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Blog Entry 71 of 84
Ask the Coastalfields Farm
Got questions on agriculture, gardening, nutrition or civilization? Ask us at: directors@coastalfields.com Coastalfields is an urban farm in Arvada and Golden that grows fruits and vegetables. We practice a unique method of agriculture that requires no herbicide (not even hand-pulling weeds), no pesticide (not even swatting mosquitoes), no fertilizer (not even poop), no traps and no poisons. Our method is more efficient and environmentally friendly than any other currently in practice. To the ancients, the coastal fields were places for the foundation and meetings of civilizations. Today they remain so: Coastalfields works towards the growth, diffusion and preservation of civilization. www.coastalfieds.com
Blog Url:
http://denver.yourhub.com/~askthecoastalfieldsfarm
Entries:
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1/15/2007 'Should you put snow on your...'
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The Missing Elements (or: elements of success)
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Contributed by:
Aaron Brachfeld & Mary Choate
on 4/26/2007
Question from DN: We just tested our soil before planting and it looks like the soil is missing quite a bit Nitrogen and Phosphorus? Should we take this into account when deciding what to plant? Where'd they go?
Answer from Coastalfields: Very cool idea to check the soil. We didthat a long time ago when we first starrted experiments. You learn so much by watching it change! In all our experiments we see something similar to what you have observed.
FURTHER TESTING REQUIRED
Besides the tests you've done, you'll also want to collect data on biodiversity and biodensity, as well as organic layer depth and pH. For the biodiversity/density, just select 10% of the area of the land for random sampling (we divide the land into square yards and select 10% of the square yards to take a test). Then count the number of individuals (plant, animal, fungal) and number of species (plant, animal, fungal) in each sample yard square. You won't want to collect data on the organic layer except in the beginning and end of the season (it'll disrupt your data): dig down until you see the bottom of the O-layer, and measure the distance in inches. pH is a good estimate of microorganism activity: naturally, the ground should be about 7.5...very similar to rain water. If it is higher or lower, you have evidence of organisms polluting CO2, O2, methane, sugar, and other acidic or basic gasses and solids.
For metric-lovers, the yards can be substituted by meters, and the inches by centemeters.
THE QUICK AND DIRTY ANSWER
We reccomend a soil science textbook anda biology book (though you have an excellent biologist at hand!), especially
Ages of Gaia
, by James Lovelock, 1988 and
Soil Science Simplified
, by Milo Harpstead, Thomas Sauer and William Bennett, illustrated by Mary Bratz, first edition: 1980...as well as any of the other books on our suggested reading page.
Based on the limited data you have provided, a quick and dirty answer might be to explain that in a standard (non-Active Fallow) garden or farm, there is usually a deficiency of many nutrients, including nitrogen and phosphorus. Nitrogen is usually formed by living things: it is a good estimate of the amount of organic matter in the soil. Nitrogen is the building block of protein, and all living cells have protein. Nitrogen is also evidence of niterbacteria, or organisms that take the vast amounts of nitrogen in the atmosphere and mineralize it in the soil. Where there is life, there is sufficient nitrogen to survive. Tillage improves nitrogen content (see research by Goss, et al.) by improving the quality of life for microorganisms. Phosphorus is similar: DNA requires P.
Where'd they go? They got eaten or degraded. Without life, soil dies. Without life, the earth itself dies. Life allows the conditions for life: without life, there'd be no plate tectonics, no oxygen in the atmosphere, no oceans of water.
ADVICE
We generally advise you to completely IGNORE the soil tests. No matter what you plant, if you practice Active Fallow, you will improve the soil. By increasing biodiversity and biodensity (by letting the weeds grow and tilling in the aisles regularly and the beds before and after crops), the soil will improve and your O-layer will get bigger...and your pH will become more neutral. Your soil and ecosystem will become more and more resistant to outside forces that would destabilize the ecosystem (such as drought, flood [had some of that today!], heat, cold...you name it).
Just water the seeds you plant (and the other plants in your garden) when they need it, till in the aisles and practice active fallow...care for all living creatures, make sure that all creatures have enough food, water and shelter.
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CONTRIBUTOR INFORMATION
Aaron Brachfeld & Mary Choate
Arvada
, CO
Aaron Brachfeld & Mary Choate has posted
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