Author: Barakah Farm Staff

  • Permaculture Puts Organic Gardening on Autopilot

    Permaculture Puts Organic Gardening on Autopilot

    BY: TIM O’NEAL

    Organic food and farming have seen a huge increase over the past ten years, and for good reason. Farming and gardening techniques that use fewer harmful, synthetic fertilizers and pesticides are better for the environment and better for human health. Permaculture methods of growing food reach far beyond these benefits. Growing food organically is just the starting point.

    According to a report from 2014 by Stephen Daniells titled US organic food market to grow 14% from 2013-18, 81% of American families reported buying organic food at least sometimes. For many people, the barriers to buying organic food are accessibility and cost. Growing organic produce at home overcomes both of those issues. Permaculture practices are a great way to achieve the best results.

    What is Permaculture 

    Permaculture (permanent + agriculture) was developed in the late 1970s by Bill Mollison and David Holmgren. It’s a set of principles and techniques for food production at any scale that focuses on mimicking natural systems, instead of competing against them. It puts humans into the system as engaged participants, departing from the conventional agricultural approach of conquering nature. The principles can be applied to container gardens on apartment balconies, large scale agricultural operations, and anything in between.

    Practitioners of permaculture believe that it is more than a set of gardening techniques. It is the simplest and most direct way we can repair many of the global problems we face today – environmental destruction, poverty and food scarcity, water shortages, among others.

    Co-founder, Bill Mollison, says, ““The greatest change we need to make is from consumption to production, even if on a small scale, in our own gardens. If only 10% of us do this, there is enough for everyone. Hence the futility of revolutionaries who have no gardens, who depend on the very system they attack, and who produce words and bullets, not food and shelter.”

    From Permaculture: A Designer’s Manual, there are three core tenets:

    Care for the earth: Provision for all life systems to continue and multiply. This is the first principle, because without a healthy earth, humans cannot flourish.
    Care for the people: Provision for people to access those resources necessary for their existence.
    Return of surplus: Reinvesting surpluses back into the system to provide for the first two ethics. This includes returning waste back into the system to recycle into usefulness. The third ethic is sometimes referred to as Fair Share to reflect that each of us should take no more than what we need before we reinvest the surplus.

    As stated in the third tenet, one central element of permaculture is to return waste back into the system as a benefit. The most direct way to do this is to compost garden and food waste onsite to add nutrients and organic material to the soil. If done well, this can eliminate the need for fertilizers.

    There is also a strong emphasis on providing habitat for pollinators, other beneficial insects, and birds. The idea is to mimic a forest setting, or some other mature ecosystem, where pests and diseases are kept in balance by a harmonious relationship among organisms up and down the food chain. With this approach, there’s no need for chemical pest control.

    Permaculture concepts can be applied beyond a single garden or farm to include a neighborhood, village, or an entire city. A permaculture system is designed for resiliency. This means that if one element fails the rest of the parts can fill in to keep the overall system intact. A society designed around permaculture principles is built to withstand destructive forces.

    While it is a relatively new approach to food production, permaculture relies on concepts from traditional approaches to agriculture. There are methods from all over the world that have been highly productive and sustainable over long periods of time. The revolution of industrial agriculture has worked to eliminate many of these techniques. Permaculture incorporates them back into the modern system to ensure resiliency.

    Achieving a productive garden using organic practices is an important goal, for the health of both humans and the environment. Permaculture provides a tested, ethical method for achieving that goal. It also assures us that the benefits of growing healthy food for ourselves isn’t limited to the space of our gardens.

    As Bill Mollison says, “If we do not get our cities, homes, and gardens in order, so that they feed and shelter us, we must lay waste to all other natural systems. Thus, truly responsible conservationists have gardens.”

    For a great introduction to some permaculture ideas, check out this video by Toby Hemenway.

    https://thehomestead.guru/permaculture/

    On – 21 Mar, 2017 By The Plaid Zebra

  • Renewable Energy – The Precise Facts to Know

    Renewable Energy – The Precise Facts to Know

    In a simple word, renewable energy comes from natural cycles and systems, turning the ever-present energy around us into functional forms. Renewable (alternative) energy is mostly cleaner than energy from nonrenewable options such as natural gas, petroleum, and coal. But right now in the U. S. over many of these of our energy still comes from nonrenewable resources.

    Such as the name says, green energy can be refilled continuously. Its sources include radiant energy like sun, thermal energy like geothermal, chemical processes like biomass, gravitational energy like hydropower, and motion energy like wind.

    A few of the key sources of power include:

    Solar

    Solar electricity is able to one day solve much of the energy needs, but that day is still very remote. Still, solar technology has become more efficient and cost-effective every year, and it is the fastest-growing kind of renewable energy.

    Wind

    Wind power is one of the greenest technologies, and also one of the most abounding and cost-competitive energy resources, rendering it a viable option to the non-renewable powers that harm our health and threaten the environment. Yet wind power is unreliable as a frequent source of electricity, impacts great tracts of land, and it is unavailable where wind is intermittent.

    Hydro

    Harnessing the kinetic power of moving normal water to generate electricity is the major source of renewable power in the USA and worldwide. Hydropower can be a sustainable and nonpolluting power source that can help decrease our dependence on fossil fuels and minimize the threat of global warming, but is limited to areas with large and regular drinking water supplies.

    Bio-fuels

    Ethanol is the product of crops full of sugar or starch, while biodiesel is the product of crops with high essential oil content. Both are natural carbon fuel, and both provide practical powers which may have not yet reached their full probable. Scientists continue refining food stocks to obtain higher efficiencies.

    Geothermal

    Heat from the earth, or geothermal energy, is cost effective, reliable, and clean, but is mostly limited to areas near tectonic plate limits. Some progress has recently been made recently in broadening the range of geothermal resources, but geothermal electric power remains a limited solution to our energy needs.

    Ocean

    Another form of kinetic power technology, the ocean’s frequent motion by way of dunes, tides, and currents is an effective and clean energy resource. Like other hydro power, though, its geographic range is limited.

    Renewable Energy and Environment/Climate Change –

    There is general arrangement among the world’s major economies that it is essential to reduce carbon dioxide emissions by 50% by 2050. And with energy-related Carbon Dioxide accounting for 61 percent of global greenhouse gas emissions today, the energy sector must be at the heart of change.

    Europe is committed to a 30 percent reduction by the year 2020 and a 60 to 80 percent decline by 2050, under stipulation that additional developing nations also obligate. To accomplish the things, it will require a huge sum of USD 22 trillion in global energy investments over the next 25 to 30 years.

    http://greenhoper.net/info/renewable-energy-the-precise-facts-to-know/

    On – 10 Feb, 2017 By greenhoper

  • The world’s largest wind farm is up and running…

    The world’s largest wind farm is up and running…

    seaturbine.jpg

    This wind farm has turbines that are 640 feet tall with 262 foot long blades built by Dong Energy. These turbines are bigger than some skyscrapers (Image via MHI Vestas)

    The world’s largest wind farm is now up and running in the UK. The 32 huge turbines built by Danish company Dong Energy are housed in Liverpool Bay. The turbines boast a greater height than some skyscrapers standing at 640 feet tall and equipped with 262-foot long blades, which can produce eight megawatts of power. This is actually the first time 8MW turbines have been used for commercial purposes. Their power is supposed to be so great the company claims a single revolution of the blade can power one house for 29 hours.

    The 32 new turbines are an extension of the Burbo Bank wind farm that was built over a decade ago. This latest addition makes Britain a world leader in wind farm technology. Because of subsidies, friendly regulation, and their maritime past, the UK have installed more offshore wind power than any other country in the world. This latest addition along with their existing structures give them the capacity of 5.3 GW, that’s enough electricity to power 4.3 million homes. And it doesn’t stop here; there are eight more projects in the works.

    But to keep receiving support for the tech from the government, the industry has to keep cutting costs. This in part is why Dong Energy opted to build such large turbines. You would think the cost to maintain these things would be high considering how big they are. Believe it or not, these large turbines are cheaper to build and maintain since each tower and blade needs a foundation. In the end, it’s cheaper than maintaining lots of small turbines. The company hopes this leads to offshore wind power that’s bigger, better, and cheaper than before.

    These wind turbines greatly benefit the UK, but they’ve still come under fire for not having enough parts made in Britain. Dong Energy doesn’t exactly help matters; they don’t reveal what how much of the Burbo Bank extension is UK built. Fortunately, half of the blades are made at MHI Vesta’s Isle of Wight factory. On the other hand, these farms create new jobs and offer residents a long term career.

    Still, you can’t argue with results, and the UK seems pretty pleased overall. There are more wind turbine projects scheduled for the future; these will also use 8MW turbines. It seems the UK is set on keeping its reputation as a world leader in windfarm technology. They’re certainly ahead of the US, which recently installed its first offshore wind farm.

    https://www.element14.com/community/community/applications/alternativeenergy/blog/2017/05/25/the-world-s-largest-wind-farm-is-up-and-running-in-the-uk

    On – 25 May, 2017 By Cabe Atwell

  • How To Decolonize The Permaculture Movement

    How To Decolonize The Permaculture Movement

    About a year ago, I posted an article in the Huffington Post detailing some of the reasons why I thought permaculture had become a “gringo” movement irrelevant to the majority of small farmers around the world.

    There were a number of reactions, both positive and negative, but I was frustrated that very few people actually offered some sort of solution or proposal for how to “un-gringo” a movement and ideology that we find hope in.

    After a good deal of reflection, I want to focus now on how to rescue the permaculture movement; how to save it from some of its most disturbing and troubling tendencies. I believe that permaculture does have a lot to offer to peasant and agrarian communities around the world, so I humbly offer these ideas and suggestions not as a judgement; but rather in the hopes that permaculture can become relevant and practically applicable to the majority of small farmers around the world.

    Stop Buying Land in Shangri-La Areas Around the World

    We need to understand the effects of our privilege. As a foreigner (most likely white and male, because that is the predominant demographic of the permaculture movement) we are inevitably going to change the dynamics of small, rural communities where we take up residence.

    While there can be positive effects through bringing new knowledge and ideas into a community, there can (and often are) unseen and ignored negative effects. When wealthy foreigners buy up land in rural, agrarian areas, this inevitably leads to gentrification. The spike in land prices forces young people off of the land and causes migration.

    I don´t excuse myself from this reality. As a white, North American male, my family and I bought a farm in the mountains of El Salvador that was the inheritance of a young man who was no longer interested in farming. With the money we paid him, he paid a human trafficker to try and make it to the United States and has failed twice. If he tries to go again, he´ll have to deal with a ridiculous wall, increased border militarization, and a racist president.

    My only excuse is that I fell in love with a Salvadoran woman who invited me to be a part of her reality. If you do end up purchasing land in some hidden, agrarian community, make an effort to truly belong there. If you´re just buying a piece of land to have it as a vacation home and a place to host a couple permaculture workshops during the year, you´re probably causing much more harm than good.

    Also, if you are interested in permaculture and are looking for land to create a vision of your own, why not look at land in rural Kentucky instead of Costa Rica? Not only is land in many rural areas of the U.S. cheaper, but there is also an urgent need to repopulate rural areas and increase the “eyes-to-acre” ratio that is necessary for proper land management and ecological care.

    Don’t Make Permaculture Courses Your Primary Source of Income

    I understand that a number of people in the developed world have the extra income to spend on a $2,000-dollar permaculture course. If they’ve got the money, why shouldn´t they pay?

    The problem is that if you derive the majority of your income from offering permaculture courses, you´re automatically divorcing yourself from the reality of your neighbors who make their living from the land. You can´t claim to offer a viable economic alternative (no matter how ecological it may be) to your under privileged neighbors who see that your income comes from hosting wealthy North Americans.

    What if we were to use that money to re-distribute economic opportunities to our neighbors? We need to be honest and admit that establishing an economically viable permaculture system takes time and money. I´m not saying that we should stop offering courses all together, but rather reconsider how to invest that money into the dreams and visions of neighbor farmers who don’t have the same economic potential as do we.

    After all, isn´t that what the third ethic of permaculture is all about: redistributing surplus so that others can enjoy the long-term abundance that comes from ecological design?

    Stop Appropriating Knowledge

    There is nothing that angers me more than watching permaculture videos on YouTube where some permaculture expert claims to have “developed” or “invented” some revolutionary technique to help preserve soil, store water, or save the environment.

    For example, recently I watched a video of a permaculture farmer who claims to have developed a technique to slow erosion through making banana leaf boomerang barriers on the slope beneath where he planted some fruit trees. The idea is no doubt a good one; but it´s far from a unique development. I personally have seen dozens of small farmers throughout Central America do the exact same thing. Of course, they don’t have access to a camera and the internet to show the world their invention.

    To put it bluntly, this is appropriation of knowledge, and it´s the same thing that mega- pharmaceutical companies and agricultural corporations have been doing for years through the patenting of medicines and seeds that have been stolen from the shared ecological wisdom of indigenous and peasant cultures throughout the world.

    Be humble, and recognize that while permaculture may very well have a number of unique skills to offer, many of these skills and techniques have been around for hundreds of years.

    Stop Demonizing Small Peasants

    There are a number of very serious problems with how many small farmers in Central America and other parts of the world farm their lands. The effects of the Green Revolution on small farmers around the world have led to an almost complete loss of traditional farming knowledge in some rural communities

    The excessive use of pesticides and herbicides, burning crop residues, tilling hillsides, and other examples of ecologically damaging farming practices are obviously unsustainable, unhealthy, and damaging to the environment. The solution, however, is not to criticize these farmers, but rather to humbly seek to understand their situation.

    If you had an acre of land and 6 children to feed, would you prioritize permaculture farming solutions that might offer abundance a decade from now or would you continue to follow the well-trodden path that while unsustainable, does offer subsistence and income?

    Instead of criticizing small farmers who adopt unsustainable farming practices, it would be much more valuable to look at the sociological and systemic factors that lead to this adoption. Permaculture has not had much of a voice for advocacy, but it would be heartening to see permaculture “experts” around the world offer their voices to fight against unfair distribution of land instead of simply blaming small farmers for their “ignorance.”

    Start Farming Grains

    I understand that annual grain farming does come with a number of difficulties. The annual tillage of the land and the monocultures of one crop obviously present an ecological challenge. But you know what, agrarian communities around the world subsist on the farming of annual grains and that is not going to change. Even if you stoutly believe in developing a “food forest” or “stacked polycultures” of tree and perennial crops, dedicate at least a portion of your land to developing more ecological solutions for annual grain crops.

    It takes years for a perennial food system to develop enough to offer any sort of subsistence or income, and almost no small farmer around the world has enough savings or alternative sources of income to wait around for their system to develop into the marvelous and awe-inspiring productive systems that you see on a 20-year-old permaculture farm

    I´m not saying that we should throw out the idea of food forests or perennial crops, but avoid the tendency to offer those systems as the “only” way to grow food in an ecological and sustainable manner. When you show off your acres and acres of food forest to a small farmer in Central America, chances are that he or she might find it interesting but have little incentive to try and reproduce what you have created.

    If, however, you had a diversified landscape with an acre of food forest, an acre of pasture, and an acre of annual crops, there is a far better chance that your neighbors will find interest in what you´re developing.

    Despite the challenges, it is possible to grow grains in a sustainable, ecological fashion. Susana Lein of Salamander Springs Farm in rural Kentucky lived and worked in Guatemala for close to a decade. When she moved to her own farm in Kentucky, she started a no-till Fukuoka method of annual grain production that was adapted to the traditional corn and bean diet of Central American farmers. If she can do that in Kentucky, why aren´t more permaculturists doing the same in Central America, or experimenting with no-till rice harvests in Asia.

    Be Aware of Alternative Epistemologies

    The bread and butter of the permaculture movement is the PDC, or permaculture design course. The two-week curriculum has been offered by thousands of teachers in every part of the world and has been adapted to the specific and particular contexts of small farmers everywhere.

    Many of the folks who critiqued my first article argued that they offered free PDC´s to their neighbor farmers. While I find that commendable, I think it´s also important to recognize that many rural, peasant and indigenous communities don’t learn the same us westerners do.

    The pedagogy of a course with Power Point presentations, lectures and “visits” to the field might actually be so foreign to a small Guatemalan farmer that he or she might get nothing out of it. The Brazilian professor Boaventura Sousa Santos talks of the idea of epistemicide, the elimination of alternative forms of knowing through the colonization that comes through western academia and forms of learning.

    An NGO that I worked with in Guatemala found that the best way to “teach” small Guatemalan farmers had nothing to do with courses, workshops, agricultural schools, or the like. Rather, they simply brought small farmers from neighboring communities together to tour the farms and lands that each one worked.

    While one corn field may appear just like every other corn field to the untrained eye, these visits allowed for small farmers to learn of small variations in growing techniques, in seed saving, in the combination of companion plants, in soil preservation that many “experts” might never have noticed. At the same time, it allowed for small farmers to take pride in what they were doing which is so often criticized or ignored

    Perhaps the famous PDC needs to be laid to rest and other, more appropriate pedagogies developed if permaculture is going to find relevance with small farmers around the world

    Conclusion

    I truly hope that this article doesn’t come across as a futile and derisive attack on permaculture practitioners around the world. I do honestly believe (and hope) that permaculture has a lot to offer the world. We need to recognize, however, that what´s most important isn´t the content or subject in itself, but rather how it is presented with respect for the local autonomy of the placed agrarian communities around the world.

    http://www.huffingtonpost.com/tobias-roberts/how-to-decolonize-the-per_b_14501784.html

    On – 31 Jan, 2017 By Tobias Roberts

  • Index takes guesswork out of buying a farm

    Index takes guesswork out of buying a farm

    The Australian Farmland Property Index was launched recently at the Australian Farm Institute Roundtable Conference.

     

    Opinion

     

    Talking Point: New index will take the guesswork out of buying farm businesses

    JAN DAVIS, Mercury

    WE’VE been hearing a lot lately about growing interest in Australian farm land. The proof of the pudding is always in the eating – and the fact that many wallets have been opening demonstrates that buyers are recognising the value inherent in well-performing agribusinesses.

    Management consulting company BDO has been looking at the key investor groups which have a particular focus on Australia’s food and agribusiness industry. They’ve identified that there are several different groups in the market – all with slightly different motivators.

    Trade buyers always have an eye for a strategic purchase. Australian farmers have been buying out their neighbours to create larger-scale enterprises. Indeed, over the 30-year period to 2011, there was a 40 per cent decline in the number of Australian farm businesses, while area farmed actually increased.

    Institutional investors, such as super funds, have been slow to recognise the value in agribusiness. However, in the current investment environment, the returns offered by agriculture are increasingly compelling. This is particularly so when taking into account the key drivers of food security, the growing middle class in Asia and changing diets.

    High net-worth individuals are also buying the agricultural investment story – literally! Cases in point include London billionaire Joe Lewis taking control of AACo, and Gina Rinehart’s bid for Kidman.

    And then there’s the Asian buyers, whose interest in Australian agriculture is primarily motivated by strong commercial fundamentals and opportunities for growth.

    Until recently, investors across all these sectors have had to rely on patchy information and their own research to determine value when considering purchase of agribusinesses. With farms, a key guide has been the underpinning land value. As we saw last week, that has delivered solid returns over many years.

    But how can a potential investor assess the worth of a business beyond land value?

    One of the factors that has limited wider investors interest has been the difficulty in getting access to reliable, timely and relevant information on how the sector performs on basic business measures; and how performance compares to other possible investments.

    Well, that’s all about to change.

    The Australian Farmland Property Index was launched recently at the Australian Farm Institute Roundtable Conference.

    For the first time in the history of Australian agriculture, investors will have available a regularly updated Index which provides a measure of the investment returns being generated by the sector. This will enable investors to compare the sector’s performance against that of other asset classes.

    The Index is based on the National Council of Real Estate Investment Fiduciaries (NCREIF) index which has been available for North American agricultural investors since 1990. From a starting base of US$350 million, the NCREIF index now reports US$7.8 billion from 729 properties. It also provides the Timberland index which reports on assets valued at US$24.2 billion.

    The index will use the same basic methodology as that used for the US, but with some small tweaks to reflect differences in the Australian agriculture sector.

    In the initial stages, it will be based on a portfolio of corporate farms that together total more than A$827 million in total asset value. The quarterly performance of these businesses is then aggregated into a single index. Of course, there are strict rules around participation in order to preserve the confidentiality of those participating.

    The baseline index has been calculated for the financial year ending 30 June 2016. It shows an impressive average return of 23.9 per cent across the portfolio. This figure was made up of an 8.3 per cent increase in income; and 14.6 per cent from capital appreciation.

    Over time, the number of participants is expected to increase. This will enable provision of more detail across different locations. It may also provide other data, for example the returns from buying and leasing farms to Australian farmers to manage as compared with returns achieved by investors who choose to manage their own properties.

    In launching the Index, the Executive Director of the Australian Farm Institute, Mick Keogh, said that the institute is supportive of the Index “as it will provide and indicator of the performance of the Australian agricultural sector on a regular basis, and will help and encourage investors to include the sector as an important component of a balanced investment portfolio.”

    This is an important development for the agribusiness sector. The more information business owners and investors have, the better positioned they are to be drive increased efficiencies and be competitive in an increasingly benchmark global market place.

    http://www.themercury.com.au/news/opinion/talking-point-new-index-will-take-the-guesswork-out-of-buying-farm-businesses/news-story/9aae0aa5c18adeb5b325a9c4cd73cb6d

    On – 29 Nov, 2016 By JAN DAVIS

  • Index takes guesswork out of buying a farm

    Index takes guesswork out of buying a farm

    The Australian Farmland Property Index was launched recently at the Australian Farm Institute Roundtable Conference.

     

    Opinion

     

    Talking Point: New index will take the guesswork out of buying farm businesses

    JAN DAVIS, Mercury

    WE’VE been hearing a lot lately about growing interest in Australian farm land. The proof of the pudding is always in the eating – and the fact that many wallets have been opening demonstrates that buyers are recognising the value inherent in well-performing agribusinesses.

    Management consulting company BDO has been looking at the key investor groups which have a particular focus on Australia’s food and agribusiness industry. They’ve identified that there are several different groups in the market – all with slightly different motivators.

    Trade buyers always have an eye for a strategic purchase. Australian farmers have been buying out their neighbours to create larger-scale enterprises. Indeed, over the 30-year period to 2011, there was a 40 per cent decline in the number of Australian farm businesses, while area farmed actually increased.

    Institutional investors, such as super funds, have been slow to recognise the value in agribusiness. However, in the current investment environment, the returns offered by agriculture are increasingly compelling. This is particularly so when taking into account the key drivers of food security, the growing middle class in Asia and changing diets.

    High net-worth individuals are also buying the agricultural investment story – literally! Cases in point include London billionaire Joe Lewis taking control of AACo, and Gina Rinehart’s bid for Kidman.

    And then there’s the Asian buyers, whose interest in Australian agriculture is primarily motivated by strong commercial fundamentals and opportunities for growth.

    Until recently, investors across all these sectors have had to rely on patchy information and their own research to determine value when considering purchase of agribusinesses. With farms, a key guide has been the underpinning land value. As we saw last week, that has delivered solid returns over many years.

    But how can a potential investor assess the worth of a business beyond land value?

    One of the factors that has limited wider investors interest has been the difficulty in getting access to reliable, timely and relevant information on how the sector performs on basic business measures; and how performance compares to other possible investments.

    Well, that’s all about to change.

    The Australian Farmland Property Index was launched recently at the Australian Farm Institute Roundtable Conference.

    For the first time in the history of Australian agriculture, investors will have available a regularly updated Index which provides a measure of the investment returns being generated by the sector. This will enable investors to compare the sector’s performance against that of other asset classes.

    The Index is based on the National Council of Real Estate Investment Fiduciaries (NCREIF) index which has been available for North American agricultural investors since 1990. From a starting base of US$350 million, the NCREIF index now reports US$7.8 billion from 729 properties. It also provides the Timberland index which reports on assets valued at US$24.2 billion.

    The index will use the same basic methodology as that used for the US, but with some small tweaks to reflect differences in the Australian agriculture sector.

    In the initial stages, it will be based on a portfolio of corporate farms that together total more than A$827 million in total asset value. The quarterly performance of these businesses is then aggregated into a single index. Of course, there are strict rules around participation in order to preserve the confidentiality of those participating.

    The baseline index has been calculated for the financial year ending 30 June 2016. It shows an impressive average return of 23.9 per cent across the portfolio. This figure was made up of an 8.3 per cent increase in income; and 14.6 per cent from capital appreciation.

    Over time, the number of participants is expected to increase. This will enable provision of more detail across different locations. It may also provide other data, for example the returns from buying and leasing farms to Australian farmers to manage as compared with returns achieved by investors who choose to manage their own properties.

    In launching the Index, the Executive Director of the Australian Farm Institute, Mick Keogh, said that the institute is supportive of the Index “as it will provide and indicator of the performance of the Australian agricultural sector on a regular basis, and will help and encourage investors to include the sector as an important component of a balanced investment portfolio.”

    This is an important development for the agribusiness sector. The more information business owners and investors have, the better positioned they are to be drive increased efficiencies and be competitive in an increasingly benchmark global market place.

    http://www.themercury.com.au/news/opinion/talking-point-new-index-will-take-the-guesswork-out-of-buying-farm-businesses/news-story/9aae0aa5c18adeb5b325a9c4cd73cb6d

    On – 29 Nov, 2016 By JAN DAVIS

  • Amazing off-grid Tiny Solar House travels across the U.S. | Inhabitat – Green Design, Innovation, Architecture

    Amazing off-grid Tiny Solar House travels across the U.S. | Inhabitat – Green Design, Innovation, Architecture

    The tiny mobile home measures approximately 18 feet long and 9 feet wide and it was constructed with a cedar exterior using vertical tongue-and-groove siding and long walls. It features a living room / office space; a kitchen with a fridge, double sink and a four-burner stove; a bathroom with shower and compost toilet; a sleeping loft with a queen-sized mattress and storage space.

    The solar panels installed on the roof generate enough clean energy to keep the house powered throughout the day. These are connected to maintenance-free deep cycle AGM batteries and a MidNite Solar charge controller and Xantrex inverter that keep the system running throughout the night.

    During its five-month journey across the country, The Tiny Solar House has visited Texas, Oklahoma, New Mexico, Colorado, South Dakota, Iowa, Illinois, Indiana, Michigan, Ohio, and Pennsylvania. The owner is planning to go on a tour of the East Coast this fall, followed by a tour of the West Coast in the winter and a trip to the Northwest in the spring.

     

    http://inhabitat.com/amazing-off-grid-tiny-solar-house-travels-across-the-u-s/

    On – 14 Oct, 2016 By Lidija Grozdanic

  • Fertilizing Corn In The Home Garden: An Organic Approach

    Fertilizing Corn In The Home Garden: An Organic Approach

    As garden crops go, corn is among the heaviest feeders. To support tall growth and good ear formation, corn crops often need supplemental additions of nitrogen; there’s typically not enough of this nutrient available in garden soils to support such a large-statured crop. Fertilizing corn in the home garden is an essential summer chore, if you want a hearty crop of plump ears.

    When To Fertilize Corn In The Summer

    Test your garden soil every few years to ensure its pH is at the correct level to support the growth of most common garden crops, including corn. The best pH for most vegetables is between 6.0 and 6.5, and ensuring your soil’s pH fits in this range improves the availability of most nutrients to your corn plants.

    That said, even when the soil’s pH is in the suitable range, supplemental nitrogen fertilizer is often necessary when growing corn. Adding yearly additions of well-composted manures and using legume cover crops will add a good bit of nitrogen to the soil, but when your corn plants reach two feet tall, it’s time for fertilizing corn in the home garden.

    Organic Products For Fertilizing Corn

    If you want to avoid using chemical-based fertilizers in your veggie patch, you’ll need to turn to organic nitrogen fertilizers to give your corn plants a boost. The following sources of nitrogen are plant- or animal-based and require soil microbes to break them down into a form of nitrogen the plants can use. Thankfully, upon adding one of these fertilizers to the corn patch, all the necessary soil microbes work very quickly to break down these products and release the nitrogen to your growing corn plants.

    • Alfalfa meal: Made from dried alfalfa plants, this plant-based fertilizer is about 4 percent nitrogen. It’s often used as an animal feed supplement, too, and it promotes a balance of healthy soil microbes.
    • Cottonseed meal: A coarsely granulated product made from the hulls of cottonseeds, cottonseed meal is about 6 percent nitrogen. Once in the soil, it rapidly breaks down and provides a burst of nitrogen to plants within a few days of application.
    • Blood meal: Derived from dried blood from slaughterhouses, blood meal contains about 12 percent nitrogen. It acts quickly in the soil and begins to provide nitrogen to plants almost immediately.
    • Feather meal: Another animal byproduct from slaughterhouses, feather meal contains approximately 14 percent nitrogen. It’s inexpensive, though it takes a bit longer for the microbes to mineralize than some of the other organic nitrogen sources discussed here.
    • Soybean meal: With a nitrogen content of about 7 percent, soybean meal is another option for fertilizing corn in the home garden.
    • Fish fertilizers: Liquid fish fertilizers as well as granular fish-based fertilizers are good nitrogen sources for the corn patch. Though they can smell bad, fish-based fertilizers are mineralized by soil microbes very rapidly. Depending on the formulation, they can contain between 5 percent and 10 percent nitrogen.

    How To Fertilize Corn

    Adding nitrogen to your corn plants is as simple as side-dressing the rows at the recommended application rate shown on the product’s label when the plants are approximately two feet tall. Lightly scratch it into the soil’s surface so the soil microbes can quickly access it, and then water it in.

    A word of caution: it is possible, of course, to overfertilize corn plants. Do not add any more fertilizer than recommended on the label. A single application is all that’s necessary, except in the case of extreme nitrogen deficiencies. Conduct a soil test every few years to ensure all essential plant nutrients are in the proper balance.

    http://www.hobbyfarms.com/fertilizing-corn-home-garden-organic/

    On – 22 Jun, 2017 By Jessica Walliser

  • The 5 Best Livestock For Starting Your Homestead

    The 5 Best Livestock For Starting Your Homestead

    Are you ready to stock your homestead with livestock?  You must be wondering which farm animals to raise first and why.  If you have doubts, consider our recommendations as a possible solution to meet your families needs.

    Buying a homestead can be a very costly decision that you should not take likely.  If you’re reading this post you’ve probably already gone forward and closed the deal.  Congratulations if this is the case for you.

    Now that you’ve purchased your first homestead property you are most likely wondering which livestock to stock and raise first?  This is a valid concern for you to have.

    The bottom line is you want to farm a group of homestead animal that will most likely meet your families needs.

    For example, you might want to only consider livestock that produces eggs, milk, and/or meat.  Or maybe you just want to raise farm animals that can also be resold as pets, for breeding, or as a food source.

    Whatever your case we got you covered.

    Just watch the short informative video below to learn the 5 best livestock farm animals to raise on your homestead.  The video is approximately 22 minutes long.

    But if you watch the video it will be the best use of your time and will definitely save you some headaches of picking the wrong animal/.

    The video is approximately 22 minutes long.  But if you watch the video it will be the best use of your time and will definitely save you the headache of picking the wrong animal.

    Here’s the list and quantity of the 5 animals recommended in the video:

    • (6 to 12) laying hens
    • (2) dairy does and possibly a buck; a couple of dairy goats
    • (2) feeder pigs short term or a breeding pair of pigs
    • (3) breeding rabbits consisting of 2 does and 1 buck
    • (15) quails

    The recommendation given in the video is for an average family of four.

    https://www.survivalisthandbook.com/5-best-livestock-starting-homestead/

    On – 01 Feb, 2017 By l3hodo

  • The 5 Best Livestock For Starting Your Homestead

    The 5 Best Livestock For Starting Your Homestead

    Are you ready to stock your homestead with livestock?  You must be wondering which farm animals to raise first and why.  If you have doubts, consider our recommendations as a possible solution to meet your families needs.

    Buying a homestead can be a very costly decision that you should not take likely.  If you’re reading this post you’ve probably already gone forward and closed the deal.  Congratulations if this is the case for you.

    Now that you’ve purchased your first homestead property you are most likely wondering which livestock to stock and raise first?  This is a valid concern for you to have.

    The bottom line is you want to farm a group of homestead animal that will most likely meet your families needs.

    For example, you might want to only consider livestock that produces eggs, milk, and/or meat.  Or maybe you just want to raise farm animals that can also be resold as pets, for breeding, or as a food source.

    Whatever your case we got you covered.

    Just watch the short informative video below to learn the 5 best livestock farm animals to raise on your homestead.  The video is approximately 22 minutes long.

    But if you watch the video it will be the best use of your time and will definitely save you some headaches of picking the wrong animal/.

    The video is approximately 22 minutes long.  But if you watch the video it will be the best use of your time and will definitely save you the headache of picking the wrong animal.

    Here’s the list and quantity of the 5 animals recommended in the video:

    • (6 to 12) laying hens
    • (2) dairy does and possibly a buck; a couple of dairy goats
    • (2) feeder pigs short term or a breeding pair of pigs
    • (3) breeding rabbits consisting of 2 does and 1 buck
    • (15) quails

    The recommendation given in the video is for an average family of four.

    https://www.survivalisthandbook.com/5-best-livestock-starting-homestead/

    On – 01 Feb, 2017 By l3hodo

  • Transitioning the Vegetable Garden from Spring to Summer

    Transitioning the Vegetable Garden from Spring to Summer

    vegetable garden

    This is the time of year when I transition the vegetable garden from its spring crops into summertime. It’s the time of year when we never seem to have enough room in the raised beds nor enough time to do all of the work we set out to do in a given day.

    In the vegetable garden, the broccoli rabe is at its peak, and the lettuce is, too. The beets will be ready for harvesting, pickling, and canning in about three weeks or so. Strawberries for jam are just starting to arrive and are protected thanks to the bird netting that keeps my nemesis, the local crow murder, from eating the harvest before I get to them. Peas twin on the Vine Spine Linking Trellis and start just starting to flower. Onions and garlic are maturing and the radishes are almost finished.

    Newly planted carrot and parsnip seeds peek tentatively above the earth. Tomato plants expelled from hothouse splendor now wave from behind the safety of their cages. And waiting on the porch for truly hot weather are the flats of sweet potato plants who need heat and plenty of it to be happy.

    Among the herb garden plants, the catnip is ready for harvesting, and I’ve already cut and dried another pint of oregano. I have cinnamon and Genovese basil plants ready to set outside and parsley and dill have been moved from the safety of their flats to the garden beds. I mix parsley and dill into the herb garden, the butterfly garden as food for hungry caterpillars, and in the vegetable garden so there is always plenty for us all.

    We’ve been busy weeding all of the flower beds in the perennial garden. It is hot, dirty work. Last year, I got behind in the weeding and the weeds took advantage of my laziness to creep into every nook and cranny among the plants. Hubby and I have worked out a system whereby I week from 7 to 8:30 each morning and then he mulches the area afterward. When we finish the entire garden in about two weeks I will start again, tidying up the areas we’ve already done.

    Our goal this year is to keep the garden in top shape as long as we can. The heat is always a problem and keeps me from gardening longer, but I have learned the hard way that a little sustained daily effort accumulates into success.

    May is a busy month, but I have found time to update the monthly gardening tip sheets available free here at Home Garden Joy. I have also started a new short gardening book that I think you will enjoy! Stay tuned, be sure to join our email list for the latest information, and keep gardening and growing!

     

     

    http://homegardenjoy.com/site/2017/05/transitioning-vegetable-garden-spring-summer.html

    On – 18 May, 2017 By Jeanne

  • Sarah Beeny on How To Live Mortgage Free: ‘It’s about finding alternative ways of living’

    Sarah Beeny on How To Live Mortgage Free: ‘It’s about finding alternative ways of living’

    Property expert Sarah Beeny, architect Damion Burrows and designer Max McMurdo will meet individuals across the country who are self-building unconventional homes with one aim in mind – to be mortgage free.

    The trio will be looking at these alternative ways of owning your own property in Channel 4’s new series, How to Live Mortgage Free, this week. Here, Sarah talks about what we can expect…

    Your new show is How to Live Mortgage Free – what is it all about?

    Obviously with no money, you can’t own a house. But if you have some assets, let’s say you’ve saved up enough for a deposit, or you’ve got some capital in your home with a big mortgage, is there a way of living in proper low-cost housing? Is there a way of looking at things in a slightly different way, and instead of having a home that will cost you £300,000, can you do it for a tenth of that cost? Can you get a home for less money, so you don’t have a massive mortgage?

    And what is the answer?

    It’s all about finding slightly alternative ways of living. If you want to go the standard route where you live near Starbucks and the tube in a three bedroom Victorian terrace, you probably can’t live mortgage free because you need more money for that. But a lot of people spend an awful lot of money on rent. If you can stop paying rent then you save an extraordinary amount of money.

    What will we see on the show?

    We have one girl on the show who pays £20,000-a-year in rent. She saved about £25,000, but that, as a deposit, was nowhere near enough to be able to buy a flat where she lived in London. So she ended up buying a barge for £168,000 and refurbishing it, and living on the water. There are a couple of people in the series living on the water. There are other places and other ways that you can live which are much lower cost, which either enable you to save up for a bigger deposit and a smaller mortgage, or you can just buy outright. We’ve got somebody else who’s bought a double decker bus and turned it into a home, which is really cool. And there’s another guy who’s turned the back of a lorry into a home. He does live on a farm in Wales, so he’s got the luxury of the fact that he can use his parents’ land. Land is the biggest cost involved – if you’ve got a piece of land with planning permission, that’s the biggest hurdle overcome.

    One of the ways of doing that is to build on a brownfield site [land previously used for industrial or commercial purposes]. How do people go about finding such places?

    Well, that’s the key. You need to be a dog with a bone. This is not the easy path, which is why it’s not the normal path. You have to hunt around. One of the things I’ve learned in housing is that the big wins go to the people who take the big risks. Brownfield sites are really interesting. It’s an easier planning battle to get a home on a brownfield than a greenfield site, and you end up with a much cheaper property. Quite a lot of people in the series are selling their homes with a mortgage and buying a new home for a lot less money.

    What was your favourite solution that someone came up with for going mortgage free?

    The double decker bus is really cool, and the lorry too. Everyone knows you can build a home out of a shipping container, but the lorry was really interesting to me. It’s mobile, which means you can take it with you in the future. It’s not simple to move around, but you can move it. And if you use a container, it’s difficult to put in the windows and doors because a lot of the structure is in the walls. But a lorry back is effectively a frame, and in-filling a frame is so easy, anyone could do it. My kids could do it. And you can fit it with any size of windows or doors. You need a low level of skill to turn a lorry back into a home, so I thought that was really clever.

     

    Catch How to Live Mortgage Free on Wednesday 19 April at 8pm on Channel 4

    Keep up-to-date with our inspiring ideas, latest looks, real-life homes and expert advice by signing up for our FREE newsletter…

    http://www.housebeautiful.co.uk/lifestyle/property/news/a1571/sarah-beeny-on-how-to-live-mortgage-free/

    On – 18 Apr, 2017 By Olivia Heath

  • Alternative Energy – Reasons To Consider Solar Power

    Alternative Energy – Reasons To Consider Solar Power

    Alternative Energy – Reasons To Consider Solar Power

    The waste products generated by the manufacture of non-renewable energy that most of us use today is now known to be very harmful to the environment. Emissions of carbon-based pollution and nuclear waste, to name just two, are extremely toxic to ourselves and our planet. This message seems to have finally hit the target for governments and ordinary people too. And the demand for alternative energy sources such as solar energy is increasing.

    The other reason for this movement towards the use of other energy sources is that the fossil fuels used to produce energy we use today is also declining, and what remains becomes more difficult and more expensive to source. We all saw what happened with the oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico last year. If you want to know more about the damage to the environment of other human beings, I suggest you get a Coy award-winning documentary “An Inconvenient Truth” and is prepared to be more than a little worried.

    Therefore, it is that solar energy entering the equation as a serious response to the aforementioned problems. The sun’s rays are certainly a source that is obtained in large quantities and is constantly renewed and clean, green and eco-friendly!

    There are some excellent reasons exactly why solar power alternative is an exceptional choice. For starters, you’ll see some real savings in your month of monthly electricity bill (in fact you can reach a point where you avoid the use of an energy company that is) In addition, you may also see an increase in your property value when you come to sell it. Think about the extra things you can repair that were not in your budget, for us we were able to get that air conditioning repair we desperately needed, we had stopped using it all together since it had become so inefficient.

    There are a variety of ways you can use solar energy sources, you can use a very small system as an auxiliary power source ie water heating, or perhaps the power of a solar oven to cook your food, or It can be used to provide lighting for your house or yard. Or what about the air conditioning system, which depends on the network, which may at any time of the blackout summer or winter? Sure, you could go all the way and install a system that will power everything in your house.

    Very few people now, who intend to build or have built new homes, choose solar energy systems over conventional energy. One reason for this has to do with the low costs of replacement and maintenance associated with the installation of this form of energy. The other reason is, of course, not having to count or pay for an electric power company. Some states also offer tax incentives and other financial aid, grants, etc., to those who choose to install alternative energy in their homes.

     

    http://latestsolarnews.com/alternative-energy-reasons-to-consider-solar-power/

    On – By Abigale Sherman

  • Animal Predators on the Homestead

    Animal Predators on the Homestead

    Do you know what predators are eyeing your homestead animals? Learn how to recognize and prepare for 50 common animal predators on the homestead.

    Several years ago we lived on a beautiful, wooded piece of land in the Oregon Cascade foothills. The pine trees were abundant and so were the predators, although the latter were often hard to recognize. After our first snow, we took a stroll around the property and were surprised by the tracks that were left behind. We had no idea that a bobcat was living right above us on the wooded mountainside until we saw the tracks.

    Bobcat tracks. Do you know what predators are eyeing your homestead animals? Learn how to recognize and prepare for 50 common animal predators on the homestead | PreparednessMama

    Bobcats prey on small or young livestock, poultry, and pets. They hunt before dusk through the early morning daylight hours, during the fall and winter. They are rarely seen and behave cautiously around humans, but will growl, hiss, or spit if threatened or protecting a kill.

    We learned to avoid surprising a bobcat by making noise when we were walking on the property’s outer paths and to remain observant for their signs by looking for claw marks, scat, and tracks.

    Dealing with Bobcats in Homes and Yards

    There are a few things you can do to deter a bobcat from coming after your chickens or pets:

    • Don’t leave pet food or water outside
    • Keep poultry and other pet birds penned with a secure top, not a tarp or flimsy netting
    • Clear brush and other hiding places in your yard and around buildings
    • Cover access to the undersides of decks, porches, and animal housing
    • Keep vulnerable animals in a secure location during birthing seasons
    • Remove sick or injured animals from the area
    • Bobcats can jump 6 feet, make sure fences are tight and secure
    • Place electric scare wires outside the fence at 12 and 18 inches above the ground. Add another near the top.

    If you meet a Bobcat, do not approach the animal or run away. Instead, back away slowly from the cat or its kill. Pick up and protect small children. In the rare case of an attack, the bobcat will target the head, neck, or shoulders. Use pepper spray, fight off and hit the cat while trying to protect your head and neck. Make loud noises.

    Keeping animals safe

    If you want to keep your animals safe, you should assume that they are vulnerable to predator attack. What’s that old saying? An ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure. Understanding the potential threat and making your animals secure is going to help you win the battle, but where can you learn about the predators that are in your area?

    Specific predator information relevant to your area can be found from the natural resource departments in states and provinces, the USDA extension office in your area, and the Ministry of Agriculture in Canada. Also, check with local livestock producers’ organizations. You can also stay informed by talking to neighbors and following local news stories.

    The Encyclopedia of Animal Predators by Janet Vorwald Dohner

    I have enjoyed a new book about animal predators by Janet Vorwald Dohner. She creates an immersive experience as you learn about the potential predators to your livestock, and more importantly, she advocates for a peaceful coexistence with these animals. While your first thought may be to head out with a shotgun, that may not always be necessary. On the dedication page, she states “Dedicated to the belief that, armed with knowledge, we can coexist with animal predators on our farms, on our ranches, in our backyards, and in the greater world we share.”

    Ms. Dohner begins the book by breaking it into three sections; first, predators in the modern world.

    This section is all about learning which predators are out there and how they can attack your livestock. She arms you with the tools of becoming a junior sleuth in uncovering what killed a member of your flock, and how to protect them in the future.

    Second, the predators up close sections is all about, you guessed it, the 50 most common predators that you can be potentially facing in your area.

    Dohner goes into the specifics of each animal such as where subspecies are found, how to identify them by their scat, track, and gait. She breaks all the common predators up into their genus, i.e., canines, felines, etc. At the end of the animal’s evaluation, there is a page or two that have what Dohner calls a Damage ID card. It contains information about what the animal typically preys on and when, their track size, how they kill their prey, their gait and scat.

    Third, the prevention and protection section which is very important to any homesteader or farmer.

    Dohner discusses the pros and cons of different coops, gates, and guardian animals to have and which will work best for the livestock or poultry that you have on your farm or ranch, and she goes in-depth, even to include protection for family pets

    What is attacking my livestock?

    Right off the bat, Ms. Dohner shoBobcat tracks. Do you know what predators are eyeing your homestead animals? Learn how to recognize and prepare for 50 common animal predators on the homestead | PreparednessMamaws you that she is an expert in the field of common predators preying on farm animals. She gives you information that will be valuable in determining what threats are possible in your area. Encyclopedia of Animal Predators has detailed pictures and several pages of information about each predator, showing the differences between the subspecies to help you identify them.

    One of the most useful points in The Encyclopedia of Animal Predators are the Damage ID guides for poultry and livestock. It is a giant check list of all the predators, the time they attack, what’s missing from the animal, evaluating the teeth, talon, or claw marks, and other observations. Brilliant!

    This guide arms you with the knowledge of what is hurting your animals and how to better protect them. She also includes what to do when if you encounter a wild animal, how to protect yourself or how to evade harm.

    I found this book to be a valuable addition to my preparedness library, and advocate adding it to any homestead, whether urban, suburban, or rural. If you raise livestock, you need to know the risks.

    About the Author

    The Encyclopedia of Animal Predators by Janet Vorwald DohnerJanet Vorwald Dohner is the author of The Encyclopedia of Animal Predators: Learn about Each Predator’s Traits and Behaviors; Identify the Tracks and Signs of More Than 50 Predators; Protect Your Livestock, Poultry, and Pets and the book Farm Dogs and Livestock Guardians.

    She has 35 years of experience on her small family farm and has relied on livestock guard dogs and corgis to protect her sheep, goats, and poultry. Dohner writes for Modern Farmer and Mother Earth News and speaks regularly on predator control and livestock guardians at conferences. She is a board member of the Kangal Dog Club of America and a member of several learning communities for working dogs.

    http://preparednessmama.com/animal-predators-on-the-homestead/

    On – 01 Aug, 2017 By Shelle

  • Animal Predators on the Homestead

    Animal Predators on the Homestead

    Do you know what predators are eyeing your homestead animals? Learn how to recognize and prepare for 50 common animal predators on the homestead.

    Several years ago we lived on a beautiful, wooded piece of land in the Oregon Cascade foothills. The pine trees were abundant and so were the predators, although the latter were often hard to recognize. After our first snow, we took a stroll around the property and were surprised by the tracks that were left behind. We had no idea that a bobcat was living right above us on the wooded mountainside until we saw the tracks.

    Bobcat tracks. Do you know what predators are eyeing your homestead animals? Learn how to recognize and prepare for 50 common animal predators on the homestead | PreparednessMama

    Bobcats prey on small or young livestock, poultry, and pets. They hunt before dusk through the early morning daylight hours, during the fall and winter. They are rarely seen and behave cautiously around humans, but will growl, hiss, or spit if threatened or protecting a kill.

    We learned to avoid surprising a bobcat by making noise when we were walking on the property’s outer paths and to remain observant for their signs by looking for claw marks, scat, and tracks.

    Dealing with Bobcats in Homes and Yards

    There are a few things you can do to deter a bobcat from coming after your chickens or pets:

    • Don’t leave pet food or water outside
    • Keep poultry and other pet birds penned with a secure top, not a tarp or flimsy netting
    • Clear brush and other hiding places in your yard and around buildings
    • Cover access to the undersides of decks, porches, and animal housing
    • Keep vulnerable animals in a secure location during birthing seasons
    • Remove sick or injured animals from the area
    • Bobcats can jump 6 feet, make sure fences are tight and secure
    • Place electric scare wires outside the fence at 12 and 18 inches above the ground. Add another near the top.

    If you meet a Bobcat, do not approach the animal or run away. Instead, back away slowly from the cat or its kill. Pick up and protect small children. In the rare case of an attack, the bobcat will target the head, neck, or shoulders. Use pepper spray, fight off and hit the cat while trying to protect your head and neck. Make loud noises.

    Keeping animals safe

    If you want to keep your animals safe, you should assume that they are vulnerable to predator attack. What’s that old saying? An ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure. Understanding the potential threat and making your animals secure is going to help you win the battle, but where can you learn about the predators that are in your area?

    Specific predator information relevant to your area can be found from the natural resource departments in states and provinces, the USDA extension office in your area, and the Ministry of Agriculture in Canada. Also, check with local livestock producers’ organizations. You can also stay informed by talking to neighbors and following local news stories.

    The Encyclopedia of Animal Predators by Janet Vorwald Dohner

    I have enjoyed a new book about animal predators by Janet Vorwald Dohner. She creates an immersive experience as you learn about the potential predators to your livestock, and more importantly, she advocates for a peaceful coexistence with these animals. While your first thought may be to head out with a shotgun, that may not always be necessary. On the dedication page, she states “Dedicated to the belief that, armed with knowledge, we can coexist with animal predators on our farms, on our ranches, in our backyards, and in the greater world we share.”

    Ms. Dohner begins the book by breaking it into three sections; first, predators in the modern world.

    This section is all about learning which predators are out there and how they can attack your livestock. She arms you with the tools of becoming a junior sleuth in uncovering what killed a member of your flock, and how to protect them in the future.

    Second, the predators up close sections is all about, you guessed it, the 50 most common predators that you can be potentially facing in your area.

    Dohner goes into the specifics of each animal such as where subspecies are found, how to identify them by their scat, track, and gait. She breaks all the common predators up into their genus, i.e., canines, felines, etc. At the end of the animal’s evaluation, there is a page or two that have what Dohner calls a Damage ID card. It contains information about what the animal typically preys on and when, their track size, how they kill their prey, their gait and scat.

    Third, the prevention and protection section which is very important to any homesteader or farmer.

    Dohner discusses the pros and cons of different coops, gates, and guardian animals to have and which will work best for the livestock or poultry that you have on your farm or ranch, and she goes in-depth, even to include protection for family pets

    What is attacking my livestock?

    Right off the bat, Ms. Dohner shoBobcat tracks. Do you know what predators are eyeing your homestead animals? Learn how to recognize and prepare for 50 common animal predators on the homestead | PreparednessMamaws you that she is an expert in the field of common predators preying on farm animals. She gives you information that will be valuable in determining what threats are possible in your area. Encyclopedia of Animal Predators has detailed pictures and several pages of information about each predator, showing the differences between the subspecies to help you identify them.

    One of the most useful points in The Encyclopedia of Animal Predators are the Damage ID guides for poultry and livestock. It is a giant check list of all the predators, the time they attack, what’s missing from the animal, evaluating the teeth, talon, or claw marks, and other observations. Brilliant!

    This guide arms you with the knowledge of what is hurting your animals and how to better protect them. She also includes what to do when if you encounter a wild animal, how to protect yourself or how to evade harm.

    I found this book to be a valuable addition to my preparedness library, and advocate adding it to any homestead, whether urban, suburban, or rural. If you raise livestock, you need to know the risks.

    About the Author

    The Encyclopedia of Animal Predators by Janet Vorwald DohnerJanet Vorwald Dohner is the author of The Encyclopedia of Animal Predators: Learn about Each Predator’s Traits and Behaviors; Identify the Tracks and Signs of More Than 50 Predators; Protect Your Livestock, Poultry, and Pets and the book Farm Dogs and Livestock Guardians.

    She has 35 years of experience on her small family farm and has relied on livestock guard dogs and corgis to protect her sheep, goats, and poultry. Dohner writes for Modern Farmer and Mother Earth News and speaks regularly on predator control and livestock guardians at conferences. She is a board member of the Kangal Dog Club of America and a member of several learning communities for working dogs.

    http://preparednessmama.com/animal-predators-on-the-homestead/

    On – 01 Aug, 2017 By Shelle

  • Planting a food forest: Proposal for Springside Park would help connect people to the land and to food

    Planting a food forest: Proposal for Springside Park would help connect people to the land and to food

    PITTSFIELD — An edible landscape, dappled with fruit, vegetables and nuts. That’s part of a vision for a food forest in Springside Park.

    A local permaculture design company has applied for a $25,000 grant to support the idea. Now through April 19, people can vote daily for that idea, one of hundreds of proposed projects, on the Seeds of Change website.

    “Food isn’t just something we eat,” reads the grant application. “It’s our history, culture, family and memories. It is our medicine and fuel.”

    A food forest is a gardening technique that imitates a woodland ecosystem by bringing a number of crops that can help support each other into one area. The vision for a 1-acre plot of Springside Park includes edible trees, shrubs, perennials and annuals.

    Matt Lamb and Jay Allard, owners of Berkshire Earth Regenerators, applied for the grant. They have studied the park for six months and developed a food forest plan on land near the Springside House.

    “My goal is to get as much diversity into the plan as possible,” Lamb said. “There’s so many different things we are trying to correct with this project.”

    He said the additional plantings in the proposed food forest would improve stormwater runoff and help cut down on carbon emissions. He said the plan could be expanded to as much as 40 acres of the park.

    Allard said their concept for the park could yield thousands of pounds of food, which would be distributed to area residents and community organizations.

    “A lot of people in the community are having a hard time getting food at all,” he said. “This is a very local situation it keeps food from traveling far distances.”

    In addition to being a source of fresh food for the community, the forest would be used as a living classroom, where people learn to garden, and it would provide some job opportunities.

    “As people take interest in these plantings, they become more invested in their community,” Allard said. “We want to be able to reconnect people with that.”

    Springside has become a place for education in addition to recreation.

    Regular garden workshops and interpretive walks are offered from the spring through fall. There’s also a weekly membership-based learning program at the park’s greenhouse.

    Joe Durwin, a longtime resident of the Morningside neighborhood, and a parks commissioner, said the proposed plan is overdue.

    “A food forest at Springside Park is an extraordinary way to honor a robust heritage of agriculture at this very historic park site, while updating it for the needs and expectations of neighborhood residents and other park users in the 21st century,” he said in a written statement.

    Last year, the city received a grant from the Kresge Foundation to study how growing food could help revitalize the Morningside neighborhood.

    Named Morningside Up by the city and community partners, the project envisions a “community-led food system.” That means residents would be involved with food production, processing, distribution, and consumption as well as waste management, said Jessica Vecchia, director of Alchemy Initiative, which is managing the Kresge grant and working in partnership with Morningside Up.

    Allard and Lamb said they are excited by the impact the food forest could have.

    “This will help educate people on how we can use public space to do greater things for ourselves, our families and our community,” Lamb said.

    The food forest concept is among nearly 600 ideas submitted by groups from across the country to Seeds of Change. A total of $310,000 will be awarded to groups by the California-based organic seed company.

    The top 50 vote winners advance to the finals in April. And grant winners will be announced May 8, according to the website.

    The Downtown Pittsfield Farmers Market, another of Alchemy’s programs, was awarded a $10,000 grant from Seeds of Change last year.

    Reach staff writer Carrie Saldo at 413-496-6221 or @carriesaldo.

    http://www.berkshireeagle.com/stories/planting-a-food-forest,503487

    On – 05 Apr, 2017 By Carrie Saldo

  • Hobbit Homes Are Real, and Here’s How You Can Obtain One of Your Own!

    Hobbit Homes Are Real, and Here’s How You Can Obtain One of Your Own!

    B.E. Structural building a dome home

    Hobbit Homes Are Real, and Here’s How You Can Obtain One of Your Own!

    00residential structural engineer, structural engineering, SustainabilityTags: , ,

    Customized home designs are gaining swift popularity as of recent years, and for good reasons: their flexibility and, most beneficially, their sustainability! People are becoming more aware of climate change than ever before, after all, and its visible effects on the weather throughout the world prompts most to take action however they can. For most people, this means modifying their homes to be more environmentally friendly.

    If you’re a Lord of the Rings fan, you’re probably intimately familiar with the concept and design of “hobbit homes.” If you also care about going green, you’ll be happy to know these homes can and do exist in the real world, and can even be commissioned and built for your own living needs! Interested? In this blog article, we’ll go over just what it takes to have your own hobbit home.

    How Do Hobbit Homes Work?

    If you aren’t familiar with this home design concept, we want to take the time to explain just what a hobbit home is. Building a hobbit home is very similar to building a dome home, particularly in terms of shape. Hobbit homes are typically nestled into hills, identifiable by the door placed into the hillside and the pathway leading up to it. These homes come in all sizes, meaning you can have a hobbit home of your own with as much space as you could possibly need.

    What Are the Benefits of a Hobbit Home?

    The best and most noteworthy feature of the hobbit home, much like dome home floor plans, is its versatility—both before and after building. Not only can you customize your hobbit home exactly to your liking, but once the construction is done, you have further options! Is your home growing too small? You can simply add onto it by requesting more “modules,” or home sections to be further implemented into the hillside. Modules come with all sorts of functions, from rooms to fully usable garages. Furthermore, you can even put the roof of your home to functional use! The grassy layout of the roof of a typical hobbit home makes a wonderful base for a garden, allowing you to grow flowers, vegetables or anything else you choose!

    Even if you don’t want to plant anything on your roof, the grass up top will come in handy in case of rain and other weather events. Because of the vegetation up top, you don’t have to worry nearly as much about water damage to your home. Dome home builders ensure your home will be able to withstand the weather since the grass can easily absorb the rain’s moisture. It will then photosynthesize, giving back to the planet and reducing your need to worry about water conservation and home-owning disasters.

    Does the idea of a hobbit home interest you? If so, B.E. Structural can help put you on the path to obtaining one of your own! Be sure to get in touch with us and we’ll help you every step of the way, from blueprints to dome home floor plans to location.

    https://www.bestructural.com/hobbit-homes-real-heres-can-obtain-one/

    On – 17 Jan, 2017 By

  • Planning for summer food – MY FRENCH COUNTRY HOME

    Planning for summer food – MY FRENCH COUNTRY HOME

    planning for summer food

    Apr 11, 2017

    planning for summer food

    fresh vegetables at market

     

    We’re not in the summer yet, not by a long way, but the spring does seem to be in a hurry to move forward here.  Consequently I’m having to decide very quickly what to plant in our kitchen garden this year.  Since I created the no-dig beds a couple of months ago, I haven’t had time to plant anything, and the only plant showing is the  rhubarb that just refuses to give up.

    We don’t have a big kitchen garden, it’s as much about looking pretty as producing food.  But the few crops that we manage to harvest have to be ideal for summer eating and entertaining.

    That’s why this year I shall be growing a lot of basil for making delicious pesto sauce for our pasta;

    bowl of pesto sauce

    plenty of tomatoes, zucchini and aubergine or eggplant for our stuffed vegetables

    and hopefully this year some coco de Paimpol, or white beans which are quite divine as a summer salad.  They can actually be bought all year around as dry beans, and the recipe below can be adapted to using dry beans in case you don’t have the possibility or indeed the wish to grow them yourself.

    coco de paimpol beans in salad

    To make a salad of Coco beans for four people as a main dish or for eight people as a small appetiser with a glass of rosé before the meal, you will need:

    350 g / fresh white beans preferably the variety Cocos de Paimpol

    one onion with a clove inserted for cooking

    one finely chopped onion (I prefer to use a violet onion)

    sprig of thyme

    3 large spoons of olive oil

    2 spoons of balsamic vinegar

    Cover the freshly shelled beans with cold water, and drop the onion with the clove and the sprig of thyme into the water  Bring to the boil and simmer for about 25 minutes or until the beans are just tender.

    Strain, rinse in cold water and leave to cool.   Chop the violet onion finely, and prepare the vinaigrette then pour the beans into a deep salad bowl and add the onion and vinaigrette with a little chopped chives or basil to taste.  Some people like to add some small cherry tomatoes cut in half, but the beans are delicious without.

    All this beautiful food was prepared and shot at the Château de Moissac, photos by Franck Schmitt for the book My Stylish French Girlfriends.

     

          •

    http://sharonsantoni.com/2017/04/31027/

    On – 11 Apr, 2017 By

  • Practical advice for tenants buying their farms

    Practical advice for tenants buying their farms

    Numbers are hard to get hold of, but anecdotally more tenants are seeking advice and finance to purchase farms and land. While no figures are collected centrally, the Tenant Farmers Association’s recommended professionals are recording more activity on surrenders and purchases than usual, says chief executive George Dunn. The AMC has also experienced a rise in enquiries for loans by tenants looking to buy their holdings. Regional agricultural manager for North Wales and the Midlands Andrew Connah has seen such […]

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    http://www.fwi.co.uk/business/practical-advice-tenants-buying-farms.htm

    On – 18 Feb, 2017 By suzie horne

  • Practical advice for tenants buying their farms

    Practical advice for tenants buying their farms

    Numbers are hard to get hold of, but anecdotally more tenants are seeking advice and finance to purchase farms and land. While no figures are collected centrally, the Tenant Farmers Association’s recommended professionals are recording more activity on surrenders and purchases than usual, says chief executive George Dunn. The AMC has also experienced a rise in enquiries for loans by tenants looking to buy their holdings. Regional agricultural manager for North Wales and the Midlands Andrew Connah has seen such […]

    This article is for subscribers.
    To continue reading subscribe today…

    Farmers Weekly Subscribe to Farmers Weekly

    http://www.fwi.co.uk/business/practical-advice-tenants-buying-farms.htm

    On – 18 Feb, 2017 By suzie horne

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