Inthis video, I show how to build an Easy Dried Kelp Farm in Minecraft 1.19!
This farm design produces over 500 Dried Kelp per hour and can also give you XP!
The resources required to build this Kelp Farm are quite easy to obtain, making it possible to create it in the survival world early in the game!
This farm works on Java edition in version 1.19 and below. I did not test it on the Bedrock edition.
Did you build it in a slime chunk? Are you standing far enough away but not too far away? Slimes won't spawn underground in swamp biomes, and this farm doesn't work with that sort of spawning anyway. It needs to be a slime chunk. Is the space 3 blocks tall or taller?
In this video, I show how to build an Automatic Sweet Berry Farm in Minecraft!
This Berry Farm is very easy to build and super efficient! It is the easiest cactus farm in Minecraft!
This Farm work on Java edition in version 1.19.2 and below. I did not test it on the Bedrock edition.
Farms are special structures that allow you to yield loads of items from a mob or a block with ease. These structures can either be completely automatic or semi-automatic. One of the most common farms is the mob tower, which allows you to intentionally spawn a large number of hostile mobs in one location and trick them into being killed.
First, you must gather all the resources needed to build the mob tower farm in Minecraft 1.19. Since the farm is quite massive, the resource list is slightly long. Here are all the items and blocks needed:
You must start by building the collection area at the base of the farm. This will store all the items dropped by dead hostile mobs. Place the chests and connect the two hoppers to them. Put two slabs on top of the hoppers. You can also use other incomplete blocks like buttons, trapdoors, etc.
When hostile mobs fall onto the blocks, you will be able to attack them with a sword, but they won't be able to attack back. Once they are dead, the items will essentially be sucked into the hoppers and stored in the chests.
Create an 8x2 path on each side of the hollow tube once the tower is complete. Place two-block-high walls around these four paths and pour water from the ends of the paths. The water will then flow exactly to the center of the hollow tube.
Finally, place trapdoors along the top edge of the water path walls. The hostile mobs have a tendency to perceive the trapdoors as solid blocks on which they can walk. In this case, they will be tricked and fall into the water path, where they will slowly get pushed toward the hole.
Such farms are best built in the ocean, away from any landmass. If you build one on land, however, make sure to illuminate every cave and surrounding landmass to force the game to spawn all hostile mobs in the farm.
Players can find a Cave Spider Spawner inside a Mineshaft. This is considered an easy farm to build, as finding a Cave Spider Spawner is somewhat easy. A Mineshaft is also already closed off so you don't need to build too much around it.
Kelp XP farms are relatively easy and cheap to make. The premise is fairly simple. Players use a furnace or smoker to convert kelp into dried kelp. They then craft the dried kelp into blocks as a fuel source to smelt more dried kelp. Kelp XP farms are very accessible, even to the beginner player, which makes them a worthwhile building project.
One of the best trades for Emerald is selling sticks to fletchers. The reason for this is that sticks are incredibly easy to get from trees. Players can just gather a number of wood blocks to create as many sticks as possible for trading.
Using a piston system, players can keep removing the worksite block of a fletcher so that it refreshes its "stick to emerald" trade. This way, players can quickly convert stick to emerald en-masse. This build can also be applied to villagers of other professions, however, nothing beat sticks in efficiency.
Steak and leather farm is probably the best food farm in Minecraft. This is a multipurpose farm that provides the player with an inexhaustible source of cooked steak and leather. The overall design of this farm is fairly simple - you only need a bucket of lava, a bucket of water, some building blocks like cobblestone, a few signs, a couple of hoppers, some soul sand, some glass, and a chest. You also need some wheat to feed and lure the cows as well.
Firstly, place your chest and run two hoppers into its back, one behind the other. Place a soul sand block on each hopper and surround them with your building blocks. When the farm is active, the cooked steak and leather will drop into the hoppers through the sand.
The second step is placing glass blocks on the front and back of the farm and a layer of building blocks on the sides. On one of the building blocks closest to the front, place a sign to stop the lava flow. Run another layer of building blocks around and place another glass block at the front. This is where the lava will be placed later. Build a platform on this layer for adult cows to stand on then place a sign on the building block across from the third glass block to prevent lava from flowing.
The third step is to build up the walls around the platform then place a water source block on this layer. Remember to block it off to prevent the water from getting into the lava. Add the lava and water then close the rest of the farm.
The final step is to lure some cows to the platform on top of the farm and leave some wheat there for them to breed. The newly created baby cow will float down below and cooked by the lava, giving you steak and leather. The more cows you have on the upper platform, the more meat and leather you can gather. You can also install a piston to push any cows that get stuck into the lava.
Sugar cane is a valuable plant for crafting rockets, making books for bookshelves, maps, and trading paper. However, farming sugarcane is actually pretty tricky, as they can only be planted on grass, dirt, podzol, and sand blocks. Furthermore, the block must be directly adjacent to water and not merely above or diagonal as with crops.
Plant the sugarcane next to a block of water. Place piston on the level above the sugarcane to break it as soon as it grows. Place blocks behind the pistons and observers above them facing the sugarcane. Create a Redstone wire across the top of the blocks behind the pistons.
Totaling $708,346, the contracts will make possible better school bus service, better marketing of farm and ranch products, and better access for tourists, and new jobs for Indian workmen during the coming year, Interior's Bureau of Indian Affairs said.
The road projects are scheduled for the Rosebud, Pine Ridge, Crow Creek and Sisseton Reservations. The contracts parallel similar resource development efforts on Indian lands as one phase of the Bureau's efforts to stimulate employment and to create desirable conditions for industrial and business development on reservations.
Under a contract for $128,306.36, the Van Buskirk Construction Company of Sioux City, Iowa, will grade and drain 6.6 miles of the Little White River Road on the Rosebud Reservation in Todd County, South Dakota. This road will permit tourist travel into the Little White River Valley recreational area, make school bus service available to 30 Indian families, and give them a better transportation link between farm and market. Five bids ranging to $179,403.76 were received for this project.
E. Stoltenberg and Son of St. Paul, Nebraska, was the successful bidder on the Pine Ridge Reservation contract for $189,204.44. Work under this contract covers grading and draining of the Slim Buttes and Red Shirt Table roads to U. S. Highway 18. Connecting links in the reservation road system, these roads will provide access to Red Shirt Village and school bus service to the newly constructed Oglala No.5 Day School operated by the Bureau of Indian Affairs. Seven bids ranging to $239,210.52 were received for the project.
Grading and gravel surfacing work will be done on 9.4 miles of the Big Bend Farm Station road under the Crow Creek contract for $180,6/+1.19. This road provides access to a recreational area on the north shore of the Big Bend Dam Reservoir, as well as farm-to-market and mail route service in the Hughes County section of the Crow Creek Reservation. Brezina Construction Company, Inc." of Rapid City, South Dakota, was the successful bidder. A total of 12 bids ranging to $212,498.32 were received.
The Sisseton Reservation contract for $210,194.48 covers grading, bituminous surfacing, and construction of a bridge on 7.5 miles of a heavily traveled farm to-market, school bus and mail route road that extends east from U, S. Highway 81 toward Browns Valley. The contract was awarded to the John Dieseth Company of Fergus Falls, Minnesota, who submitted the lowest of six bids ranging to $266,060.94,
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