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Science/Tech
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Title: Weeds Control Without Poisons
Source: ACRES USA
URL Source: http://acresusa.com
Published: Jun 9, 2007
Author: Charles Walters
Post Date: 2007-06-09 17:59:53 by richard9151
Keywords: None
Views: 1247
Comments: 158

Charles Walters, founder and long-time editor of ACRES USA, the monthly journal of eco-agriculture, has revised and expanded his now classic text on the secrets that weeds reveal to us about our soil. For a thorough undersanding of the conditions that produce certain weeds, you simply can't find a better source than this one -- certainly not one as entertaining, as full of anecdotes and home-spun common sense.

The book is a treasury of knowledge, exploring the workings of soil eco-systems through the findings of such giants as William A. Albrecht, C.J. Fenzau and Philip S. Callahan. It contains a lifetime of collected wisdom that teaches us how to udnerstand and thereby control the growth of countless weed species, as well as why there is an absolute necessity for a more holistic, eco-centered perspective in agricultrue today.

In Weeds, Control Without Poisons, Walters explains what fifty years of deadly chemicals have done to our soils and our bodies, demonstrating once and for all that the stuff simply doen't workl in any long-term, coomon-sense agricultural system. He goes on to tell us what will work, and he tells it with precision and clarity in a book as full of human warmth as sound soil science. Charles Walters is the author of dozens of books and thousands of articles on the technologies of eco-agriculture.

In this book learn;

What do weeds tell us about the soil?

What can you do about row-crop weeds?

Is there any role for herbicides in agriculture?


We do not inherit the earth from our ancestors, we borrow it from our children. Native American Proverb


FOR THE RECORD

The so-called conventional agricultural system of the United States is falling apart at the seams. Its intellectual advisers in the univesity hardly know what is going on in the countryside. Their advice has created extensive soil erosion, universal environmental contamination, and a degeneration of the health of almost every living species on this planet. Public outcry is growing in proportion to its awareness. Politicians are mocking their shared concern in order to sway votes. Legislation to curb or banish the current agricultrual system of toxic warfare on man and nature is becoming more plentiful. Caught in the middle of this political football is the farmer. One by one, his toxic crutches are being eliminated from the market. He is told that he must farm without these ''magic bullets'' which he has become so accustomed to using. This use has been sanctified by constant insistence of the USDA, land grant universities, and Extension personnel. Now, however, he is being told by the politicians that he cannot use these materials anymore, but is not being told by the lords of agriculture what to do or what to use in their place.

The farmer feels lost and frustrated. And he is lost and frustrated until he realizes that the solution to his dilemma rests with his own intuition and common sense. Farming is not a desk job nor the work of a laboratory technician. It is a natural experience. It is an understanding and appreciation for all life on this planet. It is an attitude of living, of peaceful coexistence, not an atitude of kill or be killed or of constant conflict.

The first step in builkding a system without toxic chemical war games with nature is to change your attitude. Become a farmer rather than a miner of the soil. Decide to leave the farm in a better condition when you depart than it was last year or when you started farming. Decide to accept responsibility for the health of this county, yourself, and your family.

Weeds, Control Without Poisons is an original, even though it leans on the scholarship of many in the identification of weeds. It does not pretend to have all the answers, yet it has furnished a beginning in asking the right questions. Many minor weeds still have still to be evaluated, and there can be no doubt tat answers will be forthcoming. As far as the major crop weeds are concerned, this book hints, then sledgehammers the answers into place.

Weed manuals since WWII have simply identified weeds, the implication or actual direction being that use of this or that poison is the only rational advice. Charles Walters questions this, and he has used most of his jounalistic career to gather in support for dealing with weeds without poisons. Hopefully, this little book will be a turning point away from our rush toward perdition.

Arden Andersen, author of The Anatomy of Life and Energy in Agriculture and Science in Agriculture


PREFACE

Some few years ago, I tripped to Houston, Texas and environs for the purpose of visiting a rice producer who, once upon a time, knew my old mentor, William A. Albrecht, then emeritus professor, Department of Soils, University of Missouri. This rice grower had a small plane on his farm for the purpose of monitoring his crop -- and, not least, the weeds. He had a small laboratory on his farm because he had been trained to compound things like DDT, and -- also once upoin a time -- he chest-thumped this fact to the good professor Albrecht, adding that ''this stuff works.''

Albrecht responded, 'Yes, it works today and it will probably work ten years from now.' And with that Albrecht shot a finger into the rice grower's chest. 'But ten years from now you won't know where it is!' Much of the toxic genetic chemistry spilled into agriculture over the past several decades is still out there. I know where some of it is. Richard L. Penny is an Iowa scientist who spent several years at the U.S. South Pole station. He took the biopsy specimens that revealed DDT in the fatty tissue of all the examined penguins. Appartently this toxin has established itself in the migratory food chain that travels to the South Pole and back. .....


This is an excellent book, and I recommend it for everyone that has any interest in understanding food, and how it affects our lives. There can be no doubt, after you read it, that America has been on a very dangerous path for a long time, and, it is time to correct that path, RIGHT NOW!

As an example of what this book shows; Redroot pigweed ... best possible laboratory analysis for phosphate availablility on a daily meal basis.

... quackgrass ... have herbal properties useful in treating urinary disorders. Decay systems are at fault when this weed appears. Excess aluminum also is a problem for the crop, albeit nor for quackgrass which can live with it.

And on and on through countless different weeds, using them as a teaching tool to learn what the soil is lacking, or, has to much of. Amazing the knowledge that we should be using can be this simple.....

And this book is much more than that as well. It is a look at farm life, and at OUR responsibilities, as we furnish the power behind those who grow things for us through the decisions that we make on a daily basis.

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Begin Trace Mode for Comment # 54.

#2. To: richard9151 (#0)

Thanks.

We took the "easy way out" with big chem, and now we're reaping the deadly harvest.

Lod  posted on  2007-06-09   18:09:04 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#4. To: lodwick (#2)

We took the "easy way out" with big chem, and now we're reaping the deadly harvest.

You would be very hungry were it not for Big Chem...or the world population...mainly third world....would be one quarter what it is.

Take your pick and provide a solution other than Malthusian.

JCHarris  posted on  2007-06-09   18:19:03 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#25. To: JCHarris (#4)

You would be very hungry were it not for Big Chem

Gee, it's a wonder mankind survived for many thousands of years without Dow and Monsanto and pasteurized milk...

innieway  posted on  2007-06-09   19:46:34 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#50. To: innieway (#25)

Gee, it's a wonder mankind survived for many thousands of years without Dow and Monsanto and pasteurized milk...

Look at the population...

and for your information, the leading cause of death in the South 1865 until WWII was due to malnutrition.

Mankind? Life expectancy somewhere between 19 and 45 years for most of its history.

JCHarris  posted on  2007-06-10   1:44:19 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#54. To: JCHarris, innieway (#50)

Mankind? Life expectancy somewhere between 19 and 45 years for most of its history.

Do you really believe that? I have heard the same thing said about America prior to 'whenever,' however, if you bother to read much of the info that has been published and which came directly from the jounals and records made by the people who settled America up to the time of the Civil War, you get a completely different picture.

Daniel Boone is a good example; he lived to 89. In fact, if you subtract out those who died from such mundane things as arrows, bullet and knife wounds etc., they had a life expectency not much different from ours.

Let us take it a step further; since 1900 (and the studies have been done), if you remove from the equation the gaines made in infant mortality rates, a man who reaches the age of 50 LIVES ON AVERAGE 6 MONTHS LONGER, TODAY, THAN THAT MAN'S GREAT-GRANDFATHER WOULD HAVE LIVED IF HE REACHED THE AGE OF 50 IN 1900.

That is the entire gain from toxic chemical farming and toxic chemical doctoring, which, of course, go hand in hand.

richard9151  posted on  2007-06-10   10:50:39 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


Replies to Comment # 54.

#58. To: richard9151 (#54)

Daniel Boone is a good example; he lived to 89

Apples and oranges

The maximum life span of man has not increased one day in the past 10,000, or more years. It is fixed at somewhere approaching 100 ( +/-10 ) years and is based on the cell division capability, i.e. hard-wired in.

The average life expectancy is now somewhere between 50 and 76 depending largely on infant mortality (subtract the zeros and the average zooms)but also death at childbirth and a man " wearing out" by 45 or 50.

The median life span of humans from say 1400 backwards ( and some 'natural Rousseauian noble savage' areas now) is somewhere between 40 and 60 years.

Three completely different concepts and three valid concepts to be used in evaluating current benefits and trends.

JCHarris  posted on  2007-06-10 12:47:08 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#125. To: richard9151, JCHarris (#54)

Daniel Boone is a good example; he lived to 89. In fact, if you subtract out those who died from such mundane things as arrows, bullet and knife wounds etc., they had a life expectency not much different from ours.

Looks like I asked my question too soon..

I did suspect that mortality rate reflected the large number of small children who died before modern times.

Diana  posted on  2007-06-10 19:12:48 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


End Trace Mode for Comment # 54.

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