Dr. Bob the Health Builder

 Dr Bob the Health Builder

  Healthy Soil = Healthy Plants and Animals = Healthy People
Truth About Organic Farming - January 08, 2008

 

Dr Bob the Health Builder

 

Weekly Newsletter for Wealthy Healthy Wise

 

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I spend a lot of time bringing up issues about food and farming and I have a new book that will available this month entitled "A Healthy Farmer".

I want all of you to know that I am not trying to make everyone into farmers - unless you want a challenging career that can give you a very satisfying career and a profitable career if you love the soil and helping people become healthy.

I want everyone to understand healthy farming so that you can locate and purchase healthy food for you and your family. You need to be able to ask the right questions and look the providers in the eyes to be sure they are not lying about the quality of their products - plants or meat proteins.

The US population has been lied to for about 60 years about chemical agriculture. We have been told that we, as a nation, are feeding the world and that you cannot grow food profitably in a natural, wholistically, and/or organic manner.

This is not true. The truth is that chemical, agriculture, seed, and food corporations are greedy and have no integrity when it comes to people in our great country or the rest of the world.

Farming/agriculture is responsible for most of the disease and degenerations in our bodies.

I got this article off the internet that was made public by the University of Michigan. They have dispelled the lies from chemical agriculture to inform us that organic/wholistically agriculture is possible and that we don't need toxic chemicals.

The truth about organic farming

http://www.scientistlive.com/article_images/articledir_36/18228/1_listing.jpg 

Organic farming can yield up to three times as much food on individual farms in developing countries, as low-intensive methods on the same land - according to new findings which refute the long-standing claim that organic farming methods cannot produce enough food to feed the global population.

Researchers from the University of Michigan found that in developed countries, yields were almost equal on organic and conventional farms. In developing countries, food production could double or triple using organic methods, said Ivette Perfecto, professor at U-M's School of Natural Resources and Environment, and one the study's principal investigators. Catherine Badgley, research scientist in the Museum of Paleontology, is a co-author of the paper along with several current and former graduate and undergraduate students from U-M.

"My hope is that we can finally put a nail in the coffin of the idea that you can't produce enough food through organic agriculture," Perfecto said.

In addition to equal or greater yields, the authors found that those yields could be accomplished using existing quantities of organic fertilizers, without putting more farmland into production.

The idea to undertake an exhaustive review of existing data about yields and nitrogen availability was fuelled in a roundabout way, when Perfecto and Badgley were teaching a class about the global food system and visiting farms in Southern Michigan.

"We were struck by how much food the organic farmers would produce," Perfecto said. The researchers set about compiling data from published literature to investigate the two chief objections to organic farming: low yields and lack of organically acceptable nitrogen sources.

Their findings refute those key arguments, Perfecto said, and confirm that organic farming is less environmentally harmful yet can potentially produce more than enough food. This is especially good news for developing countries, where it's sometimes impossible to deliver food from outside, so farmers must supply their own. Yields in developing countries could increase dramatically by switching to organic farming, Perfecto said.

While that seems counterintuitive, it makes sense because in developing countries, many farmers still do not have the access to the expensive fertilizers and pesticides that farmers use in developed countries to produce those high yields, she said.

After comparing yields of organic and non-organic farms, the researchers looked at nitrogen availability. To do so, they multiplied the current farmland area by the average amount of nitrogen available for production crops if so-called "green manures" were planted between growing seasons.

Green manures are cover crops that are plowed into the soil to provide natural soil amendments. They found that planting green manures between growing seasons provided enough nitrogen to replace synthetic fertilizers.

Organic farming is important because conventional agriculture--which involves high-yielding plants, mechanized tillage, synthetic fertilizers and biocides--is so detrimental to the environment, Perfecto said.

For instance, fertilizer runoff from conventional agriculture is the chief culprit in creating dead zones--low oxygen areas where marine life cannot survive. Proponents of organic farming argue that conventional farming also causes soil erosion, greenhouse gas emission, increased pest resistance and loss of biodiversity.

For their analysis, researchers defined the term organic as: practices referred to as sustainable or ecological; that utilize non-synthetic nutrient cycling processes; that exclude or rarely use synthetic pesticides; and sustain or regenerate the soil quality.

Perfecto said the idea that people would go hungry if farming went organic is "ridiculous."

"Corporate interest in agriculture and the way agriculture research has been conducted in land grant institutions, with a lot of influence by the chemical companies and pesticide companies as well as fertilizer companies - all have been playing an important role in convincing the public that you need to have these inputs to produce food," she said.

Contact: University of Michigan

 

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Dr Bob the Health Builder

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