OBSERVE THE
CYCLES OF LIFE
Walk Into the woods and meadows and visit with Nature. You will be
in the presence of much life. Especially in the spring, you will find
many types of plants, grass, trees, animals and insects---large and
small. There will be life in abundance.
Now take a closer look.
There is an equal amount of death, particularly in the winter. There
will be dead grass and leaves, fallen limbs and trees, even dead animals
and insects.
Every living thing will
sooner or later die; no living creature, plant or animal, escapes
death. In Nature, every dead thing is deposited in the very place
it dies, and there it serves as a mulch protecting the soil until
it finally decays and in due time is covered and replaced by still
later deposits of expired life.
When
a plant or animal dies it will eventually be eaten by the decomposing
microbes. They will decay or dissemble it and put it back into the
soil. If they didn't, our planet would now be miles deep in dead things.
This life-death-decay-life
cycle has built the thin layer of fertile soil that covers our land.
It nourishes and grows our plants, which are the bridge of life between
the soil and man.
In the beginning, our planet
was just a round mass of minerals moving in its planned orbit through
space. At some point, the Almighty saw fit to breath life onto earth,
very meager and primitive life, but life with a crucial mission.
As these micro-forms of
life lived and reproduced, they fed on and etched away at the rocky
mineral earth surface, and as they died, their remains formed humus
and mild acids to etch away still more minerals. This process went
on and on until very small amounts of our first soil was formed.
Even though extremely small,
the life, death, and decay of each preceding life form have been creating
better conditions for future life forms than were there before. The
decay process builds with added interest to the soil’s bank
account, and after countless centuries of creating conditions for
higher and more complex forms of life, Man, the most complex of all
life, was able to exist and be sustained.
If man understood the laws
of recycle and return, he would without delay put back onto the land
all manure and organic waste he generates. Understanding these positive
laws will determine mans future on Earth.
In Nature, there is no
waste. Everything is reused, and usually made into something of still
greater value for the sustenance of life on earth.
Malcolm Beck