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Difference between revisions of "v0.34:How large a farm do I need"

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(Looked over the text from the old version; seems like no changes are required except adding av and quality tags)
 
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==Approaches==
 
==Approaches==
 
Many fortresses begin with a single large farm (5x5) with [[plump helmet]]s, or several smaller farms (3x3 or 1x5 are common) with a wider variety of crops. Given the small number of dwarves, a single smaller farm (2x4 or 3x3) is probably best for beginning fortresses. As the growers [[experience|level up]] and farm yields increase the farm can be expanded and newer, smaller farms with different crops can be added to enable new growers to practice their skills. The more tiles of farm plot you have, the more growers (and harvesters) you will need.
 
Many fortresses begin with a single large farm (5x5) with [[plump helmet]]s, or several smaller farms (3x3 or 1x5 are common) with a wider variety of crops. Given the small number of dwarves, a single smaller farm (2x4 or 3x3) is probably best for beginning fortresses. As the growers [[experience|level up]] and farm yields increase the farm can be expanded and newer, smaller farms with different crops can be added to enable new growers to practice their skills. The more tiles of farm plot you have, the more growers (and harvesters) you will need.
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To minimize the cost of [[fertilize|fertilization]], farm plots should ideally be one less than a multiple of 4 tiles -- ex. (1x3), (1x7), (3x5), (3x9), (5x7), (7x9)
  
 
{{Template:Farming FAQ}}
 
{{Template:Farming FAQ}}

Revision as of 21:22, 11 January 2013

This article is about an older version of DF.

Dwarves require approximately 2 units of food and 4 units of drink each season. Farming can produce enough crops to satisfy part or all of these requirements. However, be aware that the more and larger your farms are, the more time and effort must be accorded to their maintenance.

The math

Your dwarves can plant 1 seed per tile on each farm plot, and depending on the crop, the skill of the grower, and whether the farm plot was fertilized, each planted tile will yield a stack of 0-12 (average: 5) edible, millable, brewable, or otherwise processable plants each season. If fully planted, a 3x3 farm plot can thus yield an average of 9 stacks of 5 plants per season, or 180 plants per year. Brewing always quintuples stack sizes; for example, a stack of cave wheats [5] is brewed into a barrel of Dwarven beer [25] at a still. Processing quarry bush plants into quarry bush leaves at a farmer's workshop also quintuples stack size, as does processing sweet pods into Dwarven syrup. Milling sweet pods into Dwarven sugar does not increase stack size. Pig tails and plump helmets grow faster than other crops, and as long as the mature plants are harvested promptly, it is not hard to grow two crops of either plant each season from the same plot.

A beginning fortress has 7 dwarves, each of which consumes 6 urists of food and drink per dwarf per season, or 168 for the whole fortress for the year. A properly-managed and fully-utilized 3x3 plot (9 tiles * average 5 plants harvested per season * 4 seasons * 5 brewing/milling multiplier = 900 units of food and drink) could potentially feed the entire fortress. A single 5x5 plot could potentially feed hundreds of dwarves (25 x 5 x 4 x 5 = 2500 units of food and drink).

The general limitation is not the size of the farm per se, but the skill of the growers, the availability of seeds and potash for fertilizer, and careful management of labor, stockpiles, and the food industry to ensure that crops are harvested (rather than left to wither in the field), are properly stored away from vermin, the plants are processed, and seeds are recovered so that the cycle can continue next season.

Approaches

Many fortresses begin with a single large farm (5x5) with plump helmets, or several smaller farms (3x3 or 1x5 are common) with a wider variety of crops. Given the small number of dwarves, a single smaller farm (2x4 or 3x3) is probably best for beginning fortresses. As the growers level up and farm yields increase the farm can be expanded and newer, smaller farms with different crops can be added to enable new growers to practice their skills. The more tiles of farm plot you have, the more growers (and harvesters) you will need.

To minimize the cost of fertilization, farm plots should ideally be one less than a multiple of 4 tiles -- ex. (1x3), (1x7), (3x5), (3x9), (5x7), (7x9)