this post was submitted on 27 May 2026
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(this is just a joke - of course farmwork still has physically demanding parts)

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[–] Habahnow@sh.itjust.works 11 points 3 hours ago (4 children)

Is it true that farming isn't physically demanding anymore? I figured it's easier now physically, but you'll still develop strength from the things that can't be done with machinery.

[–] ikidd@lemmy.dbzer0.com 2 points 48 minutes ago

Depends on the farm. In NA, if you're running a farm > 5000ac, you're probably making enough money and are busy enough managing the finances and schedules to get new equipment often enough that you don't have to fix much, or you can afford a mechanic. Things still need to be greased, and I'd challenge most of the desk jockeys here to slide under a seeder and grease and inspect 80-100 shanks every morning for 3 weeks and not complain about it. That's the job of the guy behind the wheel, usually, because they're the one to fix it in the field if it wasn't installed right. And while you're out there, shit breaks. You can shut everything down and wait for a mechanic, or you can get your ass under there and unplug the opener or replace the boots/hose.

Small farms, which today is a farm under 5k and is by far the larger amount of farms, you get to do all that yourself, and your equipment might be 30 or 40 years old, so you're fixing it a lot. You still have to be able to lift a 100lb part into your machine or implement rather than fuck around going to get another tractor to lift it in, or it just isn't going to fit where you need to lift. So you better have some upper body strength or some young prick to do it for you.

Yah, when everything is working and the GPS is engaged, all you have to do is watch for things wrong and eat the lunch you packed yourself to last all day in the first hour.

Nobody here has a clue how farming actually works.

[–] blarghly@lemmy.world 4 points 3 hours ago

My impression is that it is definitely not as demanding as when you were plowing feilds with a team of oxen... but it is still physicall demanding. Sure, machinaty automates a lot, but that just means you are more productive and end up doing more of the labor the machine doesn't automate. Also from what I've heard, a lot of the work of modern farming is fixing and maintaining the machines that do the heavy lifting - which is also fairly taxing physical labor.

Depending on the type of farming, the thing that can't be done by machinery can get ridiculously small. To my knowledge, to grow cereal for example, intensive and repetitive efforts are not needed if you have access to machines. You still have to be physically capable but i wouldnt say it's physically demanding.