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Companion Planting Vegetables For Increased Crops


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Date: 2007-12-28
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Companion planting in your vegetable garden is a great way to increase the size of the crop you will have when it comes time to harvest. The right combination of vegetables planted together improves growth, reduces disease, encourages beneficial insects to thrive in the garden, and discourages pests.

But companion planting vegetables does have it's drawbacks, as some vegetables are much more fussy than others about who they are planted next to. This simple guide will help you with a few of the more common combinations you should keep in mind when companion planting vegetables.

Asparagus get on well with most vegetables, but their ideal companions are tomato, parsley and basil.

Bush beans like potatoes, cucumber, corn, strawberries and celery, but hate onions. On the other hand, pole beans are a little more selective – they only like corn and radishes, and hate beets as well as onions.

The cabbage family (broccoli, brussels sprouts, cabbage, cauliflower and kale to name a few) like many companions - beet, celery, cucumber, lettuce, onion, potatoes and spinach. But they have a few hates as well - dill, strawberries, pole beans and tomatoes.

Carrots get on well with a wide variety of vegetables - peas, lettuce, rosemary, onions, sage and tomatoes. Just keep them away from dill.

Celery is also a very accepting vegetable, liking onions, the cabbage family, tomatoes and bush beans. Like asparagus, they don't hate any vegetables.

Keep your corn away from tomatoes, but to keep it happy plant it near potatoes, beans, peas, pumpkins, cucumber and squash.

Cucumber doesn't like being near aromatic herbs or potatoes, but plant it near beans, corn or peas and it will be happy.

Lettuce is an accepting plant, not hating any vegetables but appreciating being planted next to carrots, strawberries and cucumbers.

Onions generally like being planted next to beets, carrots, lettuce and the cabbage family, but keep them away from beans and peas if you want good results.

Peas like being planted next to carrots, turnips, cucumbers, corn and beans, but be sure to not plant them near onions or potatoes.

Speaking of potatoes, you should plant them near beans, corn and members of the cabbage family for best results, and make sure they are away from pumpkins, squash, tomatoes and cucumbers.

Finally the humble tomato - one of the more popular summer vegetables for the gardener to grow. For the best results plant them near onions, asparagus, carrots, parsley or cucumbers, but keep them well away from potatoes or members of the cabbage family.

This isn't a fully comprehensive list – obviously there are many more types of vegetables available for you to plant in your vegetable garden, and this article could easily double or triple in size if we tried to include everything. But this list of the more common vegetables should be a good start in helping you plan the layout of your vegetable garden for the next year.

So give companion planting in your vegetable garden a try. You'll find you'll have happier, healthier plants in your vegetable garden, which in turn will give you tastier vegetables to feed you and your family.

 

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Tree Crops Vs Annual Crops

Simon Chambers 2008-03-07
Title: Tree Crops Vs Annual Crops
Agriculturists are often asked if tree crops such as pine, fruit trees, rubber and oil palm or annual crops such as wheat, maize, rice or soya bean are friendlier for the environment. This article will explore the merits and demerits of planting tree crops or annual crops vis a vis its environmental impact.

One of the major contributors to environmental damage during the planting of annual crops is the heavy usage of machineries in all aspects of cultivation of the crops. There is significant use of mechanisation from seed planting to the harvesting and threshing of the crop. Early in the 19th century, a farmer could produce food for 2.5 people and by 1999 due to advances in agricultural technology, a single farmer could feed over 130 people. Modern harvesters such as combined harvesters and planters are extensively used in the planting of various crops in most parts of the world. While mechanisation increases productivity and lowers the cost of production, it also contributes towards environmental destruction. Most of these machineries are bulky and as they move around the fields, they bring destruction to the top soil causing destruction to the microorganisms found in the soil.

Soil is a favourable habitat for microorganisms and is inhabited by a wide range of microorganisms including bacteria, fungi, algae, viruses and protozoa. Microorganisms are found in large numbers in soil; usually between one and ten million microorganisms are present in each gram of soil and with bacteria and fungi being the most prevalent. Apart from that, soil organisms are very important as almost every chemical action and reaction that takes place in soil involves active contributions from soil microorganisms.

They play an active role in enhancing soil fertility by assisting with the recycling of nutrients such as carbon and nitrogen which is essential for plant growth. Microorganisms also help with the decomposition of organic matter in soil into nutrients. An example would be nitrogen fixing bacteria transforming nitrogen gas present in the soil into soluble nitrate compounds which enrich the soil and is absorbed by the plant. Other soil microorganisms produce hormones that can improve plant health and contribute towards higher yield. Microorganisms are influenced by the nature, properties and arrangement of soil particles. They also modify soil particles and their arrangements. Microbial life in soil is also indirectly influenced by surface interactions. Some microorganisms also burrow into and churn up the soil which improves soil structure and aggregation. Microorganisms have the ability to protect plants from antagonistic pathogens as some can dissolve minerals and provide nutrients in dissolved mineral form to plants. Apart from microorganisms, there are also earthworms that take in dead organic matters from soil, ingest it, excrete the nutrient rich casts in the soil and help to improve aeration, water infiltration, drainage and enhance nutrient availability and cycling. These microorganisms and earthworms which enrich the soil are usually killed by the use of machineries and continued use of machineries in the field do not enable these microorganisms to be re-established.

Another factor to be considered for annual crops is the current practice of double or even triple cropping per year which causes continuous damage to the top soil without providing opportunity for the soil to rejuvenate. Over-tilling and over-ploughing soil destroys natural soil structure with decreased soil pore

size, breakdowns in soil aggregates and decreased pore space which curbs good air and water flow. Continuous use of heavy machinery causes soil compaction which makes it difficult for microorganisms, earthworms and small insects to breed. This also results in poor internal drainage, creates possible run off, inhibits root development and breeds unhealthy plants. Soil compaction also causes water that enters the surface of the soil to be perched on the sub surface of the soil, saturating and ponding the surface of the soil while by right it should have permeated into the soil. Thus soil compaction has a destructive effect on the soil and the environment.

Smoke from these machineries also pollutes the air which is not only detrimental to health but causes chemical pollution of the crops in the form of acid rain. Apart from that, pollution caused by these machineries causes depletion of the ozone layer. In some underdeveloped countries, the stalks of annual crops are burnt after the crop has been harvested, which releases carbon dioxide into the atmosphere. The natural biodiversity of plants, animals and microbes function in many ways to enhance the quality of life enjoyed by the human beings. But in the process of providing food for the human beings, biodiversity has taken a back seat. In the case of rice, vast areas of wetlands have been drained to plant rice which upsets the pre-existing biodiversity. The same goes to vast tracts of land in North and South America where prairies have gradually been converted into field growing crops such as wheat and maize. The conversion of these areas have totally eradicated some indigenous plants and animals. The wild population of the American bisons that inhabited the prairies were practically eradicated in the process of establishing large farms to grow wheat to feed the American population. Historically they ranged across half of North America and numbered in the millions before being reduced to a countable number within a period of two centuries. Their habitat which were the grassland and meadows that were the former prairies have made them an endangered breed of animals. Establishing such farms did not just upset the ecosystems that had been in place there but also caused a gradual extinction of a breed of animal that is part of the American history.

How land is used to produce food can have an enormous effect on the environment and its sustainability. Environmental groups in the United States have mounted attacks on fast food chains such as Kentucky Fried Chicken (KFC) and Pizza Hut because of the adverse effects these organisations have created in the food production chain in the country. Intensive breeding of livestock and poultry for the restaurants have resulted in deforestation in countries such as Brazil, land degradation, and the contamination of water and other natural resources. For every pound of red meat, poultry, eggs and milk produced, farms fields in these countries lose about five pounds of top soil of their field. The water used for meat breeding comes to about 190 gallons per animal per day or ten times of that used by an average family. Overall, animal farms use about 40% of the world’s total production of grain and nearly 50% of the grain production in United States goes towards feeding livestock, not hungry mouths elsewhere in the world. (Source: South End Press, 2000). The demand for these crops are so great that genetically modified (GM) food crops are planted in some developed countries to meet the demand for them. While the peril of genetically modified crops are yet to be seen in the long term, there is already strong resistance from some Western NGOs and protests have been mounted against planting and exporting of GM crops. New concepts such as industrial agriculture have also been mooted so that production of food crops can be enhanced to meet demand for such food products. Planting of food crops is no longer considered essential farming but is increasingly viewed as production of a commodity to meet the demands of customers such KFC and Pizza Hut.

Much of the best agricultural land in the world is used to plant non food crops such as cotton, tobacco, sugar cane, cocoa and food flavour cum oil extractant crops such as soya bean. Soya bean has been found to be the cause of extensive clearing of forest land in South America. Used as a fodder and oil extractant, it requires more than four hectares to produce the same amount of oil extracted from every hectare of oil palm land. In other words for every one hectare of oil palm land you need more than four hectares of land to produce a similar amount of oil from soya bean. So extensive is the use of land and machinery in cultivating this crop in Brazil that vast areas of land in the Matto Grasso and Para districts has been cleared to plant this crop. What was once a thriving ecosystem supporting more than 300 tree species per hectare has been destroyed with the conversion into soya bean farms. The whole process of the cultivation of the soya bean crop from planting to harvesting is fully mechanised and the use of sophisticated machineries causes severe damage to the top soil and the environment. In the past three years nearly 70,000 hectares of primary rainforest has been destroyed to plant the crop. Big earth movers are sent into the jungle to bulldoze the forest trees and then the logs are dumped into pits and burnt. The trunks take weeks to burn and the smoke smoulder for months causing environmental pollution. Brazil produced more than 50 millions of soya in an area of about 23 million hectares and has overtaken the US as the leading producer of soya bean. (Source: Common Dreams. Org. July, 2006)

On the other hand, tree crops cause minimum damage to the environment through the minimal use of machines. Limited usage of mechanical equipments is one of the reasons for tree crops means less pollution to the environment. The most common piece of machinery used is the farm tractor, utilised mainly for the transportation of planting materials and harvested crops. Thus, there is no continuous use of machinery such as those used in annual crops which is heavily utilised through the entire cultivation process.

Another key factor to note is that tree crops have a lifespan ranging from 15 to 25 years thus causing minimum disruption to the soil surface. Once planting has been carried out, the soil is not tilled again until the next planting. In the case of oil palm, replanting is carried out only every 25 years giving the soil ample time to rejuvenate. Within this period, microorganisms that enrich the soil are able to reestablished. Apart from that, minimum disruption to the soil means other organisms such as earthworms and insects are allowed to breed and there is a continuous process of soil enrichment which does not occur with annual crops.

With environmental friendly approaches such as ‘zero burning’, oil palms are felled, mechanically shredded and left to decompose in the soil. By avoiding open burning, there is little disruption to the top soil and microorganisms thus helping to maintain the soil fertility. Oil palms and other tree crops also provide ample space for flora and fauna to flourish during the establishment and subsequent stages of growth of the trees. Compared to other oil producing crops, a hectare of oil palm produces 10 times more oil than other crops and an average yield of between 4- 5 tonnes of crude palm oil per hectare makes oil palms the most efficient oil bearing crop and the most efficient crop in the world.

In conclusion, Deforestation Watch (http://www.deforestationwatch.org) has found that tree crops such as oil palm plantations are 'perrenial’, providing more biodiversity and are more environmentally friendly when compared to annual crops such as soya bean. Thus, agriculturists and environmentalists normally show a predilection for and embrace tree crops and plant these whenever possible. THE END.


 

Companion Planting for a Healthier Garden

Jason Anderson 2007-12-18
Title: Companion Planting for a Healthier Garden
Is your garden overrun with pest insects? Are your plants not growing as well as you would like? Do you want to increase the yield of your vegetables? Then companion planting may be just what you are looking for.

Companion planting is an easy-to-use method that can help plants grow larger and healthier. It's extremely popular in organic gardening, since you don't need to buy or use any chemicals on your plants to reap the benefits. But even if you don't practice organic gardening, you can still use the same methods to get happier plants and larger crops.

The idea of companion planting is extremely simple. Certain combinations of plants, when planted next to each other, will improve the growth of one or both of the plants. This can be due to the effect one of the plants has on the soil, by attracting beneficial insects to the area (for example, attracting pollinators like bees), or even by repelling pests.

There are many plant combinations that work well together. One combination that dates back many centuries (it was originally used by Native Americans) is known by the nickname of "The Three Sisters". This involves planting corn, beans and squash together in the same area. The corn provides a structure for the beans to grow up. The beans fix nitrogen in the soil, which helps the corn and squash grow. The squash performs triple duty – it provides a ground cover that restricts the growth of weeds, it helps keep moisture in the soil by acting as a living mulch, and the prickly hairs of it's vines deter pests.

But just as some plants benefit from being planted next to each other, others hate being next to each other. Planting them together can make one or both of the plants grow much slower, and potentially reduce their yield. For example tomatoes hate growing near potatoes or corn. Strangely enough, this hatred doesn't always go both ways. While corn also hates growing next to tomatoes, potatoes don't care if they are planted next to either vegetable (and in fact like being near corn).

Companion planting is an extremely simple idea that improves growth in your plants, but requires no extra work after planting your crops. Why don't you try it the next time you plant out your garden?

Jason Anderson invites you to find out more about companion planting and how it can make your garden grow faster, healthier and produce larger crops than you ever thought possible.


 

Flash Freezing Vegetables

Cae Besaw 2007-09-01
Title: Flash Freezing Vegetables
Flash freezing vegetables provides you with essential nutrients and saves you time.

Purchasing frozen vegetables is becoming increasingly popular. Many farmers are starting to flash freeze their crops as soon as they are harvested. This method not only benefits the consumer but the farmer as well. Frozen vegetables are full of vital nutrients. When you cook with frozen vegetables it cuts food preparation time in half and leaves you more time to do the things you want.

Several farmers are starting to flash freeze their crops once they are ready. This action preserves the vegetables in their original form and leaves all of the vegetables nutrients in tact. If you don’t flash freeze your crop then you must sell the produce almost instantly or it will go bad and you will not make as large of a profit. The revenue that is made when you have the ability to flash freeze your product is extremely higher than if you were to just sell your harvest locally.

Frozen vegetables still have all of the same nutrients that they would have if prepared fresh. They are literally frozen right after they are picked so there are no additives in the frozen goods. They go straight from the field to the freezer and stay in the freezer until they are purchased. There is no better way to preserve the vegetables. If you purchase canned vegetables there will be added sulphites and you will then be eating unnecessary extra sodium.

When you work full time and often stay late at work you don’t have a lot of time to cook health conscious meals. Frozen vegetables are ready in minutes and have your wellbeing in mind. You can prepare any type of meal you want with frozen vegetables and it saves you the time you would normally be spending on cleaning, cutting and preparing the food to be made. Frozen foods are ideal for anyone who does not have a lot of time but wants to make a nutritious meal for their family.

Frozen prepared vegetables are progressively more popular now than they were ten years ago. Farmers that flash freeze their crops are benefiting the consumer and themselves. The second best method to getting all of your nutrients next to eating them freshly picked is to buy them frozen. The cooking time for frozen vegetables makes food preparation easier for anyone in this busy world.

Freezer Labels


 

Selection and Initiation

Tina Montalto 2007-03-03
Title: Selection and Initiation
We can think of our developing consciousness using the metaphor of the seasons. For example, with Spring, we can focus on the idea of new beginnings, new growth and planting.

Spring is the season when the crops are planted. The soil is receptive to new seeds, and the sun shines more hours per day, sharing its life-giving energy.

This can be the Spring for planting new kernels in our consciousness. Planting is the first step in harvesting. What you sow, so shall you reap.

What seed-thoughts are you planting in order to harvest your desires?

When we plant our seed-thoughts, we are using our conscious mind. We have both a conscious and a subconscious mind. The subconscious mind does not think for itself. It must take what we give it to work with. The subconscious mind contains our automatic beliefs and feelings that we are largely unaware of. The subconscious uses these automatic beliefs in an unending cycle until WE plant different thoughts and beliefs into it. (That explains why we may seem to be in repeating pattern of money troubles or failed relationships.)

The subconscious mind can only receive. The conscious mind, however, has the power of Selection and Initiation. (Emmet Fox calls it Clarity and Interest.) And as we think about planting new seeds in this season of Spring, keep in mind this concept of Selection and Initiation.

Selection is the power to think whatever we want, whenever we want. No one governs our thoughts but us. No one thinks for us. Whether we realize it or not, we select every single thought we think. Now we may have the same habitual thought, over and over. But we were the ones to select that thought for the very first time. After that, we just let our subconscious keep that thought alive and creating our experiences. We have become accepting and numb and unconscious to that thought.

If we want to live consciously, we take back our awareness and shake off the numbness. We select new thoughts with INTENTION. We select thoughts that are good for us; thoughts that make us healthy, happy, loving, wealthy. Only our conscious mind can select a new thought.

Secondly, we must initiate that new thought. Let's say we have a desire to change things at work. There have been some rough patches, and now we want things to be different. We have selected a new thought: "I am a success in my work." (Notice the use of the "I am". See last month's issue.) With this thought, we have taken the first step in breaking the subconscious pattern of problems at work. Great! Now what? We must initiate that new thought.

Initiation is like giving momentum to your thought. With selection, it just sits there. With initiation, you give it a gentle, kind shove in the right direction. To initiate the new thought of "I am a success in my work," you may decide to notice more of the "little" successes you have at work. You may take notice of a problem you solved that troubled you or a co-worker. You may take more pride in your work. You may put more effort into a job well done instead of just doing what you can get by with. You may start broadening your very definition of success. You may support your new thought with other thoughts and feelings of being really good at your job; of, dare I say, liking your job. You build upon and build upon your original selection. This is how you create a new consciousness for something.

And at some point in this process, there will be an acceptance that you are a success before you even see evidence of that. You have created the success in your mind, which is exactly where it needs to be created. At that point, you can relax. You have planted the seed. Don't go digging it up to see if roots have formed! Continue to water with supportive thoughts and feelings, but let the Law of the Universe take care of the sprouting and growth.

"Do not be conformed to this world, but be ye transformed by the renewing of your mind." -- Romans 12:2

You will reap what you have sowed. Sow something wonderful!


 

Transgenic soybean crops decrease costs, increase income in Brazil

Ranjana Smetacek 2008-03-13
Title: Transgenic soybean crops decrease costs, increase income in Brazil
In 2006, farmers in Brazil were the third largest adopter of biotech crops globally – planting more than 28 million acres (11.5 million hectares) of transgenic soybean crops. A primary reasons for the broad adoption of the technology within Brazil has been the significant impact transgenic soybeans have had on farm income levels and the technology’s fit within no-till operations.

“We saw transgenic soy as the solution – as the factor that would make it possible to keep farming. Otherwise, we would not be here,” says Waldir José Mingotti, a husband and father of two, who farms 1,875 acres (750 hectares) with his brother in Tupanciretã.

After adopting no-till farming in the 1990s to solve problems with soil erosion, Mingotti notes that they had increased difficulty controlling weeds that previously would have been controlled by plowing. “For each kind of weed that competed with soy, we needed a different herbicide. So you can imagine having 10 weeds – and, for each kind, having to use a different chemical group to control that weed. … It was a nightmare. It became very hard to farm.”

With no-till farming, farmers leave the stubble or plant residue on the soil’s surface, rather than plowing or tilling it into the soil. The new crop is planted directly into this stubble, and growers must use herbicides to control weeds as they emerge and fight with the crop for nutrients and sunlight. Transgenic herbicide-tolerant soybeans make it simpler and most economical to control weeds in the crop with fewer herbicides on an as needed basis.

“Before, we would spend 14-15 hours a day in the fields checking and trying to control weeds,” Mingotti explains. “Nowadays, it’s possible to plan in advance for weed and disease control. It’s amazing. With transgenic soy, we just plant and never have to worry about weeds.”

Research conducted by Brookes and Barfoot indicates that the net savings on herbicide costs has been larger in Brazil than in other world areas due to the high average costs of weed control in Brazil. They report that the average cost savings from reduced herbicide use, fewer spray runs, labor and machinery – after accounting for the cost using the transgenic soybean technology – was between $35/ha and $88/ha in the period 2003-2005. Overall, the adoption of transgenic soybeans increased farm income levels in Brazil by $538 million in 2005. Cumulatively, over the period 1997 to 2005, farm incomes rose $1,367 million.

“… only a few would have continued with agriculture and food production in the way we did before. Thank God we have people, scientists, who devote themselves … to introduce – in a plant, in a crop, in a seed – a new gene that makes it possible for us to believe and produce,” says Mingotti. “I support that we pay for that and keep encouraging scientists who are researching and developing new technologies, … because even though transgenic soy solved a problem for us, there may come new problems in the future.”

© 2008 Monsanto Company. All rights reserved. The copyright holder consents to the use of this material and the images in the published context only and solely for the purpose of promoting the benefits of agricultural biotechnology.

 

Tree Crops Vs. Annual Crops

Simon Chambers 2008-03-04
Title: Tree Crops Vs. Annual Crops
Agriculturists are often asked if tree crops such as pine, fruit trees, rubber and oil palm or annual crops such as wheat, maize, rice or soya bean are friendlier for the environment. This article will explore the merits and demerits of planting tree crops or annual crops vis a vis its environmental impact.

One of the major contributors to environmental damage during the planting of annual crops is the heavy usage of machineries in all aspects of cultivation of the crops. There is significant use of mechanisation from seed planting to the harvesting and threshing of the crop. Early in the 19th century, a farmer could produce food for 2.5 people and by 1999 due to advances in agricultural technology, a single farmer could feed over 130 people. Modern harvesters such as combined harvesters and planters are extensively used in the planting of various crops in most parts of the world. While mechanisation increases productivity and lowers the cost of production, it also contributes towards environmental destruction. Most of these machineries are bulky and as they move around the fields, they bring destruction to the top soil causing destruction to the microorganisms found in the soil.

Soil is a favourable habitat for microorganisms and is inhabited by a wide range of microorganisms including bacteria, fungi, algae, viruses and protozoa. Microorganisms are found in large numbers in soil; usually between one and ten million microorganisms are present in each gram of soil and with bacteria and fungi being the most prevalent. Apart from that, soil organisms are very important as almost every chemical action and reaction that takes place in soil involves active contributions from soil microorganisms.

They play an active role in enhancing soil fertility by assisting with the recycling of nutrients such as carbon and nitrogen which is essential for plant growth. Microorganisms also help with the decomposition of organic matter in soil into nutrients. An example would be nitrogen fixing bacteria transforming nitrogen gas present in the soil into soluble nitrate compounds which enrich the soil and is absorbed by the plant. Other soil microorganisms produce hormones that can improve plant health and contribute towards higher yield. Microorganisms are influenced by the nature, properties and arrangement of soil particles. They also modify soil particles and their arrangements. Microbial life in soil is also indirectly influenced by surface interactions. Some microorganisms also burrow into and churn up the soil which improves soil structure and aggregation. Microorganisms have the ability to protect plants from antagonistic pathogens as some can dissolve minerals and provide nutrients in dissolved mineral form to plants. Apart from microorganisms, there are also earthworms that take in dead organic matters from soil, ingest it, excrete the nutrient rich casts in the soil and help to improve aeration, water infiltration, drainage and enhance nutrient availability and cycling. These microorganisms and earthworms which enrich the soil are usually killed by the use of machineries and continued use of machineries in the field do not enable these microorganisms to be re-established.

Another factor to be considered for annual crops is the current practice of double or even triple cropping per year which causes continuous damage to the top soil without providing opportunity for the soil to rejuvenate. Over-tilling and over-ploughing soil destroys natural soil structure with decreased soil pore

size, breakdowns in soil aggregates and decreased pore space which curbs good air and water flow. Continuous use of heavy machinery causes soil compaction which makes it difficult for microorganisms, earthworms and small insects to breed. This also results in poor internal drainage, creates possible run off, inhibits root development and breeds unhealthy plants. Soil compaction also causes water that enters the surface of the soil to be perched on the sub surface of the soil, saturating and ponding the surface of the soil while by right it should have permeated into the soil. Thus soil compaction has a destructive effect on the soil and the environment.

Smoke from these machineries also pollutes the air which is not only detrimental to health but causes chemical pollution of the crops in the form of acid rain. Apart from that, pollution caused by these machineries causes depletion of the ozone layer. In some underdeveloped countries, the stalks of annual crops are burnt after the crop has been harvested, which releases carbon dioxide into the atmosphere. The natural biodiversity of plants, animals and microbes function in many ways to enhance the quality of life enjoyed by the human beings. But in the process of providing food for the human beings, biodiversity has taken a back seat. In the case of rice, vast areas of wetlands have been drained to plant rice which upsets the pre-existing biodiversity. The same goes to vast tracts of land in North and South America where prairies have gradually been converted into field growing crops such as wheat and maize. The conversion of these areas have totally eradicated some indigenous plants and animals. The wild population of the American bisons that inhabited the prairies were practically eradicated in the process of establishing large farms to grow wheat to feed the American population. Historically they ranged across half of North America and numbered in the millions before being reduced to a countable number within a period of two centuries. Their habitat which were the grassland and meadows that were the former prairies have made them an endangered breed of animals. Establishing such farms did not just upset the ecosystems that had been in place there but also caused a gradual extinction of a breed of animal that is part of the American history.

How land is used to produce food can have an enormous effect on the environment and its sustainability. Environmental groups in the United States have mounted attacks on fast food chains such as Kentucky Fried Chicken (KFC) and Pizza Hut because of the adverse effects these organisations have created in the food production chain in the country. Intensive breeding of livestock and poultry for the restaurants have resulted in deforestation in countries such as Brazil, land degradation, and the contamination of water and other natural resources. For every pound of red meat, poultry, eggs and milk produced, farms fields in these countries lose about five pounds of top soil of their field. The water used for meat breeding comes to about 190 gallons per animal per day or ten times of that used by an average family. Overall, animal farms use about 40% of the world’s total production of grain and nearly 50% of the grain production in United States goes towards feeding livestock, not hungry mouths elsewhere in the world. (Source: South End Press, 2000). The demand for these crops are so great that genetically modified (GM) food crops are planted in some developed countries to meet the demand for them. While the peril of genetically modified crops are yet to be seen in the long term, there is already strong resistance from some Western NGOs and protests have been mounted against planting and exporting of GM crops. New concepts such as industrial agriculture have also been mooted so that production of food crops can be enhanced to meet demand for such food products. Planting of food crops is no longer considered essential farming but is increasingly viewed as production of a commodity to meet the demands of customers such KFC and Pizza Hut.

Much of the best agricultural land in the world is used to plant non food crops such as cotton, tobacco, sugar cane, cocoa and food flavour cum oil extractant crops such as soya bean. Soya bean has been found to be the cause of extensive clearing of forest land in South America. Used as a fodder and oil extractant, it requires more than four hectares to produce the same amount of oil extracted from every hectare of oil palm land. In other words for every one hectare of oil palm land you need more than four hectares of land to produce a similar amount of oil from soya bean. So extensive is the use of land and machinery in cultivating this crop in Brazil that vast areas of land in the Matto Grasso and Para districts has been cleared to plant this crop. What was once a thriving ecosystem supporting more than 300 tree species per hectare has been destroyed with the conversion into soya bean farms. The whole process of the cultivation of the soya bean crop from planting to harvesting is fully mechanised and the use of sophisticated machineries causes severe damage to the top soil and the environment. In the past three years nearly 70,000 hectares of primary rainforest has been destroyed to plant the crop. Big earth movers are sent into the jungle to bulldoze the forest trees and then the logs are dumped into pits and burnt. The trunks take weeks to burn and the smoke smoulder for months causing environmental pollution. Brazil produced more than 50 millions of soya in an area of about 23 million hectares and has overtaken the US as the leading producer of soya bean. (Source: Common Dreams. Org. July, 2006)

On the other hand, tree crops cause minimum damage to the environment through the minimal use of machines. Limited usage of mechanical equipments is one of the reasons for tree crops means less pollution to the environment. The most common piece of machinery used is the farm tractor, utilised mainly for the transportation of planting materials and harvested crops. Thus, there is no continuous use of machinery such as those used in annual crops which is heavily utilised through the entire cultivation process.

Another key factor to note is that tree crops have a lifespan ranging from 15 to 25 years thus causing minimum disruption to the soil surface. Once planting has been carried out, the soil is not tilled again until the next planting. In the case of oil palm, replanting is carried out only every 25 years giving the soil ample time to rejuvenate. Within this period, microorganisms that enrich the soil are able to reestablished. Apart from that, minimum disruption to the soil means other organisms such as earthworms and insects are allowed to breed and there is a continuous process of soil enrichment which does not occur with annual crops.

With environmental friendly approaches such as ‘zero burning’, oil palms are felled, mechanically shredded and left to decompose in the soil. By avoiding open burning, there is little disruption to the top soil and microorganisms thus helping to maintain the soil fertility. Oil palms and other tree crops also provide ample space for flora and fauna to flourish during the establishment and subsequent stages of growth of the trees. Compared to other oil producing crops, a hectare of oil palm produces 10 times more oil than other crops and an average yield of between 4- 5 tonnes of crude palm oil per hectare makes oil palms the most efficient oil bearing crop and the most efficient crop in the world.

In conclusion, Deforestation Watch (http://www.deforestationwatch.org) has found that tree crops such as oil palm plantations are 'perrenial’, providing more biodiversity and are more environmentally friendly when compared to annual crops such as soya bean. Thus, agriculturists and environmentalists normally show a predilection for and embrace tree crops and plant these whenever possible. THE END.

 

Outdoor Planters – Perfect For Adding More Planting Space

2007-11-07
Title: Outdoor Planters – Perfect For Adding More Planting Space
In the summer time, planting fanatics are in their glory. Why? Well, because it’s the prime planting season, perfect for growing flowers, trees, vegetables, and herb gardens. However, if you’re a planter and you run out of room, then what do you do? Instead of throwing in the towel, turn to lovely outdoor planters to give you more planting space.

Outdoor planters are perfect for planting almost anything that you want because they come in all shapes, styles, and sizes. For example, you can get ones that are smaller in size and are in the shape of a vase, which would be ideal for growing flowers and placing in the corner of a deck or on both sides of your front door to create a dramatic entrance to your home. Another nice option are ones that are long and rectangular. These are perfect for planting bigger items like trees and vegetable gardens. You could even use a few to separate different areas of your outdoor space, like your patio from your lawn or your neighbor’s backyard from your backyard. To do it, just place a few between the two different areas and you are good to go.

In addition to the vase and rectangular shaped options, there are many other outdoor planters available as well. Some of those options include ones designed to be placed on your window sills, others that are v-shaped, some that are simply square or round, and there are even ones that are triangle shaped. With all the choices, you are sure to come across something perfect for what you want to plant.

When purchasing outdoor planters, the main thing that you need to keep in mind is to go with ones that are crafted out of materials that are of top quality. This is important because if you go with something cheap, then you are going to end up having to replace them since they won’t be able to handle being left in the elements. So, go with something that will last and some of the better options include sturdier woods like redwood, shorea, and teak along with other selections like stone, marble, and the synthetic plastic and recycled polymer choices. Each is very durable, plus they all have a fantastic look to them and would really enhance the appearance of any setting they are placed in.

Now, the easiest way to browse the different outdoor planters that you could get for your space is by not going to your local garden center. Instead, just plunk yourself down in front of your computer and do a little online shopping. Just by the click of the mouse you can see the many selections, plus, when you do find something you like, it’s usually at the most reasonable prices around. It will even be shipped to your home, so you don’t have to worry about getting it from here to there.

With outdoor planters, you just get some nice spots to plant different things. So, if you have run out of planting room, they’re a great option for giving you more.

 

Planting A Vegetable Garden Reaps Hidden Health Benefits

Laurence Ireland 2007-12-18
Title: Planting A Vegetable Garden Reaps Hidden Health Benefits

Planting a vegetable garden is a healthy way to relieve stress, eat healthier and safer - because you control what goes on your vegetables, provide better nutrition to your family with fresh vegetables, and get some exercise while enjoying the warm sun and environment.

You can challenge your creative side by laying out your vegetable garden so that your space looks great. Whether you have a huge area for a vegetable garden, a small area, or just a deck or patio by being creative you can use your space optimally. There is nothing more satisfying than growing your own vegetables in your own vegetable garden without the use of pesticides or chemicals, keeping you and your family that much healthier.

Planting a vegetable garden will promote good health and give you some nice gentle exercise. By planting and tending to your garden you control what you eat as well as how it is grown plus it just doesn’t getting any fresher than this.

Even apartment or flat dwellers can produce a nice size vegetable garden on their balconies. Most developments will allow flower box size gardens just pay attention to the weight. Remember a vegetable garden box 15cm(6") wide by 60cm(24") can weigh as much as 27Kg(60lbs) when wet from the rain so you do not want to hang it over the balcony for fear of it breaking loose and falling. Instead, secure it to the top of the ledge or on the balcony floor. You can also invest in brackets that will take the weight. That way you don’t have to worry about anyone getting hurt below if it falls.

Planting a vegetable garden outside will give you more exercise than you might realise and the good news is that it’s a nice gentle exercise so just about anyone can do it. All that planting, raking, pulling weeds, and watering so that your plants grow and produce delicious vegetables from your vegetable garden, provides you with an excellent low impact workout.

Starting a vegetable garden can be a little tougher and produce a little more exercise - but hey!... that`s not a bad thing - is it?. You will need to prepare the soil for planting. Besides removing weeds and debris from your vegetable garden to be, you may need to have top soil or fertiliser brought in depending on the condition of the soil. Working the soil can give you quite a work out but you want it to be in optimum condition so that your vegetable garden is as healthy as possible.

You may need to frame your garden space so that the soil stays contained within your vegetable garden area and is easy to work on. If you are going to use a wood frame, do not use wood that has been treated with anything that can contaminate the soil. Framing your vegetable garden beds will also increase the depth of the soil giving better growing conditions for your plants.

When the soil is ready it’s time to start to plant out your vegetable garden. You will need to decide whether you want to use young vegetable plants or seeds. There are pros and cons to each. Young vegetable plants cost more but they give you the edge to get your plants rooted and growing. Seeds are cheaper but they may not all come up. Both are healthy so it’s really a personal choice.

Deciding to grow your own vegetables in your own vegetable garden is one of the smartest things you will ever do for you and your family. Not only are you going to get to enjoy some sunshine and thus get your vitamin D, you’ll get some exercise which these days we all can use a little more, and you are going to be feeding your family a lot healthier.

You’ll be feeding your family fresher fruits and vegetables that you get to control. You decide what fertilisers and pesticides are okay to use on your vegetable garden or whether you are going to do the smart thing and use natural products that will keep your family even healthier.

These days when we buy fresh vegetables at our grocery store or supermarket they often aren’t that fresh after spending days travelling. On top of that, too often they are picked too early which reduces the amount of nutrients you get. With your own vegetable garden, it just can't get any fresher and there is no need to pick early. There’s nothing like a fresh salad or a tomato picked right off the vine.

Planting a vegetable garden is going to give you good health in more ways than one - you will get a little exercise, excellent nutrition, chemical free vegetables, and you can spend a little time outdoors soaking up the nutrients the sun has to offer.


 

Spring Planting For Our Minds

Tina Montalto 2006-04-22
Title: Spring Planting For Our Minds

With the arrival of Spring, we focus on the idea of new beginnings, new growth and planting.

Spring is the season when the crops are planted. The soil is receptive to new seeds, and the sun shines more hours per day, sharing its life-giving energy.

Now is the time for us to plant new kernels in our consciousness. Planting is the first step in harvesting. What you sow, so shall you reap.

What seed-thoughts are you planting in order to harvest your desires?

When we plant our seed-thoughts, we are using our conscious mind. We have both a conscious and a subconscious mind. The subconscious mind does not think for itself. It must take what we give it to work with. The subconscious mind contains our automatic beliefs and feelings that we are largely unaware of. The subconscious uses these automatic beliefs in an unending cycle until WE plant different thoughts and beliefs into it. (That explains why we may seem to be in repeating pattern of money troubles or failed relationships.)

The subconscious mind can only receive. The conscious mind, however, has the power of Selection and Initiation. (Emmet Fox calls it Clarity and Interest.) And as we think about planting new seeds in this season of Spring, keep in mind this concept of Selection and Initiation.

Selection is the power to think whatever we want, whenever we want. No one governs our thoughts but us. No one thinks for us. Whether we realize it or not, we select every single thought we think. Now we may have the same habitual thought, over and over. But we were the ones to select that thought for the very first time. After that, we just let our subconscious keep that thought alive and creating our experiences. We have become accepting and numb and unconscious to that thought.

If we want to live consciously, we take back our awareness and shake off the numbness. We select new thoughts with INTENTION. We select thoughts that are good for us; thoughts that make us healthy, happy, loving, wealthy. Only our conscious mind can select a new thought.

Secondly, we must initiate that new thought. Let's say we have a desire to change things at work. There have been some rough patches, and now we want things to be different. We have selected a new thought: "I am a success in my work." (Notice the use of the "I am".) With this thought, we have taken the first step in breaking the subconscious pattern of problems at work.

Great! Now what? We must initiate that new thought.

Initiation is like giving momentum to your thought. With selection, it just sits there. With initiation, you give it a gentle, kind shove in the right direction. To initiate the new thought of "I am a success in my work," you may decide to notice more of the "little" successes you have at work. You may take notice of a problem you solved that troubled you or a co-worker. You may take more pride in your work. You may put more effort into a job well done instead of just doing what you can get by with. You may start broadening your very definition of success. You may support your new thought with other thoughts and feelings of being really good at your job; of, dare I say, liking your job. You build upon and build upon your original selection. This is how you create a new consciousness for something.

And at some point in this process, there will be an acceptance that you are a success before you even see evidence of that. You have created the success in your mind, which is exactly where it needs to be created. At that point, you can relax. You have planted the seed. Don't go digging it up to see if roots have formed! Continue to water with supportive thoughts and feelings, but let the Law of the Universe take care of the sprouting and growth.

"Do not be conformed to this world, but be ye transformed by the renewing of your mind." -- Romans 12:2

You will reap what you have sowed. Sow something wonderful!


 

Outdoor Planters - Perfect For Adding More Planting Space

Jesse Akre 2007-11-07
Title: Outdoor Planters - Perfect For Adding More Planting Space

In the summer time, planting fanatics are in their glory. Why? Well, because it's the prime planting season, perfect for growing flowers, trees, vegetables, and herb gardens. However, if you're a planter and you run out of room, then what do you do? Instead of throwing in the towel, turn to lovely outdoor planters to give you more planting space.

Outdoor planters are perfect for planting almost anything that you want because they come in all shapes, styles, and sizes. For example, you can get ones that are smaller in size and are in the shape of a vase, which would be ideal for growing flowers and placing in the corner of a deck or on both sides of your front door to create a dramatic entrance to your home. Another nice option are ones that are long and rectangular. These are perfect for planting bigger items like trees and vegetable gardens. You could even use a few to separate different areas of your outdoor space, like your patio from your lawn or your neighbor's backyard from your backyard. To do it, just place a few between the two different areas and you are good to go.

In addition to the vase and rectangular shaped options, there are many other outdoor planters available as well. Some of those options include ones designed to be placed on your window sills, others that are v-shaped, some that are simply square or round, and there are even ones that are triangle shaped. With all the choices, you are sure to come across something perfect for what you want to plant.

When purchasing outdoor planters, the main thing that you need to keep in mind is to go with ones that are crafted out of materials that are of top quality. This is important because if you go with something cheap, then you are going to end up having to replace them since they won't be able to handle being left in the elements. So, go with something that will last and some of the better options include sturdier woods like redwood, shorea, and teak along with other selections like stone, marble, and the synthetic plastic and recycled polymer choices. Each is very durable, plus they all have a fantastic look to them and would really enhance the appearance of any setting they are placed in.

Now, the easiest way to browse the different outdoor planters that you could get for your space is by not going to your local garden center. Instead, just plunk yourself down in front of your computer and do a little online shopping. Just by the click of the mouse you can see the many selections, plus, when you do find something you like, it's usually at the most reasonable prices around. It will even be shipped to your home, so you don't have to worry about getting it from here to there.

With outdoor planters, you just get some nice spots to plant different things. So, if you have run out of planting room, they're a great option for giving you more.



 
 

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