Can you make underground farm minecraft
I have the following underground farm. It's not optimal in terms of space, but for a farm, it's very efficient, and has automatic harvesting. Planting is always manual on these things unfortunately, and that's the bottleneck for massive production. I replicate the above pattern, one level up to the right for as long as you want.
S is stone. D is tilled dirt. The bottom row of wheat seeds were just planted while the top are fully grown. You can make a hoe with cobblestone, iron, gold or diamond, though you won't be using it often; dirt blocks that have been tilled into farmland don't need to be tilled again unless the blocks are not constantly hydrated or seeded. The only crops that don't require tilled farmland are sugarcane, cactus, mushrooms, and saplings. Once you have planted crops, all you can do is wait—unless you speed the growth with bonemeal.
Depending on how big your underground farm is, the time it takes to do this may not be worth the effort! Harvesting your crops prematurely results in killing the plant and getting back the seeds; if you harvest wheat before its time, you will get back wheat seeds and have to plant it all over again. Fully grown crops are at their tallest and are sometimes more yellow than green. When pumpkins and melons are fully grown, the crop grows onto the dirt block next to the plant.
When you harvest a fully grown crop, you receive the end product wheat, carrots, potatoes, etc. In later Minecraft versions, you can right-click on most crops to harvest them without ripping out the seeds! Instead of harvesting each crop block by block, you can set up a light system controlled by redstone.
Since crops need a light source to grow, you can arrange your underground farm so that the flip of a lever will turn off the lights and make the crops pop out of the ground. This makes harvesting a fully grown crop easier and quicker.
This setup can be accomplished with the following supplies:. To do this, you will need extra space above or around your underground farm to place the redstone lamps and connect them with redstone.
Redstone configures itself to point toward any adjacent redstone circuits made by running redstone dust on the ground and redstone-powered components, such as redstone lamps and levers.
Redstone that is powered will turn bright red, while redstone that is not powered will be dark red. The video at the beginning of this article displays a simple redstone lamp setup! Question: When growing sugar cane, is the same light level needed as wheat to grow?
Answer: Sugar cane does not require light to grow at all! Wheat, however, requires a light level of 9 or higher. Question: While playing Minecraft, I made an underground farm in the snow biome but nothing will grow. Why not? Answer: Is your water source freezing? Question: I tried making an underground farm in my minecraft home on the top story but the crops won't break when the light goes off. Does it have to be underground? Answer: There is currently a bug that has broken this mechanic of farming.
Turning off the lights will not break crops. It has yet to be fixed. Question: Can this Minecraft underground farm design be done underwater in a big glass dome? Any answers? Answer: Is there enough light? It's difficult to diagnose the problem without seeing it firsthand.
I haven't really gotten into the farm aspects of the game as much. Looks like you covered a very great tutorial! JacobCornell You mean farm in rows, instead of a huge square?
You could plant however you like! I just like to economize with placement of water blocks. It does keep things safer! I also sometimes do above-ground farms several levels high, like a giant farm tower. It feels futuristic. This is awesome! What a great way to check on your farm and reap the goods without having to go outside with those nasty mobs.
I'm about to build this right now. SimilarSam: It is totally doable! There is one-block hole filled with water in the middle. Then, above the soil place glowstone. You might put a solid layer of it, but a pattern of 1 every 4 blocks reduces the efficiency only marginally.
Repeat that 9x9 pattern in line, as many times as needed. Instead of just running ahead, "reaper motions" turning around while holding the button harvest up to 4 lines away at a time, so harvest is fast enough that you really don't need automation.
And digging is just 9x9x4 or even x3 if floor is soil. I'm no expert in Minecraft but the way I set up to carve a huge square basin of solid block then x number of rows Whatever you determine sufficient , of raw wood block also lining the perimeter so the basin looks like a barred window, then cap each wood block with soil.
Every other row is now two block depth. Then fill every ditch between with water. I have melons, wheat, cane, etc. I have every block on all surrounding walls torchlit. Incidentally in a side room with almost no light I have a mushroom garden. I'm now into growing forests underground. Who doesn't want giant trees that stack from bedrock to overworld? Wood and food are now endless for me underground. Sign up to join this community. The best answers are voted up and rise to the top.
Stack Overflow for Teams — Collaborate and share knowledge with a private group. Create a free Team What is Teams? Learn more. How do I build an efficient underground farm? Ask Question. Asked 9 years, 2 months ago. Active 7 years, 8 months ago. Viewed 51k times. I would like to build an underground wheat farm that fits the following criteria: Can be built entirely in a hollowed-out, underground room All of the crops have enough light and water that they can grow as fast as possible It is impossible -- or at least excessively difficult -- to accidentally destroy part of it eg.
How would I build an underground farm that met this criteria?
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