Texas Farm Girl


Book Description

Texas Farm Girl has a working relationship with her PawPaw who teaches her about farming in the region of the Texas Panhandle. Despite the challenges of farming, including unpredictable Texas Panhandle weather, Texas Farm Girl and her PawPaw still find the positive in their hard work.




Buying Rural Land in Texas


Book Description

Whether the prospective buyer is a farmer or rancher looking to expand operations, a sportsman seeking to preserve habitat for wildlife, or a nature enthusiast trying to conserve native flora and fauna, acquiring rural land can be a rollercoaster of exciting and stressful experiences. In Buying Rural Land in Texas: Taking the Right Risk, Charles E. Gilliland demonstrates that buyers can and should arm themselves with knowledge—of the land-buying process, of the potential problems involved, and of the resources available to them—to ensure a successful and satisfying outcome. In this practical guide, Gilliland outlines four phases of buying rural land: identifying what you want, in terms of both land and property rights; locating a suitable property; valuing the property; and completing the transaction. He then covers everything the potential landowner should know while progressing through these steps: how to identify and manage risk, plan an “exit strategy,” interpret present and future land prices, find the “perfect spot,” evaluate the property’s physical attributes, gauge economic trends, understand legal rights and limitations, protect natural resources, and, finally, close the deal. Incorporating real life examples from a career spent in land sales, Gilliland takes readers step-by-step through the process, also providing checklists, maps, professional tips, and information about how to tap additional sources of information and advice. With the knowledge gained from Buying Rural Land in Texas, new landowners will find themselves not at the end of a journey but at the beginning, as they learn to manage their land and to deliver it intact to future generations.




Growing Good Things to Eat in Texas


Book Description

As more and more people seek locally grown food, independent, family owned and operated agriculture has expanded, creating local networks for selling and buying produce, meat, and dairy products and reviving local agricultural economies throughout the United States. In Growing Good Things to Eat in Texas, author Pamela Walker and photographer Linda Walsh portray eleven farming and ranching families who are part of this food revival in Texas. With biographical essays and photographs, Walker and Walsh illuminate the work these food producers do, why they do it, and the difference it makes in their lives and in their communities.




Texas, Cotton, And The New Deal


Book Description

Cotton growing-Government policy-Texas-Historly 2. Cotton trade-government policy-Texas-History. 3. New Deal1933-1939-Texas. 4. United States.













Price of Gasoline to Farmers


Book Description

"I should note for the record the reason that we have asked representatives of various oil companies to meet with us. It is due to the reports that we have from Texas to the effect that sometime in June there was a very definite change in regard to the policy of all major oil companies in connection with the sale of gasoline to farmers from tank wagons. We are somewhat at a loss to know the exact figures or to know exactly what has occurred, but, certainly, it is quite clear that in the past farmers have been given certain favorable rates from tank wagons when the farmers' gasoline was delivered to tanks on the farms. On the 1st of June the Federal Government announced that there would be a refund of taxes on farmer gasoline. About that same date all of the major oil companies, at least in Texas, with the exception of Shell, which company tells me that they are not engaging in this business, announced that their jobbers or distributors would raise the price of tank wagon gasoline to farmers by one-half cent. Obviously, it could not fall at a more harsh time on the farmers of Texas, suffering as they are a most severe drought and depressed prices, too." -- W.R. Poage, Committee chairman.