This is TOTAL BS. Organic Farming can increase yields by 60% or more per acre.
Organic Gardening and Mother Earth News Mags, can show anybody how it's done. When I lived at the old place My Organic Garden produced 5 Gal Buckets full of Tomatoes, Peppers, Squash, Beans, etc, every other day or so. I really miss my large Garden and the Aquaponics system. Fish and Food all in a 30 x 30 Green house all winter. I had Bumble Bee hive to pollinate in the winter.
That is one of the many things that Organic Gardening does for the soil.
Making & Adding Compost to the soil, Planting companion crops together, and many other best practices is what increase's the productivity.
J. I. Rodale is the father of organic farming and gardening. Started in the 1930's. His books are as relevant today, as they were back then.
Grow the Soil, and anything will grow in it...!
I heard something interesting that I planned on researching but forgot, until now.
The honey bee population decline? It's only seen in amateur/hobby beekeepers.
The general wild population and professional beekeeping world is just fine
The amateurs just don't have the skills you need to replicate natural environments.
Thoughts?
This is TOTAL BS. Organic Farming can increase yields by 60% or more per acre. Organic Gardening and Mother Earth News Mags, can show anybody how it's done. When I lived at the old place My Organic Garden produced 5 Gal Buckets full of Tomatoes, Peppers, Squash, Beans, etc, every other day or so. I really miss my large Garden and the Aquaponics system. Fish and Food all in a 30 x 30 Green house all winter. I had Bumble Bee hive to pollinate in the winter.
Truth-and organic farming tends to use crop rotation more than industrial GMO mega farms--far better for the soil.
That is one of the many things that Organic Gardening does for the soil. Making & Adding Compost to the soil, Planting companion crops together, and many other best practices is what increase's the productivity. J. I. Rodale is the father of organic farming and gardening. Started in the 1930's. His books are as relevant today, as they were back then. Grow the Soil, and anything will grow in it...!
Gee, they can spin anything, can't they.
I heard something interesting that I planned on researching but forgot, until now. The honey bee population decline? It's only seen in amateur/hobby beekeepers. The general wild population and professional beekeeping world is just fine The amateurs just don't have the skills you need to replicate natural environments. Thoughts?