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      • For Education Edition, right click on the block. This will prepare the ground and expose the soil for planting turning it into farmland. Once you have used the hoe on the blocks that you want to farm, they will look brown (because the grass has been removed). The blocks will begin to get wet from the water and change to a darker brown.
      www.digminecraft.com/getting_started/how_to_farm.php
  1. Farm Lesson 1: Pollination. Students dissect a flower to explore how its structures and functions relate to a pollinator’s physical and behavioral adaptations. Guiding Ideas. This project was developed with the American Beekeeping Federation’s Kids and Bees program.

  2. Farm Lesson 2: Bee Friendly Farming. Students explore dynamic, multi-faceted solutions to the difficult and complicated issue of bee death, using sustainable agriculture as a guide.

    • Overview
    • Automation
    • Mob farming
    • Experience farming
    • Food and other crops
    • Block farming
    • Item farming

    Farming refers to the systematic production of renewable resources. The technique is typically used to get blocks, food, experience and other desired items. Specific types of farming are listed below.

    Farms can be classified as manual, semi-automatic, and fully automatic. Manual farms rely mostly or solely on the player to harvest and restart the farm. Semi-automatic farms use mechanisms to automatically harvest the farm, but they are manually activated by the player. Fully automatic farms do not rely on the player at all and usually use mobs or more complicated mechanisms.

    There are other limits to farming regardless of automation:

    Many farms require their chunks to be ticked;. In Bedrock Edition, all loaded chunks in the world are ticked, but in Java Edition, a chunk must also have a player nearby – specifically, some player must be within 128 blocks (horizontal distance only) of the chunk's center. This affects most block changes, including farmland and other crop farms.

    Mobs will generally despawn if they do not have a player nearby; details vary by version, but in general mobs can randomly despawn if no player has been within 32 blocks for at least 30 seconds (sometimes 10 seconds), or if no player is within 128 blocks. In either case, the chunk needs to still be loaded for the despawning process to work. This affects most mob farms, especially those which depend on hostile mobs.

    Many mobs are protected from despawning; by way of summary:

    •Any mob that was created as part of a naturally-generated structure.

    Animal farming Using wheat, seeds, beetroot, and carrots to breed animals, to be slaughtered for their products or used in egg, milk, or wool farming.

    Bee farming Using flowers to breed bees to store in beehives and bee nests, and make honeycomb and/or honey.

    Hostile mob farming Creating spawn rooms for hostile mobs to be killed for their drops.

    Villager farming Farming villagers requires the player to have enough beds and job site blocks for each villager for them to breed.

    Guardian farming Farming guardians by funneling them to a concentrated area for materials and/or experience.

    Blaze farming Farming blaze rods from blazes.

    The reason to farm experience is to easily enchant items, or repair tools and armor. Many common experience farms require a difficulty above Peaceful, as they require mobs to spawn. Other uncommon farms use other ways to gain experience, such as fishing or furnaces.

    Spawner farming

    Spawner farming involves waiting at an active monster spawner for monsters to spawn. This includes mobs that do not spawn naturally without the use of spawners, such as cave spiders.

    These can be automated with a water pathway transferring the mobs to a convenient collection or killing area.

    A similar system can be used to adapt "dark-spawn farms" to experience harvesting: Mobs are funneled into a grinder to soften them up, then a killing chamber where you can take a sword to them without being targeted. There are several considerations here, the hard part is doing them all at once:

    •As usual, spiders generally need to be separated or killed off to avoid them blocking other mobs.

    Wheat, Carrot, Potato, Beetroot farming, and Sweet Berries Farming wheat, carrots, potatoes, beetroots, and Sweet Berries

    Pumpkin and Melon farming Farming pumpkins and melons

    Vine farming Vines can be farmed for use instead of ladders, decoration, or crafting mossy stone bricks or mossy cobblestone. Cave vines can be found in lush caves, but they can only be acquired if they are mature with glow berries. The Nether also offers weeping vines and twisting vines.

    Kelp farming Farming kelp for fuel or decoration.

    Bamboo farming Farming bamboo for fuel, sticks or scaffolds.

    Sugar Cane farming Farming sugar canes to make paper and sugar.

    Cactus farming Farming cacti for green dye or traps.

    Cobblestone farming Creating a stone or cobblestone generator for self-repairing shelters or harvesting.

    Obsidian farming Creating an obsidian generator for obsidian-intensive builds.

    Ice farming Farming ice using a self-refilling rink.

    Tree farming Farming trees for wood, saplings, apples, or charcoal.

    Wool farming Farming wool for many different uses

    Bone Meal farming Farming bone meal.

    Iron farming Farming iron ingots by killing iron golems spawned in large villages.

    Gold farming Farming gold nuggets by killing zombified piglins, which spawn in the Nether or near Nether portals in the Overworld.

    Egg farming Farming eggs for use in cake, pumpkin pie or creating chickens.

    Cocoa bean farming Farming cocoa beans for use in cookies or creating brown wool.

    Snow farming Trapping a snow golem and digging the snow it produces.

  3. Oct 10, 2022 · How To Make an EASY Iron Farm Minecraft Education Edition 1.18+ You will need: 20 beds 1 lava bucket 2 water buckets 1iron shovel 1iron pickaxe 100 blocks (any block you want) 1 slab 2 chests...

    • 4 min
    • 40.3K
    • Learn With Minecraft Education
  4. You have been sent to a developing country to help the local population farm in a more effective way, to make sure there is not a shortage of food. The goal is to help optimize farming and create a more sustainable food source for the local population. This will be accomplished by collecting satellite data in a semi-

  5. www.digminecraft.com › getting_started › how_to_farmHow to Farm in Minecraft

    How to Farm in Minecraft. This Minecraft tutorial explains how to farm with a hoe with screenshots and step-by-step instructions. In Minecraft, you can plant and grow your own garden of wheat, carrots and potatoes by farming in the game. When you farm, you require water and a hoe.

  6. Jan 10, 2021 · Minecraft School - Lesson 3: All About Farming in Minecraft!In this video, you will find out all about animals and plants that you can farm in Minecraft. We ...

    • 31 min
    • 1176
    • JayDeeMC
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