Getting Started (Forestry - Farms)

= Farming the Forestry Way = Forestry is focused around agriculture. To that end it provides one of the largest multi-block structures in Minecraft. The Farm.

Each farm is made up primarily of Farm Blocks. They must have a Farm Gearbox through which you input RF power. Farm Valve, Farm Hatch and Farm Control blocks are optional, but will be needed if you intend on automating the farm.

All farms will be 4 blocks high and require a platform to work on. The smallest farm will be 3x3x4 with a platform radius of 9, the largest will be 5x5x4 with a platform radius of 15. A 3x5x4 will allow you to have a platform radius of 15 and is generally considered to be the most efficient size farm you can create.

The platform must be built around the sides of the farm. If built on top it will not function.

Farm Types
There are several types of farms which can be built and you then have to decide on a Farm Configuration. These come in the form of either manual farms or managed farms.

Configuring Your Farm
For many of the farm types you will need to change how they are configured for them to farm the items you want or to be a managed or manual type. To configure your farm you will need to have crafted a Soldering Iron and one of the types of Circuit Boards in the Carpenter you built earlier.

The Circuit Boards allow you to attach Electron Tubes which will configure one of the 4 sides of the farm, (N)orth, (S)outh, (E)ast and (W)est. Basic Circuit Boards can only take one Electron Tube, Enhanced Circuit Boards can take two, Refined Circuit Boards three while Intricate Circuit Boards are able to take four allowing all sides of the farm to be configured.

To configure a Circuit Board with Electron Tubes you need to put the Soldering Iron in your hand and right click, place the Circuit Board to be configured in the top right slot, click the arrows at the top to change the machine type selection to read Managed Farms or Manual Farms and then place one of the accepted Electron Tubes into one of the four available slots down the left hand side.

Make sure you check out the Farm Configuration page to see what each Electron Tube does. Both farm types will require Fertilizer created from Apatite.

Manual Farms
Manual farms require you to set the soil and plant the seeds or saplings. It will harvest and replant once you have done the initial set up.

Manual farm types include,


 * Orchard
 * Peat Bog
 * Crop Farm
 * Vegetable Farm
 * Succulent Farm
 * Reed Farm
 * Rubber Plantation (If IndustrialCraft 2 is installed)
 * Gourd Farm
 * Cocoa Plantation

Managed Farms
Managed farms will automatically layout the soil type and plant the seeds and saplings as long as they are kept supplied with various items they need to do so.

Managed farm types include,


 * Arboretum
 * Peat Bog
 * Crop Farm
 * Vegetable Farm
 * Infernal Farm
 * Shroom Farm

Building Your First Farm
Farm Blocks can be made from a variety of materials which only affect the appearance of the block, not its function. These will be used to build the main farm structure and also the other farm blocks so it's a good idea to make quite a few of these.

Now that you have several Farm Blocks we can craft the other blocks you'll need and want in order to build your farm.

Note: These blocks will only work when placed to form the outside edge of the structure.

Farm Gearboxes you will need to have at least one as part of your farm structure as they are the only way to supply the farm with the RF power it will need to operate. Connect any type of pipe capable of transferring RF power.

Farm Valves are used for supplying the farm with water. Connect any type of liquid pipe to pump the water in.

Farm Hatches allow you to pipe in the items the farm will need such as Fertilizer, dirt, seeds etc... and also allow you to pipe out the products the farm produces. Attach pipes that transport items.

Farm Control blocks allow you to control which field your farm works on by supplying a Redstone signal. By applying a Redstone signal to either the top or bottom you can shut down the whole farm. By applying a Redstone signal to a specific side you stop the farm working on field matching the side of the control block the signal was applied to.

Now comes the fun part, putting it all together and building your first farm. By default the first farm you build will be an Arboretum. As shown earlier this is a managed farm, so lets get building.

First clear out a nice sizeable area at least 40x40 blocks wide and make sure there is open sky above. Now you'll need some Farm Blocks. You can build the bottom layer as all Farm Blocks but I'm going to incorporate the Farm Gearbox, Farm Hatch, Farm Valve and the Farm Control block in this first layers. Note that these extra blocks must be placed on the outer shell of the construct and can be places anywhere on this outer shell. For the purpose of this tutorial place them as shown in the image below.



The second layer,



third layer



and final layer can now all be Farm Blocks.



If you did it right you'll see a band appear around the whole construct as shown in the last image above. This completes the Farm structure itself, but now we need to provide a working platform so the farm can have something to plant on.

Using the same material used to create the Farm Block, Stone Bricks in this case, build outwards from the Farm structure a platform on all sides. This platform needs to be against the side of the Farm structure or it won't work. I use the band as a guide and it might be good practice to do the same. In this instance build the platorm 3x3 blocks on all sides of the Farm as shown.



Now fill in the bit in between each platform to build one large platform.



Now all that remains it to pipe RF into the Farm Gearbox, water into the Farm Valve, Dirt and Saplings and Fertilizer into the Farm Hatch. Depending on what type of pipe you use for the Farm Hatch you can also collect the Farm's output, which for the Arboretum will be Wood and/or Apples depending on the type of tree sapling used.

The fertilizer will gradually be used up over time at a slow rate so be sure to keep a good stock.

If you want to stop the Farm from operating at any time attach a Redstone signal to the bottom or top, if you placed the Farm Control on the top of the Farm structure. If you put a Redstone signal on the side of the Farm Control then the corresponding side of the farm will stop operating. This is handy if you have configured your farm to work on different things on each side as if you have enough of the item, you can stop production without affecting the rest of the farm.

Once all of the above has been completed the Farm will automatically use dirt and saplings to plant your tree farm. You'll notice that what the farm actually places is Humus rather than dirt. This is normal and once it's finished this process your completed Farm will look as follows.

'''Note: Managed farms are the only type that will layout and plant your farm automatically. Manual farms will require you to layout and plant initially. Once laid out the farm will replace anything it harvests automatically provided it is kept supplied.'''