[Terrapreta] The new "Black Gold" is already on sale in Indonesia!
Robert Flanagan
saffechina at gmail.com
Sun Sep 2 03:33:13 EDT 2007
Well David,
Better put your view of shit across then mail a bunch of shite!
Life is truly fascinating, as are all those that walk on this rock. We the
only species that can not only determine our own faith by planting crops,
but we can directly influence the life of others, what makes us different
is the more powerful of our species chose greed above life when ever the
choice is put forward!
Talk is cheap! and when it's all said and done, Actions do speak louder than
words!
Regardless of what else we know, FACT, sections of soil on our planet called
"Terra Preta" exist to guide us in a time when we need it most. The only
logical action is to join and try and recreate "Tetta preta" and then teach
others for no other reason than it's the right thing to do!
Rob.
On 9/2/07, David Yarrow <dyarrow at nycap.rr.com> wrote:
>
> the idea of buffalo carrying microbes around on their hooves is curious
> and amusing. but this is really a "hoof and mouth' phenomenon. the main
> way bison transport microbes around is in their guts. every dump of dung is
> a microbial substrate. and then soil insects like the dung beetle spreads
> their fecal fertilizer and resident microbes all around the soil. (the dung
> beetle was nearly exterminated by farm presticides, resulting in pastures
> full of cow pies.)
>
> i can't claim to know much about the current state of research into terra
> preta, but i understand there is some discussion about the mystery
> of whether the ancient indigenous amazonians transported some kind of
> special microbial culture around to inoculate their biochar-enriched soils
> with specialized blends of digesting micro-organisms to inoculate their
> boichar. not only "if" they transported some kind of terra preta starter
> culture, but "how" they carried this culture from one end of the amazon
> basin to the other.
>
> to me, the answer is quite simple. of course they did. in their own
> digestive tract -- just like the buffalo on the prairies. i have no doubt
> the indigenous tribes used nightsoil in their backyard garbage heaps, along
> with kitchen and crop wastes, broken pottery, and all other junk, trash and
> offal. not that they had a lot of waste by today's weights, wastes and
> standards.
>
> the average healthy human carries at least five pounds of micro-organisms
> around in their gut -- primarily in their large intestine. these microbes
> aren't pathogens or parasites. they're a critical part of our own digestive
> system. without them, our capability to digest and assimilate nutrients
> from our food would degrade.
>
> in fact, many modern humans have badly damaged digestive systems, first of
> all due to a high acid (or acid forming) diet. but also due to excessive
> use of antibiotics, which in effect sterilize our intestinal flora. and a
> variety of other poor dietary practices. it's no accident the main class of
> non-prescrition medications in drug stores are digestive remedies --
> especially if you include headache remedies. and it's also no accident the
> second most common surgery is for gall bladder -- mostly for stones. the
> gall bladder is the oldest, most ancient, first-in-evolution part of our
> digestive canal -- director of our entire digestive system and its complex
> processes (at least.according to oriental medicine). a malfunctioning
> gall bladder is a sure sign of chronic, long term digestive disorders.
>
> a prime function of the gall bladder is its normally very alkaline bile
> secretions neutralize acids secreted by the stomach to activate protease
> enzymes to initiate protein breakdown and digestion. gall stones or acid
> bile or weakly akalaline bile means those stomach acids aren't properly
> neutralized, and so the digestive discharges of the stomach begin to degrade
> the lining of the small intestine where most nutrient assimilation takes
> place. and this acid excess will also mutate and aberrate the balance of
> organisms inhabiting our gut, even as acid fertilizers and acid rain degrade
> soil microbe communities and sterilize the soil food web.
>
> for example, i wrote earlier about the B12 bacteria in the rumen of
> herbivoires such as cows and bison. these bacteria thrive in an alkaline
> environment with a rich supply of amino acids. they (and the B12 molecule)
> perish in an acid environment, such as in the stomach, which is why medical
> B12 must be taken as injection, sublingual or inhalant. few modern
> civilized humans have any B12 bacteria in their gut, but i'd bet all my
> money those indigenous amazonians had alkaline intestines that encouraged
> the residence and proliferation of B12 bacteria. and likely their
> composting garbage heaps provided a favorable environment for B12 bacteria,
> too. interestingly, B12 bacteria are also quite common living on seaweeds.
>
> anyway, i am fully convinced the ancient amazonians carried their terra
> preta microbial cultures around in their own guts, and inoculated their char
> and garbage enriched soils by blending their humanure into the mix.
>
> however, given how atrocious most modern industrialized diets are, and how
> out-of-balance and unhealthy most civilized humans intestinal flora are, not
> too mention how toxic, noxious, obnoxious, and awful their offal is, i
> wouldn't want their poop in my compost heap.
>
> that's my feces thesis for terra preta inoculation. of course, you could
> say it's just a lot of shit.
>
> David Yarrow
> "If yer not forest, yer against us."
> Turtle EyeLand Sanctuary
> 44 Gilligan Road, East Greenbush, NY 12061
> dyarrow at nycap.rr.com
> www.championtrees.org
> www.OnondagaLakePeaceFestival.org<http://www.onondagalakepeacefestival.org/>
> www.citizenre.com/dyarrow/
> www.farmandfood.org
> www.SeaAgri.com <http://www.seaagri.com/>
>
> "Happiness can be found even in the darkest of times,
> if one only remembers to turn on the light."
> -Albus Dumbledore
>
> ----- Original Message -----
> *From:* Robert Flanagan <saffechina at gmail.com>
> *To:* lou gold <lou.gold at gmail.com>
> *Cc:* dyarrow at nycap.rr.com ; terrapreta at bioenergylists.org
> *Sent:* Sunday, September 02, 2007 12:36 AM
> *Subject:* Re: [Terrapreta] The new "Black Gold" is already on sale in
> Indonesia!
>
>
> Dear Lou and N.B.G list,
>
> You know life is funny, on my walk to work I was going over what I wrote
> yesterday about imputing beneficial bacteria into the animals diet and I
> remember something Jim F. told me about migrating bison being an integral
> part of the life of the prairie. As Jim explained, when the migrating bison
> pass through the prairie they also relocate soil microbes in the dirt on
> their hoofs as well as process the grass into manure to feed the topsoil and
> microbes. Then I come into work and the first thing I'm reading is about
> bison and the life of the prairie!
>
>
--
Robert Flanagan
Chairman & President
Hangzhou Sustainable Agricultural Food & Fuel Enterprise Co., Ltd.
Skype "saffechina"
Tel: 86-571-881-850-67
Cell: 86-130-189-959-57
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