Soil
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California Certified Organic Farmers Organic Farming BasicsOrganic farmers realize that the soil is a living entity and that organic practices feed the soil which in turn feed the plant. Organic farming is a management intensive, not a materials intensive, technology; materials are a supplementary tool in a balanced farm management program. Organic farmers attempt to understand and work in harmony with the natural biological systems on the farm, not to override them with chemicals (even naturally derived ones). They strive to develop cultural and biological means of crop nutrition and protection that are balanced, sustainable, and resilient. Basic Concepts The following are some of the concepts and practices that are fundamental to organic production and should be the backbone of a certified grower's farming system: Rotations and diversification are key principles in an ecological farming system. In an annual cropping system: Legumes used as green manures, cover crops or permanent understory improve fertility; Allelopathic crops that exude toxins from their roots can suppress weeds and insect pests; Diversity of crops in both time and space prevents insect and disease buildup and provides a hedge against poor market conditions for any one crop. In a perennial or permaculture system: Cover crops are used to hold the soil, improve fertility and provide habitat for beneficial insects; A diversity of plants including polycultures, hedgerows and windbreaks help ensure that no one factor such as a pest or a weed can throw the system off balance. Pest-free and weed-free fields are neither always possible nor economically and ecologically desirable. Learning the thresholds for tolerable levels of weeds, insects, birds and rodents takes time and experience and is an on-going process. Varietal selection should look beyond maximum potential yield and consider insect and disease resistance, nutritional quality, flavor and positive response to lower inputs of nutrients and water. Pest problems can be minimized by proper timing of plantings and the use of trap crops to attract pests and beneficials alike. Materials are not used as the primary management strategy, but rather as an aid to resolving a specific problem until the farm system can be brought back into balance. Livestock management is based on good nutrition, animal stress reduction, preventive medicine and other means not dependent on drugs or pesticides. Livestock breeding selects for disease resistance. The Living Soil The condition of the topsoil
affects not only productivity, but also its stability and resistance
to erosion. In nature the soil surface is protected by vegetation and
plant debris, which is continually being drawn into the soil by worms
and other fauna. Rain percolates gently through this layer to the soil
beneath. Due to its high organic content the surface soil acts like
a sponge, retaining part of the moisture and allowing the surplus to
filter slowly into the subsoil and then into streams, rivers and eventually,
the sea. Soil Erosion: Is it a threat to our future? The greatest irreversible
change arising from the long-term practice of unsustainable farming
methods is the loss of topsoil. Since agriculture began, soils in many
parts of the world, have been destroyed and replaced by degraded vegetation,
bare rock or sand deserts. The civilizations that they sustained have
disappeared also. In recent times, one of the most dramatic examples
of erosion occurred in the 1930s, where large areas of once productive
land were destroyed by gully erosion and reduced to a dustbowl. In the
Roman period North Africa was described as the breadbasket of the Empire;
it has since been replaced by the Sahara Desert. At the present time
Africa is losing thousands of hectares of productive land each year
through water and wind erosion. In some places blowing sands are engulfing
fertile irrigated lands. |
