[Terrapreta] TP,TP list and the Third world
Richard Haard
richrd at nas.com
Sun Apr 27 18:03:34 CDT 2008
Bakary Jatta
This is for you rather than the entire TP reading list. I am a small
scale farmer in the Pacific Northwest of the USA. I just visited
Tobago, an Island off the coast of Venezuela and natural tropical
rainforest habitat. I am quite interested in encouraging use at small
scale producer level. I agree with you that the industrialists and
their equipment manufacture do not have anything to offer charcoal
users at our scale. There work is valuable but so is ours and we
should not beat each other up.
During my visit to the island which was for a family wedding ceremony
we took time to explore back roads and trails looking for evidence of
small scale agriculture. We did find some examples and unfortunately
we were only able to spend a few days and did not have much
opportunity to meet and discuss farming with these people. What we did
notice is that the lush rampant vegetation on the island is a constant
problem. Everywhere we went people were burning vegetation to dispose
of this biomass, yet we saw no evidence of efforts made to make excess
biomass into charcoal. We looked over these burn piles and noticed
very little charcoal was formed.
Here is a picture of a woman burning vegetation, making much smoke and
most likely no charcoal
http://www.flickr.com/photos/rchaard/2447354452/
Here is a picture of a very nice, well managed small scale farm. As
the Island of Tobago is very hilly this farm is on a side hill. We
noticed a simple diversion in a stream and plastic pipe leading
towards a gravity sprinkler system on the hill. Notice the rampant
vegetation surrounding this farmers field. Here is a source of
vegetation that can be charred and spread on this field. I do not
believe any of the industrialists on this list have any equipment to
serve this persons need. It would be very easy with a machette to
gather and store to dry several tons to many of biomass per year at
this site and to distribute the biochar in the field shown.
http://www.flickr.com/photos/rchaard/2438757067/
In my opinion there is agriculture that is the walking dead ( the
fertilizer and energy intensive kind ) and there is agriculture of the
past and also of the future and what is practiced today by millions of
people.
For myself I am experimenting with charcoal production that will yield
1 ton or more per year of charcoal from agricultural waste I have
accumulated and stored. This will give me an assured supply for my
studies and also for a small scale farmer as the field shown above
this quantity would have a beneficial effect on his crops, reduce his
need for fertilizer and improve soil water holding capacity.
I need a technique that is a step larger scale than the oil drum
method for this need. Our first test last year we obtained a good
yield of charcoal with a buried pile technique which is what I am
attempting to improve at this time.
Rich Haard
On Apr 27, 2008, at 2:13 PM, bakaryjatta wrote:
> Dear list members,
>
> Terra Preta seemed to be a good idea and therefore I started to put
> it into practice immediately. After all, we in the third world are
> in need of better food production. Global warming or not, around
> here we have run out of enough shady trees, so we don't doubt things
> are heating up. Rain, on which we rely for crop production, is
> unpredictable and has diminnished in overall quantity , except for
> localized cloudbursts causing extensive damage. So I really want to
> know all the in's and out's of the system and promote the concept.
> Through a dial up internet connection that is agonizing slow and for
> practical purposes excludes downloads of lots of learned documents
> and photographs.
>
> Now, to my dismay I discover that I have to spend a lot of time
> scrolling down digests untill I come upon another line that is
> actually new information, of possible use, after I try it myself.
> After all, there are so many things reported and called lies or
> unscientific, so I cannot just go ahead and trust it will be a good
> thing to spend energy and resources on. Of course, I also grit my
> teeth when I see all the sparring between the partners in the
> exercise of asserting one knows or is better than the other. That is
> not a pastime of use to the third world, where one looks for people
> to solve environmental problems financed by carbon credits >From
> what I found out at a meeting about the subject, the man on the
> ground will receive very litle after the brokers and bureacrats are
> through with it and he has fulfilled all the required conditions
> plus his actual work on the ground.
>
> When it comes to the proper production of Biochar, made according to
> approved standards by an agency still to be decided on, where is the
> equipment, where will it be based, who is going to pay for it, how
> is it going to be get to the third world farmer, and how is he or
> she going to apply it?
>
> Perhaps it would be easier to get the corporations handle the whole
> deal. Put the third world population on welfare and rations while
> Corporate science and technology takes over the land and fixes it
> like it has fixed modern productive society elsewhere. The elite and
> the banks they own will ensure it is economically viable and the
> Governments will assist the banks when they fail with taxpayer's
> money.
>
> Of course, I am not going to wait for anybody. I must get a crop
> planted regardless of environmental uncertainties. Also, I will
> continue to use my inefficient retort made from a barrel. I am not
> illegally cutting trees and producing charcoal the traditional way.
> BTW, Government officials and law enforcement officers are the
> consumers of the charcoal. I wonder whether they will ensure future
> biochar will meet the production standards to be decided on, when
> ever it actually gets produced here. Or do we have to import it
> like we do 70% of our food?
>
> Dear people, please get real ! Think outside the (still very
> confortable) box you are in.
>
> If I want to make my char more efficiently, it looks like I have to
> find information to do so elswhere.
>
> Thanks for trying to save the world from all those people who don't
> do things right.
>
> Love you all anyway.
>
> Bakary Jatta,
>
> Bwiam village, The Gambia
>
>
> _______________________________________________
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> Terrapreta at bioenergylists.org
> http://tech.groups.yahoo.com/group/biochar/
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