To Feed the World, Tap Into Organic's Potential: Study
@CommonDreams wrote: To Feed the World, Tap Into Organic's Potential: Study Andrea Germanos, staff writer A new review of four decades of science has come to his conclusion: organic agriculture has a...
View ArticleTo Feed the World, Tap Into Organic's Potential: Study
@Emphyrio wrote: Well, bloody hell, only took 4 decades, hallelujah! Chemical poison corporate big-ag is based on production of units regardless the actual costs to Planet Earth, not sustainability,...
View ArticleTo Feed the World, Tap Into Organic's Potential: Study
@MonkesTale wrote: No-till farming offers many benefits. It may well do a better job than many organic operations in saving soil, reducing erosion, building and storing carbon, and yielding less...
View ArticleTo Feed the World, Tap Into Organic's Potential: Study
@PatchworkCelt wrote: I grew up on a farm in the 50s & 60s. When I was 5, we spread manure on the fields to fertilize them; when I was 15, we hired somebody to spread anhydrous ammonia. The “Green...
View ArticleTo Feed the World, Tap Into Organic's Potential: Study
@PatchworkCelt wrote: [quote=“MonkesTale, post:6, topic:18053, full:true”] To my mind some type of a melding of the best ideas of organic agriculture with no-till farming is the preferred way...
View ArticleTo Feed the World, Tap Into Organic's Potential: Study
@natureboy wrote: Spraying for Zika virus mosquitoes will mean big sales for pesticide producers like Monsanto and bad news for organic growers in Florida. Read full topic
View ArticleTo Feed the World, Tap Into Organic's Potential: Study
@natureboy wrote: Zika spraying good bye bees Read full topic
View ArticleTo Feed the World, Tap Into Organic's Potential: Study
@a2plusb2 wrote: natureboy: Spraying for Zika virus mosquitoes will mean big sales for pesticide producers like Monsanto and bad news for organic growers in Florida. The mosquito has been there for...
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