information were collected for up to three operators per farm - the principal operator plus up to two additional operators. This may be fewer than the total operators on some farms. Demographic data for up to three operators reported are presented separately for women, by race categories, and for Spanish, Hispanic, or Latino origin. Operators of Spanish, Hispanic, or Latino origin. See Spanish, Hispanic, or Latino origin. Operators, total. The data represent the total reported number of operators for the operation. Operators, total women. The data represent the total number of women operators reported for the operation. Oranges, all. All oranges are a summation of Valencia oranges and Other oranges. Total acres, bearing age acres, and nonbearing age acres were collected by category. Oranges, other. See Other oranges. Organic agriculture. Respondents were instructed to indicate if they had organic production according to USDA's National Organic Program (NOP) in 2012. 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 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 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, used for cover crops or soil improvement, cropland which all crops failed or were abandoned, and cropland in cultivated summer fallow. Other crops. In Chapter 1, table 45, Commodities Raised and Delivered Under Production Contracts, the data relate to any crop that did not have a specific code in the Grains and Oilseeds, or Vegetables, melons, and potatoes sections of the 2012 report form. In Chapter 2, table 27, Other Crops the data relate to any field crops that did not have a specific code in the field crops section. 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 and include hay sales. 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-farm related income sources. See Total income from farm-related sources, gross before taxes and expenses. Other field and grass seed crops. Data relate to any field or grass seed crop not having a specified code on the 2012 report form. Other floriculture and bedding crops. Data relate to any floriculture and bedding crops not having a specific code on the 2012 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 2012 report form. 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 2012 report form. Data are for farms with production, not necessarily sold. Mink pelts and rabbit pelts are included here in 2012, but were in specific codes in 2007, so data are not directly comparable. Other noncitrus fruit. Data relate to any noncitrus fruit not having a specific code on the census report form. Other nuts. This category includes any nut crop not having a specific code on the report form. Other oranges. Data are for Oranges other than Valencia oranges, including Navel oranges. 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 hogged or grazed but not harvested prior to grazing. However, cropland that was pastured before or after crops were harvested in 2012 was included as harvested cropland rather than cropland for pasture or grazing. In 2007, this category was referred to as other pasture or grazing land that could have been used for crops without additional improvements. This is a wording change only; data are comparable. Other poultry. Data are for other poultry not having a specific code on the report form. The list of poultry with specific codes changed from 2007, so data are not directly comparable. Other tame hay. See Hay, other tame dry hay. Other vegetables. Data shown for other vegetables relate to any vegetable not having a specific code on the census form. Owned horses and ponies. Only horses and ponies which are owned by the operation and sold contribute to the total value of production of the operation. Horses on the operation which are not owned and sold do not contribute to the total value of production. Therefore, the value of horses owned sold is published instead of all sold horses. This removes not owned horses sold that were not part of an operation's value of production. It is not possible to publish a value for Total horses sold in 2012 as the data were not summarized. Patronage dividends. See Total income from farm-related sources, gross before taxes and expenses. 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 operators received for commodities delivered. Peaches, all. Data for all peaches were collected as a category in all States except for California and Arizona. Peach data in California and Arizona were collected separately for clingstone and freestone peaches. The data were later combined with all peaches for publication. Data for clingstone and freestone are found in the California and Arizona publications only. Peacocks and peahens. This is a new item for 2012. In 2007, peacocks and peahens were reported as other poultry. Pears, all. Data for all pears were collected as a category in all States except for California, Arizona, Idaho, Oregon, Alaska, and Washington. These States collected data separately for Bartlett pears and Other pears which were later combined into the Pear, all category. Data for Bartlett and other pears are found only in the State publications where collected. Pecans, all. All pecans is 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 for further explanation. 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 for further explanation. 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. Plums. This item was reported as an individual item only in California and Arizona. All other States reported plums in a combined plum and prune category. Plumcots, pluots, and other plum-apricot hybrids. In 2012, plumcots, pluots and other plum-apricot hybrids were reported as an individual item only in California, Arizona, Idaho, Oregon, Alaska, Washington, Nebraska, Kansas, Iowa, Wisconsin, Illinois, Indiana, Michigan, Ohio, New York, Pennsylvania, New Jersey, and New England States. In all other States they were reported in the Other noncitrus category. In 2007, this category was referred to as pluots and they were reported as an individual item in California, Arizona, Idaho, Oregon, Alaska, and Washington. Pluot is a registered trademark of plumcots, which are genetic crosses between plums and apricots. This is only a wording change, all data are comparable. 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 under the sales heading. Poultry, other. See Other poultry. Primary occupation of operator. Data on age and primary occupation were obtained from up to three operators per farm. The primary occupation classifications used were: 1. Farming or ranch work. The operator spent 50-percent or more of his/her worktime during 2012 at farming or ranching. 2. Other. The operator spent less than 50-percent of his/her worktime during 2012 in farming or ranching operations. Principal operator. The person primarily responsible for the on-site, day-to- day operation of the farm or ranch business. This person may be a hired manager or business manager. See Operators for further explanation. Production contracts. See Commodities raised and delivered under production contracts. Production expenses. See Total farm production expenses. Prunes. This was reported as an individual item only in California and Arizona. All other States reported prunes in a combined plum and prune category. Pullets for laying flock replacement. Data are for pullet inventory and the number sold or moved for laying flock replacement. Pulse crops. For 2012, pulse crops text was added to the Grain Storage screener question for clarity. Pulse crops include dry beans, dry peas, lentils, lupines, and other minor pulse crops. Data are comparable. Rabbits, live. This is a new item for 2012. The data are for inventory and sales of live rabbits. Rabbit pelts are included in Other livestock products. In 2007, rabbits and their pelts were reported together. Race of operator. With the exception of Hawaii, data were collected for American Indian (included Alaska Native), Asian, Black or African American, Native Hawaiian and Other Pacific Islander, and White operators. Respondents were asked to mark one or more of the race categories. In Hawaii operator 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. Raspberries, all. Raspberries were reported as All raspberries but the data for black and red are reported separately in Alaska, Idaho, Oregon, and Washington where they were reported as black raspberries or red raspberries. In these States, black raspberries and red raspberries data were combined as Raspberries, all for comparability with other States. Raspberries, black. See Raspberries. Raspberries, red. See Raspberries. Renewable energy producing systems. This is a new category for 2012. These types of systems produce power, heat, or mechanical energy by converting resources either to electricity or to motor power. Biodiesel. Data are for production of non-petroleum based diesel fuel made from vegetable oil or animal fats. Biodiesel can be used alone or blended with conventional petroleum-based diesel fuel Ethanol. A fuel produced by converting crops such as corn and sugarcane, biomass crops, or wood. This fuel is generally blended with gasoline. Production of ethanol for fuel requires a permit from the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, and Firearms (ATF). Only ethanol production for fuel was reported. 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. Methane digesters were reported only if in production and used in 2012. 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 panel. A flat panel designed to capture the sun's energy. Include 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. Include wind generators, wind power units, wind energy converters and aero generators. Exclude windmills, which do not produce electricity. Rental of farmland. See Total income from farm-related sources, gross before taxes and expenses; Gross cash rent or share payments. Sales, total. See Market value of agricultural products sold. Sheep and lambs inventory. Data for Western States (AK, AZ, CA, CO, HI, ID, MN, MT, NV, ND, OR, SD, UT, WA, WY) are for sheep and lambs of all ages owned regardless of location. Data for all other States are for sheep and lambs of all ages on the operation regardless of ownership. Sheep and lambs were collected in their own section to clarify to respondents when to report "owned" sheep and lambs versus any sheep and lambs on the operation. 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" section of the report form. Size of farm. See Farms by size. Small hydro system. See Renewable energy producing systems. Solar panel. See Renewable energy producing systems. Spanish, Hispanic, or Latino origin. Operators of Spanish, Hispanic, or Latino 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. 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. Squash, summer. See Squash, all. Squash, winter. See Squash, all. 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. Switchgrass. This is a new item for 2012. In 2007 and previous censuses, data were included in other field crops. Other field crops data are comparable. Tame hay. See Hay, other tame dry hay. Tenure. See Farms by tenure of operator. 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 cultivated 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 operators, partners, landlords (excluding property taxes), and production contractors for the farm business in 2012. Tenant farmers reported expenses paid by landlords for the agricultural production on the operation, as well as their expenses. Farm or ranch operators 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 2012 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 2012. 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. This category includes all expenses not listed on the report form. Examples include animal health costs, storage and warehousing, marketing and ginning expenses, insurance, etc. Health expenses and payroll taxes were excluded. Breeding livestock purchased or leased. These expenses include all breeding livestock and poultry purchased or leased during 2012 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 2012 for land and buildings. These data include the cost of renting land and buildings that were part of the operation. Rent paid for the operator's dwelling or other non-farm property and the value of the shares of crops and livestock paid to landlords were excluded. Chemicals. These 2012 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. 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 in 2012, just as it was in the 2007 census. 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 2012. Fertilizer, lime, and soil conditioners. These 2012 expenses include fertilizer and lime including 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 2012. 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 2012 expenses include the total amount paid for farm or ranch labor including regular workers, part-time workers, and members of the operator'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 2012 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 operator'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 2012 on debts secured by real estate for the farm. 2. Not secured by real estate. These data include all interest expenses paid in 2012 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. Other livestock and poultry purchased or leased. These expenses include all non-breeding livestock and poultry purchased or leased during 2012 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 operators for the farm share of land, machinery, buildings, and livestock, excluding taxes paid by this operator'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 2012. 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 2012. 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 2012. 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 2012. Included in the water cost is water purchased for irrigation purposes, livestock watering, etc. Household utility costs were excluded from these items. Total greenhouse vegetables and fresh cut herbs. This category includes greenhouse tomatoes and other greenhouse vegetables and fresh cut herbs. Total income from farm-related sources, gross before taxes and expenses. This includes gross income from farm-related sources received in 2012 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. Categories that make up the farm-related income calculation changed between the 2002 and 2007 censuses. In the 2012 census as in the 2007 census, Crop and livestock insurance payments received and Amount from State and local government agricultural program payments are published separately. In the 2002 census, these categories were combined with Other farm-related income sources. 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 CREP payments if they were reported in the amount received for participation in CREP in section 5, item 1 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 operators 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, cut 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, State, and local programs other than the CRP, WRP, FWP, and CREP, and Commodity Credit Corporation loans. Total operators. See Operators, total. Total organic product sales. The data represent the value of commodities produced according to USDA's National Organic Program and sold from operations during 2012. Crops, livestock, and poultry products were reported individually on the 2012 report form, but in 2007, these commodities were combined and may have come from either crops or livestock production. The data for the 2012 census years is not directly comparable. 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. This is a new item for 2012. It includes agricultural workers not on the payroll who performed activities or work on a farm or ranch. Utilities. See Total farm production expense. Value of agricultural products sold directly to individuals for human consumption. This item represents the value of agricultural products produced and sold directly to individuals for human consumption from roadside stands, farmers' markets, pick-your-own sites, etc. It excludes non-edible products such as nursery crops, cut flowers, and wool but includes livestock sales. Sales of agricultural products by vertically integrated operations through their own processing and marketing operations were excluded. Value of commodities. Data show the number of farms and the market value of all commodities delivered under a production contract. Also see commodities raised and delivered under production contract. 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 sales. See Market value of agricultural products sold. Vegetable transplants. Data are for vegetable transplants grown and sold from this 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. 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 spring other than Durum. Wind turbines. See Renewable energy 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 pastureland 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. To reduce the length of the report form, only the major crops for each region were prelisted on the regional report forms. For other crops, the respondent was asked to look at a list of crops in each section and write in the crop name and its code. 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 is a new item for 2012. This section collects information about how long the operator(s) has operated any farm, regardless of location.