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Savory presentation

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  • grassfarmer
    Senior Member
    • Jul 2002
    • 9734

    Savory presentation

    I know I've posted similar before but thought this
    presentation by Allan Savory was worth posting and
    taking the time to watch.

    http://vimeo.com/8239427

    A central theme "Humanities future hangs on a
    slender thread - learning how to manage livestock to
    address biodiversity loss/desertification/climate
    change"

    An interesting little comment right at the start
    challenged my thinking "If we had never discovered
    fossil fuels we would still be facing climate change
    brought about by humans"
  • wd40
    Senior Member
    • Aug 2004
    • 483

    #2
    If the polar ice caps are melting at such an alarming rate; why aren't our shore lines flooding inland and our harbors from 200 yrs ago flooded? da

    Comment

    • grassfarmer
      Senior Member
      • Jul 2002
      • 9734

      #3
      You haven't heard of places like London where the
      rising water table is causing substantial problems?

      Comment

      • Happytrails
        Senior Member
        • Dec 2009
        • 832

        #4
        We have been white for almost 5 months and could easily stay that way for another 40 days. If global warming could shorten this big sleep I have to be in favor of it. Unfortunately the big powers don't care what I or anyone else thinks.

        Comment

        • grassfarmer
          Senior Member
          • Jul 2002
          • 9734

          #5
          Reductionist thinking at its finest. Try watching the
          video. More likely scenario is bigger rain
          events/bigger snow events - but combined with more
          severe droughts. Do you look forward to more severe
          drought in your part of the world HT?
          I sure don't and I'm starting off with way more
          precipitation than your area.

          Comment

          • cpallett
            Senior Member
            • Apr 2005
            • 176

            #6
            Excellent talk.

            I had a long chat with the former president of the PEI Cattle Producers yesterday. She told me that the number of farms with cattle in PEI has fallen by about 35% since pre-BSE days, which is pretty much the national average.

            A lot of potato producers used to keep cattle for the benefits the manure provided to the potato fields. Many of these potato producers have gotten out of cattle and moved to chemical fertilizers. These same growers are now finding that their soil structure is failing and their yields are dropping.

            Ploughing in alfalfa is apparently not good enough. As she told me, her neighbours forgot about the importance of the microbiological biodiversity that manure brings to the soil.

            Plus que ca change, plus que c'est la meme chose. In PEI no less!

            Comment

            • rkaiser
              Senior Member
              • Dec 2004
              • 2282

              #7
              Yes - an awesome presentation GF. One challenge seems to be that our friends at Monsanto and such are using the "don't bare the soil" speach to promote the use of herbicides and our wonderful glyphosate on crop land as well.

              I almost wonder if this is not part of the problem in parts of Saskatchewan and Manitoba these days where too much moisture is not allowing seeding to occur. Killing off life in the soil with chemicals may actually be having a similar and dangerously opposite affect in these areas that can not abosorb moisture. Chem cropping in dry areas is an obvious problem where more and more rain or irrigation is needed to supply the moisture needs of cereal crops, but is it also causing problems in these overly moist areas?

              Between Savory and Dr. Huber and his exposition of glyphosate, I think we have the chance to wake up.

              As grassroots producers, we can not only save human life, but save the life of the planet as well. Just need to do a better job of marketing our products and stop leaving it in the hands of those who promote reductionist, "anti life" behaviour.

              Comment

              • Happytrails
                Senior Member
                • Dec 2009
                • 832

                #8
                Sorry, can't do the cool-aid guys. Do I believe one stuffed shirt or the evidence of 20 failed civilizations?

                Not to engage in this sort of puffery but at present we have over 7 BILLION people on this earth who (whom?) almost all are living better than their parents. But the sky is falling.

                Comment

                • grassfarmer
                  Senior Member
                  • Jul 2002
                  • 9734

                  #9
                  Not sure I follow what you are saying Randy. The use
                  of zero-till technology has certainly increased
                  chemical use but it also conserves considerable
                  moisture and keeps more litter on the soil so relative
                  to the old conventional farming no-till and chemicals
                  are probably less harmful than plows and discs.
                  Of course it isn't sustainable without livestock on the
                  land. I really noticed that driving down through
                  northern Montana in August where it is all winter
                  wheat/barley and chem fallow. Mile after mile and
                  you never see an animal, no songbirds just sterile,
                  desolate landscape.
                  I think people are waking up though, even my
                  Hutterite neighbours are looking for ways to park
                  their sprayer after hearing Don Huber. Maybe a new
                  age of enlightenment is slowly spreading across the
                  land?

                  Comment

                  • gaucho
                    Senior Member
                    • Jul 2006
                    • 164

                    #10
                    Randy its the fact that continuous
                    cropping with annual only root so far
                    and if you do not have plants that root
                    deep there is no mechanism for the water
                    to infiltrate at deep levels...
                    perennial plants root deep and if you
                    ever look at overgrazed and well grazed
                    pastures after rain storm you will see
                    that overgrazed pool water and well
                    grazed pastures suck it up..Sask /
                    manitoba land has been continuously
                    cropped with nothing to break the
                    hardpan and allow after to infiltrate

                    Comment

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