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A farmers stand against monsanto.

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    #61
    Really grass farmer? Then explain to me
    how you can replace Phosphate without
    stealing it from another field (manure) or
    from any form of phosphate ADDED to the
    soil.

    I'd love to hear the crop rotation that
    does this!

    Comment


      #62
      A no till farmer actually reduces fertilizer over time with the proper rotations.

      I have been using a JD disk drill for over a decade, I think I grow a reasonable crop with less fertilizer than the neighbors and their hoe drills.

      Although I must admit 2010,2011 and part of 2012 it hurt because the no till ground couldn't take any more moisture.

      Comment


        #63
        Clutching at straws w9. Phosphate is about the only
        one you really need to add and I knew that hence I
        said most elements/nutrients are available in the soil.

        Comment


          #64
          Pretty big straw!

          Nitrogen. It takes 2 years to grow one
          crop of canola with a legume the first
          year. Certainly would help with the
          price!

          How about Sulfur? A 50 bushel canola
          crop uses 20 pounds of Sulfur. Barley
          oats and flax around 15. How do you
          propose that one gets replaced?

          How about Potassium? Wheat and canola
          uptake 90 and with the crop off comes 20
          lbs. How you gonna replace K2O?

          I eagerly await your answer how these
          are replaced in the soil if not from
          fertilizer.

          Comment


            #65
            Whats the point? - you are obviously a dyed in the
            wool believer in GM crops, glyphosate and
            conventional high input non-sustainable agriculture.
            I'll just let you go the way of the dinosaurs on your
            own.

            Comment


              #66
              And yup, that's where the organic
              religion falls apart. Call names,
              whatever, just avoid any intelligent
              discussion.

              Its a marketing plan, deceiving
              consumers, not a sustainable agronomic
              method.

              Comment


                #67
                http://www.freakonomics.com/2013/02/22/a-
                soybean-in-the-supreme-court-bowman-v-
                monsanto/

                Comment


                  #68
                  Intelligent discussion? hardly w9. You are obviously
                  unwilling to even consider the possibilities of an
                  alternate system instead using the simplistic logic of
                  continuing with mono-crop agriculture growing a
                  crop that needs very high inputs (canola) to try and
                  prove that an alternate system can't work.

                  Like so many of the "studies" that are produced to
                  discredit organic agriculture where they take 2 pieces
                  of land that have been conventionally farmed for 30
                  years, switch one to organic and keep the other
                  conventional. That is not a fair trial over the short
                  term. If you compare a piece that had been organic
                  farmed for 30 years and one conventional farmed for
                  the same time then you'd have a comparison. Of
                  course you aren't interested in that because you want
                  to prove that the fertilizer and spray route is the only
                  one.
                  If you want an intelligent discussion you have to open
                  your eyes and your mind to the crop rotations the
                  likes of Gabe Brown are using - you have got to think
                  holistically.

                  Comment


                    #69
                    I would gladly consider it if you
                    actually answered the question.

                    Nutrients are not replaced in an organic
                    system. The land is depleted of its
                    resources until they are gone.

                    Without extracting those nutrients from
                    another source either thru mining or
                    cracking from natural gas or even as in
                    the case of manure from other land, if
                    you take food off, nutrients are
                    depleted.

                    Also, why do you assume i have a mono
                    culture? I do not. Even if i grew 19
                    different crops, but did not replace the
                    nutrients removed by the food grown and
                    taken, i deplete my natural resource.

                    In not a single one of the Gabe Brown
                    articles is this addressed. Perhaps you
                    could point me to one that does!

                    Comment


                      #70
                      WD9,

                      Pulses pick up and deposit much more N than they
                      use.

                      Deep rooted plants bring up p2o5 K2o from outside
                      the normal soil nutrient pool... and deposit this in
                      roots that are shallow to build soils. The development
                      of soils over the past 1000's of years... proves the eco
                      system can build organic matter and the nutrient pool
                      without actually adding the mineral itself.

                      I would like to see the plan... of how an organic farm is
                      sustainable. For a beef farmer (who raises grass fed
                      beef)... this is going to be far easier than for a grain
                      farmer.

                      Cheers

                      Comment


                        #71
                        Try taking a look at his website.

                        http://brownsranch.us/?id=1

                        Who said anything about taking all the crops off?
                        That's only what you do with the unsustainable
                        conventional model. Growing crops that fix nitrogen,
                        grazing crops on site with cattle all create and return
                        nutrients to the soil. These are all part of Gabe's
                        strategy.
                        I guess none are as blind as those who don't want to
                        see.

                        Comment


                          #72
                          Yes, pretty website. I'm sure it helps with sales, which
                          is what it is all about. Certainly nothing about actually
                          replacing nutrients. Please point out where on the site
                          you are referring to that i refuse to see.

                          Crops do fix nitrogen. We went over that already. Crop
                          every second year or only grow legumes.

                          But that does not address the others. And only half the
                          answer for N.

                          Tom, mining is mining. Whether from 4 feet down or 6
                          inches.

                          Jump start is a great example of paying for phosphate
                          twice. Once to mine it with acidity, once to replace it.
                          Acidity only works so far too. Soil equilibrium is
                          complex.

                          If we didn't take anything off the land, then it would be
                          healthy. If we take energy off, we need to replace it.

                          http://soil.gsfc.nasa.gov/index.php?section=74 explains
                          how long it takes to make an inch of soil - but only if
                          nothing is removed.

                          Comment


                            #73
                            So i asked Gabe the question directly here is his reply:


                            Brown's Ranch Brian, Great question. The answer lies in the
                            miracle of a properly functioning mineral cycle. This occurs
                            when we have a healthy ecosystem. By this I mean we have the
                            combination of soil biology along with root exudates from a very
                            diverse plant community and very diverse insect and animal
                            communities all working to insure a properly functioning mineral
                            cycle. We have shown that this mineral cycle is actually taking
                            organic forms of these nutrients and converting them to
                            inorganic (plant available) forms. Tests done on our soils by
                            Dr. Rick Haney, ARS Temple, Texas have proven this. Now, it is
                            true that when we export produce from our land we are exporting
                            nutrients however, there is no way for me to know how much of
                            these nutrients occur in the soils on our ranch.

                            For you see, a proper functioning mineral cycle is able to cycle
                            organic minerals that are for example, in the case of
                            phosphorus, currently "tied up" as rock phosphate. We have not
                            used any synthetic fertilizers on our home unit since 2008 and
                            yet current tests show that nutrient levels in the top 24" are
                            increasing despite our "exporting" grains and meat. Our soils
                            are alive, our management just needs to allow it to function
                            properly.

                            Comment


                              #74
                              In an organic system, unless the human
                              feces and urine are put back on the soil
                              in which the food is harvested from,
                              there is no cycle. Only mining and
                              export.

                              Comment


                                #75
                                coleville,

                                Many Municipalities are doing exactly that.

                                Toilet to table: Human waste serves as cheap, effective
                                fertilizer
                                By Bob Shaw
                                bshaw@pioneerpress.com
                                Posted: 01/13/2013 12:01:00 AM CST
                                Updated: 01/22/2013 11:44:46 AM CST

                                http://www.twincities.com/localnews/ci_22367291/fr
                                om-your-toilet-your-dining-table

                                East of Edmonton we applied this for years... was a
                                very good source of nutrients.

                                Cheers!

                                Comment

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