Gjest UncommonSense Skrevet 8. desember 2018 #1 Del Skrevet 8. desember 2018 (endret) Regenerativt landbruk: https://www.agropub.no/fagartikler/evig-gronne-enger http://www.regenerateland.com/why-livestock-are-necessary-for-food-production-to-be-sustainable/ http://blogs.oregonstate.edu/dairy/2016/12/12/ruminants-important-world-might-thought/ https://futureofag.com/the-need-for-a-ruminant-revolution-aa78c9a92572 Endret 31. desember 2018 av UncommonSense opprydning, endret overskrift Lenke til kommentar Del på andre sider Flere delingsvalg…
Gjest UncommonSense Skrevet 8. desember 2018 #2 Del Skrevet 8. desember 2018 (endret) "We cannot speak of topsoil, indeed we cannot know what it is, without acknowledging at the outset that we cannot make it. We can care for it (or not), we can even, as we say, “build” it, but we can do so only by assenting to, preserving, and perhaps collaborating in its own processes. To those processes themselves we have nothing to contribute. We cannot make top soil, and we cannot make any substitute for it; we cannot do what it does. (..) although any soil sample can be reduced to its inert quantities, a handful of the real thing has life in it; it is full of living creatures. And if we try to describe the behavior of that life we will see that it is doing something that, if we are not careful, we will call “unearthly”: It is making life out of death. Not so very long ago, had we known about it what we know now, we would probably have called it “miraculous.” In a time when death is looked upon with almost universal enmity, it is hard to believe that the land we live on and the lives we live are the gifts of death. (..) A healthy soil is made by the life dying into it and by the life living in it, and to its double ability to drain and retain water we are complexly indebted, for it not only gives us good crops but also erosion control as well as both flood control and a constant water supply. " - Wendell Berry, Two Economies (min utheving) Slides from video: https://drive.google.com/file/d/0B6tV3TorfmstbXllUU5yMXB2MWM/view https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2018/10/181031080559.htm : Ekrem Ozlu, Sandeep Kumar. Response of Soil Organic Carbon, pH, Electrical Conductivity, and Water Stable Aggregates to Long-Term Annual Manure and Inorganic Fertilizer. Soil Science Society of America Journal, 2018; 82 (5): 1243 DOI: 10.2136/sssaj2018.02.0082 Endret 31. desember 2018 av UncommonSense Sortert Lenke til kommentar Del på andre sider Flere delingsvalg…
Gjest UncommonSense Skrevet 20. desember 2018 #3 Del Skrevet 20. desember 2018 (endret) Endret 31. desember 2018 av UncommonSense Lenke til kommentar Del på andre sider Flere delingsvalg…
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