In my
experience which has been 42 years of farming, I have never seen a monocrop of any kind out perform variety. It does not matter if we tried replanting old fields into pine
trees, hackmatack or oak, or in planting one species of grass in a field. Each time we reverted back to a variety of species, things went VERY well.
In this case, I can see where they got the results they did. Permiculturists use cover crops for a different purpose than row crop farmers. It is still a VERY good thing they use them however and they are getting good results compared to what they had before. They are getting green manure, nitrogen fixing and less soil erosion, but this is nothing new. In the 1970's cover crops were HUGE and it was well funded by the USDA. The silly part was that they stopped funding the cover crop program.
I watched a few Gabe Brown videos and like what he is doing. We are seeing similar results as him, but do it differently just because we do not have thousands of acres of wide open prairie that he has. He does it through grazing, but we do it another way, through the spreading of manure mechanically. It is the same thing only our way costs more, but due to the land base here, have no alternative.
He is seeing amazing results where he is at because his neighbors are dependent upon synthetic fertilizers, on my farm we never were, nor have we ever. We have enough sheep and cow manure so we get similar results, with high worm counts, deeply rooted crops, and vigorous growth. It is that organic matter going on the ground that does the work. He is doing it by having his
cattle and sheep walk about his fields, but we simply haul our manure to a field and spread it by
tractor and manure spreader. Same thing, just done differently.
As for our crops, we have never went with 100% alfalfa fields simply because our climate could not support it like Gabe Brown's neighbors. Because of the cold here, high winds, and elevation, we would get winter kill. We can put a percentage of it in the mix, but it is VERY field location dependent. But this is also New England where we have the greatest pastures in the world. A very short growing season to temper that greatness, but the topography and terrain, weather and rainfall are very good for the grass we grow, which is a mixture of cool season and warm season grasses. This is much better then native prier grass which is rather poor grass. That is why Gabe Brown is constantly tweaking the grass he is growing.
So in conclusion, to me the report is accurate, its just not really comparing apples to apples.
It is kind of like the three sisters method of growing those three crops. Without a doubt that method combined can grow abundant crops in comparison to those same crops grown in a mono-culture system, but since it is impossible to harvest mechanically, it does not do much good for putting food on the national food chain. The abundant crops would rot in the field by the time they were harvested. To me it just does not make much sense to argue whether or not the three sisters method of raising crops is better, and slamming big agriculture for not doing it; the intelligent thing would be to try and conjure up a mechanical harvester for the three sisters method to make the crop raising method work so more food is put on the national food chain. And so it is with cover crops. I am just excited to see so many neighbors of mine referring back to using them again.