mikeh, on 2013-May-06, 18:28, said:
Hey, onoway: let's not have a flame war, especially since we are on the same side, at least generally.
I think sustainable farming, with reduced dependence and perhaps elimination, of chemically manufactured herbicides and pesticides is a tremendous idea, which deserves to have more attention and money spent on it.
I merely pointed out that some of the examples to which you made reference may not be quite the incredible poster-children for the approach and/or that their approaches contain some problems. That isn't the same as saying that they are crooks, or charlatans nor that they don't have a lot of important, valid, information for us to absorb.
Look at the urban farming: I endorsed it, while pointing out the obvious: no way are we ever feeding our city populations doing urban farming, for any number of reasons. So, yes, it's great and it should be expanded, but it will never contribute a huge amount to any urban food economy for many, many reasons.
Look at Rodale: they admit, tho they do so in the disingenuous guise of claiming to 'create jobs', that their method of agriculture is relatively labour-intensive.
If you add to that the idea that one should not use expensive machinery, this means that their idea of job creation is largely going to be lowpaid manual labour.
I have no doubt but that there are always going to be some idealistic young adults who will 'intern' on these projects for little more than room and board. However, I doubt that that sort of approach can be scaled to a size where the approach generates a significant fraction of the national food demand.
Indeed, surely you see the inconsistency between maintaining that these approaches are economically competitive while also bragging that they use a low of barely-paid manual labour? You can only count on a small part of the population being willing to put their lives on indefinite hold just to feel as if they are contributing to the salvation of humanity. Most earnest interns will eventually move back to more conventional lives.
As for rodale getting donations to help it survive, well I may be mistaken but when an organization seeks and obtains tax status in the US permitting donors to write off the money they donate, it suggests that they are seeking and getting tax-deductible donations and it took only 30 seconds on google to discover that the institute is a 501©(3) organization.
I apologize if the inference I drew was mistaken, but what I read into the situation is that they get donations, and virtually free labour from some workers and on that basis they can compete economically. While I applaud their work, and hope that some aspects of it can be commercialized on a large scale, those particular aspects seem unscalable to me.
As for mindnumbing labour: would you rather operate a climate controlled combine, with a padded seat, gps navigation, and a stereo system or be stooping in a field, harvesting by hand? I've witnessed subsistence farming. I've watched people work rice paddies by hand, when their ancient rice planting machine broke down and the owner couldn't afford to replace it (our guide in Bali took us to the family rice paddies where we saw his father at work...maybe he was lying to us, but we certainly believed him).
Eliminate machinery and you get stoop (or other forms of manual) labour, and it is incredibly naive to suggest otherwise. Stoop labour on 3 acres or 30 acres or 3000 acres is still stoop labour, and I doubt that it gets less boring or more pleasant merely because you're on or off a sustainable farm...at least not after the idealism wears off.
So: my position:
Encourage sustainable farming (I previously used the term organic but I appreciate that other terms may be more appropriate as commercial interests distort the term 'organic').
Be careful about GMO's but not out of ignorance or a desire for 'the good old days'
Encourage urban farming: heck I always brag to friends about the sheer good taste of produce you pick from your yard. I love growing a modest crop of vegetables and fruits and I don't use any herbicides or persticides...we had an organic farmer come by and give us guidance on how to do it.
But also recognize that until and unless there are significant advances, it seems implausible to feed the world without chemicals, at least in the short term, hopefully measured in decades not centuries.
Oh, and don't be quite so quick to brand what I say as being based on a fantasy world. When one of your exemplars admits that they create more jobs than does conventional farming, and we see you state that such models use less labourm than conventional farming, a red flag goes up. I raised an inference from a publication on the rodale website. You respond by accusing me of basing my comment on my personal fantasy world. Where did that come from?
I don't want a flame war either but I have said several times that permaculture is NOT the same as organic farming and yet I keep reading these comments based on what organic farming does. It gets a bit frustrating:
I'll try once more.
Permaculture is fairly labour intensive to get the system going, and for sure machinery is often used for that stage to create swales and planting trees and such. But the system is designed not to need machinery to plow and harrow and disc and spray five times a year so none of that machinery is needed. It isn't labour which is going to have to be done by hand, it isn't going to be needing done at all.
Fencing for cattle and so forth is often best if it's flexible in plan so no post pounder is needed, except perhaps for the perimeter fencing.Electric fencing, either stranded or woven can be used as permanent fence or very easilly moved. It is labour intensive in that someone needs to go out to the field and walk along picking up slim fiberglass posts and moving them over from time to time. Greg Judy doesn't even put up much hay any more as he doesn't need it although he gets lots of winter and snow but the cattle find good feed under it. It's only really bad days he feeds, and his cattle are in excellent shape come spring. So that's a whole lot less haying equipment/buildings needed. Do you see what I mean?
You are trying to fit what you know of farming into what I have touched on, and not understood that I am talking about a system of farming that you are likely (clearly) not familiar with. That's sort of what I was talking about when I said that scientists have bias they likely aren't even aware of. I'd guess almost everyone assumes the world basically works how they are familiar with it working so they try to make things fit and it leads to complications, misunderstandings and really really slows down progress.
Will Allen supposedly raises about a million pounds of food on his 3 acres per year. That doesn't seem insignificant to me. That's one 3 acre parcel.Most of what he does could be done in abandoned factories or other such places, and there supposedly is a glut of those around with companies moving to offshore or shutting down. Not only that, but perhaps more important, he is making people, in particular kids, understand that their access to food need not be entirely out of their control. Also, look at the numbers and obvious enthusiasm of those kids and young adults. Those kids would likely not only jump at the chance to work on a farm for the season but be a real asset, which is not always the case with interns. BUT, not an agribusiness farm, not one they would be treated like a necessary evil rather than given some respect, and not one where they couldn't learn anything.
Also I didn't mean to suggest that permaculture farmers don't ever pay people who work for them. I was pointing out that those who get interns for little or no money seem to have no trouble finding them, so I would guess that those who pay a wage wouldn't have too many problems either. I don't know.
As far as rice production and stoop labour, there's a little book called the One Straw Revolution about (by?) Masanobu Fukuoka and I think you would find it interesting. He died in 2008. Although his system didn't include stock of any kind, he is also regarded as an excellent example of a permaculture farmer (and he was also a trained scientist). It isn't full of science, it's a very gentle book talking about his philosophy and not so incidentally how he farmed and why and how it worked out for him. It would give you a MUCH better idea of what permaculture is all about and why/how it doesn't revolve around the biggest tractor or the most acres. His productivity without all of that rivalled or surpassed the average in Japan (if you don't like Rodale you can try Fukuoka
) I wish I had thought of him earlier but until you mentioned rice paddies he hadn't crossed my mind. It's a small and very readable book.
Again as far as seasonal work is concerned (which farming mostly is in terms of intensity) I think that a lot of people simply aren't familiar enough with it and what they do think they know they don't find appealing.A combination of bad press and being outside the comfort zone is going to make it hard to appeal to people. That;s why I think programs such as Will Allen and the Bronx teacher run are so important aside from the food they produce, they are bringing back a sense of connection to food that we have been losing. When kids in school can't identify a beet or green bean when it is held out to them, (Jamie Oliver video) and think that milk comes from the store, full stop, it is not a good situation.
As well as all that, it seems ironic to me that people will shriek in disbelieving horror at the idea of carrying a pail of mash to a pig but will be proud of belonging to a gym so they can work out with weights.
Anyway, sorry but I don't accept that agribiz
as it is now IS needed to feed the world for the next hundred years. I think the sooner we change tactics to a more sustainable form of agriculture the better. Chemicals damage the soil and the soil is the basis of the food which sustains us. Healthy soil, healthy food. Way simplified but that's the basis of it all. I'm realistic enough to know that isn't going to happen anytime soon anyway, unless there is some sort of major disaster so it's an academic question.
Someone once told me that Lincoln said that any man could make something of his life no matter what else if he had 5 acres of land and an axe, (or some such, I can't find the reference, maybe it was a cow or chicken or a shovel
) I tend to think that if we could take the best of what the small farm had to offer, with the best that we now know and take for granted (Central heating, running water, computers are hard to deny) we might end up with the best of both instead of thinking there has to be a choice.