IT might have a lot of jeets, but agriculture, at least on a large scale is all about automation, because saving those few inches of overlap when you seeding/fertilizing/applying pesticide etc. is where the profit margins lay and that's all done via GPS etc. at least in big farms. So I'm not sure there is a huge demand for educated workforce there.
As for small farms, I know a few people who work on smallish farms and they basically do everything from inspecting the machinery, doing small to mid size repairs/maintenance, operating the harvesters and other tractors as needed and doing other manual labor when those things are not required. You need a broad range of skills to be viable in small farm.
I would suggest looking into civil engineering, because with that degree there are more options available. You can specialize in roads/buildings/bridges, tunnels etc. with your bachelors and then further specialize via your masters etc. This opens a lot of different job opportunities from office jobs like estimator and supporting engineer(basically detailing formwork/falsework/rebar etc.), to in the field jobs like foreman, to a mix of both like the customer hired overseer, to project lead which is similar to foreman just doing the planning on a more macro scale and dealing more with bunch of gay paperwork and annoying lawyers etc. instead of workers on site.
Take this with a grain of salt because the words words words I typed apply to where I live. Doe, I've been hearing for years how american infrastructure is crumbling so civil engineer might be in demand in america, too. In general I would suggest you take a deep dive into this, ask around if anyone you know knows someone in whatever industry you're looking at so you can ask them questions about how it's like in reality.