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Latest Census Shows KY Farm Receipts up 57 Percent Since 2002

By wmadministrator

Kentucky farmers took in $4.82 billion from the sale of farm products in 2007, according to the 2007 Census of Agriculture. The figure represents an average of $56,586 per farm and a 57 percent increase over the last census in 2002.
“Kentucky farmers achieved $4.82 billion in sales while tobacco income was 22 percent lower than in the previous census,” Agriculture Commissioner Richie Farmer said. “That shows Kentucky’s investments in agricultural diversification are working.”

The sales numbers include multiple sales of livestock, such as sales of cattle between farmers and then from the farmer to the stockyard.
The number of tobacco farms in Kentucky declined 72 percent since 2002 to 8,113, according to the census. Tobacco acres harvested fell 21 percent from 2002. The federal tobacco quota and price support system was eliminated after the 2004 growing season.

The census showed that slightly fewer people farmed slightly more acres in Kentucky in 2007 than in 2002. Eighty-nine percent of Kentucky’s 85,260 agricultural operations are still run by individuals or families, and most are still small farms. The number of farms declined 1 percent from 2002, but the size of farms increased 1 percent from an average of 160 to 164 acres.
The number of full-time farmers in Kentucky dropped from 54 percent in 2002 to 40 percent in 2007. The average age of farm operators was 56.5 years old, up from 55.2 in 2002.

Fayette County led the state in equine sales at nearly $410 million and led every U.S. state in that category.