Our
Future
There
are huge environmental problems facing mankind today. However, if
we study to understand Nature and her positive laws, we can perform
a critical role in attacking these problems. Anyone who loves Nature
soon learns to see Her deeper beauty and greater fascination. You
learn to observe and understand the cycles of life-death-decay
then new birth. No living thing, plant or animal, escapes death. In
Nature, every dead thing is usually deposited in the very place it
dies. There it serves as mulch protecting the soil until it finally
decays. In due time, it is covered and replaced by still later deposits
of expired life.
In
a natural environment, there is no waste. Everything is reused and
is usually made into something of still greater value for the sustenance
of life on Earth. Dead things furnish the organic matter to supply
energy, food and structure for the beneficial soil life. The beneficial
soil life creates the conditions for healthy, abundant plant life
to feed the animal life. And the life cycle continues. In a natural
environment the life cycles add to the past and build a future. Without
continued death and decay, future life species and systems would degenerate,
eventually to extinction.
Earth
is covered mostly by water, only 20 percent is dry land. In the beginning
the dry land consisted of lava, basalt, granite or other hardened,
once molten material. There was no soil on earth. Only life forces
can make soil. But, there was no life because it takes soil to support
life.
Our
biggest problem worldwide is that most of our farmland no longer has
the organic matter for life and energy it once had. As little as 200
years ago, all of the farmlands across the United States had an organic
content of 3.0% to 8.0%. The once fertile Rio Grande Valley is wasting
away with a soil organic content that is testing at O.2% to 0.8%.
Now most farmland everywhere is down to 20% or less of what it should
be. As recently as the 1940s, the organic content was ALL ABOVE 3%
and closer to 5%. This represents a drop in organic content of between
70 to 90 percent in 60 years.
Topsoil
Lost to Erosion is an increasing problem today. As the soil
loses its organic matter, it becomes unable to hold and trap water.
Any water allowed to run off carries the topsoil with it. It goes
into the rivers and streams and is lost forever. Then we are left
with barren unproductive sub soil.
Fresh
Water Shortages are worldwide and are increasing daily. The
earth is covered by 74% water. All of it is salty except for about
3%. Between 80% and 90% of that small amount of fresh water is used
in irrigation. Irrigation needs could be cut 30% or more if only proper
soil organic matter was maintained. Storing water also helps prevent
shortages. The safest and most efficient place to store our annual
rainfall is in the soil under a mulch cover.
A
mulch layer of leaves, twigs, grass, compost, or any organic material
from man's waste stream will protect the soil from the baking sun
and drying winds. The mulch holds heavy rains in place until they
soak in. This prevents floods and soil erosion.
Water
amounts greater than the soil can hold filter on down and slowly drip
into our aquifers to keep them at a constant level during dry spells.
Water allowed to run off carries topsoil with it, then both end up
in the salty sea. Or, if trapped in lakes, we lose 4 to 6 feet of
water each year to evaporation and the soil carried with it silts
up the lake.
At
the soil level, under the mulch, the grubs, earthworms, termites and
numerous other soil life are chewing up the mulch and churning up
the soil. Then the microbes take over and compost it. The composting
activity creates mild organic acids that dissolve minerals from rock
in the soil, and then it all becomes healthy, rich fertile soil. Decaying
organic material on the soil surface saves water and builds fertile
soil.
How
Nature saves water.
Because
of the increased carbon dioxide release under plants from mulch, compost
and organic rich soil, the pores on plant leaves stay open less and
shut longer. This causes plants to transpire less, allowing them to
draw less moisture from the soil while growing. Even though, organic
rich soil can absorb and hold more water, plants grown in organic
rich soil actually require less water to grow.
Air
Pollution.
Carbon
dioxide is admitted to the atmosphere from burning fossil fuels in
our factories and automobiles. Carbon dioxide is believed to be changing
our weather patterns. Soil scientists have calculated that carbon
in the excess carbon dioxide now found in the atmosphere is near equal
to the carbon lost from our farmlands.
Scientists
have also calculated that all we have to do to offset the carbon dioxide
in the atmosphere is to increase the organic content of our farmland
JUST ONE TENTH OF ONE PERCENT EACH YEAR. Conservation tillage, especially
'no-till' farming and/or the use of mulch and compost does just
that.
Nitrate
Toxicity and Other Toxic Products are detected in water wells
and aquifers everywhere. In many cases, the nitrate is high enough
to cause health problems. This is caused by over using high nitrate
fertilizers in poor soils. Soil microbes must process fertilizer in
order for a plant to use it properly. If the soil is low in organic
energy, the microbes cannot do the processing. Then the plants become
stressed, which usually invites pests and diseases. The sick plants
are then treated with yet another toxin. Eventually, the unused nitrates
and other toxins, seep down to pollute the water table. Low organic
content causes this cycle to be repeated over and over.
The
quality of our life is connected to the quality of the soil. The quality
of the soil determines the quality of the air we breathe, water we
drink and food we eat. If we allow the quality of the our top soil
to degrade to any degree, the life it supports goes with it.
Soil
quality is determined by the amount of life, mineral, and energy it
contains. Understanding and properly using the energy, carbon, and
life cycles to maintain quality soil can solve the major problems
facing mankind.
World
economy is connected to the soil. In the hands of skilled growers,
the wealth grown from fertile soil, such as fruit, nuts, grain, vegetables,
flowers, trees, grass, and farm animals can be renewable forever and
ever.
Recycling
organics or recycling anything, for that matter, is also creating
new wealth. New wealth is what sets an economy in motion. Everything
else is buying or selling a service.
Is
mulching and conservation farming too simple an answer to so many
problems? Yes and no. It is a wonderfully simple answer to many complex
problems.
As
gardeners, farmers and ranchers that love, understand and work with
Nature, we can make a difference. Planet Earth Needs our Help!
The
Garden-Ville Method - Lessons in Nature