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Gardening > Edible Gardens > Re: No Till Far...
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Re: No Till Farming

by Billy <wildbilly@[EMAIL PROTECTED] > Jul 3, 2008 at 04:53 PM

In article 
<doesnotwork-9F361E.14461403072008@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
>,
 "Dan L." <doesnotwork@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> wrote:

> In article 
> <wildbilly-C88524.10082903072008@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
>,
>  Billy <wildbilly@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> wrote:
> 
> > If you are interested, you might want to look at the article on
> > no till farming in the July Scientific American (page 70, I think). It

> > is mostly an industrial approach but the article finishes by saying
that 
> > the problems with industrial no till farming (pests and weeds that
arise 
> > from monoculture farming and the increasing amounts of agrichemicals 
> > needed to suppress them) can be addressed with organic farming
> > approaches of crop rotation, interplanting, and the grazing of animals
> > on the land. The more things change . . .
> 
> The article does indeed start on page 70. I have subscribed to that 
> magazine for many years. That will be one article I will read.
> But is this really new news?

Does refuting the industrial farming model pushed by Monsanto constitute 
news?

For decades now, since WWII, agribusiness has propagandized that
modern chemicals and equipment could better feed the world. That lie is 
slowly coming apart. As you will see, industrial no-till was introduced 
to combat the  erosion and loss of top soil. But industrial no-till 
relies on expensive chemical inputs of fertilizers and increasing 
quantities of chemical remedies to combat pests (vegetative and insect 
problems) inherent in repeated planting of monocultures in the same 
place (Additionally this affects soil cohesion, as as microflora and 
fauna are killed.). The answer? Introduction of "organic farming 
practices such as crop rotation to prevent pests from establi****ng 
themselves, and reducing the eco-degrading in-puts of pesticides. 
Interplanting of pulses or "companion" crops. Using the land to grow 
animals which in turn fertilize the land with manure (see excerpt from 
"Omnivore's Dilemma" below). The net result is greater total out-put 
from the land, fewer costly inputs, and improved human and ecological 
health.

This response is based on the article and "The fatal harvest reader : 
the tragedy of industrial agriculture" / edited by Andrew Kimbrell. I 
found no disagreement between the two sources.
------

"Omnivore's Dilemma"
p. 126

"Grass," so understood, is the foundation of the intricate food chain 
Salatin has assembled at Polyface, where a half dozen different animal 
species are raised together in an intensive rotational dance on the 
theme of symbiosis. Salatin is the choreographer and the gr***** are his 
verdurous stage; the dance has made Polyface one of the most productive 
and influential alternative farms in America. 

Though it was only the third week of June, the pasture beneath me had 
already seen several rotational turns. Before being cut earlier in the 
week for the hay that would feed the farm's animals through the winter, 
it had been grazed twice by beef cattle, which after each day-long stay 
had been succeeded by several hundred laying hens. They'd arrived
by Eggmobile, a ramshackle ****table henhouse designed and built by 
Salatin. Why chickens? "Because that's how it works in nature," Salatin 
explained. "Birds follow and clean up after herbivores." And so during 
their turn in the pasture, the hens had performed several ecological 
services for the cattle as well as the grass: They'd picked the tasty 
grubs and fly larvae out of the cowpats, in the process spreading the 
manure and eliminating parasites. (This is what Joel has in mind when he 
says the animals do the work around here; the hens are his "sanitation 
crew," the reason his cattle have no need of chemical parasiticides.) 
And while they were at it, nibbling on the short cattle-clipped gr***** 
they like best, the chickens applied a few thousand pounds of nitrogen 
to the 
pasture-and produced several thousand uncommonly rich and tasty eggs. 
After a few week's rest, the pasture will be grazed again, each steer 
turning these lush gr***** into beef at the rate of two or three pounds 
a day. 

By the end of the season Salatin's gr***** will have been transformed by 
his animals into some 40,000 pounds of beef, 30,000 pounds of ****k, 
10,000 broilers, 1,200 turkeys, 1,000 rabbits, and 35,000 dozen eggs. 
This is an astounding cornucopia of food to draw from a hundred acres of 
pasture, yet what is perhaps still more astoni****ng is the fact 
that this pasture will be in no way diminished by the process-in fact, 
it will be the better for it, lusher, more fertile, even springier 
underfoot (this thanks to the increased earthworm traffic). Salatin's 
audacious bet is that feeding ourselves from nature need not be a 
zero-sum proposition, one in which if there is more for us at the end of 
the season 
then there must be less for nature-less topsoil, less fertility, less 
life. He's betting, in other words, on a very different proposition, one 
that looks an awful lot like the proverbially unattainable free lunch. 

And none of it happens without the grass. In fact, the first time I met 
Salatin he'd insisted that even before I-met any of his animals, I get 
down on my belly in this very pasture to make the acquaintance of the 
less charismatic species his farm was nurturing that, in turn, were 
nurturing his farm. Taking the ant's-eye view, he ticked off the census 
of a single square foot of pasture: orchard grass, foxtail, a couple of 
different fescues, bluegrass, and timothy. Then he cataloged the 
legumes-red clover and white, plus lupines-and finally the forbs, 
broad-leaved species like plantain, dandelion, and Queen Anne's Lace. 
And those were just the plants, the species occupying the surface along 
with a handful of itinerant insects; below decks and out of sight 
tunneled earthworms (knowable by their castled mounds of rich castings), 
pocket gophers, woodchucks, and burrowing insects, all making their dim 
way through an unseen wilderness of bacteria, phages, eelish nematodes, 
shrimpy rotifers, and miles upon miles of mycelium, the underground 
filaments of fungi. We think of the gr***** as the basis of this food 
chain, yet behind, or beneath, the grassland stands the soil, that 
inconceivably complex community of the living and the dead. Because a 
healthy soil digests the dead to nourish the living, Salatin calls it 
the earth's stomach. 

But it is upon the grass, mediator of soil and sun, that the human gaze 
has always tended to settle, and not just our gaze, either. A great many 
animals, too, are drawn to grass, which partly accounts for our own deep 
attraction to it: We come here to eat the animals that ate the grass 
that we (lacking rumens) can't eat ourselves. "All flesh is grass." The 
Old Testament's earthy equation reflects a pastoral culture's 
appreciation of the food chain that sustained it, though the 
hunter-gatherers living on the African savanna thousands of years 
earlier would have understood the flesh-grass connection just as well. 
It's only in our own time, after we began raising our food animals on 
grain in Confined Animal Feeding Operations (following the dubious new 
equation, All flesh is corn), that our ancient engagement with grass 
could be overlooked. 









> No-Till talk has been around for years has 
> it not? I have not read this months mag yet.
> 
> It is getting harder and harder to find time to read these days.
> The more people that get laid off, the more work gets piled on me.
The articles are short so I leave the magazine in the bathroom;o)
> 
> Enjoy Life ... Dan
-- 

Billy
Bush and Pelosi Behind Bars
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9KVTfcAyYGg&ref=patrick.net
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=l0aEo59c7zU&feature=related
 




 12 Posts in Topic:
No Till Farming
Billy <wildbilly@[EMAI  2008-07-03 10:08:29 
Re: No Till Farming
"Dan L." <do  2008-07-03 14:46:15 
Re: No Till Farming
Billy <wildbilly@[EMAI  2008-07-03 16:53:48 
Re: No Till Farming
"Dan L." <do  2008-07-04 00:10:16 
Re: No Till Farming
Billy <wildbilly@[EMAI  2008-07-03 22:11:29 
Re: No Till Farming
"FarmI" <ask  2008-07-04 17:35:24 
Re: No Till Farming
Billy <wildbilly@[EMAI  2008-07-04 11:59:58 
Re: No Till Farming
"FarmI" <ask  2008-07-05 19:18:01 
Re: No Till Farming
Billy <wildbilly@[EMAI  2008-07-06 11:12:07 
Re: No Till Farming
"FarmI" <ask  2008-07-07 23:24:32 
Re: No Till Farming
Charlie   2008-07-06 23:18:22 
Re: No Till Farming
"FarmI" <ask  2008-07-07 22:48:11 

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tan12V112 Tue Dec 2 3:55:35 CST 2008.