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OT GOP Purge
On Apr 21, 3:29*am, DaveS wrote:
Jebus man, if its half as bad back there as you say it is, * Actually, it's a lot worse everywhere than I have suggested thus far. there is still that thing that Horace Greeley said. Horace didn't understand global atmospheric dynamics. We live in the North Westerlies. The best part of the west (roughly everything beyond the latitude of St. Paul), the only thing of enduring value, is steadily moving eastward into the Mississippi watershed.....and thence into the Gulf of Mexico, where it does no one any good at all. *Did you get my snailmail address per the seeds via Email? Yep. Planning to ship tomorrow. giles |
OT GOP Purge
On Apr 21, 6:03*pm, Giles wrote:
*Did you get my snailmail address per the seeds via Email? Yep. *Planning to ship tomorrow. giles Thanks. Look forward to getting them into the soil and getting some ignition. Per the runoff/soil in the streams/Gulf bit. I am more and more thinking that No-tillage practices offer the possibility of significantly reducing soil loss and fossil fuel consumption in many different soil types and geographies. Over a few years no-till practices can also reduce the use of pest and herbicides for some crops. The benefits to fish could be substantial in areas where ag runoff is a major limiting factor. I suspect there are many folks like myself who have or have friends who have smaller ag parcels that they lease out. No-till wheat has now replaced heavily irrigated alfalfa on my little parcel. Favoring leasing farmers who can do no-till is a way to keep land in ag, AND lessen the impact on nearby streams. And the cost advantages just might keep more family farmers in the business. Lest specialized equipment needed for no-till be a barrier, some Farm Bureau operations now have no-till capable equipment in their contract services programs. Here are two videos that tell some of the story. The first is about no- till in your Corn/soybean region. The second is a bit of the July '09 field tour of no-till wheat farms in the Spokane River drainage. http://cornandsoybeandigest.com/corn...nsider-notill/ www.youtube.com/watch?v=Kjd6fMun-rc Dave |
OT GOP Purge
On Apr 21, 6:03*pm, Giles wrote:
*Did you get my snailmail address per the seeds via Email? Yep. *Planning to ship tomorrow. giles Thanks. Look forward to getting them into the soil and getting some ignition. Per the runoff/soil in the streams/Gulf bit. I am more and more thinking that No-tillage practices offer the possibility of significantly reducing soil loss and fossil fuel consumption in many different soil types and geographies. Over a few years no-till practices can also reduce the use of pest and herbicides for some crops. The benefits to fish could be substantial in areas where ag runoff is a major limiting factor. I suspect there are many folks like myself who have or have friends who have smaller ag parcels that they lease out. No-till wheat has now replaced heavily irrigated alfalfa on my little parcel. Favoring leasing farmers who can do no-till is a way to keep land in ag, AND lessen the impact on nearby streams. And the cost advantages just might keep more family farmers in the business. Lest specialized equipment needed for no-till be a barrier, some Farm Bureau operations now have no-till capable equipment in their contract services programs. Here are two videos that tell some of the story. The first is about no- till in your Corn/soybean region. The second is a bit of the July '09 field tour of no-till wheat farms in the Spokane River drainage. http://cornandsoybeandigest.com/corn...ge/1101-farmer... Shepherd's Grain Field Tour - July 2009 3 min 38 sec - Sep 21, 2009 - Shepherds Grain's 33 farmer-owners grow wheat on 65000 acres in a geographic area of Washington, Oregon and Idaho known as the Columbia ... www.youtube.com/watch Dave |
OT GOP Purge
On Apr 21, 6:03*pm, Giles wrote:
*Did you get my snailmail address per the seeds via Email? Yep. *Planning to ship tomorrow. giles Thanks. Look forward to getting them into the soil and getting some ignition. Per the runoff/soil in the streams/Gulf bit. I am more and more thinking that No-tillage practices offer the possibility of significantly reducing soil loss and fossil fuel consumption in many different soil types and geographies. Over a few years no-till practices can also reduce the use of pest and herbicides for some crops. The benefits to fish could be substantial in areas where ag runoff is a major limiting factor. I suspect there are many folks like myself who have or have friends who have smaller ag parcels that they lease out. No-till wheat has now replaced heavily irrigated alfalfa on my little parcel. Favoring leasing farmers who can do no-till is a way to keep land in ag, AND lessen the impact on nearby streams. And the cost advantages just might keep more family farmers in the business. Lest specialized equipment needed for no-till be a barrier, some Farm Bureau operations now have no-till capable equipment in their contract services programs. Here are two videos that tell some of the story. The first is about no- till in your Corn/soybean region. The second is a bit of the July '09 field tour of no-till wheat farms in the Spokane River drainage. http://cornandsoybeandigest.com/corn...ge/1101-farmer... www.youtube.com/watch?v=Kjd6fMun-rc - Dave |
OT GOP Purge
On Apr 21, 6:03*pm, Giles wrote:
On Apr 21, 3:29*am, DaveS wrote: Jebus man, if its half as bad back there as you say it is, * Actually, it's a lot worse everywhere than I have suggested thus far. there is still that thing that Horace Greeley said. Horace didn't understand global atmospheric dynamics. *We live in the North Westerlies. *The best part of the west (roughly everything beyond the latitude of St. Paul), the only thing of enduring value, is steadily moving eastward into the Mississippi watershed.....and thence into the Gulf of Mexico, where it does no one any good at all. *Did you get my snailmail address per the seeds via Email? Yep. *Planning to ship tomorrow. giles Thanks. Look forward to getting them into the soil and getting some ignition. Per the runoff/soil in the streams/Gulf bit. I am more and more thinking that No-tillage practices offer the possibility of significantly reducing soil loss and fossil fuel consumption in many different soil types and geographies. Over a few years no-till practices can also reduce the use of pest and herbicides for some crops. The benefits to fish could be substantial in areas where ag runoff is a major limiting factor. I suspect there are many folks like myself who have or have friends who have smaller ag parcels that they lease out. No-till wheat has now replaced heavily irrigated alfalfa on my little parcel. Favoring leasing farmers who can do no-till is a way to keep land in ag, AND lessen the impact on nearby streams. And the cost advantages just might keep more family farmers in the business. Lest specialized equipment needed for no-till be a barrier, some Farm Bureau operations now have no-till capable equipment in their contract services programs. Here are two videos that tell some of the story. The first is about no- till in your Corn/soybean region. The second is a bit of the July '09 field tour of no-till wheat farms in the Spokane River drainage. Thanks. Look forward to getting them into the soil and getting some ignition. Per the runoff/soil in the streams/Gulf bit. I am more and more thinking that No-tillage practices offer the possibility of significantly reducing soil loss and fossil fuel consumption in many different soil types and geographies. Over a few years no-till practices can also reduce the use of pest and herbicides for some crops. The benefits to fish could be substantial in areas where ag runoff is a major limiting factor. I suspect there are many folks like myself who have or have friends who have smaller ag parcels that they lease out. No-till wheat has now replaced heavily irrigated alfalfa on my little parcel. Favoring leasing farmers who can do no-till is a way to keep land in ag, AND lessen the impact on nearby streams. And the cost advantages just might keep more family farmers in the business. Lest specialized equipment needed for no-till be a barrier, some Farm Bureau operations now have no-till capable equipment in their contract services programs. Here are two videos that tell some of the story. The first is about no- till in your Corn/soybean region. http://cornandsoybeandigest.com/corn...nsider-notill/ The second is a bit of the July '09 field tour of no-till wheat farms in the Spokane River drainage. I could not link it but it is well worth seeing. It is on Youtube, listed as Shepard's Grain Field Tour- July 2009 Dave |
OT GOP Purge
On Apr 21, 6:03*pm, Giles wrote:
On Apr 21, 3:29*am, DaveS wrote: Jebus man, if its half as bad back there as you say it is, * Actually, it's a lot worse everywhere than I have suggested thus far. there is still that thing that Horace Greeley said. Horace didn't understand global atmospheric dynamics. *We live in the North Westerlies. *The best part of the west (roughly everything beyond the latitude of St. Paul), the only thing of enduring value, is steadily moving eastward into the Mississippi watershed.....and thence into the Gulf of Mexico, where it does no one any good at all. *Did you get my snailmail address per the seeds via Email? Yep. *Planning to ship tomorrow. giles Thanks. Look forward to getting them into the soil and getting some ignition. Per the runoff/soil in the streams/Gulf bit. I am more and more thinking that No-tillage practices offer the possibility of significantly reducing soil loss and fossil fuel consumption in many different soil types and geographies. Over a few years no-till practices can also reduce the use of pest and herbicides for some crops. The benefits to fish could be substantial in areas where ag runoff is a major limiting factor. I suspect there are many folks like myself who have or have friends who have smaller ag parcels that they lease out. No-till wheat has now replaced heavily irrigated alfalfa on my little parcel. Favoring leasing farmers who can do no-till is a way to keep land in ag, AND lessen the impact on nearby streams. And the cost advantages just might keep more family farmers in the business. Lest specialized equipment needed for no-till be a barrier, some Farm Bureau operations now have no-till capable equipment in their contract services programs. Here are two videos that tell some of the story. The first is about no- till in your Corn/soybean region. http://cornandsoybeandigest.com/corn...ge/1101-farmer... The second is a bit of the July '09 field tour of no-till wheat farms in the Spokane River drainage. I could not link it but it is well worth seeing. It is on Youtube, listed as Shepard's Grain Field Tour- July 2009 Dave |
OT GOP Purge
On Apr 22, 2:07*pm, DaveS wrote:
On Apr 21, 6:03*pm, Giles wrote: *Did you get my snailmail address per the seeds via Email? Yep. *Planning to ship tomorrow. giles Thanks. Look forward to getting them into the soil and getting some ignition. See new thread, "Chestnuts revisited." Per the runoff/soil in the streams/Gulf bit. I am more and more thinking that No-tillage practices offer the possibility of significantly reducing soil loss and fossil fuel consumption in many different soil types and geographies. Over a few years no-till practices can also reduce the use of pest and herbicides for some crops. The benefits to fish could be substantial in areas where ag runoff is a major limiting factor. I suspect there are many folks like myself who have or have friends who have smaller ag parcels that they lease out. No-till wheat has now replaced heavily irrigated alfalfa on my little parcel. *Favoring leasing farmers who can do no-till is a way to keep land in ag, AND lessen the impact on nearby streams. And the cost advantages just might keep more family farmers in the business. Lest specialized equipment needed for no-till be a barrier, some Farm Bureau operations now have no-till capable equipment in their contract services programs. Here are two videos that tell some of the story. The first is about no- till in your Corn/soybean region. http://cornandsoybeandigest.com/corn...ge/1101-farmer... The second is a bit of the July '09 field tour of no-till wheat farms in the Spokane River drainage. I could not link it but it is well worth seeing. It is on Youtube, listed as Shepard's Grain Field Tour- July 2009 Dave The first link produced an error message. The "Shepard's Grain Field Tour- July 2009" on Youtube is a nice enough amateur sound bite, but little more. At any rate, no-till farming is certainly a much belated and very small step in the right direction (65,000 acres is roughly a ten mile square......how big is Iowa or Kansas or Nebraska or South Dakota or North Dakota or Indiana or Illinois or Alberta or Saskatchewan...?)* but none of this speaks to the subject under discussion. Remember?.....the nobility of farmers? In fact, farmers still remain the most biologically destructive force unleashed on this planet since the last mass extinction that excites the interest of geologists. giles *the sahara, the negev, the kalahari, the gobi, the altacama, etc., etc. |
OT GOP Purge
On Apr 23, 2:56*pm, Giles wrote:
On Apr 22, 2:07*pm, DaveS wrote: On Apr 21, 6:03*pm, Giles wrote: *Did you get my snailmail address per the seeds via Email? Yep. *Planning to ship tomorrow. giles Thanks. Look forward to getting them into the soil and getting some ignition. See new thread, "Chestnuts revisited." Per the runoff/soil in the streams/Gulf bit. I am more and more thinking that No-tillage practices offer the possibility of significantly reducing soil loss and fossil fuel consumption in many different soil types and geographies. Over a few years no-till practices can also reduce the use of pest and herbicides for some crops. The benefits to fish could be substantial in areas where ag runoff is a major limiting factor. I suspect there are many folks like myself who have or have friends who have smaller ag parcels that they lease out. No-till wheat has now replaced heavily irrigated alfalfa on my little parcel. *Favoring leasing farmers who can do no-till is a way to keep land in ag, AND lessen the impact on nearby streams. And the cost advantages just might keep more family farmers in the business. Lest specialized equipment needed for no-till be a barrier, some Farm Bureau operations now have no-till capable equipment in their contract services programs. Here are two videos that tell some of the story. The first is about no- till in your Corn/soybean region. http://cornandsoybeandigest.com/corn...ge/1101-farmer... The second is a bit of the July '09 field tour of no-till wheat farms in the Spokane River drainage. I could not link it but it is well worth seeing. It is on Youtube, listed as Shepard's Grain Field Tour- July 2009 Dave The first link produced an error message. *The "Shepard's Grain Field Tour- July 2009" on Youtube is a nice enough amateur sound bite, but little more. At any rate, no-till farming is certainly a much belated and very small step in the right direction (65,000 acres is roughly a ten mile square......how big is Iowa or Kansas or Nebraska or South Dakota or North Dakota or Indiana or Illinois or Alberta or Saskatchewan...?)* but none of this speaks to the subject under discussion. Remember?.....the nobility of farmers? *In fact, farmers still remain the most biologically destructive force unleashed on this planet since the last mass extinction that excites the interest of geologists. giles *the sahara, the negev, the kalahari, the gobi, the altacama, etc., etc.- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - The 65k acres figure is only for the 35 or so farmers in the Washington/Oregon Shepard's grain flour coop. World wide the figure is up around 100 million hectares. Its widest adoption has been in the US, Canada, Brazil, Australia and So. Africa. A major negative of no-till has been the need for as much or more herbicide, unless the farmers be really diligent with crop rotations and other more eco friendly practices. The distortions of US alcohol/ corn policies and things like differential soil warming effects of no- till vs conventional plowing have helped slow adoption in the Northern US corn/soybean belt. But lots of work by the land grant schools and outfits like the Rodale Institute etc are chipping away at the problems. Right now the big-time advantage of no-till vs traditional- till methods for carbon sequestration is getting lots of attention, to the extent that some are saying that maxing no-till could be the near- term quick fix we need to get a bite and some breathing room on climate change. And I think that is the reasoning behind the current push to figure out how to reduce the herbicide factor in no-till so we don't create another problem as we address the sequestration bit. As to the nobility stuff and the farmers-are-to-blame stuff. . . . Arguing that stuff could go on as long as that old Roffian thread on catch and release. 1. What I see in this no-till business is that no-till works better for rivers, holding soil and water for slower release. Consequently fishers should consider promoting it particularly in "challenged" watersheds. 2. I went no-till on my small parcel. Consequently I have skin in the game so to speak. It is a part of my plan to further cool 1/2 mile of trout river. So I am interested and want other small parcel owners to consider no-till and other conservation ag alternatives. 3.Existing No-till technology looks like it has even more potential for addressing carbon sequestration issues. And it looks like promoing development of no-till/low till technologies for things like paddy rice and some of the subsistence crops in the tropics that depend on slash and burn could help make small farmers in Africa and India more competitive. Dave |
OT GOP Purge
On Apr 25, 2:27*pm, DaveS wrote:
On Apr 23, 2:56*pm, Giles wrote: On Apr 22, 2:07*pm, DaveS wrote: On Apr 21, 6:03*pm, Giles wrote: *Did you get my snailmail address per the seeds via Email? Yep. *Planning to ship tomorrow. giles Thanks. Look forward to getting them into the soil and getting some ignition. See new thread, "Chestnuts revisited." Per the runoff/soil in the streams/Gulf bit. I am more and more thinking that No-tillage practices offer the possibility of significantly reducing soil loss and fossil fuel consumption in many different soil types and geographies. Over a few years no-till practices can also reduce the use of pest and herbicides for some crops. The benefits to fish could be substantial in areas where ag runoff is a major limiting factor. I suspect there are many folks like myself who have or have friends who have smaller ag parcels that they lease out. No-till wheat has now replaced heavily irrigated alfalfa on my little parcel. *Favoring leasing farmers who can do no-till is a way to keep land in ag, AND lessen the impact on nearby streams. And the cost advantages just might keep more family farmers in the business. Lest specialized equipment needed for no-till be a barrier, some Farm Bureau operations now have no-till capable equipment in their contract services programs. Here are two videos that tell some of the story. The first is about no- till in your Corn/soybean region. http://cornandsoybeandigest.com/corn...ge/1101-farmer.... The second is a bit of the July '09 field tour of no-till wheat farms in the Spokane River drainage. I could not link it but it is well worth seeing. It is on Youtube, listed as Shepard's Grain Field Tour- July 2009 Dave The first link produced an error message. *The "Shepard's Grain Field Tour- July 2009" on Youtube is a nice enough amateur sound bite, but little more. At any rate, no-till farming is certainly a much belated and very small step in the right direction (65,000 acres is roughly a ten mile square......how big is Iowa or Kansas or Nebraska or South Dakota or North Dakota or Indiana or Illinois or Alberta or Saskatchewan...?)* but none of this speaks to the subject under discussion. Remember?.....the nobility of farmers? *In fact, farmers still remain the most biologically destructive force unleashed on this planet since the last mass extinction that excites the interest of geologists. giles *the sahara, the negev, the kalahari, the gobi, the altacama, etc., etc.- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - The 65k acres figure is only for the 35 or so farmers in the Washington/Oregon Shepard's grain flour coop. World wide the figure is up around 100 million hectares. 100 million hectares is equal to roughly 247,105,381.47 acres or 386,100.61 square miles. I read somewhere recently that tropical rainforest is currently being denuded at a rate equal to the area of Maryland.....each day. Maryland is a small state, about 12,407 square miles. So, it takes about 31.12 days to lose 386,100.61 square miles, or 100 million hectares of tropical forest. And who is doing all this cutting and burning and denuding? Well, I guess it ain't 35 or so farmers in the Washington/Oregon Shepard's grain flour coop. Its widest adoption has been in the US, Canada, Brazil, Australia and So. Africa. Interesting, I suppose, assuming that it means something or somehow bears on something that does. A major negative of no-till has been the need for as much or more herbicide, unless the farmers be really diligent with crop rotations and other more eco friendly practices. The distortions of US alcohol/ corn policies and things like differential soil warming effects of no- till vs conventional plowing have helped slow adoption in the Northern US corn/soybean belt. But lots of work by the land grant schools and outfits like the Rodale Institute etc are chipping away at the problems. Right now the big-time advantage of no-till vs traditional- till methods for carbon sequestration is getting lots of attention, to the extent that some are saying that maxing no-till could be the near- term quick fix we need to get a bite and some breathing room on climate change. And I think that is the reasoning behind the current push to figure out how to reduce the herbicide factor in no-till so we don't create another problem as we address the sequestration bit. Also interesting enough.....with the same qualifications.....but it also doesn't speak to the issue at hand which, to the best of my recollection, was the nobility of farmers. As to the nobility stuff and the farmers-are-to-blame stuff. . . . Arguing that stuff could go on as long as that old Roffian thread on catch and release. Yes it could. They have that much in common. The difference is that catch and release vs. catch and kill is a complex issue worthy of a great deal more thoughtful consideration and discussion than it will ever get here, while the unconscionable destructiveness of agricultural practices, past, present, and for the foreseeable future, is simply a fact. And I happen to believe that one has to look awfully hard and reason damned poorly to find a good working definition of nobility in any of that. Moreover, if one isn't prepared to rally a rousing defense of the nobility of farmers, why does one broach the matter? I mean, why one would surrender at the first salvo is easy enough to understand, but why does one invite it? 1. What I see in this no-till business is that no-till works better for rivers, holding soil and water for slower release. Consequently fishers should consider promoting it particularly in "challenged" watersheds. 2. I went no-till on my small parcel. Consequently I have skin in the game so to speak. It is a part of my plan to further cool 1/2 mile of trout river. So I am interested and want other small parcel owners to consider no-till and other conservation ag alternatives. 3.Existing No-till technology looks like it has even more potential for addressing carbon sequestration issues. And it looks like promoing development of no-till/low till technologies for things like paddy rice and some of the subsistence crops in the tropics that depend on slash and burn could help make small farmers in Africa and India more competitive. Looks to me like a good start on an argument in favor of no-till farming, What say you start up a thread on that subject and let's see where it goes? giles |
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