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A Single Straw Can Start A Revolution. - Masanobu Fukuoka

Masanobu Fukuoka (1913-2008) was a farmer and philosopher who was born and raised on the Japanese island of Shikoku. He studied plant pathology and spent several years working as a customs inspector in Yokohama. While working there, at the age of 25, he...
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A Single Straw Can Start A Revolution. - Masanobu Fukuoka

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Masanobu Fukuoka (1913-2008) was a farmer and philosopher who was born and raised on the Japanese island of Shikoku. He studied plant pathology and spent several years working as a customs inspector in Yokohama. While working there, at the age of 25, he had an inspiration that changed his life. He decided to quit his job, return to his home village and put his ideas into practice by applying them to agriculture.

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Over the next 65 years he worked to develop a system of natural farming that demonstrated the insight he was given as a young man, believing that it could be of great benefit to the world. He did not plow his fields, used no agricultural chemicals or prepared fertilizers, did not flood his rice fields as farmers have done in Asia for centuries, and yet his yields equaled or surpassed the most productive farms in Japan.

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In 1975 he wrote The One-Straw Revolution, a best-selling book that described his life’s journey, his philosophy, and farming techniques. This book has been translated into more than 25 languages and has helped make Mr. Fukuoka a leader in the worldwide sustainable agriculture movement. He continued farming until shortly before his death in 2008, at the age of 95

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After The One-Straw Revolution was published in English, Mr. Fukuoka traveled to Africa, India, Southeast Asia, Europe and the United States. His interest turned to rehabilitating the deserts of the world using his natural farming techniques. This work is described in detail in Sowing Seeds In The Desert (2012). Mr. Fukuoka is also the author of The Natural Way of Farming and The Road Back to Nature. In 1988 he received the Magsaysay Award, often referred to as the “Nobel of Asia,” for Public Service.
 

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I'm going to wait until harvest for next update. Strip tease pics will be posted
 
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This gentlemen's perspective of mankind hits the nail on the head. He is absolutely right though. Everyone perceives reality to their liking or they focus on only one part of the equation they find suitable and think they've solved it.

In the end the term "it's all relative" holds true. Think shroedingers box. [Spelling] everyone views the world from a different set of eyes with their own ideas already imprinted into reality.
 
Yeager
No spray no bureau dirt sun water
Goat chicken manure amend at planting
IMG 7404
 
Yeager
No spray no bureau dirt sun water
Goat chicken manure amend at plantingView attachment 724586
Damn you don't even use neem? How the world do your plants not get eaten up? I do a simple weekly neem/lemon grass oil foliar up to flower to avoid issues. After that i have to rely on aloe and coconut water to keep her strong.
 
Got the lamp hung and fired it. I still need a hanger for the other one but it's all prepped. Went ahead and turned off the LED for now and threw my starts under the new lamp since I read it's recommended to run it for a little while when it's first fired up. These things are bright. I could run wall to wall with 2 more.
 

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Damn you don't even use neem? How the world do your plants not get eaten up? I do a simple weekly neem/lemon grass oil foliar up to flower to avoid issues. After that i have to rely on aloe and coconut water to keep her strong.

Have used neem in past indoors. also seems like GH and OD have way less pest issues.
last year grasshoppers, not too bad damage wise we used grass hopper net over plants.
Never seen mites on OD plants...GH a bit none this year..
 
It's that natural balance. I like it.
16 years working the soil here...
We cultivated this tiller just enough to scratch surface to remove weeds.
analyzed soil amended as recommended landscape cloth covered, individual drip emitters each plant.
Hopefully some day will plant cover crop to overtake weeds before they come up, run our rows no cloth needed, sure eliminates tons of weeds..
 
16 years working the soil here...
We cultivated this tiller just enough to scratch surface to remove weeds.
analyzed soil amended as recommended landscape cloth covered, individual drip emitters each plant.
Hopefully some day will plant cover crop to overtake weeds before they come up, run our rows no cloth needed, sure eliminates tons of weeds..
I run clover and ryegrass together. No other weeds can compete except...weed.
 
Starts are ready to go as soon as these bastards are done flowering. Might just clone right off the seed. For some reason the clones turn out better.
 

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Something I learned about lava rock. Vigoro belongs in the trasho. I was busing it and noticed it to be harder than normal. I didn't worry too much and put it in my bed. I bought flowerock and I want to tell you guys d9nt make the mistake I made and settle. I had a change of heart and now I've had to retill my new bed. I pulled the vigoro out to the best of my ability. Not too concerned because the rest will sink in no time.

Only flowerock from here on out. I found that vigoro mixes granite in. When you pick up lava rock thinknthey school earth science. You were amazed it was a rock. It should feel like half the weight of a rock that size. You should also be able to see the pores going inside the rock. Some companies just put little dimples. Defeats the purpose of aeration.

In the front is flowerock. The back is vigarbage.
 

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I broke this in half with my hands. Flowerock.
 

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I'll probably end up with 2 sets of fox tails. I could milk it some more with fulvic acid but we'll go ahead and let her flush.

I put the 315 over her to finish off. UV B. the mazar should enjoy that. No glass. I'm running 2 open and it hasn't gotten above 76 degrees. No need for exhaust fan. These things run cooler than the LEDs.
 

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