Watch: Maya farming techniques
Jade Skirt: Us Maya have really healthy diets. As well as the maize, beans and squash we grow to eat, we also produce cotton to make cloth and flowers for decoration.
We hunt deer, fish and birds and collect fruits from the forest.
But we make sure we don’t take too much, as we don’t want to upset the spirit guardians of each species.
Maize is our most important food, long ago the gods made our bodies out of it.
We are really good at farming because our calendars are so good.
They tell us when to plant our crops, and when to harvest them. When it will rain, and when it will be dry.
Time to take our maize to the market.
They sell and trade lots of things here. Juicy tomatoes.
[CRASH]
Spicy chillies.
[CRASH]
Chocolate drinks. Yum.
[TURKEY GOBBLES]
And noisy turkeys.
[BARK]
[TURKEY GOBBLES]
[CRASH]
What did the Maya farmers produce?

Farming was really important to the Maya. Most people grew their own crops in small fields.
Farmers grew many kinds of crops at the same time, such as maize, beans and squash. If farmers grew more than they could eat, they traded the leftovers in markets.


Food such as chillies and tomatoes were gathered from the forest or grown in gardens.
The Maya made a lot of cotton, which was spun, dyed and woven into textiles. Cotton seeds were ground to make cooking oil.

Cocoa and vanilla were also produced. Cocoa was made into chocolate drinks for the royal family.
Archaeologists have found the remains of a Maya market at Chunchucmil, in modern day Mexico. It was a huge trade centre in the heart of Mesoamerica.

Why were they successful?

The Maya were so successful at farming was because they studied the stars and the weather. This meant they were able to create very detailed calendars which told them what time of year to plant crops and when they should harvest them.
Maya calendars were more accurate than the European calendars at that time.

What were the three types of Maya farming?

Raised field
The Maya used this method to farm areas of land that otherwise would have been too wet to use. Small canals were created by digging out soil from beneath the water and piling up to create small islands.
Maya farmers could then grow crops on these islands while they harvested the fish that swam in the canals.
Raised fields connected by canals can be seen today on aerial photographs.
Terrace farming
This is where walls are built to make small flat fields one on top of the other. It was useful for increasing the amount of farmland in mountain areas. Most terraces were small, but in some parts of the Maya lowlands, they dramatically transformed entire regions!
Shifting cultivation
Also known as ‘swidden’ or ‘slash and burn’ this is when jungle areas are chopped down and burnt. The ash is good for the soil, so it was perfect for growing crops. Within a few years, the nutrients would be used up and the farmers would have to move elsewhere to let the forest regrow.

Activities
Activity 1: Quiz – Maya farming
Activity 2: History Explorer game
Play this game to test your knowledge and learn even more facts about the ancient Maya.
History Explorer: Secrets through time
History Explorer: Secrets through time: KS2 History

SAT’s preparation resources. activitySAT’s preparation resources
Get ready for the SATs papers with videos, activities, quizzes and games to refresh your knowledge and practise your skills.

More on Maya Civilisation
Find out more by working through a topic
- count7 of 9
- count8 of 9
- count9 of 9
- count1 of 9