Home & Garden Garden Specialty Farming and Alternative Crops for Small Farms Niche Products That Appeal to Consumers By Lauren Arcuri Lauren Arcuri Writer Swarthmore College Lauren Arcuri is a freelance writer and an experienced small farmer based in rural Vermont. Learn about our editorial process Updated October 8, 2020 Treehugger / Hilary Allison Garden Urban Farms Planting Guides Indoor Gardening Insects Specialty crops, alternative crops, and value-added products can be a great way to earn money and profit for your small farm. At a time when it seems like everyone is growing tomatoes, lettuce, and mesclun greens, how can a small farmer stand out from the crowd? You may want to find a niche that is not already occupied, something a little different—yet still, choose a crop that grows well in your climate and that has demand. Identify the product correctly, develop a good plan, execute it wisely, and you may yield a nice payday in the end. Aquaculture VisitBritain/Britain on View / Getty Images Aquaculture means farming aquatic plants or animals. For example, you can raise trout, catfish, oysters, clams, fish for bait, crawfish, or tilapia. You can raise aquatic plants and animals in ponds or in seawater depending on what waters you have access to—for example, oysters are raised in salt water while trout can be raised in a freshwater pond. Specialty Vegetables onkelramirez1 / Pixabay Specialty vegetables can mean anything from heirloom varieties of typical farm-grown vegetables and using greenhouses or hydroponics to grow out-of-season crops to farming medicinal and/or edible mushrooms such as shiitakes or button mushrooms (agaricus). Microgreens. These are tiny leafy vegetables grown from seed to eat. Common microgreens are beets, broccoli, Chinese cabbage, kohlrabi, mustards, and radishes. These are harvested when less than 2 inches tall. Mushrooms. Some of the more commonly grown mushrooms include white, criminis, portabella, oyster, shiitake, maitake, enoki, and beech mushrooms. Peppers. If you are in a warm climate, you may want to grow specialty peppers, such as hot peppers like jalapenos and habaneros for salsa. Sprouts. Pea shoots, broccoli sprouts, mung bean sprouts and more are all sold to consumers. Sprouts grow very quickly but freshness is also a concern—they have a short shelf life. Feed and Forage iPae / Pixabay Growing feed and forage for livestock is another specialty area. Consider growing plants for birdseed, too: sunflower, millet, and canary grass are popular. You could grow turnips and rutabagas for livestock to forage. If you have the right pasture, you can grow hay for other farmers. Fiber, Fuel, and Edible Oils Arletta Cwalina / EyeEm / Getty Images Edible oils like flaxseed and borage, castor beans, and sesame can be good alternative choices. Also consider other popular cooking and cosmetic oils like sunflower, comfrey, jojoba, lupine, milkweed, and safflower. Fruits and Nuts Anemone123 / Pixabay Fruits and nuts are other kinds of specialty crops. Heirloom apples, Asian pears, berries of all kinds—gooseberries, elderberries, blueberries, strawberries, cranberries and currants—as well as rhubarb, grapes for eating or for making wine, and more, are some good choices. And, if you have maple trees, tapping those trees for maple syrup is another possibility. Horticultural and Nursery Plants Mayur Kotlikar / Getty Images Do you have a green thumb? Do you have a nice plot of arable land for growing plants? You can grow vegetable starts and sell flats of them in the spring. Or consider transforming your farm into a nursery. Sell trees, bedding plants, perennials, annuals, bulbs, and more. You can also sell field-grown cut flowers to florists and garden shops for arrangements or drying. Agroforestry Elizabethsalleebauer / Getty Images Agroforestry means, basically, farming trees. Christmas tree farms, bamboo, firewood, tree seed collections, and wild nuts are some viable options. Livestock christels / Pixabay Specialty livestock are those animals that are not commonly farmed. Potential specialty livestock can include beefalo (bison cow hybrid), buffalo, deer, elk (for meat and antlers), pheasant, alpacas and llamas, goats, horses (draft horses, miniatures, exotics), mink, mules and donkeys, rabbits for meat, Angora rabbits for hair, and worms for composting. In terms of specialty poultry items, you can produce balut (partially-incubated duck eggs), partially developed chicken eggs (for Asian markets), ducks for meat and pate, doves, geese, guinea fowl, peafowl and peacocks, pigeons, turkey, and quail. Value-Added Products Chatuporn Sornlampoo / EyeEm /Getty Images There are other value-added products you can make on your farm that come as a result of your agricultural endeavors. For example, if you keep bees, in addition to honey, you can sell beeswax products like candles or propolis (bee glue), which is used for wound healing. You can develop a line of herbal tinctures, teas, and salve products made from wildcrafted or farm-grown herbs. As a farm byproduct, you may be able to make specialty products like kombucha, sweet and hard cider, beer, wine, cheese, tanning hides, dried fruits, furniture, wool for spinning or spun into yarn and dyed, processed meat like jerky, salsa, soap—the possibilities are nearly endless.