Baby John is the farmer who owns 100 acres of land about 70 of which is already in various orchards. they have a sustainable agriculture history here in India which they have mainly abandoned in favor of the green revolution , monoculture and chemicals. On this farm all the orchards are monocropped trees, with some other fruit and neem and teak trees.
Author: Charlotte Anthony Page 1 of 3
Baby John is the farmer who owns 100 acres of land about 70 of which is already in various orchards. they have a sustainable agriculture history here in India which they have mainly abandoned in favor of the green revolution , monoculture and chemicals. On this farm all the orchards are monocropped trees, with some other fruit and neem and teak trees.
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in speaking with farmers here in tamil nadu, karnetaka, maharastra, and gourjarat, many of them are having to dig new bore wells every 2 years for a cost of more than 100,000 rupies. many of them will soon not be able to grow food.in my own studies all these years as well as by visiting and reading a vision of natural farming about bhaskar save, i feel i have a method to bring the water back.it includes1) lot of the methods you have used with bunds, reservoirs, check dams, gavions.2) stopping drip irrigation and using flood irrigation to return the moisture to the air3) plant a lot of fruit and nut trees as well as well as jack fruit etc. to have a tree cover probably at least 50%.meaning we will plant trees as if in a monoculture on at least 50 % if the land and then interplant with medicinal herbs, other trees, vegetables. the government of india is paying for farmers to plant trees both for the trees and for the labor and for the manure for them, but the farmers still do not want to plant trees because the yield is a lot less than from what they are planting. we plan to show them how to grow the medicinals and the vegetable interplants. moreover we will form a marketing cooperative, so that the plants not now marketed by them will be able to be sold. with these methods we believe we can not only raise the water table but increase farmers earnings. it is an important part of our program to encourage folks to grow their own food first.
4) plant on key lines (a permaculture technique) trees and plants such as clover which hold the water between monsoons. this method has been developed by me, rather than using a key line plow to plant on the keylines like a plant tractor.5) doing everything organically to save at lest 30% of the water.6) use open pollinated varieties tested in local regions in india, navdanya and vandanna shive are helping with this7) mulching at least one 3 x 3 x 3 feet heap every 30 feet in all the plants.8) hedgerows where among many other things predators of insects which damage plants can survive.
i am staying in my current digs for the meeting with the priest on the 9th who will help me with a tribal connection to see a tribal food forest. today i took a day trip. i noticed a lot of cutting down of the food forests, maybe 5%. i had been reading that folks are replacing their food forests for monoculture. it hurts me so much to see “our imperialism” spreading here to something which feels so whole, something that can feed folks for 7 and more generations. i thought it was only wars that we were exporting. we are also exporting all kinds of takerism (alla ishmail) there are chemical shops every block in all the villages that i see. i thought farmers were conservative, how are they embracing all these chemicals so easily. i guess for several years they give higher yields and then they need more pesticides and no one is counting those secondary costs. except of course when the farmer goes broke because it has been very easy to borrow the money from the banks and the land is repossessed by the bank. there are more than one million suicides here of such farmers. i also expect that a lot of land owners who are not the farmers are reading about enhanced production from the chemicals and embracing them because they do not understand the land.
i also got word back from the publishers of the book about bhuskar save. here is how to get the book if you want it for the best price they know how to do.
Dear Charlotte,
Thanks for your mail.
It’s so good to know that you liked The Vision of Natural Farming and would like other people to read it.
We do not have a tie-up with Amazon. But if we send in bulk, shipping would be considerably less.
Alternatively, individuals can pay by PayPal and we provide free shipping. The price per copy would be $16 and not $24.
We used to send books by SAL (Surface Air Lifted) earlier. But India Post does not do SAL any more.
If you know of any other arrangement that we can explore, please do let us know.
Thanking you,
With best wishes,
Vinita Mansata
Earthcare Books
10 Middleton Street
Kolkata 700071
India
Phone : +91-33-22296551 / 22276190
EMail : earthcarebooks@gmail.com
Website : www.earthcarebooks.com
meanwhile i want to set up a videographer for the indigenous food forest experience so i can put it on u tube, although i remember seeing geoff lawton’s u tube of a food forest in viet nam and it did not teach me much. just knowing it existed got me started and this is all coming from that.
i stopped many times and looked over the edge to see the plantations. these were very small. folks had made wellings (rock surrounds on the side of the river enclosing water) so they could pull water out. seems like they hand water when the plants are small and then no water, but i still cannot say for sure. these small holdings were very beautiful. river water stored in rocks, and then food forest with a small house. (many of the houses here are meant for 30 people but these were small, of course the holding would probably not support 30 people.)
just got word from my friend miguel who was staying at solitude farm which i reported on from auroville. miguel is the one who is working for an ngo up near mombai. he reported this from solitude farm:
“Yeah, in solitude farm there are some indian folks learning a lot and working/teaching/learning with krishna almost side by side, giving their opinions and collaborate towards the development of the farm. It was also good to see satya, one of the indian boys that work there, don’t know if you met him, he is a great painter and really passionate about his art, and alberto, a spanish volunteer working in solitude for a year (with academic background in art history) is giving some lessons. Feels quite a holistic place to live and grow when you see this closed loops of learning, alberto learning farming from satya, satya learning art history from alberto, both developing their passions and help other to develop their own. Quite nice to experience that ambiance.”
so again everything is connected and me feeling at times isolated and how could one person have any effect on any of this, am being shown windows of light and air which are good for humans as well as plants.