Permaculture...picking the lock back to Eden since 1978.
Pics of my Forest Garden
SKIP books, get 'em while they're hot!!! Skills to Inherit Property
Idle dreamer
Moderator, Treatment Free Beekeepers group on Facebook.
https://www.facebook.com/groups/treatmentfreebeekeepers/
William Bronson wrote: Do herbicides do anything we value?
On the face of it, agricultural yields would go down as the weeds compete with crops.
Permaculture embraces the weeds, replaces them with polyculture,recruits animal helpers, and/or uses plants like perennials that out compete the weeds all on their own.
Human labor, mechanized weeding, plastic mulch, could substitute for herbicides in a monoculture setting.
Food costs will probably go up, at least until the new systems get to scale.
Moderator, Treatment Free Beekeepers group on Facebook.
https://www.facebook.com/groups/treatmentfreebeekeepers/
Michael Cox wrote:Unfortunately "could happen" is not where we are now. It would require a massive societal change, effectively forcing a large proportion of the population back into manual labour on the land. The overwhelming trend of the past 200 years of agriculture has been one of increasing labour efficiency - few people are needed to work on the land per 1000 people fed. In the short term this would put a massive spike on food costs which affects the poorest most.
Idle dreamer
Michael Cox wrote: In the short term this would put a massive spike on food costs which affects the poorest most.
If we as a society really want to be able to move away from herbicides then we need to ensure that other viable solutions are already in place to take over in a transition. Robotics are one possible path for this - imagine a diverse permaculture crop tended by a flock of small robotic gardeners doing tasks like pruning, weeding, harvesting...
Permaculture...picking the lock back to Eden since 1978.
Pics of my Forest Garden
Dennis Mitchell wrote: I miss seeing butterflies.
Idle dreamer
James 1:19-20
Not all those who wander are lost - J. R. R. Tolkien
Caleb Mayfield wrote: There is a whole system in place for the production and distribution of the raw materials and the application of them.
Idle dreamer
A piece of land is worth as much as the person farming it.
-Le Livre du Colon, 1902
Nails are sold by the pound, that makes sense.
Soluna Garden Farm -- Flower CSA -- plants, and cut flowers at our Boston Public Market location, Boston, Massachusetts.
Tyler Ludens wrote:
Caleb Mayfield wrote: There is a whole system in place for the production and distribution of the raw materials and the application of them.
There is a whole system in place which is literally killing the biosphere, the biosphere which supports human life.
James 1:19-20
Not all those who wander are lost - J. R. R. Tolkien
Dale Hodgins wrote:I really like the idea of limiting what can be bought with food stamps. If Society is giving people money for food, then I think there needs to be some sort of agreement as to what food is. And that shouldn't be decided by the purveyors of junk food.
I read this somewhere and saved it to my notes in the phone. I think most of us have seen that poverty often goes hand-in-hand with obesity. It's about food choices---
"We’ve all heard it. A calorie is a calorie. It does not matter what you eat as long as you burn it off. It’s Coca Cola’s favorite argument, taking all the blame from the producers of junk food, and blaming the victims.
Unfortunately it’s not true. An avocado is not the same thing as a soft drink for your body, no matter what the calorie count says. The hormonal effects are quite different, and let’s not even mention the vast difference in nutrient levels."
I think it's likely that any increased cost in operating the food stamp system, would be recovered in savings on the Medicaid end.
William Bronson wrote: I found one industry estimate that yields would plummet by as much as 50% if we did not use herbicides.
…
Joseph Lofthouse wrote:If herbicides were made illegal, we could expect a black market in herbicides. People would buy them in jurisdictions where they are legal, and smuggle them to areas where they are illegal. An herbicide cartel would form as people, who could not use the legal system for protection, developed their own justice and distribution systems. Herbicide prices would rise dramatically, and more people would get poisoned more acutely by applying (possibly unvetted) black-market products in clandestine ways. Typical human behavior... Consume more of products that are banned.
Permaculture...picking the lock back to Eden since 1978.
Pics of my Forest Garden
-
Greg Martin wrote:Thinking about all the ways herbicides are used left me wondering....if they tried to make the use of herbicides illegal across the state what would happen? My first thoughts are that it would generate a series of lawsuits and the state would loose. What do you think? Is that true? Has this happened anywhere else at the state level and if so what happened?
Henry Jabel wrote:Here in the U.K you need to take an expensive course if you want to use herbicides commercially so you know how to use them safely and dont obvious things like spray them into rivers, etc. However if you plan to use it on your own property when you go to the garden centre all of that knowledge spontaneously appears in your head like when Neo says 'I know Kung Fu' in The Matrix.
Permaculture...picking the lock back to Eden since 1978.
Pics of my Forest Garden
Greg Martin wrote:
Henry Jabel wrote:Here in the U.K you need to take an expensive course if you want to use herbicides commercially so you know how to use them safely and dont obvious things like spray them into rivers, etc. However if you plan to use it on your own property when you go to the garden centre all of that knowledge spontaneously appears in your head like when Neo says 'I know Kung Fu' in The Matrix.
-
William Bronson wrote: I found one industry estimate that yields would plummet by as much as 50% if we did not use herbicides.
Moderator, Treatment Free Beekeepers group on Facebook.
https://www.facebook.com/groups/treatmentfreebeekeepers/
Moderator, Treatment Free Beekeepers group on Facebook.
https://www.facebook.com/groups/treatmentfreebeekeepers/
Dale Hodgins wrote:I really like the idea of limiting what can be bought with food stamps. If Society is giving people money for food, then I think there needs to be some sort of agreement as to what food is. And that shouldn't be decided by the purveyors of junk food.
I read this somewhere and saved it to my notes in the phone. I think most of us have seen that poverty often goes hand-in-hand with obesity. It's about food choices---
"We’ve all heard it. A calorie is a calorie. It does not matter what you eat as long as you burn it off. It’s Coca Cola’s favorite argument, taking all the blame from the producers of junk food, and blaming the victims.
Unfortunately it’s not true. An avocado is not the same thing as a soft drink for your body, no matter what the calorie count says. The hormonal effects are quite different, and let’s not even mention the vast difference in nutrient levels."
I think it's likely that any increased cost in operating the food stamp system, would be recovered in savings on the Medicaid end.
Moderator, Treatment Free Beekeepers group on Facebook.
https://www.facebook.com/groups/treatmentfreebeekeepers/
William Bronson wrote:
Permaculture might suggest an animal based alternative oil, like lard or butter.
Traditionaly of course it was butter and lard here.
The thing about the wheat makes me wonder if the strains grown are the same...
The older wheats have higher protein content, but lower overall yield I think (please correct me if I am wrong) Yes it was mainly Rye, oats and barley, wheat and wheat bread was for sundays.
Permaculture principles might promote woodchips,
The problem with woodchips is they are very limited and expensive (they are burnt in powerstations so are not free) of course everything done by plastic here can be done by hand with a hoe, but wages cost more than plastic
I'm not sure if I approve of this interruption. But this tiny ad checks out:
A rocket mass heater heats your home with one tenth the wood of a conventional wood stove
http://woodheat.net
|