[Terrapreta] Pure Organics Vs. Biological Agriculture

Jon C. Frank jon.frank at aglabs.com
Fri Sep 14 17:17:45 EDT 2007


David,

I agree with the point of your post.

My point was that soils must have electrolytes or plants stop growing and
that the selective addition of commercial fertilizers can be very beneficial
to plant growth.  In other words if soil conductivity only has 50
microSiemens of conductance per centimeter plant growth is virtually
stopped.  Nutrient flow is at a stand still.

If you start with a typical dead soil that has been farmed hard with the
industrial model and then add rock minerals, sea solids, microbial
inoculant, and biochar that doesn't mean you get a great crop.  A run down
soil does not respond the same way as a healthy soil.  The low level of soil
bacteria cannot create enough energy fast enough to digest residue, digest
rock powders (including limestone) and have adequate nutrients available for
crop growth.  In this situation if commercial fertilizers or fairly soluble
organic fertilizers such as liquid fish are not used the farmer will not get
a crop. Period.

Just putting broad spectrum rock minerals, biochar, and sea solids will not
automatically make high brix.  You cannot get high brix without adequate
available calcium, adequate available phosphates, and active soil biology
(which really needs the calcium to get going in the first place).  Many
people involved with trace minerals miss this point and consequently the
brix readings are only so so.  Trace minerals cannot substitute for calcium.

Jon
  -----Original Message-----
  From: terrapreta-bounces at bioenergylists.org
[mailto:terrapreta-bounces at bioenergylists.org]On Behalf Of David Yarrow
  Sent: Friday, September 14, 2007 2:26 PM
  To: Terrapreta
  Subject: Re: [Terrapreta] Pure Organics Vs. Biological Agriculture


    ----- Original Message -----
    From: Jon C. Frank
    To: Terrapreta
    Sent: Friday, September 14, 2007 12:53 PM
    Subject: [Terrapreta] Pure Organics Vs. Biological Agriculture
    a question for you.  Do you use salt on food when cooking or at the
table?  I am sure most people do.  Why?  It adds electrolytes which are
needed both in the human body and in soil.  Too much is bad.  Too little is
equally bad.  Commercial fertilizers add electrolytes in the soil.  If the
soil runs out of energy (electrolytes and available nutrients) plant growth
stops and yields bottom out.
  salt is added to food when cooking or eating as a flavor enhancer.  this
because the foods themselves are deficient in the full supply of minerals
needed to have full flavor.  and this is partly because the soils we grow
our foods in are also deficient in the full supply of minerals required, and
partly because we have inbred our food plants to have more water and sugar,
and survive in weaker soils.

  flavor is imparted to taste bud sensors in our mouth by the minerals --
the electrolytes that carry the electric and magnetic charges that make
biology react.  lower mineral content means weaker flavor.  and unbalanced
mineral supplies means bad flavor.

  adding rock powders and/or full spectrum sea minerals to soils routinely
produces foods with more flavor, as rated by blind consumer taste tests.
also yield crops with higher nutrient density, and higher overall crop
density (eg. more weight per volume).  also longer storage life.  and
enhanced resistance to fungus and bacteria.  also, consumers and animals
routinely eat less of these remineralized foods to feel satisfied.

  the sea is the ultimate and original seasoning.  for example, MSG -- a
classic flavor enhancer -- was originally extracted from seaweed -- kelps,
in particular.  later, chemistry figured out how to artificially synthesize
it.

  adding sodium chloride to food -- refined table salt -- is a bad idea, as
it adds only two elements, not the full range of minerals, trace elements
and pico-elements that make food truly and fully satisfying.  in fact, table
salt makes food toxic by skewing the balance of all minerals.  but you'll
seldom read the god's honest truth that sodium chloride is a major
contributor to heart disease, kidney disease, liver disease, cancer......

  my personal strategy is to soak biochar in a dilute solution of sea water
before adding it to soil, or inoculating it wirh micro-organisms.  once the
charcoal is saturated with water and full spectrum, balanced minerals and
trace elements, it can be added to soil safely without retarding plant
growth, and is an enhanced substrate for microbial popultations to grow
rapidly.

  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
  www.citizenre.com/dyarrow/
  www.farmandfood.org
  www.SeaAgri.com

  "Happiness can be found even in the darkest of times,
  if one only remembers to turn on the light."
  -Albus Dumbledore
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