Integrated Farming Systems
Program snapshot | Design systems that reduce waste and improve productivity.
Core Principles of Integrated Farming
How integrated farms create value while protecting the environment.
Close the loops
Turn waste into resources: manure, crop residues, and byproducts become inputs for the next cycle.
Build soil health
Improve fertility, structure, and biology to increase yields and reduce dependency on inputs.
Use water wisely
Harvest, store, and apply water efficiently using practical low-cost systems where possible.
Integrate livestock
Livestock adds value through protein production, manure, and use of farm-grown feed resources.
Support biodiversity
Increase resilience using trees, hedgerows, beneficial insects, and ecological pest management.
Plan for profitability
Design farm enterprises that meet market demand while controlling costs and risks.
What You’ll Be Able To Do
Practical skills to design and operate an integrated farm system.
Technical & System Skills
- Assess soil health and improve fertility using practical methods
- Plan crop rotations, intercropping, and nutrient cycles
- Integrate livestock to support farm productivity and income streams
- Design water management systems: harvesting, storage, and efficient use
- Build biodiversity strategies that support resilience and pest control
Planning & Sustainability
- Create a whole-farm plan aligned to land, labor, and market realities
- Balance economic, social, and environmental goals
- Reduce waste by closing loops (manure → compost → crops → feed)
- Track basic KPIs for productivity and sustainability
- Develop an actionable implementation roadmap
Build a sustainable farm system that works
Join the program and learn integrated farming from design to implementation.Curriculum Overview
Modules covering soil, crops, livestock, water, biodiversity, and farm planning.
Module 1: Systems Thinking
Week 1- Principles of integrated farming
- Farm goals: economic, social, environmental
- Mapping farm resources and constraints
Module 2: Soil Management
Week 2- Soil health: structure, organic matter, biology
- Compost, manure, mulching, and amendments
- Simple soil testing and interpretation
Module 3: Crop Management
Week 3- Crop planning, rotation, and intercropping
- Integrated pest management basics
- Post-harvest handling basics
Module 4: Livestock Management
Week 4- Livestock enterprise design (poultry-focused)
- Housing, feeding, health, and biosecurity basics
- Nutrient cycling: manure handling and use
Module 5: Water & Biodiversity
Week 5- Water harvesting and storage options
- Irrigation efficiency and scheduling
- Biodiversity strategies for resilience
Module 6: Whole-Farm Planning
Week 6- Farm layout design and enterprise mix
- Budgeting, risk planning, and KPIs
- Capstone: integrated farm plan + roadmap
Tools & Templates You Receive
Fees, Dates & Certification
Clear costs and intake scheduling.
Tuition
IntegratedFull program tuition.
- Hands-on + planning sessions
- Templates and resources
- Certificate upon completion
Application Fee
RequiredPaid online to validate your application.
- Non-refundable
- Confirms seriousness
- Supports processing
Cohort Dates
ScheduleIntake calendar coming soon.
- Limited seats per cohort
- Orientation included
- On-site/hybrid timetable
Note: Application fee is required to start the enrollment process. Full tuition due before cohort start.
Want a customized training cohort?
We can tailor integrated farming training for groups, cooperatives, and organizations.Integrated Farming FAQs
Quick answers before you enroll.
Is this program only for crop farmers?
No. It’s designed for anyone building a farm system that integrates crops, livestock, and resource management.
Do I need land to take this course?
No. You can learn the design and planning approach without land, then apply it when you have access to a farm site.
Do I receive a certificate?
Yes. You receive an OTAFARMS Academy certificate upon successful completion.
