Global Warming
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This is not true at all. There are villages in India which do not use fertilizers. Their yields are same may be more than one with fertilizers use. We just need to understand the various insects, bacteria etc and how they fit into this big food chain. They do help improving soil quality which in turn means better yield. Check this[^] out. Sikkim state in India is known for it's organic farming.
"The worst code you'll come across is code you wrote last year.", wizardzz[^]
d@nish wrote:
This is not true at all.
Provide a source.
d@nish wrote:
Their yields are same may be more than one with fertilizers use.
Provide a source.
d@nish wrote:
They do help improving soil quality which in turn means better yield.
So your contention is that locusts provide a better yield?
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In a way of thinking, they are. I am also talking about industrial scale farming here. I have spent good 20 years of life living on farm lands. They included industrial farming and research as well. I have seen both fertilizer based farming and one without it. It is evident that once you have started using fertilizers, slowly soil quality and ability to grow crops will reduce. It will also impair crop rotation abilities inherent in the soil. I don't know standards followed in Australia regarding their use but I would still stand by my point: fertilizers are bad and are not needed at all. Even if rules you have are strict enough to check the quantity and quality of chemicals used, it is not needed. There are many natural ways of saving crops from insects.
"The worst code you'll come across is code you wrote last year.", wizardzz[^]
d@nish wrote:
I have spent good 20 years of life living on farm lands.
I have spent decades using bathrooms but that doesn't make me an expert on urban waste disposal and most certainly doesn't make me an expert on differing techniques on a world wide basis on the best ways to deal with it.
d@nish wrote:
It is evident that once you have started using fertilizers, slowly soil quality and ability to grow crops will reduce.
It is evident that if you misuse the soil, regardless of how, that problems will occur. That is the only thing that is "evident".
d@nish wrote:
There are many natural ways of saving crops from insects.
Wrong. Most insect problems are specific to a single pest. Something that eats leaves cannot be dealt with in the same way that a pest that eats roots or harvested product can be. And "natural" solutions are often limited to a single choice for a single pest. Some pests have more than one solution and if you disagree with that then please do provide the name of a single pest and provide more than 10 "ways" of saving the crop from that pest.
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Yes there was. I am not denying the fact that chemical speed up growth process and also protect against creatures. But all the evident benefits could have been achieved using natural ways. There was no real need to doing all which was done through harmful chemicals (all of them are poison, just the threat level differs). Any land which was introduced to chemicals had deteriorated in past 20-30 years. Today, switching away from these chemicals is not easy and hence farmers are now stuck. If one a capable enough to survive with little less crop for sometime, he can still refuse to use these. Here are some more links if you wish to have a look: Navdanya[^] Centre for Sustainable Agriculture[^]
"The worst code you'll come across is code you wrote last year.", wizardzz[^]
d@nish wrote:
Here are some more links if you wish to have a look:
Looks similar to the sites that promote that cow urine cures cancer. All types of cancer. Perhaps just a coincidence that India also seems to have better luck with that than other places.
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People had always had problems like crops being eaten away by insects. Getting rid of them is the solution. How we achieved that was wrong. It could have been done using natural process. For instance, just keep some peacocks around the farm and you can get rid of rats and snakes. Similar ways can be applied to almost every other aspect. I am not saying people in West (or anywhere) are dumb. All I am saying is we all were. We all saw the improvement and jumped the bandwagon without realizing consequences in long run.
"The worst code you'll come across is code you wrote last year.", wizardzz[^]
d@nish wrote:
For instance, just keep some peacocks around the farm and you can get rid of rats and snakes.
Eh? You equate rats/snakes with locusts? Far as I know rats/snakes have not had a significant impact on agriculture productivity for at least 50 years. Perhaps 100 years ago rats might have been a problem but snakes were never significant. Locusts on the other hand were a problem 100 years ago and still are.
d@nish wrote:
We all saw the improvement and jumped the bandwagon without realizing consequences in long run.
Exactly what do you mean by "long run"? I am fairly certain that crop yields (yield per acre) have been improving for a very long time. Probably more than 50 years. Your statement suggests that it is has somehow fallen off. So where is your source for that?
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US farmers tried selling their "beautiful" bug-free produce in Japan around that time and the Japanese were smart enough to know that if a bug won't eat it, they wouldn't eat it. For a while, the US couldn't get their produce to sell well in Japan. Quantity does not always beat quality.
There are only 10 types of people in the world, those who understand binary and those who don't.
ryanb31 wrote:
US farmers tried selling their "beautiful" bug-free produce in Japan around that time and the Japanese were smart enough to know that if a bug won't eat it, they wouldn't eat it. For a while, the US couldn't get their produce to sell well in Japan.
I see. And what is your take on Japan's continued importation of endangered species used in "medicine"? Or for that matter non-endangered species? How about their continued "scientific" research done by killing whales? And could you explain to me exactly what real human caloric need is met by the consumption of the blowfish?
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The problem with fertilizer is it kills the soil. It kills all of the good bacteria and micro-organisms and even worms that make soil healthy. Why is there no real solution? Since the history of mankind small farms have sustained life. I am not suggesting everyone become farmers but small sustainable farms can go a long way in being a solution. Big farms produce a lot of food, but it is not nutritious food. Also, big farming practices destroy the earth making them more and more dependent on chemicals which is a vicious cycle because the chemicals destroy the earth.
There are only 10 types of people in the world, those who understand binary and those who don't.
ryanb31 wrote:
The problem with fertilizer is it kills the soil. It kills all of the good bacteria and micro-organisms and even worms that make soil healthy.
Sigh...If you mismanage the soil you mismanage the soil. Period. End of story. Soil mismanagement has been occurring since agriculture started. And presumably no one is claiming that when it started it wasn't "natural".
ryanb31 wrote:
Since the history of mankind small farms have sustained life.
And rape, pillage and burn (farms) was a popular pastime as well. But in those times that you are romanticizing the vast majority of the population (probably greater than 99%) were farmers and were totally at the whim of nature in terms of whether they lived or died of starvation. And even now the populations that rely on those "small farms" end up starving in the millions when there is some small problem with the "natural" ways. Not to mention of course that when it does go right then it means more mouths to feed. And each mouth needs much more land for a "small farm" to support it. Thus guaranteeing that more will starve.
ryanb31 wrote:
Big farms produce a lot of food, but it is not nutritious food.
Utter and complete nonsense.
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The carbon tax is a farce on multiple levels. The fact that it won't help anyone but the government, has nothing to do with the science behind the theory of AGW, that's another example of politics being merged with science. Bad politics do not prove bad science.
Christian Graus Driven to the arms of OSX by Vista. Read my blog to find out how I've worked around bugs in Microsoft tools and frameworks.
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ryanb31 wrote:
US farmers tried selling their "beautiful" bug-free produce in Japan around that time and the Japanese were smart enough to know that if a bug won't eat it, they wouldn't eat it. For a while, the US couldn't get their produce to sell well in Japan.
I see. And what is your take on Japan's continued importation of endangered species used in "medicine"? Or for that matter non-endangered species? How about their continued "scientific" research done by killing whales? And could you explain to me exactly what real human caloric need is met by the consumption of the blowfish?
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ryanb31 wrote:
The problem with fertilizer is it kills the soil. It kills all of the good bacteria and micro-organisms and even worms that make soil healthy.
Sigh...If you mismanage the soil you mismanage the soil. Period. End of story. Soil mismanagement has been occurring since agriculture started. And presumably no one is claiming that when it started it wasn't "natural".
ryanb31 wrote:
Since the history of mankind small farms have sustained life.
And rape, pillage and burn (farms) was a popular pastime as well. But in those times that you are romanticizing the vast majority of the population (probably greater than 99%) were farmers and were totally at the whim of nature in terms of whether they lived or died of starvation. And even now the populations that rely on those "small farms" end up starving in the millions when there is some small problem with the "natural" ways. Not to mention of course that when it does go right then it means more mouths to feed. And each mouth needs much more land for a "small farm" to support it. Thus guaranteeing that more will starve.
ryanb31 wrote:
Big farms produce a lot of food, but it is not nutritious food.
Utter and complete nonsense.
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If you mismanage the soil you mismanage the soil.
True. And?
Quote:
And rape, pillage and burn (farms) was a popular pastime as well.
And?
Quote:
Utter and complete nonsense.
Do research before responding.
There are only 10 types of people in the world, those who understand binary and those who don't.
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I'm sorry, but in terms of industrial farming, it is true. Even on the small scale that I do it, with companion planting and everything else, my neighbours who use fertilizers, get better yields, not least because the crops are grown quicker. Do you think people use fertilizer because they are stupid ?
Christian Graus Driven to the arms of OSX by Vista. Read my blog to find out how I've worked around bugs in Microsoft tools and frameworks.
I take it you've never made your own batch from worm composting. I've been gardening for years, organic and non, and nothing has ever come close to the season I had a worm composter. At the end of the growing season, my worms weren't going to survive the winter (I was forced to keep the composter in an unheated area), so I dumped what was left, including the worms into a 3 foot wide gravel alley between 2 garages, an area that gets no light. The idea was that they would at least become bird food. Next spring, the first thing to grow was a dense patch of plants from where I dumped about maybe 2 gallon's worth of half broken down compost. I figured weeds like it. 2 months later I saw 5-6' plants growing in the patch that gets no sun, and I never watered. I recognized them as tomatoes immediately. My highest yield that year was from my accidental tomatoes. I never planted seeds in there, they were from composting my own organic kitchen waste, and seeded itself. That was a few years ago, I never composted again, but that patch eventually broke down back into gravel, though each year some plants returned in the same spot, eventually weeds and rocks took over. I know it's only an anecdotal story, but worm composting is absolutely high yield. Every time I fed my plants with it, they grew noticeably right after. It was simple, as they fed off only my own veg and garden scraps and I never even added water to their mix. Anyways, the U.S. Midwest has very different soil nutrients and salinization than Australia, so you may have to depend on fertilizers more than me.
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I take it you've never made your own batch from worm composting. I've been gardening for years, organic and non, and nothing has ever come close to the season I had a worm composter. At the end of the growing season, my worms weren't going to survive the winter (I was forced to keep the composter in an unheated area), so I dumped what was left, including the worms into a 3 foot wide gravel alley between 2 garages, an area that gets no light. The idea was that they would at least become bird food. Next spring, the first thing to grow was a dense patch of plants from where I dumped about maybe 2 gallon's worth of half broken down compost. I figured weeds like it. 2 months later I saw 5-6' plants growing in the patch that gets no sun, and I never watered. I recognized them as tomatoes immediately. My highest yield that year was from my accidental tomatoes. I never planted seeds in there, they were from composting my own organic kitchen waste, and seeded itself. That was a few years ago, I never composted again, but that patch eventually broke down back into gravel, though each year some plants returned in the same spot, eventually weeds and rocks took over. I know it's only an anecdotal story, but worm composting is absolutely high yield. Every time I fed my plants with it, they grew noticeably right after. It was simple, as they fed off only my own veg and garden scraps and I never even added water to their mix. Anyways, the U.S. Midwest has very different soil nutrients and salinization than Australia, so you may have to depend on fertilizers more than me.
wizardzz wrote:
I take it you've never made your own batch from worm composting. I've been gardening for years, organic and non, and nothing has ever come close to the season I had a worm composter.
Actually, my best run ever was the first time I used a patch, because it had never been used. But, I have used worm compost, yes. The issue is entirely that none of these methods are commercially viable and I'm talking about commercial yields. And, no matter what I do, cauliflowers take 3-4 months to grow for me, and the farm that uses fertilizer gets them up in half the time, year after year.
Christian Graus Driven to the arms of OSX by Vista. Read my blog to find out how I've worked around bugs in Microsoft tools and frameworks.
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Christian Graus wrote:
It had a chapter on global warming, also.
I didn't find the piece very informative. The stated intent was to present evidence but a lot of the verbiage was about predicted results.
Christian Graus wrote:
because the green movement has tied accepting AGW to the idea of being anti any sort of development or modern lifestyle, they are equated in the minds of people who oppose it.
That is of course because much of the the organized environment groups are pushing social issues rather than the environment. Read up on why one of the original founding members of Green Peace quit the organization for an example of that. Might note as well that the environment groups also ignore the most pressing social issue that would have a direct impact on the environment - that of population growth.
Christian Graus wrote:
and that it's a shame that science is being made a slave to ideology.
It is of course a mistake to think that any large scale human endeavor is somehow exempt from the same social conditions that other endeavors are subject to.
jschell wrote:
I didn't find the piece very informative. The stated intent was to present evidence but a lot of the verbiage was about predicted results.
yes, the Skeptics magazine did a much better job of listing the doubters claims and then explaining the science.
jschell wrote:
Might note as well that the environment groups also ignore the most pressing social issue that would have a direct impact on the environment - that of population growth.
Actually population is peaking, I've done some reading on that, too. but yes, it is the core issue and the reason that things like corn for fuel and organic farming do not scale.
Christian Graus Driven to the arms of OSX by Vista. Read my blog to find out how I've worked around bugs in Microsoft tools and frameworks.
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Christian Graus wrote:
The fact that it won't help anyone but the government,
Pretty sure that some people are making quite a bit of money on it.
Perhaps providers of clean alternatives can now put their prices up, because of the benefits of no carbon tax. Which does not help society, either
Christian Graus Driven to the arms of OSX by Vista. Read my blog to find out how I've worked around bugs in Microsoft tools and frameworks.
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wizardzz wrote:
I take it you've never made your own batch from worm composting. I've been gardening for years, organic and non, and nothing has ever come close to the season I had a worm composter.
Actually, my best run ever was the first time I used a patch, because it had never been used. But, I have used worm compost, yes. The issue is entirely that none of these methods are commercially viable and I'm talking about commercial yields. And, no matter what I do, cauliflowers take 3-4 months to grow for me, and the farm that uses fertilizer gets them up in half the time, year after year.
Christian Graus Driven to the arms of OSX by Vista. Read my blog to find out how I've worked around bugs in Microsoft tools and frameworks.
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I can't help but think the low nutrient levels in Australian soil to begin with just illustrates the difference fertilizer makes. How do you guys water there to counter the salt?
We don't use salt water :-) If ground is highly salted, it's just useless.
Christian Graus Driven to the arms of OSX by Vista. Read my blog to find out how I've worked around bugs in Microsoft tools and frameworks.
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jschell wrote:
I didn't find the piece very informative. The stated intent was to present evidence but a lot of the verbiage was about predicted results.
yes, the Skeptics magazine did a much better job of listing the doubters claims and then explaining the science.
jschell wrote:
Might note as well that the environment groups also ignore the most pressing social issue that would have a direct impact on the environment - that of population growth.
Actually population is peaking, I've done some reading on that, too. but yes, it is the core issue and the reason that things like corn for fuel and organic farming do not scale.
Christian Graus Driven to the arms of OSX by Vista. Read my blog to find out how I've worked around bugs in Microsoft tools and frameworks.
Christian Graus wrote:
Actually population is peaking,
You mean that growth is slowing versus evidence that it will actually plateau? But I misspoke a bit anyways. Environmental issues along with a number of other issues would be more readily solved or would become non-existent if the population went down.
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No, none of your questions have anything to do with the topic so I am not getting on that ride with you.
There are only 10 types of people in the world, those who understand binary and those who don't.
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Quote:
If you mismanage the soil you mismanage the soil.
True. And?
Quote:
And rape, pillage and burn (farms) was a popular pastime as well.
And?
Quote:
Utter and complete nonsense.
Do research before responding.
There are only 10 types of people in the world, those who understand binary and those who don't.
ryanb31 wrote:
And?
You were romanticizing something while ignoring the reality.
ryanb31 wrote:
Do research before responding.
I already am aware of the claim that you made and the refutations of it. I suspect that if you have in fact done any research that you did so by ignoring the basics of scientific inquiry.
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Perhaps providers of clean alternatives can now put their prices up, because of the benefits of no carbon tax. Which does not help society, either
Christian Graus Driven to the arms of OSX by Vista. Read my blog to find out how I've worked around bugs in Microsoft tools and frameworks.
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Christian Graus wrote:
Actually population is peaking,
You mean that growth is slowing versus evidence that it will actually plateau? But I misspoke a bit anyways. Environmental issues along with a number of other issues would be more readily solved or would become non-existent if the population went down.
jschell wrote:
You mean that growth is slowing versus evidence that it will actually plateau?
It's odd to me that people are convinced that population is exploding, yet we all know that our next big crisis is an aging population, which is what happens as we breed less.
Christian Graus Driven to the arms of OSX by Vista. Read my blog to find out how I've worked around bugs in Microsoft tools and frameworks.