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Farmer-Rick

(11,587 posts)
5. Those petroleum based fertilizers are destroying our rivers and oceans
Fri Feb 11, 2022, 02:47 PM
Feb 2022

They seep from the farm lands into the waterways.

Some of our GMO seeds are so delicate they need tons of nitrogen, excessive water and pesticides to grow. But there are other ways to get nitrogen into your soil. There are other plants or seeds that don't need constant watering. And some of the beneficial insects can control problem insects quite well. I've got chickens who are allowed to peck through the fields 4 months before planting. The eat the insect grubs and leave fertilizer.

Then I have live stock manure I carefully cultivate to fertilize the fields too. People think you can just put the manure on your field but that will burn and infect your plants. So, you have to let it dry out, preferably away from too much rain because the rain will leach out alot of nitrogen. But too much nitrogen will burn your plants. It's a careful balancing act.

When the farm was in full swing, I felt more like I was a fertilizer farmer than anything else.

I could never afford to buy fertilizer. Then when I had more money, I just felt I should use the fertilizer that was all around me.

It's just one less thing I have to buy for the farm. I guess old time farms did this. Raised livestock to fertilize the fields. Raised corn and managed grass fields to feed the livestock.

But you can't necessarily do it the old fashioned way. Older farmers use to till. I hardly till my fields unless I'm estbliing a new one. Older farmers use to just let the cattle out in to what ever land they had. I constantly rotate my pastures so that the animals don't overgraze. Just dividing your field in half can make a big difference in the quality of your pasture.

So it's a combination of old and new techniques. I don't know why corporations can't do it this way too? Why do they have to abuse animals and land to farm? But some farmers are coming around because consumers have show they are willing to pay more for better quality food.

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