• Zink@programming.dev
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    1 day ago

    I have been existing in a superposition of both of these states for a few years and really like it.

    During the day I’m a senior engineer on embedded c/c++ stuff. During free time at home I dig in the dirt and build shit and do my “farm chores” like tending to my koi pond. Feels good man.

    I think most people would agree that fresh air, exercise, hobbies, and personal goals are good for your body and mind. It’s still wild when I notice it actually working.

      • AdminBot@programming.devB
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        18 hours ago

        Your comment was auto-removed for profanity, an admin will review it and undelete it soon if there has been an error. Sorry for the inconvenience.

        • psud@aussie.zone
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          9 hours ago

          Profanity is against the rules here? It doesn’t say so in the sidebar

          • AdminBot@programming.devB
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            6 hours ago

            No, it’s not against the rules.

            It’s a proxy (albeit a poor one) for abuse, we are trying to prevent new accounts sending abusive messages.

            We are open to other solutions, but we need something, because we kept having spammers sending abusive tirades to other users.

            Please reach out to Spyro@programming.dev if you have any better ideas.

          • kiagam@lemmy.world
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            9 hours ago

            I believe it is instance-level, or at least that is what I saw in another thread (the instance mods can filter that)

          • AdminBot@programming.devB
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            6 hours ago

            We don’t like it either, but we don’t have much choice.

            It is to prevent abusive messages from new accounts, and it is a poor solution.

            If you have a better alternative, feel free to reach out. Contact Spyro@programming.dev.

  • tempest@lemmy.ca
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    2 days ago

    Farming is only fun if you already have enough money that you don’t actually have to farm if you didn’t want to.

    Otherwise it’s hard work for low pay that is very hard to buy yourself into if you weren’t born with some land.

    • boonhet@sopuli.xyz
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      1 day ago

      When they say the goal of many a software engineer is to become a farmer, it’s quietly implied that you have to first make bank as a software engineer and then farm as a hobby while at least semi-retired rather than depending on it for survival.

      I know people who are doing this and are happy. Half time spent farming, half time CEOing a software startup (not a silicon valley hustle culture 996 one though), and you get to take meetings in your own personal forest.

      • neomachino@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        1 day ago

        I’m actually on my first year of sort of doing this. I wouldn’t say I made bank, but I make enough that I could buy a house with an acre and an adjacent partially wooded lot with another acre that I’ll hopefully be able to split between crops and some livestock in the next few years. For now I’m starting small with 1/8th of an acre and just growing the same stuff we always grew in the garden but on a bigger scale plus a few rows of corn and a patch of sunflowers.

        My company doesn’t care when I do my work so I can spend half the day in the field no problem and clock a couple hours at night, as long as I get something done no one bothers me.

        It’s been extra cool because the house is an original farmhouse from the early 1900s with an original barn, water lines and even power running out there too so being able to fix everything up myself and bring the land back to it’s original glory has really brought something much needed back into my soul.

        I will say thought it is fucking expensive even after buying the land.

        • boonhet@sopuli.xyz
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          1 day ago

          Do you have any foresty bits on your acre? That’s honestly peak luxury in some ways. Person I mentioned in the previous comment has a forested knoll with a great view, but enough tree cover that you can avoid the sun.

          Fixing things up on your own truly is magical. I do it with cars more than my home (because the former is often cheaper and quicker and I buy cheap-ass formerly-luxury beaters usually), but this summer I have some plans for my house as well.

          • neomachino@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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            12 hours ago

            Oh we do, we have a little bit of woods, but right next to us there’s about a 20 acre thick woods that’s owned by one of our neighbors and basically treated as communal. A couple of the neighbors help out to maintain a trail that they made running next to a small stream. We just found out the whole woods is filled with various flowers in the spring/summer. Right now all the daffodils are absolutely covering everything but the trail so the owners posted on Facebook inviting anyone to come walk the trail and pick as many as they want. It was really cool to see so many people from the community come to this private land that’s treated as public, maintained for free by the neighbors just for the sake of having something nice, to pick flowers for free without any expectation of anything in return. Talk about icing in the cake, we had no clue about any of this before we moved in. I assumed it was a grumpy old guy who like living in the woods so people wouldn’t bother him, instead it’s a young couple with a baby who invite strangers in for tea.

            I tried fixing up cars a couple years back but it turns out that’s just not my jam. I was a framing carpenter for a few years so my expertise outside of wood and nails is pretty limited. But with the price of things nowadays I’m getting not too shabby with plumbing and electrical. Replaced a couple pipes when we first moved in and I’m working on slowly swapping out some old knob and tube with romex, although it takes me forever because I’ll check everything 20, times and redo it if it’s not absolutely perfect, electrical stuff makes me nervous.

            • da_cow (she/her)@feddit.org
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              5 hours ago

              I tried fixing up cars a couple years back but it turns out that’s just not my jam. I was a framing carpenter for a few years so my expertise outside of wood and nails is pretty limited.

              I grew up on a farm and one of The good things about it is, that no matter what, you will be forced to learn at least the basics of quite a lot of different fields of manual work. I van comfortably handle quite a lot of stuff and would be able to fix a lot of stuff by myself, because I learned all the basics while fixing stuff with my dad (or by myself). As long as long AS i dont have to fix anything at a car (or any other bigger vehicle) or do any electrical work that is more complex than changing an electric component (as in ripping out the old component and replacing it with an identical new component) I am quite comfortable, that I could do quite a lot stuff by myself (if I have the right tools for it).

            • boonhet@sopuli.xyz
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              11 hours ago

              Cars are easy, but you’ll need adequate diagnostics solutions much of the time. And you’ll want to avoid cars from areas where they tend to rust. Rust is harder to deal with than engine or even auto transmission issues lol

              But if you’re not into it, it’s harder to learn it and it’ll be a fruitless endeavour.

    • tiredofsametab@fedia.io
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      1 day ago

      [I]t’s hard work for low pay that is very hard to buy yourself into if you weren’t born with some land.

      It’s certainly hard work and low pay (compared to software engineering) in many cases, but it is rewarding.

      As for the land, that really depends on the scale and the country.

      • CanadaPlus@lemmy.sdf.org
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        13 hours ago

        At the end of the day, farmland is going to earn a similar basic return to whatever other capital asset, and while farming labour isn’t unskilled the amount of people raised in it means it earns like it is.

        Nobody who says this is picturing manhandling half-dead battery chickens, and it’s usually someone white who isn’t going to move to the mountains of Ethiopia to farm subsistence crops and cocoa. That pretty much leaves something land-intensive.

        I did talk to someone on Lemmy who made it work with ranching, but ranching is definitely not a good earner right now, and a lot of people are leaving the industry. Modern crop farming seems a lot like a desk job on wheels. Mainly, I think people just want space and fresh air, and have no idea what rural life is actually like.

        • Alenalda@lemmy.world
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          8 hours ago

          The goal I had for my first vegetable garden was to produce enough food to last a month. I was able to achieve that for under 50$ in parts. More recently I’ve been getting into fruit trees which has been a little more expensive because I’m not doing to grafting myself. You don’t have to feed the entire neighborhood yourself, and will like 30min of effort a day you can have more than enough for your own needs.

          • CanadaPlus@lemmy.sdf.org
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            7 hours ago

            If you’re not eating anything else, but still have a year-round growing season, it takes an acre or two for modern agriculture to feed a person. That’s a lot by city standards, but not in general (it was more like 60 in pre-modern times). It’s basically what the Ethiopians mentioned are doing, plus the cocoa so they can have things that don’t grow on trees, as well.

            and will like 30min of effort a day you can have more than enough for your own needs.

            Mountains of human experience suggests it takes a lot more effort than that. Have you had to deal with pests, drought or disease yet?

            You might still come in under 8 hours a day, but then you add in the cash crops… Again, this is something only white people generations away from subsistence farming seem to think will be easy.

            • Alenalda@lemmy.world
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              6 hours ago

              I’m not saying you need to grow enough to feed a village on 30min a day. After I got everything prepared I water every other day if there’s no rain and spot weed when I feel like it. My goal was enough for like 50 meals from a small garden and anyone can easily supplement their diet without that much effort. Hobby vegetable farming and industrial agriculture are two different things and as food insecurity worsens and costs go up, it’ll be a valuable skill to have. For me it takes more work to preserve the food than it does to grow it.

        • AlligatorBlizzard@sh.itjust.works
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          1 day ago

          Yup. My extended family is farmers. They got out of livestock decades ago because there was no profit at the scale they were willing to do it in and animals smell terrible at (abusive) scale. Corn and soybeans, they had a contract with a major company for sweetcorn last I heard.

          I love the idea of an air conditioned tractor cab that’s mostly run by GPS and lets me sit around and listen to podcasts while babysitting the tractor, but I don’t want to live in Bumfuck Iowa so I didn’t go into farming.

          • CanadaPlus@lemmy.sdf.org
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            7 hours ago

            And there’s other babysitting-type jobs out there, if that’s what you want. Actually that’s one sector poised to grow a lot do to AI, because AI needs hella babysitting.

        • tiredofsametab@fedia.io
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          1 day ago

          It’s always a balance of what you can afford, what you want to do, and what your market can bare. You may love raising chickens, but eggs will almost never pay off. I love hot peppers. But I can’t get by growing just that. It is skilled and complicated for sure.

          • tempest@lemmy.ca
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            1 day ago

            I don’t know where you live but round here if you want to raise chickens you gotta first buy some chicken quota (I am serious).

            So you are in the hole before a bird lays its first egg.

            • tiredofsametab@fedia.io
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              1 day ago

              I’m in Japan. It’s not worth it on my scale to even try. I do plan to get chickens for our eggs (and bonus bug eating and compost helping), but otherwise I’m just in the veg business. I have full English support and website which helps me find my market

      • tempest@lemmy.ca
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        2 days ago

        They are? When did that happen? For the last 15 years it’s been 23 year old ‘senior devs’

          • boonhet@sopuli.xyz
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            1 day ago

            Think it’s actually a paygrade thing at some companies. Get a talented engineer (that yes, probably had open source projects already as a teen) and they kinda want more pay than an average engineer. Now they’re a senior engineer.

            Of course whether said engineer is actually worth said salary isn’t immediately obvious and oftentimes you end up with young seniors that are better at selling themselves than they are at engineering.

            I also know at least one company I worked for developed clear outlines of what your skills (both soft and… Hard?) and ownership of codebase should be for each level. At the time I had just over 3 YoE (2.5 from previous company and was essentially one biannual review away from becoming a senior, but threw it away for a more exciting job and since then I’ve not been at a company that differentes levels at all. So I don’t know if I’ll ever be a senior now lol

        • entropicdrift@lemmy.sdf.org
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          1 day ago

          As a programmer who grew up in rural nowhere-land, I’m convinced most people who glorify farming have never spent a day on a farm doing any actual work.

          Either that or they’re isolationist due to being religious nutjobs (solidly 1/3rd to 1/2 of people in the middle of nowhere IME)

          • boonhet@sopuli.xyz
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            1 day ago

            The dream is to get rich programming and THEN start farming. When you don’t need to do it for income. Nobody mentions the first half usually though. I’m sure some do actually think they want to make a living off farming, good luck to them.