The Organic No-Till Farming Revolution: High-Production Methods for Small-Scale Farmers
J**E
Five years later and I'm still using this book
A classic reference book for any small-scale grower looking to learn about several methods for no-till growing. This book has indeed sparked a revolution. Thanks Andrew!!
T**X
Excellent. Brings no-till to organic home gardening, not just commercial-ag weedkiller-type no-till.
Excellent. Helps you figure out how to bring no-till to a home garden with no weedkillers, just occultation (ie, smothering plants as needed with tarps or mulch or both). Some readers have pointed out that there is some repetition involved. That is correct but it is not a problem. The author and the interviewees are riffing on the themes, intentionally reprising them from various angles, hashing details various ways. This is how you move beyond the basic idea into skilled application of it. It makes sense. Even if you only get half or 3/4 through the book, you have learned some applications and have benefited. That's where I'm at, although I plan to finish it as well.
J**Y
A Balanced Converstational-style Overview of No-Till Methods
Disclaimer: I am not a market farmer – only a vegetable gardener. That said, I raise 3,000 sq. ft. of vegetables that I have no-tilled from virgin sod. I have experimented with and still use cover crops, deep mulch, cardboard, occultation, and solarization. Now on to the review…Conversational Style: The Organic No-Till Farming Revolution is not a how-to book or manual with neatly organized steps. Rather Mefferd uses conversational style to tell the stories of about eighteen farmers and their no-till farms. For a farming novice who has never heard of no-till before, this book will serve to pique the curiosity and present a case for no-till farming but will fall short of being a comprehensive handbook. For someone who is somewhat familiar with the subject, Mefford's book may well provide the incentive to start small while answering questions on the viability and profitability of no-till.Contents: The Organic No-Till Farming Revolution begins by listing the benefits of the no-till method and an overall explanation of various techniques. Mefford organizes the remainder of his book by no-till methodology dedicating a separate chapter to each farm interview. Sections include mulch grown in place, cardboard mulch, deep straw mulch, and compost mulch. Mefford also highlights the differences between the use of plastic for occultation and solarization.Andrew Mefford is obviously an advocate of no-till farming, but he does not gloss over the method's weaknesses – namely problems with perennial weeds, slugs, and voles. Throughout the book, the benefits of no-till are overwhelmingly portrayed as outweighing the negatives. These benefits include low entry cost, increased soil biology, better soil structure, increased organic matter, water conservation, weed reduction, and reduced labor requirements.Opinion: I pre-ordered this book months before it was released, and I am not sorry I did. The content is useful to me as a hard-core gardener and should also be of inspiration to a small-scale market farmer. If the book has a downside, it is that the information is so interspersed throughout interviews rather than being organized succinctly in handbook style. This makes locating information for future reference slightly more challenging. On the flip side, the casual conversational style makes for easy reading and brings to the book the authenticity of real-life, economically viable farms as working models.Oh, and one more random note, the cover takes fingerprints like mad, but hey, your copy will probably be soil-stained and teeming with microbiology soon anyhow.
A**J
Great author, great book.
Andrew lays out a very good book full of lessons and experiences from 17 Farmers with all different perspectives and formulas for organic no till farming. I was able to attend an all day lecture with Andrew and it was super helpful and informative. He really is just presenting information he's found, he had his opinions like us all, but tried his best to leave our bias. Great author, great book.
M**N
Great info!
As a novice large scale gardener this book has been immeasurably helpful. I love having the different examples of how no-till is being used by other farmers.
M**H
A must read for no-till farming
This book is an outstanding introduction to no-till farming. The approach of including interviews with many farmers practicing no-till provides a broad description of the subject.
O**O
Buying the mulches and the feetility - unsustainable
The book is informative, however, most of the farmers described in the book import both the fertility and the mulch (when mulch is natural like straw) or they mulch with silage tarps - products of the petrochemical complex. Don't forget that when you buy someone's compost or manure, you are effectively mining their soil's fertility - on a global scale this is not sustainable. All farms should strive to be closed loops as much as possible.
N**R
Great book
Good info
P**A
Absolutely love this book read it twice over two days!
One of the best no till books ever!
G**K
Gostei
Gostei
R**N
A must read for all farmers
Very interesting book. A must read for all farmers, agronomists and any politician or employe working for Minister of Agriculture. It is about time that we open our eyes and stop following blindly the big fertilizer and pesticide manufacturers.
D**D
Many of the practices described in this book are not really no-till agriculture.
Many vegetable growers are interested in reducing tillage to promote soil health and reduce greenhouse gas emissions. This book has some useful ideas, but it would be more accurate to call it a book about tillage reduction rather than no-till, because most of the farms profiled are still doing some tillage. Also, one of the principal practices promoted in the book, using deep compost applications which are left on the soil surface as a mulch, could be problematic because of the potential for nutrient overloading as well as carbon dioxide and nitrous oxide emissions.
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