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Farm/Ranch Manager

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AVG. SALARY

$56,700

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EDUCATION

High school (GED) +

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JOB OUTLOOK

Stable

Real-Life Activities

Real-Life Decision Making

You just bought some land and you're going to expand your farm. You have a small family farm and a fruit stand for sales. You have noticed that your customers have been asking for peaches. You want to plant peach trees on your new land to meet this demand.

There are many varieties of peaches to choose from. The different varieties produce fruit at different times in the season. For harvesting purposes, it would be more convenient to have all the fruit ripen at the same time.

Peaches ripen at different times, even on the same tree. Multiple visits to the same tree to pick the ripe fruit (spot-picking) are necessary. This makes peaches labor-intensive to harvest.

If you only had one variety of peach tree, it would cut down on the time you spent spot-picking. The downside is that most of the fruit would ripen at the same time, but you would still have to spot-pick it out among those peaches that weren't yet quite ready. However, as a fruit stand owner, you want to be able to have fresh fruit available for your customers throughout the season.

If you planted different varieties of peaches that ripen from mid-July to mid-September, you would be able to harvest a few boxes of peaches every day from July to October. But having to spot-pick peaches every day for months would be a big time commitment and might keep you from other work on your farm.

Gina Harfman is a farmer with a small orchard and some ground crops. She recently bought some farm land and had to decide what to plant. She spent some time considering varieties of peaches. The harvest time was a big part of her decision.

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