This particular piece
is worthy and nicely integrates the role of organic farming with active animal
husbandry. A lot is said here that I was not particularly familiar with except
by intuition. This blog has long championed
the close integration of companion planting and animal husbandry. This takes it much further to possibly
marginal conclusions.
I would also note,
outright ignorance of biochar protocol has been a limiting factor in all
this. Once that is established and not
even for that long, the soils will be hugely enhanced. A uniform result may even be anticipated.
Otherwise, animal
husbandry is an efficient way to manage soil health and that can only be
improved with the biochar protocol which avoids nutrient losses.
The core plea of Steiner
has never been wrong. It is that our
practices degrade the value of our food stream.
The kick back to end this has only really begun now and almost too late
for much of our lands.
What is Biodynamic
Farming?
By
WENDY E. COOK
My
first introduction to a biodynamic farm was over 35 years ago, yet it made such
an indelible impression upon me that I can still vividly recreate the memory.
Nestling in the soft East Sussex hills, Busses Farm, run by Jimmy and Pauline
Anderson, was a clear demonstration of a living example of biodynamics.
Walking
through the kitchen garden was like being in a Monet painting. The French
intensive biodynamic method was being practised, with raised beds and an
exuberant riot of herbs, flowers and vegetables. Patches of marigolds, tagetes
and nasturtiums tangled with bright blue borage, lavender, rosemary,
courgettes, cucumbers and firm-hearted lettuce. Runner beans busily twined up
poles and tomatoes grew warm, sweet and ripe.
If
you managed to glimpse the soil through this cornucopia it was black and
crumbly, the kind that produces happy plants. Bees provided the background hum
as they gratefully progressed from flower to flower, spoilt for choice between
gardens and orchards. This was the first time I remember hearing about
companion planting.
Out
in the fields was a herd of horned Sussex cows, most with their calves, for
breeding as well as some milk cows; a few fluffy sheep that looked like an
advertisement for washing powder, 300 pecking and excitable hens, and a
wonderful workhorse that was used for transporting heavy loads.
All
of these animated the landscape with their variety of shapes, colours, sounds
and behaviours. In addition to this huge quantity of mouths and beaks to feed
there was usually a group of very hard-working and very hungry apprentices who
would come to train for 3-6 month blocks. Their healthy appetites meant that
Pauline’s four-oven Aga was always on the go, full of marvellous dishes. And,
as if this was not enough, the indefatigable Andersons pioneered a vegetable
and wholefood shop in the village of Forest Row, which has continued to go from
strength to strength.
So
many people were enthusiastic about getting biodynamic produce that a number
came forward with their various talents, and the next enterprise was a
restaurant run by a team of good cooks – some days the queues would stretch
round the block The salads fairly jumped off the plates with vitality and we
all felt that this was an ‘idea whose time had certainly come’.
On
the farm were study groups looking at the theoretical side of biodynamics, and
regular celebrations of festivals with music, singing and dancing. It was very
hard work to be sure, but it made the profound statement of Manfred Klett
(former head of biodynamic work in Germany) that “the farm is the university of
the future,” a living ideal to be realised eventually on a much wider scale.
When
it honours the particular piece of land that forms it, in all its true depth of
potentiality, the farm is a world of symbiotic relationships and processes. Then the farm becomes the most
excellent, cheap and efficient place to study botany, zoology, chemistry,
physics, water, soil, chemistry, nutrition, cooking, animal husbandry, crafts,
climatology, astronomy and true economy (the Greek oikos, meaning
house +nomia, meaning management; to manage nature’s household properly we
will need to develop a new and qualitatively different understanding of
economic principles).
To
bring us back to today, my local biodynamic farmer Richard Smith takes up the
theme:
“Walking
around a biodynamic garden, or as in my case, over the fields of a biodynamic
farm, one soon begins to realise that there is something different going on
here. It is usually an impression of vibrancy in the plants, warmth in the soil
and a health and contentment amongst the animals. When we look at some of
the surrounding conventional farms, the fact that they have become highly
specialised will be evident. There will be a small selection of crops spread
out over huge fields or there will perhaps be animals, usually cattle or sheep.
We rarely see poultry or pigs, because they tend to be kept in barns or
feedlots where they stay summer and winter. It is hard to think of the
deprivations that they endure. Whereas on a biodynamic farm we will usually see
a wide diversity of crops and animals outside in smaller groups, smaller
machines (e.g. lighter tractors) and generally a closer connection between
human beings and nature.”
One
of the biodynamic farmer’s main goals is to create a balance between plants,
animals and humans, and the needs of that particular soil. The aim is as far as
possible to grow food for the animals entirely on the farm. No artificial
fertilisers are brought in since the fertility of the soil will be derived
exclusively from composted plant waste mixed with the different animal manures.
If there are so many animals that it is necessary to buy feed in, or the
plants do not thrive because there is insufficient compost, then somehow a more
realistic and secure ratio of plants and animals has to be achieved. With
experience, most biodynamic farmers usually find this to be possible. It is a
principle at the heart of biodynamic farming; it is also one of the ways
biodynamics may differ from organic farming (where the main aim for some farmers
is to be able to grow food without chemicals).
Sometimes,
of course, there are difficulties to be faced, such as extremes of weather,
which seem to be occurring with greater frequency. A farmer who has a wide
spread of plants and animals usually observes that not all are affected with
equal severity. Failures are neither total nor ruinous, and there is a measure
of security in such an approach. (No biodynamic cattle succumbed to the foot
and mouth epidemic. The only cull of biodynamic cattle was in Scotland where
the farm was contiguous with an infected farm.) Such security came from
diversity, which used to be true of traditional farms before the last World
War, but is not the lot of the current conventional farmer who has sacrificed a
wide spread of farm products to concentrate on mono-crops or only dairy cows
and has to cope with the unpredictable and fluctuating prices of different commodities.
This is short-term, high-risk farming because specialisation also exhausts the
soil, limits the habitat of insects and birds and can open the door to disease.
A
biodynamic farmer trying to ‘orchestrate’ the number and type of animals
required to create the ideal and appropriate balance on the farm will need to
consider the different types of manures produced by the various animals, and
this in a qualitative way. In animal dung there is something of the
essence of the animal and its whole relationship with the earth. Each group of
animals has a different attribute or gift, and a good farmer will understand how
to direct certain animals to specific parts of the farm where they can improve
and enliven the soil. Here are some thoughts on various farm animals.
The
Pig is a very intelligent creature. It spends a great deal of time rooting
in the soil and is inexhaustibly curious, heaving up the soil and disturbing it
where it is compact and damp, letting in the air. As an omnivore it is partial
to whatever is rich in flavour, especially the taproots of pernicious weeds.
With only a sparse coat of hair it likes to grow fat to keep itself warm and it
seems to extract all the potential for warmth from its feed, so that its dung
tends to be much more earthly and cold (compared to that of the cow). But this
type of manure works well on the cold root crops.
Sheep, clothed
in the ‘Golden Fleece’ and famous as the ‘Golden Hoof’, improve the land
wherever they tread. They nibble close to the ground thus allowing light to
penetrate the pasture, which responds by the production of a rich clover. Their
silica-rich manure encourages the growth of strong stems that help the plant
reach up into the air and light. Although the sheep is a ruminant animal with a
complex digestion, involving four stomach chambers and a circular process of
regurgitation into the mouth for further chewing, its digestion is not as
advanced as that of the cow.
The
Cow, a ruminant, has a digestive system that has reached a state of perfection.
The reach of the cow’s senses out into the world, however, is limited; she
chews the cud in a state between dreaming and waking. She seems to inwardly
experience all the plants of the meadow as she chews and re-chews them in a
wonderful reverie. It is not difficult to appreciate why this animal is so
venerated by the Hindus as a model of meditative peace. The dung that derives
from a digestive tract 22 times the length of the animal is so transformed from
the original plant state that cattle are not repulsed by it, as other animals
are by theirs. Cow dung has been so well assimilated that it is provides the
most nutritionally available dung for maturing plants on the farm or in the
garden, when composted. Its effect is strongest on the soil surface; it
nourishes leaves – the watery part of the plant – and so balances the earthly
and watery realms. The cow is indeed quite central to the proper workings of a
biodynamic farm.
So
farm animals are connected with the four elements of earth, air, fire and
water. If only there were still horses on farms, then the aspect of ‘warmth’
would be more completely fulfilled. (Horse manure has always been prized by
flower growers.) The dung of the pig specially fertilises root crops and
sheep’s dung the stems and flowers. Much that we have been describing could be
observed on a well-run organic farm, so what is different about biodynamics?
Origins
of the Biodynamic Movement
The
biodynamic movement grew out of the deep concerns of a group of farmers in
central Europe back in the 1920s. They had noticed an increasing degeneration
in seed strains, in many cultivated plants, and in their livestock. They
approached scientist and philosopher Rudolf Steiner in 1924 seeking some
insights and practical ideas to offset this decline. (How much has happened to
exacerbate this trend since then!) Steiner envisaged what might happen if
mineral fertilisers should be used extensively in farming rather than the
natural fertility of animal manures and good compost. He said:
“The
materialistic farmer who thinks about these matters can calculate how many
decades it will be in this century before agricultural products have
degenerated so far that they can no longer nourish the human being adequately.
With the materialistic world conception, agriculture has come the furthest away
from rational principles.” (Agriculture)
He
went on to predict how farm products would become so denatured that people
would endeavour to make mineral blueprints of them, and here we are reminded of
the growth of the mineral and vitamin supplement industry over past decades.
Steiner pointed out that not only was the earth already middle aged, but it
would become increasingly sclerotic (declining in vitality) as a result of the
developing materialistic view of the earth as a resource for human beings to
exploit. When he was persuaded to offer his insights into agriculture, his aim
was to try and correct a largely one-sided, mechanistic view of nature,
entrenched as early as the 1920s.
Steiner’s
approach offered a view of life that reconnected the earth and the cosmos,
physical life with its origins, in a spiritual worldview – a vision that takes
account of the powerful forces that pour down from the cosmos to work within
the soil and plant. These forces stimulate the processes vital to agriculture,
but in order for these beneficent influences to be fully active, the soil
needs to be sufficiently sensitive. This in turn requires the use of natural
organic fertilising materials, to keep it alive. Coupled with this, special
potentised ‘medicines’ (usually known as ‘preparations’) would be required for
the compost heap and for spraying on the land, as well as a renewed
understanding of planetary and zodiacal influences, to be creatively harnessed
by the sensitive farmer.
The
Moon and Its Relation to the Zodiac
The
forces that come from the zodiac (Greek zodiakos means circle of animals)
have always been recognised as being connected with the enlivening forces of
the four elements, for the earth is indeed a living organism, deriving energy,
warmth and light from the sun. The processes of rain, evaporation, day and
night, summer and winter all depend on our relationship to the sun. The earth’s
satellite, the moon, particularly influences the movement of the waters on the
surface of the earth, waters that are in constant ebb and flow according to
the phases of the moon.
As
the moon circles the earth it is able to focus the particular aspect of each
constellation rather like a lens, according to its passage in front of that
sign. So that when the moon is in front of the constellation of Pisces, Cancer
or Scorpio (all water signs), it magnifies their influence on the watery part
of the plant – the leaves. The earth element (particularly favourable for root
vegetables) can be stimulated by the arrangement of planting, hoeing or any
work that disturbs the soil, at a time when the moon is in Capricorn, Taurus or
Virgo (earth signs).
Some
biodynamic gardeners arrange their garden rotations so that each year a
different plant activity is accentuated on each plot. Flowers should be grown
under air signs (Gemini, Aquarius and Libra) and cereal and seed crops under
the fire signs (Leo, Sagittarius and Aries).
The
Roman scholar Pliny the Elder, in his Natural History, examined the
influences of the moon’s phases on vegetal and animal life. He observed that
if one wanted juicy and good-looking fruits and vegetables for sale or for
consumption, the optimal time to pick them was at full moon, just when ants
were busiest in their hills, even at night, and marine animals such as oysters
were in their period of burgeoning growth. At new moon the ants were seen to be
listless and the growth of sea creatures slack. “Fruit,” said Pliny, “is much
less susceptible to rotting at new moon and can be easily and efficiently
dried.”
Virgil,
born just after the death of Pliny, told in a discourse on agriculture how husbandmen
took cues from the heavenly spheres and constellations to tell them when to sow
their crops, certain seeds being best put into the ground when “glittering
Taurus opens the year with his golden horns.” Paracelsus – a healer and one of
the last of the true alchemists – made much of the connections in astronomy and
astrology for perceiving the ‘signatures’ of plants and to use remedies much
more effectively, as did Nicholas Culpeper who saw that each planet was linked
to a particular plant species, in turn connected to a particular organ of the
body. From the seventeenth century onwards people following such traditional
wisdom have been systematically marginalised, so we have lost the link to the
cosmos.
Biodynamic
farmer Alan Brockman adds:
“Each
planet has its own force field; thus each planet can, at some time or other, be
seen in every part of the zodiac. The earth can be pictured as being surrounded
by seven spheres of force, of which each physically visible planet is marking
out its own particular boundary. These spheres were known as ‘crystal spheres’
(a description attributed to Ptolemy). Steiner indicated that the various leaf
spirals and their positioning around the stem, or ‘phyllotaxis’, indicates
which particular force field the plant is reacting to. So clearly plants and
planets have correspondences, as healers such as Paracelsus and Culpeper knew.”
Part
two of this article appears in New Dawn 113 and explains how biodynamic
preparations are made and their effectiveness compared to modern chemical
fertilisers.
Reprinted
with permission from The Biodynamic Food & Cookbook:
Real Nutrition that Doesn’t Cost the Earth by Wendy E. Cook, ISBN: 1905570015,
published by Clairview Books.
1 comment:
Also see Ecology Action, the non profit of John Jeavons, the author of How to Grow More Vegetables than You Ever Thought Possible. http://www.growbiointensive.org/
The website has lots of info and video presentations.
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