http://www.greenshireecofarms.com
Zone 5a in Central Ontario, Canada
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Travis Philp wrote:
Jmy, do you have much experience growing this way?
velacreations wrote:
3. What is the stance on grain consumption for humans? I see the following phrase appear throughout the website: "A healthy vegan diet is composed of grains...." There is quite a bit of evidence that contradicts that a healthy diet (vegan or otherwise) can be based largely on grains.
Jonathan Byron wrote:
Not mockery ... just asking where that way of thinking draws the line, and why. I appreciate objections to the many problems generated by modern feedlot agriculture and imbalance cause by eating large quantities of meat. But herbivores, carnivores, and their manure and carcasses are a normal part of most terrestrial ecosystems - I don't see such animal products as an inherent problem, though it can be if too concentrated. And worms and insects are also animals (and they play important roles in most terrestrial ecosystems and soil nutrient cycling). Is the objection only to manure from mammals? Mammals and birds? Either way, it seems rather arbitrary to me. What if the animals are not raised for slaughter - does that make the manure acceptable?
http://www.greenshireecofarms.com
Zone 5a in Central Ontario, Canada
Travis Philp wrote:
The line gets drawn at domesticated animals. Whether the animals are raised for slaughter is not the key issue. It is the environmental degradation that usually comes with raising animals domestically, eg. The soil compaction, erosion, water and air pollution, high salt content in manures, and inefficient land use, common as a result of animal husbandry operations.
jmy wrote:
I always thought that John McDougall MD was well respected as a medical diet expert.
It is the environmental degradation that usually comes with raising animals domestically, eg. The soil compaction, erosion, water and air pollution, high salt content in manures, and inefficient land use, common as a result of animal husbandry operations.
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Emerson White wrote:
Should we skip out on raising plants just because people are doing it wrong?
http://www.greenshireecofarms.com
Zone 5a in Central Ontario, Canada
There is nothing permanent in a culture dependent on such temporaries as civilization.
www.feralfarmagroforestry.com
I think we should develop and promote .... that uses little to no inputs from domesticated animals.
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Emerson White wrote:
Well it only salts the earth if the manure is from an animal whose food is salted. Permaculture however relies on animals large and small to process the parts of the plants that humans cannot. Humans+Plants =massive fail. Humans +Plants+Animals+Fungus=Win.
http://www.greenshireecofarms.com
Zone 5a in Central Ontario, Canada
http://www.greenshireecofarms.com
Zone 5a in Central Ontario, Canada
There is nothing permanent in a culture dependent on such temporaries as civilization.
www.feralfarmagroforestry.com
Buy Our Book! Food Web: Concept - Raising Food the Right Way. Learn make more food with less inputs
Off Grid Homesteading - latest updates and projects from our off grid homestead
Its not so much about exclusion.Domestic animals take alot of effort and inclusion is not(IMO)the path of least resistance.Much of the hardwood forests of the east were cut to make barns and fences.Domesticated animals are made possible today largely through cheap oil(metal barns and fences).Take away that subsidy and it looks alot bleaker.Wild animals contribute to the system without all the ecological and energy costs.They meat their own needs and are thus more caloricaly efficient.Avoiding all animals in a system I disagree with.
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velacreations wrote:
If a plant is growing in just the fresh manure, then maybe there might be an issue (I've seen tons of pants grow in manure), but the fact is that properly managed manure will be mixed with other organic matter and composted, which greatly reduces the salt concentration.
The risk of salt injury to plants from manure is very slim, as long as you compost manure with organic matter.
http://www.greenshireecofarms.com
Zone 5a in Central Ontario, Canada
Travis Philp wrote:
I disagree. Animals concentrate salts in their feces, and since salts are naturally present in most soils and ground waters, it will be present in manure whether salt is added to feed or not.
Manure commonly contain 4 to 5% soluble salts (dry weight basis) and may run as high as 10%. To illustrate, an application of 5 tons of manure containing 5% salt would add 500 lbs. of salt... http://ecochem.com/t_manure_fert.html
manures contain 5 to 10% salt (50,000 to 100,000 ppm). Frequent and/or large (20 tons per acre) applications of manure to cropland increases the risk of salt injury to plants http://ag.arizona.edu/animalwaste/farmasyst/awfact8.html#salt
A survey of 156 manure samples collected in 1996 throughout Colorado indicated manures had salt levels from 3.3 mmhos/cm3 to a high of 42.8 mmhos/cm3. Many vegetable crops have salt tolerances between 1.5 mmhos/cm3 and 4 mmhos/cm3 and when high salt manures are used around these plants, severe damage can occur. http://www.growfruitandveg.co.uk/grapevine/growing-techniques/interesting-article-manure_15345.html
velacreations wrote:
My domesticated animals require less time than my garden. They tend to themselves just fine, if you let them. I don't have metal barns and very few fences. Every homestead 300+ years ago had animals. They didn't have cheap oil to make it possible, and that's why they had animals.
My point is that adding animals increases your efficiency, not reduces it. My rabbits and chickens don't require extra planting or space, they eat the waste from the garden and provide me with food, manure, company, clothing, and tools. Excluding them from my system increases my labor (weeding+composting) and reduces my products.
http://www.greenshireecofarms.com
Zone 5a in Central Ontario, Canada
Travis Philp wrote:
But everything you mention can be provided by plants, for less of an environmental cost. And if when you weed you compost in place, then you save time and energy since you don't have to move the garden waste to the animals. And yes, you can just let the animals wander through gardens to get to the wastes but not in most cases unless you're willing to suffer crop loss/damage.
And though this is not an issue for people in warm enough climates, for those with a snowy winter, you have to either harvest and store food for your animals, or you buy it from offsite, the former of which can be a real pain in the ass, as well as a time, space, and energy vampire.
Tinknal wrote:
If I eat only vegans who eat only organic food could it be said that I am on a strict organic vegan diet?
Jonathan Byron wrote:
What about worms and insects? Does the soil have to be free of them??
Jonathan Byron wrote:
Not mockery ... just asking where that way of thinking draws the line, and why.
Mt.goat wrote:
Many organic farms use bone and blood meal for fertilizers.This comes from factory farms.They also import lime and rock phosphate which are mined.I totally see the point of avoiding these products and all outside inputs.In that respect,I think this thread addresses some very important issues that I have found people to be concerned about.
velacreations wrote:
1. Is vegan-organic sustainable? If so, please give us some examples of long-running operations with low external inputs. It seems that many examples require trace elements or additional external organic input over time, is the usually the case?
velacreations wrote:
2. Is the use of animals in organic agriculture necessarily cruel? I see that the site promotes "cruelty-free" organic growing. Can animal based systems also be "cruelty-free"? (also, please define "cruelty-free")
velacreations wrote:
3. What is the stance on grain consumption for humans? I see the following phrase appear throughout the website: "A healthy vegan diet is composed of grains...." There is quite a bit of evidence that contradicts that a healthy diet (vegan or otherwise) can be based largely on grains.
There is nothing permanent in a culture dependent on such temporaries as civilization.
www.feralfarmagroforestry.com
Mt.goat wrote:
.People can say that animals save time but if you are not using industrial civilization to make hay or for barns,fences,medicine,watering holes ect.than Im not sure how little work it is.
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christhamrin wrote:
of course not. btw would you have the same non-mocking questions if a strict jain or buddhist posted about their growing techniques? just curious because i am both.
Emerson White wrote:
Plants eat your table scraps, then produces extra calories for you to eat? A plant that gets compost will turn sunlight into food as fast as a plant that gets compost and manure? A plant will pick off bugs from other plants and turn them into calories on your plate? A plant will go into an area and root around and break up the soil? A plant will help you take out a tree stump that's in the way?
Emerson White wrote:
Yes it is possible to do many things with out animals, but not with less labor.
Emerson White wrote:
To top it all off there is no ecosystem that is both stable and productive anywhere on land with out several types of animal larger than a kilogram.
Emerson White wrote:
Just keeping some sort of small fowl safe with access to your compost bin will do wonders to enrich your compost, and reduce your labor, and provide extra calories. I know I've done it. All summer you keep the birds with a pitance of scratch and table scraps and the compost pile, then in fall you kill them and eat them, if one guy in 10 saves a few over the winter with some grain he can hatch out chicks and trade them to the others for the grain that he used in the winter and start the whole ball of wax again the next year.
http://www.greenshireecofarms.com
Zone 5a in Central Ontario, Canada
But everything you mention can be provided by plants, for less of an environmental cost.
My animals harvest the weeds themselves, saving me time and energy. They do wander through, and I rarely loose any crops to them. If they seem to be getting into a crop too much, I put up a small barrier, and they get interested in something else. The key to good management is guiding things, not trying to control them.And if when you weed you compost in place, then you save time and energy since you don't have to move the garden waste to the animals. And yes, you can just let the animals wander through gardens to get to the wastes but not in most cases unless you're willing to suffer crop loss/damage.
It depends on what your winter crop is. It costs me nothing to make hay from grass (in terms of energy), and I even let the animals harvest it as much as possible. Lots of tree crops can be stored very easily, and just require gathering (mesquite beans, pecans, acorns, etc)And though this is not an issue for people in warm enough climates, for those with a snowy winter, you have to either harvest and store food for your animals, or you buy it from offsite, the former of which can be a real pain in the ass, as well as a time, space, and energy vampire.
Well I think its great that some of you have animals without barns and fences.Thats my goal.Where I live ,a forest is the natural ecosytem.Unfortunatly people with cows cut away the forest.Grass fed?yay!lets get rid of this pesky multi story production model and reduce a once lush and diverse forest to a single story grass field to be eco!One animal I brought in to our rural community that has worked for us is rats.They require no housing,fences,or feed.They eat our compost,can live in a multistory production model and dont damage our plants.They are very tasty too.The added bonus is that they moved over to the unsustainable farms that import grain and become a big pest for them!I also seed ball the local fields with noxious weeds to affect the livestock and create more diversity.Grass is great if you live in the plains!I also gotta chuckle at those moving poop around.I grew up on a farm and moving poop around is not something I want to spend time doing in this brief life.
It can be very little work, especially if you are smart about it and work with the strengths of the animals. I rarely have to do any sort of medicine, watering holes, barns, or fences. I let the animals do the work for me.People can say that animals save time but if you are not using industrial civilization to make hay or for barns,fences,medicine,watering holes ect.than Im not sure how little work it is.
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i think someone mentioned it before on a different, but eliot coleman uses only on site compost made from hay. so there is one.
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Travis Philp wrote:
jmy, I posed this question earlier but I think it got lost in the shuffle. What did you do for bed preparation in the first year? I'm planning on establishing a whack of new vegetable and fruit gardens next year and would like to avoid manure if I can. I'm gonna go big on fresh eating and drying beans as a companion plant but that'll only get me so far
Travis Philp wrote:
Plants can provide the following, which is what I was answering to:
velacreations: "they eat (Insertion: in a plants case; convert) the waste from the garden and provide me with food, manure, company, clothing, and tools."
In answer to your questions Emmerson:
Well, the plants don't eat the scraps but in effect they use them.
If you use compost teas as well as compost I think the growth rates would be comparible. Even if it took a bit longer, I think it's worth it considering the alternative.
Certain plants can be made into insecticidal sprays, or grown next to 'at risk' plants to ward off insects, without the issue of an animal messing up your garden by compaction, eating vegetable crops, and/or knocking them over. If using direct sprays the insects will die in the garden and their calories returned to the earth. Otherwise, I think there is enough bird and animal life cycling in the average garden to make up for a lack of chickens or ducks. When you run a chicken through your garden, there probably won't be any wild birds in the same area at the same time for example. And after observing both types of birds in a garden, I'd rather have wild birds. I could shoot them if I wanted some extra calories, and they don't bring the extra work and hassle of domesticated birds.
Yes, plants can go into areas and break up soil. Tap rooted plants are great for that, they don't wake me up at 4 in the morning, or raise my risk of cancer when I eat them. In fact many tap root plants fight cancer. I don't think you can't say that for any meat that I know of.
Now, a plant can't remove a stump. You've got me there. For the amount of stumps most of us have to remove in a lifetime though, I don't think keeping domesticated animals around is worth it. I wonder how long it takes most fungi to turn a stump soft enough that one could easily remove it. Not applicable if the stump is in a roadway or on a future building site I know, but it could be applicable in some cases. I suppose if one wanted to avoid using machinery for stump removal and digging wasn’t viable, some of us have the option of borrowing a neighbors animal. In my case, we keep horses for recreational and equine-assisted-therapy purposes and could use our half draft cross.
Even if this were true, which I don’t agree…I think the trade off of a more environmentally friendly farming practice void of domesticated animals is worth the marginally extra labour. I must say, it may not be the case with everyone but the people I know who have domesticated animals are practically slaves to them. And even the most violent of plants isn’t going to be able to do as much damage as a donkey stepping on your foot, kicking you in the head, or a bull impaling you. Unless of course you eat a poisonous plant but this could happen regardless. A plant isn’t going to fly at you full tilt or squawk with annoying volume and negative energy every time you walk by, or follow you around begging for food. A plant isn’t going to leave its runny shit in large quantities on the ground for you to step on, or cause you to need to muck a barn.
Nature can provide this in just about any ecosystem I can think of where humans live.
If you want those extra animal calories go could hunt. And excluding hunting, a patch of lambs quarters, basswood, or alfalfa for example can provide calories at a much lower maintenance level than keeping fowl, and they allow you the freedom to go on vacation without having to inconvenience your neighbours to look after them. As far as compost piles, you can enhance them quite well with comfrey, nettles, or other similar plants.
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