FARMING

8: Woe unto them that join house to house, that lay field to field, till there be no place, that they may be placed alone in the midst of the earth! -- ISAIAH 5:8    Holy Bible

 

 

Small farms

Artwork of "Small Farm" by Christine Thery


Sustainable farming
Small farms fit
References

http://journeytoforever.org/farm.html

Small family farms are the backbone of a community, a nation, and of society as a whole. A landscape of family farms is settled, balanced and stable, and generally sustainable. It's the natural shape of society on the land. Such communities aggregate into strong and secure nations.

But it's difficult to find a government that thinks that way, now or ever: the history of small farms presents a fantastic picture of neglect and abuse. Maybe the family farming landscape just doesn't offer enough opportunity for the rich and powerful, and the greedy.

Compare Rome before the Punic Wars, built on a bedrock of independent yeoman farmers, with Rome after the wars, the small farms swallowed by big estates owned by nobles and worked by slaves, a mighty empire with cancer at its heart, inevitably to fall.

"The original strength of Rome, like that of China, was that of a superior family-agriculture." -- "Restoration of the Peasantries" by G.T. Wrench, Chapter 4 -- The Second Agricultural Path

"If, by some magic, we could transport ourselves back to the days of the early Latin farmers, we should see a picture of a well-populated countryside with the land divided up into a number of small farms, often not exceeding five acres in extent." -- "Reconstruction by Way of the Soil" by G.T. Wrench, Chapter 2 -- Rome

Now it's industrialization that collapses rural economies, driving the farmers into factories and city slums, fodder for economic growth and a "development" that turns a country from food self-sufficiency to a producer of commodities with massive food import bills, an economic success story that can be wrecked by a run on the foreign exchange market.

The cancer at the heart of today's mighty industrial empire is the ruin that this woefully unbalanced landscape is wreaking upon both the natural and the social environment. It's not sustainable, by any measure, as everybody knows.

"Global Agricultural Survey Shows Nearly Half of Farm Soil 'Seriously Degraded'" -- Associated Press, May 22, 2000. Detailed satellite photos of the Earth's land mass and other data are helping scientists at the UN-affiliated International Food Policy Research Institute determine the state of global agriculture. Their conclusion: nearly 40% of farmland is seriously degraded. Soil erosion, loss of organic matter, hardening of soil, chemical penetration, nutrient depletion, excess salinity and other damage have left much of the world's potential and previous agricultural land unusable. The research covers only human-induced degradation. See Land Degradation In The Developing World: Issues and Policy Options for 2020:
http://www.ifpri.org/2020/briefs/number44.htm

The 1999 report on the University of Wisconsin-Madison's ongoing 37-year project monitoring the effects of nitrogen fertilisers in the US concluded that agriculture's continuing overapplication of nitrogen fertilizers is causing irreparable damage to the soil. It said US farms have "a 50% applied nitrogen efficiency rate" -- only half the nitrogen applied to the soil is actually used by the crop. The other half becomes harmful nitric acid. They said three decades of such overuse of nitrogen has destroyed much of the soil's fertility, causing it to age the equivalent of 5,000 years. -- "Acidification From Fertilizer Use Linked To Soil Aging":
http://www.cals.wisc.edu/media/news/03_99/acid_soil.html

"Crops without profit", New Scientist, 18 December 1999 -- Low-cost food, the great achievement of postwar high-input intensive farming, may be an illusion. The most detailed study yet of the industry's wider balance sheet has found the costs of cleaning up pollution, repairing habitats and coping with sickness caused by farming almost equals the industry's income. The true cost of £208 per hectare is double the amount suggested by previous, less detailed, studies of the costs in Germany and the US. But the survey's chief author, Jules Pretty of the Centre for Environment and Society at the University of Essex, describes this figure as "very conservative". Environmental economists say the findings suggest the need for a radical rethink of Europe's farming policy.
http://www.biotech-info.net/crops_without_profit.html
An assessment of the total external costs of UK agriculture, J.N. Pretty, C. Brett, D. Gee, R.E. Hine, C.F. Mason, J.I.L. Morison, H. Raven, M.D. Rayment, G. van der Bijl, Agricultural Systems 65 (2) (2000) pp. 113-136 -- this paper was this peer-reviewed journal's second-most-popular download of the year. The report:
http://www2.essex.ac.uk/ces/ResearchProgrammes/
Externalities/AgSystTotalExtCostsUKagri.htm

"European Union Goes Organic to Tackle BSE Scare", February 13, 2001 (ENS) -- Organic farming is at the heart of a seven-point plan announced by the European Commission to tackle the continent's BSE (mad cow disease) crisis. The Commission called for a move away from industrial farming and increased support for extensive, organic agriculture. "The BSE crisis demonstrates the need for a return to farming methods that are more in tune with the environment," EU Farm Commissioner Franz Fischler's proposal said. The UK's Soil Association estimates that demand in the UK for organic food is growing by more than 40% a year and much of Europe is following the same trend.

and much, much more ...........

http://journeytoforever.org/farm.html

 

The English Peasant and Agricultural Labourer

German Colonies: The Mandates


Russia, South Africa, Australia
 

Farming in the United States of America

 

Agriculture

 

23: Be thou diligent to know the state of thy flocks, and look well to thy herds.
24: For riches are not for ever: and doth the crown endure to every generation?
25: The hay appeareth, and the tender grass sheweth itself, and herbs of the mountains are gathered.
26: The lambs are for thy clothing, and the goats are the price of the field.
27: And thou shalt have goats' milk enough for thy food, for the food of thy household, and for the maintenance for thy maidens.

-- Proverb 27: 23-27       Holy Bible

 

 

 

Organic Gardening

http://journeytoforever.org/garden.html

http://www.kintera.org/site/apps/dir/dir.asp?c=7dJBKPNxFqG&b=278521

Sustenance Farming

Growing Organic Vegetables

http://www.verdant.net/food.htm

Vine Ripened Home Grown Arkansas Tomatoes

 

 

 

Heirloom Seeds

Baker Creek Heirloom Seeds

Preserving Our Ethnic Heritage

RareSeeds.com

http://www.rareseeds.com/index.php?page=indexpage

Preserving the finest in heirloom vegetables, flowers and herbs. We offer pure heritage seed varieties that are selected for flavor and nutrition. Non-Treated, Non-Hybrid and Non-GMO. Our catalog lists 1000 heirloom seeds from over 50 countries. "Taste your Past and Savor the Flavor"

In the Ozark Mountains of Missouri

Baker Creek Heirloom Seeds
2278 Baker Creek Road
Mansfield, MO 65704

 

The Heirloom Gardener Magazine

"The First in Heritage"

http://www.rareseeds.com/index.php?page=magazine

At last, a magazine for serious gardeners that is beautifully illustrated in full color! It is for home gardeners, seed savers, specialty growers, heritage cooks and history buffs. We average 15 feature length articles per issue on topics covering all aspects of vegetable varieties and history, organic cultivation, antique flowers, marketing specialty produce, seed saving, gene-altered foods, exotic seed collecting trips, traditional uses for plants, and growing and historical facts about ethnic varieties.

 

 

 

 

The Old Timer Page - The Way We Used To Do It


Country Folk Magazine

 

Homestead

http://www.homestead.org/

 

OzarkLand.com

http://www.ozarkland.com/

Where anyone can buy land without a down payment.

NOTE: Search the Internet, there is a lot of inexpensive rough back-country land for sell in the Ozark Mountains at very reasonable prices.  Much of it suitable for small farms.

SPECIAL NOTE: Lots of rugged and remote primitive undeveloped land can be purchased for $1000.00 or less an Acre in the Ozark Mountains of Arkansas at this time, if you search for it. Spend some time on the net researching, then send some E-Mails & make some telephone call to different Real Estate Agents. Migrate to the Ozark Mountains Soon!

 

 

 

Letters From The Federal Farmer (1787) - Richard Henry Lee

"To preserve liberty, it is essential that the whole body of people always possess arms, and be taught alike especially when young, how to use them." (Richard Henry Lee, Walter Bennett, ed., Letters from the Federal Farmer to the Republican, at 21,22,124)

"A militia, when properly formed, are in fact the people themselves...and include all men capable of bearing arms." (Richard Henry Lee, Additional Letters from the Federal Farmer [1788])

"The constitution ought to secure a genuine militia and guard against a select militia. ...All regulations tending to render this general militia useless and defenseless, by establishing select corps of militia, or distinct bodies of military men, not having permanent interests and attachments to the community ought to be avoided."
(Richard Henry Lee
)

Richard Henry Lee

Empire and Nation: John Dickinson, Letters from a Farmer in Pennsylvania and Richard Henry Lee, Letters from the Federal Farmer, ed. Forrest McDonald (1962)

 

Gun Owners of America

 

James Madison Research Library and Information Center

 

 

 

The Nordic Farmers of Engleland

"The English peasant first appears in Engleland as an individual with a strong bent for independence. Engleland was the southern part of the thumb of land that projects itself between the North and the Baltic Seas, the northern part being the land of the Jutes or Jutland.

The dwellers in Engleland, writes Mr. John Richard Green, in his Short History of the English People, 'seem to have been merely an out-lying fragment of what was the Engle or English folk, the bulk of whom lay probably along the middle Elbe and on the Weser', and he adds that they were allied to peoples occupying a wide tract reaching to the Rhine and collectively known as Saxons.

... family came into being in the following way: some Teutonic or Nordic people reached the plains of Sweden and in their search for undisturbed homes, passed on over the mountains and settled along the fiords of Norway.

These families were small or particularist owing to the sheer limitation of vegetable food. When the families of a fiord grew too large, the younger members gathered together, stocked a few ships and voyaged southwards, seeking land for themselves in fiords farther south, in the projecting thumb of Denmark, in the northwestern river-lands of Germany, and finally in the island of Britain. In the new settlements, the love of independence led to the persistence of the small family system.

However this system actually arose, it has been of great significance in the world's history. It is the oddity as opposed to the customary large or joint family; it is independent individuality as opposed to dependence on joint opinion; and a very strong oddity it has proved to be.

They could not, however, be quite independent. Dangers from other peoples sometimes threatened them and they then joined together, chose a chief and took to arms. They were fierce fighters and, when they arrived in Britain under their captains, they drove the Britons westwards or slew them, and took their land, until once more they were independent farmers at peace. They were the forerunners of similar settlers in America, Australia and New Zealand."

SMALL FARMS

Reconstruction by Way of the Soil - by G.T. Wrench

Chapter 10 - The English Peasant and Agricultural Labourer

 

FARMING - PAGE ONE

LINKS

FARMING - PAGE TWO

Onward To FARMING - PAGE THREE

Agriculture

FOLKWAYS

Agrarianism

 

American Reformation Ministries

       

Keltic Klan Kirk

American Rebel Militias

PASTOR JOE JOHNSON   P.O. BOX 1166   MALVERN, ARKANSAS 72104