This is seriously important. The
three sister story is actually badly wrong. Corn growing took place in
the bottom lands where you had annual flooding and muck soils. This crop
produced two products. Corn of course but also dried stover that is
easily used to create biochar kilns as i posted ten years ago. That bio
char was then easily blended with the soil and carried in baskets to where
growing need to be supported.
This made the
artificial terraces easy to build up and work. It also turns out that
beans and vegetables grow best on those terraces.
All this
supported the huge population with a completely sustainable food production
technology.
AGRICULTURAL SCIENTIST CONFIRMS RESULTS OF EXPERIMENTS ON BIOCHAR TERRACES
Posted by Richard Thornton |
May 17, 2017 |
Why would our ancestors commit extensive
labor to build terrace complexes on the mountainsides of the Southern
Appalachians and the hillsides of the Piedmont . . . but then often nearby
cultivate massive fields of corn in the river bottomlands? For example, the
Track Rock Terrace Complex is in easy walking distance of several contemporary
towns with mounds in the Nottely and Brasstown Creek flood plains.
Another question that I had was really a
“fact check.” Virtually all American History and Anthropology books state that
Native Americans “grew the three sister plants, corn, beans and
squashes/pumpkins together,” because the plants were symbiotic. Is that really
true, or is it the speculation of some professor, who everybody believed was
infallible many decades ago?
Five years ago I started construction of a
“mini-terrace complex” with the same orientation and soil types as Track Rock
Gap. The only differences were is that the experimental location gets more
rainfall and is a 2-5 degrees warmer in mid-summer than Track Rock Gap.
From the beginning I used biochar, Maya
and Creek farming techniques . . . all of which focus on “growing the soil”
year-round. I put all my bones and egg shells in the wood stove throughout the
heating season and spread all of the ashes and charcoal on the garden. I
compost all of the weeds and non-burnable organic kitchen waste then mix the
compost into the soil during late winter and early spring. Periodically, during
the peak growth periods, I irrigate with diluted human urine. I sprinkle fine
wood ashes on predatory insects, which generally makes them shrivel and die.
Effect on plants
What I have found is that legumes (beans
and peas) indigenous to the Americas grow like kudzu on my terraces. Seeds that
the package says should grow vines 32 inches tall, produced vines six feet
tall. Seeds that were supposed to grow vines to about six feet tall grew from
11 to 14 feet tall. The legumes seem to
be the most affected by biochar soil techniques.
As all those who have seen the magic
garden can confirm, the biochar terraces produce picture perfect collards,
cabbages and broccoli with very little damage from insects. The broccoli and
collards especially are “super-sized.” However, Native Americans did not
grow members of the cabbage family until after Europeans began colonizing North
America.
Both Yellow and Winter Squash planted near
corn did very poorly with stunted fruits, while legumes planted near corn had
spindly vines and few peas or beans. So the mixing of these three plants seems to be an “urban
legend,” created by academicians, who never farmed in their lives.
I have found that corn, beans and
members of the squash family prefer entirely different types of soil and sun
exposure. Corn prefers sandy loam that is liberally treated with
dolimitic lime, shells and animal bones. Beans do best on well-drained soils
consisting of clay that has been converted into brown or black bio-char soil.
Yellow (summer) squash prefers lots of space in soil, which contains a high
percentage of decomposed wood or leave particles. Winter squash prefers rough,
woodsy soil with lots of whole decomposing leaves and soil that has been
recently burned by “slash and burn” techniques. I get monster butternut
squashes when I plant the seeds directly in the areas where I burned brush and
tree limbs the previous fall.
What the expert said
Dr. Ray Burden was kind enough to drive
down from Tennessee to visit my hovel and magic biochar garden today. He served
for many years as the Director of the Chattanooga-Hamilton County, Tennessee
Agricultural Extension Office then was on the staff of the University of
Tennessee for several years. He has recently retired. Ray is of Creek and Uchee
descent and a member of the Coweta Creek Confederacy.
Beans on a Guatemalan terrace farm
I asked Ray about the the contradiction
between how my bio-char terrace garden behaved and what the
history-anthropology text books say. The beans are amazingly productive on the
terraces, but the corn is stunted unless build furrows out of sandy loam from
bottom land.
One type of squash likes soil that is
halfway between flood plain soils and mountainside soils, while the winter
squash behave as if they would be happier growing on the edge of the woods and
wrapping their vines around saplings. Tomato plants grow to seven feet tall in
the exact same soil that the yellow squash likes. In contrast, pumpkins
preferred the same soil that corn likes. They did not do well on the biochar
terraces . . . even in the same locations that their cousins, winter squash
liked.
I told Ray that I never saw corn growing
on the terrace complexes in Chiapas State, Mexico and in southern Guatemala. I
only saw beans, peppers and small sweet squashes growing on the terraces. All
the corn was grown in bottom lands, while all the pumpkins and tobacco were
grown at the bases of mountainsides in between the corn and the bean terraces.
Were the Mesoamerican farmers doing things all wrong or was this actually very
sophisticated farming techniques?
Ray responded, “We always told the farmers
to grow the corn in the bottomlands and the beans on the uplands.”
So apparently, the “three sister crops
growing together” thing is an urban legend (myth) created by someone, who never
saw a Native American farmer and certainly never had a Native American in their
home.
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