This and here is why: 7 years ago (I was 40 at the time) I started working remotely in the software industry and went through a period of depression because I actually enjoyed going into an office and conversing with people (mostly water cooler talk and banter). I needed a physical outlet and started researching farming.My suggestion is to find a way to keep the 9-5 job while you get the new venture up and running.
So I owned 200 acres in Northern California. We tried a few different ranching deals including cattle, goats, and chickens. The best way to make money on the cattle was leasing the hills for graze. We could sustain 35 cow/calf if they supplemented hay. Goats were a net loss. Chickens were net neutral pretty much.
I wanted to do trees (almond or pistachio). Water and enough money to get it established was the killer there. Otherwise in 5-8 years I would have been a millionaire. I did some dry land wheat and grass to feed my wives horses on top of the hay they ate. Without water you are screwed in California. The climate is too hit and miss. Not to mention the property tax and other costs of living I figured out what the best solution was.
I downsized and capitalized on a hot market. Bought the place in 2012 for $925,000. Sold it in 2021 for $1,850,000 to a weed farmer. Bye bye California!
I raise cattle, have fruit trees/grapes, grow a big enough garden to sell produce. Never made a red cent, I don't think
Joel Salatin is the GOAT. Greg Judy is great too. Salatin says Alan Nation was his mentor. Dont forget Gabe Brown. My side hustle would be contract tractor work, would probably run some sheep and pigs too, but just to break even to have mine for free.I'm working toward the goal of making a living farming. I bought the land (160 acres in the Ozarks) 2 years ago, finished building a house on it this year, and plan to start running cattle next year. I plan to keep my job as an engineer while getting my farming enterprises going and have a goal to be fully supported by farm income by age 40 (I'm currently 34). I've been reading Joel Salatin's "You Can Farm" and "Your Successful Farm Business" for advice and inspiration.
I'm pursuing the regenerative/holistic/permaculture (some would call it hippie/earth muffin) route for philosophical reasons and because the low-input economic model appeals to me. I intend to use grassfed beef (initially sold into the commodity market then eventually finished on-farm and sold direct to consumer) as my centerpiece operation. Adding hair sheep might be step two. Maybe add laying hens and/or broilers someday. About half my acreage is wooded, so firewood and custom-milled lumber are possible side businesses.
In addition to Joel Salatin, I would recommend Gabe Brown, Jim Gerrish, Greg Judy, Allan Nation, and Kit Pharo as resources on how to make a living in agriculture.