jasonvivier
Garden Ornament
The original topic is found at http://www.theeasygarden.com/threads/anybody-with-advice-on-vegetation-killer.16593/page-4
Yes I am aware of farming practices. But I don't need to be; gardening like a farmer a waste of time, money, and effort.
"Do you understand the differences between minimum till, no-till, cover crops, strip till etc?" Why yes I do thanks.
"Not trying to be difficult but the general public has NO idea how/why agriculture got to where it is today. " I would agree with you; because on mass the public isn't comprised of farmers, 'generally.'
"The next 5 years it is projected that there will be more changes in AG than have been in last 10-20 years." The procedure of agriculture hasn't changed since before the Romans during the Aegean Bronze Age on the island of Crete as cataloged by Homer discussing the Minoan civilization, only the implementation has changed.
· If a gardener designs their garden like a forest would you concede that it is more sustainable then commercial AG?
· Clearly you will admit to be mistaken here. Right?
o "We learn the most when we admit we are wrong - I do it regularly. -Someone, somewhere"
"Organic gardeners use chemicals, just approved chemicals. Why chemicals, because they couldn't control weeds/insects either." I'll agree that organic chemicals are still chemicals. And I’ll' even go further and say that even synthetic chemicals can be beneficial and not hurt an ecosystem if used properly and for slight adjustments. They typically are over used but that is a different discussion.
And I'll even say that Organic gardening if designed off of modern day commercial agriculture will require chemicals because the design of modern day commercial agriculture requires them.
My argument has been that modern day agricultural practices do not apply to the home gardener, and I feel like I have made that point.
Jason, very aware of differences. Are you a commercial farmer? Do you understand all the farming practices? Do you understand the differences between minimum till, no-till, cover crops, strip till etc? Not trying to be difficult but the general public has NO idea how/why agriculture got to where it is today. The next 5 years it is projected that there will be more changes in AG than have been in last 10-20 years. As much as some gardeners love to chant the montra that they are sustainable, they aren't any more than commercial AG. They aren't the first to rotate crops or use manure for fertilizers. Organic gardeners use chemicals, just approved chemicals. Why chemicals, because they couldn't control weeds/insects either.
Yes I am aware of farming practices. But I don't need to be; gardening like a farmer a waste of time, money, and effort.
"Do you understand the differences between minimum till, no-till, cover crops, strip till etc?" Why yes I do thanks.
"Not trying to be difficult but the general public has NO idea how/why agriculture got to where it is today. " I would agree with you; because on mass the public isn't comprised of farmers, 'generally.'
"The next 5 years it is projected that there will be more changes in AG than have been in last 10-20 years." The procedure of agriculture hasn't changed since before the Romans during the Aegean Bronze Age on the island of Crete as cataloged by Homer discussing the Minoan civilization, only the implementation has changed.
- Side note read Virgil's "The Georgics" if you haven't already. It's all about agriculture as seen in 29 B.C.
- I'm a bit of a history buff.
· If a gardener designs their garden like a forest would you concede that it is more sustainable then commercial AG?
· Clearly you will admit to be mistaken here. Right?
o "We learn the most when we admit we are wrong - I do it regularly. -Someone, somewhere"
"Organic gardeners use chemicals, just approved chemicals. Why chemicals, because they couldn't control weeds/insects either." I'll agree that organic chemicals are still chemicals. And I’ll' even go further and say that even synthetic chemicals can be beneficial and not hurt an ecosystem if used properly and for slight adjustments. They typically are over used but that is a different discussion.
And I'll even say that Organic gardening if designed off of modern day commercial agriculture will require chemicals because the design of modern day commercial agriculture requires them.
- Which brings me to my point from earlier; Gardens shouldn't be designed like commercial agriculture, because that design comes with all of the conventional problems of industrial agriculture which on a large scale are combated by external inputs.
- To the home gardener these problems (weeds, pests, fertilizer, and hydrology) are design issues, nothing more.
- Again the difference between mimicking natural systems (our forest garden design) and agricultural systems design based mostly on mono-cropping: Mono-cropping is what creates the agricultural design systems, home gardeners hardly ever mono-crop. So they need a system of design based on poly-cultures; agriculture has no framework for such as garden because conventional agriculture
- can't utilize perennial nitrogen fixation like a home gardener can because of machinery, herbicide and financial risk factors.
- can't utilize perennial dynamic nutrient accumulation like a home gardener can because of machinery, herbicide and financial risk factors.
- can't focus on soil building efforts for more than the off season because of tight margins and financial risk
- can't focus on building up mycorrhizae associations in any meaningful way because again they can't utilize perennial soil building strategies because of mono-cropping and because agricultural equipment compacts soil which damages soil biology; equipment + risk + mono-cropping = industrial agriculture design.
My argument has been that modern day agricultural practices do not apply to the home gardener, and I feel like I have made that point.