Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
#1
|
|||
|
|||
Concreteblock farming; Agriculture of the future
Recently I posted a thread about the use of the regular concrete block
of 16 X 8 X 8 for gardens and farming. It is a great idea and now want to talk about it in detail as I am running experiments on this approach. In the future when petrol is scarce this is (I feel) the maximum means of farming. I am always talking about the Optimal Strategy in VonNeumann Gametheory in mathematics. And I believe all of agriculture has an OS of farming. In the future when petrol is rare and expensive and when fusion engineering realizes there will never be Fusion Electric Power Plants (Fusion Barrier Principle). Then in that future time agriculture will have to become MAXIMIZED for efficiency. And that is when I believe Concrete Block will be the theme and focus of farming. Also, this planet Earth needs to have a limited amount of human population where I am guessing the magic number is 2 billion people. I just wonder how many concrete block this planet needs for agriculture for that of 2 billion people. What a beautiful quantization of agriculture. Quantized by concrete building blocks. WHAT IT IS: It is the placement of concreteblock on land surface wherein one of the holes of the block is placed the seed or small plant. The block thence protects the plant and marks the plant where it is. The block are spaced such that a human driven push mower, either human muscle or draft animal so that the block protects the plant whenever the pushmower is drawn through the spacings. The clipped weeds and grass become the fertilizer. So, in this future farming there never needs be applied fertilizer for the clippings provide all the fertilizer. There never needs be applied herbicides because the weeds are encouraged to grow for more clippings as fertilizer. There is the problem of more people working on the farm to hand weed the block where the plant is in. I either hand weed or use a shears carefully. What IT WILL Change: In this Concrete Block future farming there will be no need for farm equipment such as tractors or combines or any other heavy equipment. There will be no need to buy any petrol. No need to buy any fertilizer. No need to buy any herbicides. There will be more people working in farming. There will be a need for horses and donkeys again. And it may also eliminate the need for most insecticides because the fields can be diversified instead of one kind of crop. Experiments So Far: On all of the tomatoes planted inside a concreteblock cover, all of them are doing fine. Those planted without a concrete block cover, over 50% are dead because of either birds pulling up the pot in search of worms or because of too much sunlight moving from indoors to outdoors. Caveat: none of the seeds planted in the concreteblock have emerged yet. So if the seed have a tougher time of emerging may have to remedy the problem by placing the block to the side until emerged. Here in the USA, concreteblock of 16X8X8 cost about $1.20 apiece. So to have an acre of these block spaced for the mower to go lengthwise and widthwise is not cheap. But then again, paying for petrol and tractor and all the other farm machinery and paying for herbicides and insecticides and fertilizer are not cheap. I remember a TV show about some NorthDakota farmers having trouble with a weed that is costing them $80. per acre to spray with herbicides just to control it. So the herbicide costs more than any viable crop. In the future, there will be not just one of these weeds beyond the price of control but many of them resistant to herbicides. This type of situation is a perfect test for the ConcreteBlock method of farming. If we take that NorthDakota infestation of $80 weeds fields and put concrete block spaced so that a lawnmower can go through easily. Then we use that weed as a natural fertilizer for the crop plant inside the block. Archimedes Plutonium, whole entire Universe is just one big atom where dots of the electron-dot-cloud are galaxies |
#2
|
|||
|
|||
Concreteblock farming; Agriculture of the future
"Archimedes Plutonium" wrote in message ... Recently I posted a thread about the use of the regular concrete block of 16 X 8 X 8 for gardens and farming. It is a great idea and now want to talk about it in detail as I am running experiments on this approach. In the future when petrol is scarce this is (I feel) the maximum means of farming. I am always talking about the Optimal Strategy in VonNeumann Gametheory in mathematics. And I believe all of agriculture has an OS of farming. In the future when petrol is rare and expensive and when fusion engineering realizes there will never be Fusion Electric Power Plants (Fusion Barrier Principle). Then in that future time agriculture will have to become MAXIMIZED for efficiency. And that is when I believe Concrete Block will be the theme and focus of farming. Also, this planet Earth needs to have a limited amount of human population where I am guessing the magic number is 2 billion people. I just wonder how many concrete block this planet needs for agriculture for that of 2 billion people. What a beautiful quantization of agriculture. Quantized by concrete building blocks. WHAT IT IS: It is the placement of concreteblock on land surface wherein one of the holes of the block is placed the seed or small plant. The block thence protects the plant and marks the plant where it is. The block are spaced such that a human driven push mower, either human muscle or draft animal so that the block protects the plant whenever the pushmower is drawn through the spacings. The clipped weeds and grass become the fertilizer. So, in this future farming there never needs be applied fertilizer for the clippings provide all the fertilizer. There never needs be applied herbicides because the weeds are encouraged to grow for more clippings as fertilizer. There is the problem of more people working on the farm to hand weed the block where the plant is in. I either hand weed or use a shears carefully. What IT WILL Change: In this Concrete Block future farming there will be no need for farm equipment such as tractors or combines or any other heavy equipment. There will be no need to buy any petrol. No need to buy any fertilizer. No need to buy any herbicides. There will be more people working in farming. There will be a need for horses and donkeys again. And it may also eliminate the need for most insecticides because the fields can be diversified instead of one kind of crop. Experiments So Far: On all of the tomatoes planted inside a concreteblock cover, all of them are doing fine. Those planted without a concrete block cover, over 50% are dead because of either birds pulling up the pot in search of worms or because of too much sunlight moving from indoors to outdoors. Caveat: none of the seeds planted in the concreteblock have emerged yet. So if the seed have a tougher time of emerging may have to remedy the problem by placing the block to the side until emerged. Here in the USA, concreteblock of 16X8X8 cost about $1.20 apiece. So to have an acre of these block spaced for the mower to go lengthwise and widthwise is not cheap. But then again, paying for petrol and tractor and all the other farm machinery and paying for herbicides and insecticides and fertilizer are not cheap. I remember a TV show about some NorthDakota farmers having trouble with a weed that is costing them $80. per acre to spray with herbicides just to control it. So the herbicide costs more than any viable crop. In the future, there will be not just one of these weeds beyond the price of control but many of them resistant to herbicides. This type of situation is a perfect test for the ConcreteBlock method of farming. If we take that NorthDakota infestation of $80 weeds fields and put concrete block spaced so that a lawnmower can go through easily. Then we use that weed as a natural fertilizer for the crop plant inside the block. Archimedes Plutonium, whole entire Universe is just one big atom where dots of the electron-dot-cloud are galaxies When energy is dear hydauic cemtent to make concrete blocks become dearer still. On some thinks you have enoght knowlege to make an agrument the looks reasonable or bit. You know so little about the engey balace of agricuture that any preschool farm kid can see thorought it. Grodon |
#3
|
|||
|
|||
Concreteblock farming; Agriculture of the future
It's well you broached the topic on a message list like this and see that
your idea is hogwash. It will save you the embarrassment of being publicly denounced. I do not mean to be ornery but your concept has less than no value. Look around you and discover what is really working for productive minded folks. Jim Curts "Archimedes Plutonium" wrote in message ... Recently I posted a thread about the use of the regular concrete block of 16 X 8 X 8 for gardens and farming. It is a great idea and now want to talk about it in detail as I am running experiments on this approach. In the future when petrol is scarce this is (I feel) the maximum means of farming. I am always talking about the Optimal Strategy in VonNeumann Gametheory in mathematics. And I believe all of agriculture has an OS of farming. In the future when petrol is rare and expensive and when fusion engineering realizes there will never be Fusion Electric Power Plants (Fusion Barrier Principle). Then in that future time agriculture will have to become MAXIMIZED for efficiency. And that is when I believe Concrete Block will be the theme and focus of farming. Also, this planet Earth needs to have a limited amount of human population where I am guessing the magic number is 2 billion people. I just wonder how many concrete block this planet needs for agriculture for that of 2 billion people. What a beautiful quantization of agriculture. Quantized by concrete building blocks. WHAT IT IS: It is the placement of concreteblock on land surface wherein one of the holes of the block is placed the seed or small plant. The block thence protects the plant and marks the plant where it is. The block are spaced such that a human driven push mower, either human muscle or draft animal so that the block protects the plant whenever the pushmower is drawn through the spacings. The clipped weeds and grass become the fertilizer. So, in this future farming there never needs be applied fertilizer for the clippings provide all the fertilizer. There never needs be applied herbicides because the weeds are encouraged to grow for more clippings as fertilizer. There is the problem of more people working on the farm to hand weed the block where the plant is in. I either hand weed or use a shears carefully. What IT WILL Change: In this Concrete Block future farming there will be no need for farm equipment such as tractors or combines or any other heavy equipment. There will be no need to buy any petrol. No need to buy any fertilizer. No need to buy any herbicides. There will be more people working in farming. There will be a need for horses and donkeys again. And it may also eliminate the need for most insecticides because the fields can be diversified instead of one kind of crop. Experiments So Far: On all of the tomatoes planted inside a concreteblock cover, all of them are doing fine. Those planted without a concrete block cover, over 50% are dead because of either birds pulling up the pot in search of worms or because of too much sunlight moving from indoors to outdoors. Caveat: none of the seeds planted in the concreteblock have emerged yet. So if the seed have a tougher time of emerging may have to remedy the problem by placing the block to the side until emerged. Here in the USA, concreteblock of 16X8X8 cost about $1.20 apiece. So to have an acre of these block spaced for the mower to go lengthwise and widthwise is not cheap. But then again, paying for petrol and tractor and all the other farm machinery and paying for herbicides and insecticides and fertilizer are not cheap. I remember a TV show about some NorthDakota farmers having trouble with a weed that is costing them $80. per acre to spray with herbicides just to control it. So the herbicide costs more than any viable crop. In the future, there will be not just one of these weeds beyond the price of control but many of them resistant to herbicides. This type of situation is a perfect test for the ConcreteBlock method of farming. If we take that NorthDakota infestation of $80 weeds fields and put concrete block spaced so that a lawnmower can go through easily. Then we use that weed as a natural fertilizer for the crop plant inside the block. Archimedes Plutonium, whole entire Universe is just one big atom where dots of the electron-dot-cloud are galaxies |
#4
|
|||
|
|||
Concreteblock farming; Agriculture of the future
Sat, 24 May 2003 11:25:27 -0500 Archimedes Plutonium wrote:
Recently I posted a thread about the use of the regular concrete block of 16 X 8 X 8 for gardens and farming. It is a great idea and now want to talk about it in detail as I am running experiments on this approach. In the future when petrol is scarce this is (I feel) the maximum means of farming. I am always talking about the Optimal Strategy in VonNeumann Gametheory in mathematics. And I believe all of agriculture has an OS of farming. In the future when petrol is rare and expensive and when fusion engineering realizes there will never be Fusion Electric Power Plants (Fusion Barrier Principle). Then in that future time agriculture will have to become MAXIMIZED for efficiency. And that is when I believe Concrete Block will be the theme and focus of farming. Also, this planet Earth needs to have a limited amount of human population where I am guessing the magic number is 2 billion people. I just wonder how many concrete block this planet needs for agriculture for that of 2 billion people. What a beautiful quantization of agriculture. Quantized by concrete building blocks. WHAT IT IS: It is the placement of concreteblock on land surface wherein one of the holes of the block is placed the seed or small plant. The block thence protects the plant and marks the plant where it is. The block are spaced such that a human driven push mower, either human muscle or draft animal so that the block protects the plant whenever the pushmower is drawn through the spacings. The clipped weeds and grass become the fertilizer. So, in this future farming there never needs be applied fertilizer for the clippings provide all the fertilizer. There never needs be applied herbicides because the weeds are encouraged to grow for more clippings as fertilizer. There is the problem of more people working on the farm to hand weed the block where the plant is in. I either hand weed or use a shears carefully. What IT WILL Change: In this Concrete Block future farming there will be no need for farm equipment such as tractors or combines or any other heavy equipment. There will be no need to buy any petrol. No need to buy any fertilizer. No need to buy any herbicides. There will be more people working in farming. There will be a need for horses and donkeys again. And it may also eliminate the need for most insecticides because the fields can be diversified instead of one kind of crop. Experiments So Far: On all of the tomatoes planted inside a concreteblock cover, all of them are doing fine. Those planted without a concrete block cover, over 50% are dead because of either birds pulling up the pot in search of worms or because of too much sunlight moving from indoors to outdoors. Caveat: none of the seeds planted in the concreteblock have emerged yet. So if the seed have a tougher time of emerging may have to remedy the problem by placing the block to the side until emerged. Here in the USA, concreteblock of 16X8X8 cost about $1.20 apiece. So to have an acre of these block spaced for the mower to go lengthwise and widthwise is not cheap. But then again, paying for petrol and tractor and all the other farm machinery and paying for herbicides and insecticides and fertilizer are not cheap. I remember a TV show about some NorthDakota farmers having trouble with a weed that is costing them $80. per acre to spray with herbicides just to control it. So the herbicide costs more than any viable crop. In the future, there will be not just one of these weeds beyond the price of control but many of them resistant to herbicides. This type of situation is a perfect test for the ConcreteBlock method of farming. If we take that NorthDakota infestation of $80 weeds fields and put concrete block spaced so that a lawnmower can go through easily. Then we use that weed as a natural fertilizer for the crop plant inside the block. Archimedes Plutonium, whole entire Universe is just one big atom where dots of the electron-dot-cloud are galaxies This is going to be a long thread over time and so I need the very best newsgroups to purvey. I need sci.agriculture, sci.energy and sci.environment. Trouble with newsgroups such as sci.bio.botany and sci.bio.technology is that they are either irrelevant or they have too many regular posters with parochial minds unable to have a single theoretical thought. 90% of laypersons or common persons are unable to be scientific and 90% of people who call themselves scientists and scientific are not really scientists but pretentious. Archimedes Plutonium, whole entire Universe is just one big atom where dots of the electron-dot-cloud are galaxies |
#5
|
|||
|
|||
Concreteblock farming; Agriculture of the future
"Archimedes Plutonium" wrote in message ... 90% of laypersons or common persons are unable to be scientific and 90% of people who call themselves scientists and scientific are not really scientists but pretentious. Seeing as how it comes from Archimedes, I will treasure that quote for a long time indeed Jim Webster |
#6
|
|||
|
|||
Concreteblock farming; Agriculture of the future
Jim Webster writes
"Archimedes Plutonium" wrote in message ... 90% of laypersons or common persons are unable to be scientific and 90% of people who call themselves scientists and scientific are not really scientists but pretentious. Seeing as how it comes from Archimedes, I will treasure that quote for a long time indeed Well he was for many years a janitor at a well-known american university. Admittedly you probably wouldn't have heard of it and I can't quite recollect it's name just now. -- Oz This post is worth absolutely nothing and is probably fallacious. Note: soon (maybe already) only posts via despammed.com will be accepted. |
#7
|
|||
|
|||
Concreteblock farming; Agriculture of the future
"Oz" wrote in message ... Jim Webster writes "Archimedes Plutonium" wrote in message ... 90% of laypersons or common persons are unable to be scientific and 90% of people who call themselves scientists and scientific are not really scientists but pretentious. Seeing as how it comes from Archimedes, I will treasure that quote for a long time indeed Well he was for many years a janitor at a well-known american university. Admittedly you probably wouldn't have heard of it and I can't quite recollect it's name just now. I knew he was in further education Jim Webster -- Oz This post is worth absolutely nothing and is probably fallacious. Note: soon (maybe already) only posts via despammed.com will be accepted. |
#9
|
|||
|
|||
Concreteblock farming; Agriculture of the future
Dean Hoffman wrote:
(snipped what I wrote) A couple things come to mind. The grass and weeds take valuable moisture so your idea would work only in areas with plenty of rainfall. Well, not really. That is mostly a assumption never really tested. Of course in the desert of say Arizona or New Mexico where water really is critical then any and all weeds are avoided. But starting with the Grasslands and higher water regions I suspect that assumption is false. I have noticed, but not run a full science test, that when you have a dry spell on these Prairie grasslands. That a plant surrounded by black dirt with no competing weeds nearby does more poorly than does a plant surrounded by weeds which those weeds are kept cut and trimmed to the ground. Why that is I cannot say for sure in that the clippings do contain moisture which perhaps gets to the desired crop plant or whether the soil with the weed roots undisturbed retains more moisture than the tilled and hoed ground around the crop plant. I would guess that from Praire Grasslands on upwards to more watery zones, that having clipped or mowed weeds nearby a cropplant is far better than having black soil dirt near the cropplant. And it is undisputed that having mowed clippings near a cropplant benefits the plant in both moisture and in nitrogen nutrients. They also take nutrients out of the soil. That is the purpose of farming the ConcreteBlock method in that the weeds become the fertilizer. Everytime you go out and mow your lawn and leave the grassclippings on the lawn you are fertilizing your lawn. The ConcreteBlock will replace the tractor and all farm equipment. And a farm will never again need to fertilize their fields. We want the worst weeds in the world to come into our farmfields because the more they grow is more clippings for our cropplants. Farmers had horse drawn planters and cultivators before tractors. Tin shields protected the plants as the cultivator shovels went by. The same is true today with tractor drawn equipment. I wonder if a grasstrimmer is more efficient than a lawnmower in the use of gasoline per acre or hectare. Of course no damage must be done to concrete block and I am unfamilar as to whether those grass trimmers would damage a block with their plastic or metal wire. Something I would have to research and a trimmer would be easier to go between block. What I do is line the block into a row where one block touches another and it is easy for my lawnmower to hug the outside wall and run straight down the row. But I daresay that once the tomato plants are tall and vigorous that it will be almost difficult to run the lawnmower down there. Worst yet for the watermelon. There used to be something called check planting. A wire was stretched the length of the row. This wire had evenly spaced knobs or knots on it. The planter would drop a seed at each knot. The wire had to be moved after the planter completed a pass. This planting method would allow a field to be cultivated east-west and north-south to help eliminate the weeds. Crop rotation used to be regular practice. The U.S. Farm program and economics put and end to that for awhile. Rotation is being practiced more now since the Freedom to Farm Act (1996) and the invention of Roundup ready soybeans. There used to be migrant workers that would come through to weed the soybeans before RR beans were invented. The workers did fine with their hoes without an obstacle in the way. What happens to your concrete enclosed plants in a heavy rain? That might be something to test. What if a worker trips and bangs his head against one of those blocks? I smell lawsuit. Just askin. Dean The whole point of ConcreteBlock Farming is to get rid of tractors and all petrol powered equipment. To use weeds and grass as fertilizer and so never again do you need to buy any chemicals. The ConcreteBlock becomes the Order for the farm instead of the tractor being the Order. Instead of getting a field black soil with no plants except your monoculture one plant, here we want weeds and grasses. We do not care what weeds and grasses come. Send us your very worst weeds because we mow them down and throw them onto our cropplant to utilize their moisture and fertilizer content. In our ConcreteBlock farming we produce all Organic food, the best food in the world that you do not even have to wash but eat right off the cob. And our ConcreteBlock farming loses no soil to the Mississippi River Basin such that after 20 or 30 generations of farming the old petrol based way has all of its topsoil way down into the Gulf Ocean basin. We do not poison any of our land with chemicals, our food is Organic and chemical free and we lose no topsoil. In fact, we gain in topsoil every year from the soil blown in from the farmers due north and west of our farmland. So as they lose their topsoil every year we gain it and gradually our farm becomes a hill. We lose no topsoil because our ground is never exposed to the wind and rain that all petrol based farming does. Our farm cannot be big as the petrol based farmers because we have to mow the weeds every summer so we cannot take care of thousands of acres but 100 acres is all we can manage. But that is okay because we are guardians of the land who produce pure fresh safe organic food, we are not the strippers of the topsoil that fills the Gulf Ocean floor. Archimedes Plutonium, whole entire Universe is just one big atom where dots of the electron-dot-cloud are galaxies |
#10
|
|||
|
|||
Concreteblock farming; Agriculture of the future
"Archimedes Plutonium" wrote in message ... Dean Hoffman wrote: (snipped what I wrote) The ConcreteBlock will replace the tractor and all farm equipment. And a farm will never again need to fertilize their fields. We want the worst weeds in the world to come into our farmfields because the more they grow is more clippings for our cropplants. hey ho, we have the perpetual motion machine. Jim Webster |
#11
|
|||
|
|||
Concreteblock farming; Agriculture of the future
On 5/26/03 1:54 AM, in article , "Archimedes
Plutonium" wrote: Dean Hoffman wrote: (snipped what I wrote) Well, not really. That is mostly a assumption never really tested. Of course in the desert of say Arizona or New Mexico where water really is critical then any and all weeds are avoided. But starting with the Grasslands and higher water regions I suspect that assumption is false. I have noticed, but not run a full science test, that when you have a dry spell on these Prairie grasslands. That a plant surrounded by black dirt with no competing weeds nearby does more poorly than does a plant surrounded by weeds which those weeds are kept cut and trimmed to the ground. Why that is I cannot say for sure in that the clippings do contain moisture which perhaps gets to the desired crop plant or whether the soil with the weed roots undisturbed retains more moisture than the tilled and hoed ground around the crop plant. I would guess that from Praire Grasslands on upwards to more watery zones, that having clipped or mowed weeds nearby a cropplant is far better than having black soil dirt near the cropplant. And it is undisputed that having mowed clippings near a cropplant benefits the plant in both moisture and in nitrogen nutrients. That is the purpose of farming the ConcreteBlock method in that the weeds become the fertilizer. Everytime you go out and mow your lawn and leave the grassclippings on the lawn you are fertilizing your lawn. The ConcreteBlock will replace the tractor and all farm equipment. And a farm will never again need to fertilize their fields. We want the worst weeds in the world to come into our farmfields because the more they grow is more clippings for our cropplants. I wonder if a grasstrimmer is more efficient than a lawnmower in the use of gasoline per acre or hectare. Of course no damage must be done to concrete block and I am unfamilar as to whether those grass trimmers would damage a block with their plastic or metal wire. Something I would have to research and a trimmer would be easier to go between block. What I do is line the block into a row where one block touches another and it is easy for my lawnmower to hug the outside wall and run straight down the row. But I daresay that once the tomato plants are tall and vigorous that it will be almost difficult to run the lawnmower down there. Worst yet for the watermelon. The whole point of ConcreteBlock Farming is to get rid of tractors and all petrol powered equipment. To use weeds and grass as fertilizer and so never again do you need to buy any chemicals. The ConcreteBlock becomes the Order for the farm instead of the tractor being the Order. Instead of getting a field black soil with no plants except your monoculture one plant, here we want weeds and grasses. We do not care what weeds and grasses come. Send us your very worst weeds because we mow them down and throw them onto our cropplant to utilize their moisture and fertilizer content. In our ConcreteBlock farming we produce all Organic food, the best food in the world that you do not even have to wash but eat right off the cob. And our ConcreteBlock farming loses no soil to the Mississippi River Basin such that after 20 or 30 generations of farming the old petrol based way has all of its topsoil way down into the Gulf Ocean basin. We do not poison any of our land with chemicals, our food is Organic and chemical free and we lose no topsoil. In fact, we gain in topsoil every year from the soil blown in from the farmers due north and west of our farmland. So as they lose their topsoil every year we gain it and gradually our farm becomes a hill. We lose no topsoil because our ground is never exposed to the wind and rain that all petrol based farming does. Our farm cannot be big as the petrol based farmers because we have to mow the weeds every summer so we cannot take care of thousands of acres but 100 acres is all we can manage. But that is okay because we are guardians of the land who produce pure fresh safe organic food, we are not the strippers of the topsoil that fills the Gulf Ocean floor. Archimedes Plutonium, whole entire Universe is just one big atom where dots of the electron-dot-cloud are galaxies My previous comments cut. Think legumes inter-planted with the other crop. I don't think you'd gain anything by letting weeds grow. That's just recycling nutrients at best. Ridge till and no till farming helps hold moisture and soil in place. That's about the same as letting grass or weed clippings protect the soil. Early tractor drawn equipment was just horse drawn stuff with a different hitch. Old time farmers cultivated the weeds to kill them. Dean -----= Posted via Newsfeeds.Com, Uncensored Usenet News =----- http://www.newsfeeds.com - The #1 Newsgroup Service in the World! -----== Over 80,000 Newsgroups - 16 Different Servers! =----- |
#12
|
|||
|
|||
Concreteblock farming; Agriculture of the future
On 5/26/03 4:22 AM, in article , "Jim
Webster" wrote: "Archimedes Plutonium" wrote in message ... Dean Hoffman wrote: (snipped what I wrote) The ConcreteBlock will replace the tractor and all farm equipment. And a farm will never again need to fertilize their fields. We want the worst weeds in the world to come into our farmfields because the more they grow is more clippings for our cropplants. hey ho, we have the perpetual motion machine. Jim Webster Now that is a good analogy. -----= Posted via Newsfeeds.Com, Uncensored Usenet News =----- http://www.newsfeeds.com - The #1 Newsgroup Service in the World! -----== Over 80,000 Newsgroups - 16 Different Servers! =----- |
#13
|
|||
|
|||
Concreteblock farming; Agriculture of the future
Archimedes Plutonium wrote:
Here in the USA, concreteblock of 16X8X8 cost about $1.20 apiece. So to have an acre of these block spaced for the mower to go lengthwise and widthwise is not cheap. But then again, paying for petrol and tractor and all the other farm machinery and paying for herbicides and insecticides and fertilizer are not cheap. I remember a TV show about some NorthDakota farmers having trouble with a weed that is costing them $80. per acre to spray with herbicides just to control it. So the herbicide costs more than any viable crop. In the future, there will be not just one of these weeds beyond the price of control but many of them resistant to herbicides. This type of situation is a perfect test for the ConcreteBlock method of farming. If we take that NorthDakota infestation of $80 weeds fields and put concrete block spaced so that a lawnmower can go through easily. Then we use that weed as a natural fertilizer for the crop plant inside the block. Archimedes, I can give you some figures to begin comparing the costs of standard farming methods vs. the concrete block method. First of all, I calculated that a perfectly square acre could contain a maximum of 17,528 8"x8"x16" concrete blocks, allowing a 3-foot space in between for a mower. At $1.20 per block, it would cost $21,033.60 to purchase concrete blocks for one square acre. I priced a new John Deere model 7810 150-hp row crop tractor, with no extras, at $81,707. This is a mid-level model. I live and work in a rural agricultural area and have observed that John Deere brand tractors are quite popular with the local farmers. One would have to add fuel costs, maintenance costs, and eventually the replacement cost. I found your $80/acre herbicide cost to be extremely high, perhaps the farmers in question had a unique situation. Here are the annual per-acre costs for some commonly used herbicides: 2,4-D: $1.40/acre MCPA: $1.75/acre Roundup (glyphosate): $6.90/acre Sonalan (ethalfluralan): $9.18/acre Of course, the actual herbicide(s) would depend on the particular crop and what weed is to be killed. It was not clear to me how the use of concrete blocks would eliminate the need for pesticide. However, there are a variety of viable alternatives to the use of pesticide. The average cost per acre for pesticide (including fungicide) in the US is $24.69 per acre annually. I am having difficulty quantifying the labor costs. Typical labor costs per acre under the standard agricultural cultivation method are about $340 per season. The concrete block method would be substantially more labor intensive. Perhaps you could estimate the number of labor hours required per acre and multiply by the estimated wage. For purposes of brevity I have omitted the sources of the figures and the details of the calculations, however I could provide these on request. I hope the above information is helpful to you. Best regards, -Kevin |
#14
|
|||
|
|||
Concreteblock farming; Agriculture of the future
30 May 2003 09:53:38 -0700 Kevin Eanes wrote:
(snipped) Archimedes, I can give you some figures to begin comparing the costs of standard farming methods vs. the concrete block method. First of all, I calculated that a perfectly square acre could contain a maximum of 17,528 8"x8"x16" concrete blocks, allowing a 3-foot space in between for a mower. At $1.20 per block, it would cost $21,033.60 to purchase concrete blocks for one square acre. Yes, Kevin, I believe how this is going to work best is not to make a huge initial investment of buying alot of concreteblock but to start out small and keep adding more block with future profits from the garden and farm. I envision that organic farmers will make the switch faster than anyone else. And for specialty growers such as tulips or other valuable specialities where the concrete block is more of a modified "pot". Or a pot with its bottom missing. I priced a new John Deere model 7810 150-hp row crop tractor, with no extras, at $81,707. This is a mid-level model. I live and work in a rural agricultural area and have observed that John Deere brand tractors are quite popular with the local farmers. One would have to add fuel costs, maintenance costs, and eventually the replacement cost. Kevin, the most important data for me at this moment in time is to find out if any of the 50 or more University Aggie schools have done their homework. Have done the research and found out how much grass clippings and weed clippings via a mower equals a "fair sprinkling of fertilizer". Kevin, are you privy to any data or information as to how much grass and weed mowing clippings would it take to fertilize a row of corn in perpetuity? I just have the ugly feeling that Aggie College professors are mostly salesperson proxies to the chemical and agribusiness companies and have spent the entire 20th century touting herbicides and not a single one of them researching how much grass/weed clippings is equal to artificial fertilizer application. I found your $80/acre herbicide cost to be extremely high, perhaps the farmers in question had a unique situation. Here are the annual per-acre costs for some commonly used herbicides: Yes, thanks Kevin, that $80 figure was my best attempt at recall of the plight of some NorthDakota farmers with a weed (forgotten its name -- spurge??-- don't hold me to that name). Anyway these NorthDakota farmers have a weed that costs them more in herbicides than any crop yield return. And I am guessing they make on average 60 dollars per acre on a crop return. So if the herbicide costs more than 60 dollars then those NorthDakota farmers cannot plant a crop there. But if they used the ConcreteBlock Method of farming then this weed is a welcomed sight because we get out the mower and mow it down and it becomes a fertilizer for the corn. In our method we welcome the most vigourous and fast growing weeds because they give our crops more nitrogen fertilizer. 2,4-D: $1.40/acre MCPA: $1.75/acre Roundup (glyphosate): $6.90/acre Sonalan (ethalfluralan): $9.18/acre Of course, the actual herbicide(s) would depend on the particular crop and what weed is to be killed. Interesting, and mowing the ConcreteBlock Method of farming is not the suburban style mowing but rather instead more like the mowing of alfalfa about 4 or 5 times a year. And our mowing is mowing to as close to the ground as possible and to have a mower that sprays the clippings up against the concrete block so the crop gets the most clippings. I estimate from my own acre of garden that it costs me about 10 dollars per summer to mow. So, Kevin, if Roundup costs 7 dollars per acre, then my mowing of 10 dollars per acre per summer (gasoline at 1.50 per gallon). Then herbicide application in petrol-based farming matches the price of just simply mowing your farm each year and the ConcreteBlock Method needs no fertilizer. So I solved two problems in one. By mowing I solved the need for herbicide and also solved the need for fertilizer. It was not clear to me how the use of concrete blocks would eliminate the need for pesticide. However, there are a variety of viable alternatives to the use of pesticide. The average cost per acre for pesticide (including fungicide) in the US is $24.69 per acre annually. Wow, that is a high cost. I am not clear either as to the Optimal Strategy for a Renewable pesticide program. ConcreteBlock Method faces the challenge of pests just as Petrol-Based Farming. But Petrol based farming excerbates pests with its huge fields of monocultures. Like an open invitation for swarms of insects to eat up the crop. ConcreteBlock decreases pests because in the planting their need not be a monoculture but a wide diversity of crop in the field. Also, the farmfield will be much smaller in this method. Farmers can no longer operate hundreds or thousands of acres unless they hire alot of people. A farmfield in the ConcreteBlock Method would be 20 acres or less per person farmer. So when a person tends and takes care of 20 acres, the pest problem is vastly reduced. I know of many gardens that have pests but the gardener never applies any poison pesticide. Another alleviation of pests in the ConcreteBlock Method would be to use biotech seed that is pest resistant. Renewable and Organic produce is not antagonistic to biotech GMO plants that is pest resistant. I am having difficulty quantifying the labor costs. Typical labor costs per acre under the standard agricultural cultivation method are about $340 per season. The concrete block method would be substantially more labor intensive. Perhaps you could estimate the number of labor hours required per acre and multiply by the estimated wage. Labor costs in Petrol-based farming is irrelevant because it is the petrol and tractor that is creating farms of huge size where one person can farm it all and where grain surpluses appear every year in the marketplace and why corn is 2 dollars a bushel. We need to reserve oil reserves for future generations. We need to limit human population to no more than 2 billion persons at any one time. And we need Agriculture farming that is Renewable. For purposes of brevity I have omitted the sources of the figures and the details of the calculations, however I could provide these on request. I hope the above information is helpful to you. Best regards, -Kevin Kevin, in your above you say the rows are 3 feet apart. The most important data I need at this time is how much grass/weed clippings in mowing is needed for a row of corn so that it is fertilized during the summer? I need to know if 3 feet is the proper spacing. Of course some crops such as beans need less fertilizing by clippings than does corn. I need to know if any scientists have made that knowledge available. How much grass/weed clippings equals a cupful of common fertilizer? Archimedes Plutonium, whole entire Universe is just one big atom where dots of the electron-dot-cloud are galaxies |
#15
|
|||
|
|||
Concreteblock farming; Agriculture of the future
Kevin Eanes wrote: First of all, I calculated that a perfectly square acre could contain a maximum of 17,528 8"x8"x16" concrete blocks, allowing a 3-foot space in between for a mower. At $1.20 per block, it would cost $21,033.60 to purchase concrete blocks for one square acre. Kevin, that number of 17,000 sounds a bit too high comparing my own acre which has block on it. Acre is about 44,000 sq ft and consider a block takes up about 1 sq ft I think that 10,000 block with 3 ft strips of weeds/grasses to mow for fertilizer is more akin to my acre test plot. Archimedes Plutonium, whole entire Universe is just one big atom where dots of the electron-dot-cloud are galaxies |
|
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|
Similar Threads | ||||
Thread | Forum | |||
eliminate fertilizer and herbicide steps in farming Concreteblock farming; Agriculture of t | Plant Science | |||
eliminate fertilizer and herbicide steps in farming Concreteblock farming; Agriculture of t | sci.agriculture | |||
eliminate fertilizer and herbicide steps in farming Concreteblock farming; Agriculture of t | Plant Science | |||
eliminate fertilizer and herbicide steps in farming Concreteblock farming; Agriculture of t | Plant Science | |||
Concreteblock farming; Agriculture of the future | Plant Science |