The Role of Agritourism Microentrepreneurship and Collective Action in Shaping Stewardship of Farmlands
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Review of the Literature
2.1. Motivations towards Agriourism Microentrepreneurship
2.2. Tourism and Land Stewardship
Builds on existing internalized moral feelings and worldviews, has the potential to generalize to many of an individual’s behaviors, and contributes to both personal and community senses of responsibility.(p. 38)
2.3. Collective Action
3. Research Questions
- (1)
- In what ways are small-scale farmers (e.g., conventional, alternative farmers) involved in agritourism microentrepreneurship and what factors motivated their involvement?
- (2)
- In what ways do small-scale farmers use agritourism microentrepreneurship to demonstrate land stewardship and/or promote agricultural literacy?
- (3)
- What is the role of collective action in facilitating or hindering these relationships?
4. Methods
4.1. Study Region
4.2. Sampling
4.3. Instrument Development
4.4. Data Analysis
5. Results and Discussion
5.1. Involvement in Agritourism Microentrepreneurship and Farming
In general, the characteristics of these new owners include limited, if any, dependence on farm income, relatively high interest in environmental stewardship, small-scale farming operations, sub-commercial landholdings and a focus on land ownership for ‘lifestyle’ reasons. As is the case with full-time farmers, however, the motivations and practices of these landowners are diverse.(p. 317)
Well I mostly give mine away. I like to give mine to senior citizens and take it to them, the ones that are unable to come out. And I don’t take funds from them…I won’t take the money from them you know. I always felt this way…If I could help someone, you know. I don’t mind.
Work ethics are a little bit different from what they were, (so) I thought, if I can get some kids involved and get some parents involved, grow some sweet corn, and do, like, little franchises, and call it ‘corn for kids’… And they’d sell corn and it’d go in your college fund or something... and they can come help pull the corn. They could help, and this would be their little plot—we’d sell a plot to them and they could come and pull it. Now, how many kids these days had that opportunity?
5.2. Agritourism and Land Stewardship
5.2.1. Demonstrating Land Stewardship through Agritourism
Yes, for this county the alternative has been—go put your farm into a huge amount of debt and have confined animal feeding operations (CAFOs)—that’s what’s kept these farmers here on the farm—in addition to the direct payments from the government, and those direct payments now are gone—the tobacco buyout money is now gone. We had farmers in this county making well over 1 million dollars a year from the government payments alone, so now what’s left is simply the CAFOs. Ok, if you don’t want to go down that avenue…for whatever reason—if it’s strictly financial (you don’t want to put your farm in debt that much and you don’t want to be tied to a payment to pay off forever), if it’s strictly financial, then what is your option? There are lots of other reasons why you would not want to do a CAFO (animal welfare, lots of reasons)—but if it’s strictly financial, what is your option? I don’t know what your option is—I haven’t seen it.
Minorities, small farmers, they don’t get to benefit—taxes make all the difference, tax is how people lose their farm. People farm and still don’t get the tax benefit, they are still paying the same as the next door neighbor that got a lot—that’s the taxes that you are paying if you got 10 or 20 acres, you can’t pay it… you aren’t producing that much.
I don’t care if I make any money or not. But you do have to have cash in order to pay the light bill… you can’t trade eggs to the light company, so you have to remain in the cash society a certain amount, but most farmers would say ‘my farm is a for-profit farm; I’m not a hobby farm’. And I’m like, well you can be more focused on process than profit and still not be a hobby farm. I mean, I don’t do anything else.
5.2.2. Reducing Agricultural Illiteracy through Agritourism
We try to educate them about agriculture because a lot of kids these days have no clue where their meat or corn or anything comes from, so we try to help them understand that farmers are very important because it seems like nowadays people don’t care if you’re a farmer or not, so we’re trying to get the word out so younger generations, when they grow up, they can be a little more active and give us more respect than some people do. Some people couldn’t care less as long as they can go to the store and buy it, because they think it’s grown there basically. So we try to do that.
There’s a movement of people that are concerned about what they’re eating and where it comes from. And so that’s where our niche is. You can come out here to the farm. You can see where these cows are being raised, how they’re being raised. Heck, you could even pick one out if you wanted to. And that’d be the one you get. And you could see how they’re finished and see that they’re treated humanely and that they’re free range. They’re not pent up in small pens and fed a bunch of garbage.
We actually started the maze, because as far as for families, there wasn’t much to do in Sampson County. Um, young kids—and there wasn’t anything like this, like the fall festival maze. And so, we just keep adding events to our site. I mean, families are looking for something to do.
5.3. Involvement in Collective Action
If you have been taught, and it’s a generational thing, that certain things you don’t do… it’s there for you, but you are scared to go really see what’s there for you… you basically mentally block yourself from stepping out of your zone, and that’s what it is for a lot of people... especially for small, minority farmers. My dad couldn’t do that, I can’t do that. And it’s more prevalent than people think.
As far as supplying the food value and the food needed for the world, no, you can’t do it on open range… you have to have a confinement system where the nutrients, the environment, the conditions that they live are in our control.
Okay, they can take $10 million and give it to somebody else and figure out how to grow chickens outside just as efficiently as they do in those houses… And that’s really a waste. It’s like living next to a giant pesticide plant for no reason other than greed (laughs). You know, all these companies that say we have to have these chemicals to make a living—we have to do this we have to do that—they could just as easily produce another product that’s natural and not destructive to the ecosystem.
6. Conclusions
7. Implications, Limitations, and Future Research
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Pseudonym Race, Sex, Age, Type of Farmer | Involvement in Agritourism | Involvement in Farming | |
---|---|---|---|
1 | Emmanuel Black male, 71 (retired), alternative | Very informal; P1t a entrepreneur; no direct income from tourism. | Vegetables for consumption; no chemicals, no income from land directly. |
2 | John and Laura White couple, 50 & 49, mixed | Give occasional kids’ tours and ~12 informal tours a year when people come to farm to purchase products; no income directly from tourism. | Angus beef, peaches, timber. 50% of income comes from land, rest comes from their family-run hardware store. |
3 | Jean White female, 63, (part time), conventional | Hopes to lead organized horse trail rides or a cheese-making course when retires; no current income from tourism. | Owns goats, sheep, horses, turkey, chickens, ponies; almost all income currently off-farm, but when retires next year will farm full-time. |
4 | Robert White male, 62 (retired), conventional | No longer has visitors for wine picking because not profitable and not in contract. | Vineyards, hog houses, Angus cattle, hay—all contracted agriculture. |
5 | Andy White male, 24, conventional | Sells U-Pick peas in summer and runs fruit stand; P1t a entrepreneur; tourism provides ~5% of income. | Manages 200-acre produce farm. |
6 | Luisa Hispanic female, 75 (retired), alternative | Sells products informally; developing more formal operation (e.g., P1t a); currently very little income is from tourism. | Runs 7-acre permaculture farm with plants and animals; ~25% of income comes from land. |
7 | George Black male, 69 (retired), mixed | Not currently involved in tourism, but interested. | Manages <10 acres of vegetables and has a few chickens, goats. <5% of income comes from land—participates for enjoyment. |
8 | Grant Coharie Indian male, 61, alternative | Helps run community garden through the tribal center; feels tourism important, but not a direct source of income. | Does not tend his land, which is family-owned., works full time off-farm. |
9 | Paul Coharie Indian male, 61 (retired), alternative | Developing river maintenance program to improve waterways for residents and tourists to recreate; no current income from tourism. | Has 12 acres in woodlands that keeps as conservation land—doesn’t harvest timber. |
10 | Dorothy White female, 61 (retired), alternative | Has a farm stay on property, occasionally offers farm tours. | Owns a “Century Farm” where has sheep, a few cows, donkeys, and horses. |
11 | Susan White female, 48, conventional | Runs family-owned corn maze with seasonal activities. Rents animals to use for agritourism and coordinates with local businesses, which makes up ~ half of livelihood. | Has contract to manage hog nursery and leases land to brother-in-law for row crops. |
12 | Charlene White female, 54, alternative | Wants to set up farm to accommodate people with disabilities and have hands-on participation activities; currently no income from tourism. | New farm with cows, sheep, goats, pigs, chickens, laying hens, and vegetable garden—no chemicals. Sells to farmer’s market and through CSA. |
13 | Zach White male, 22, conventional | Educational tours with local schools, rents barn out for weddings and events; rents animals for agritourism; not much income from tourism, but growing. | Contracted hog and turkey houses, cattle, row crops (corn, soy, wheat, cotton, hay) |
14 | Dennis Black male, 68 (retired), alternative | Occasionally teaches school groups and informal visitors; no income from tourism | Vegetables to sell at farmer’s market; no chemicals, leases part of land to board horses; ~40 acres |
Conventional Farmers | Alternative Farmers | ||
---|---|---|---|
Trust | Groups | Agribusiness groups/associations Extension agents Agritourism associations | Small, grassroots organized collectives Non-profits Agritourism associations |
Individuals | Family, neighbors, friends, community, other conventional farmers | Minorities and women trust each other | |
Lack of Trust | Government Environmental activists | People in community Extension agents Agribusiness associations |
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Peroff, D.M.; Morais, D.B.; Sills, E. The Role of Agritourism Microentrepreneurship and Collective Action in Shaping Stewardship of Farmlands. Sustainability 2022, 14, 8116. https://doi.org/10.3390/su14138116
Peroff DM, Morais DB, Sills E. The Role of Agritourism Microentrepreneurship and Collective Action in Shaping Stewardship of Farmlands. Sustainability. 2022; 14(13):8116. https://doi.org/10.3390/su14138116
Chicago/Turabian StylePeroff, Deidre M., Duarte B. Morais, and Erin Sills. 2022. "The Role of Agritourism Microentrepreneurship and Collective Action in Shaping Stewardship of Farmlands" Sustainability 14, no. 13: 8116. https://doi.org/10.3390/su14138116
APA StylePeroff, D. M., Morais, D. B., & Sills, E. (2022). The Role of Agritourism Microentrepreneurship and Collective Action in Shaping Stewardship of Farmlands. Sustainability, 14(13), 8116. https://doi.org/10.3390/su14138116