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Soil, Dirt or Just Muck?   

 

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The Magic Bean......>>.....to.....>>....... Soil


As an Agricultural Engineer I am very excited by the Mucuna bean for it makes the worlds most valuable commodity; SOIL

What's more it can even grow on a rocky hillside, and create a soil bed within 4 years, allowing other organic crops to be grown. where previously nothing existed, that's the magic of the Mucuna bean.

The Mucuna bean, known as the Magic bean solves all modern & old Agricultural problems with soil, from erosion to, poor water absorbency, to nutrient levels.

Furthermore it makes Organic farming easier and possible for the poorer farmers, making competition with the large rich farmers easier.

I suggest you try it in your garden, if you have soil problems, even just too heavy a clay, or drainage, or too dry a soil.

Over the years poor people have been pushed off the land. From the land clearances in Scotland, to recent clearances from India to Palestine.  The Jack in the Bean Stalk children's nursery story, highlights the same wonder of a magic bean to poor people, pushed off the rich land.

By providing a rich soil, derived from a plant that puts down very deep roots, it achieves what a lot of modern farming fails todo, a healthy nutrient rich soil.  See below

MUCUNA BEAN BBC NEWS DOCUMENTARY

magic bean

Julian Pettifer travels through Guatemala, Honduras and Brazil to investigate the story of a plant which could feed the world, the magic mucuna bean.

I am inclined to be sceptical about agricultural revolutions. About 40 years ago, we heard so much about "the Green Revolution" that would banish hunger and usher in an age of plenty.

That revolution was the exact opposite of what today would be considered "green". It was industrial and technological: a revolution in food production using chemical fertilisers, herbicides, pesticides and a range of so-called "miracle" crop varieties.

It certainly achieved several decades of rapidly increasing food production, but there are still hundreds of millions of people who are under-nourished and the outlook for them is gloomy.

planting in unploughed field

Grain being planted in unploughed ground in Brazil
 

Professor Jules Pretty, Director of the Centre for Environment and Society at Essex University argues that poor producers cannot afford expensive technology, and therefore must find solutions based on existing resources.

The mucuna bean

One of those existing resources is the mucuna bean. It is cheap, effective and easy to use.

On Professor Pretty's advice, I went to Guatemala and Honduras where mucuna has been widely promoted by non-government organisations working among the rural poor.

Mucuna provides the best solution to their biggest problems: how to improve crop yields on steep, easily eroded hillsides with depleted soils.

magic bean

When the peasants cut down and burn the forest, the land begins to lose its productivity. As the soils lose their ability to absorb water, they are easily washed or blown away.

This is where mucuna provides all the answers.

Farmers first plant the beans which produce masses of vigorous growth. Then, maize is planted into the residues of the beans which are left to rot on the surface of the land. Subsequently, beans and maize are grown together.

As the soil improves, yields of grain are doubled and even trebled. Mucuna produces 100 tonnes of organic material per hectare, creating rich soils on rocky hillsides in just two or three years.

It also produces fine compost and almost wholly suppresses weeds. The land never needs to be ploughed.

mountains

75% of terrain in Central America is mountainous
 

Moreover, mucuna produces its own fertiliser. Like many leguminous plants, the magic bean takes atmospheric nitrogen and stores it in the ground where it can be utilised by other plants. This is enough to triple maize yields.

As I saw in Honduras, results like that can turn abject poverty into modest prosperity.

New hope

I visited the small town of Guinope, two hours' drive from the capital Tegucigalpa.

Twenty years ago, Guinope was a dying community, as many of its small farmers gave up the struggle to feed their families and fled to the cities.

Today, some of those fugitives are returning to their abandoned land and are making it fertile and productive.

 

nitrogen fixnodules

Nodules in which bacteria fix nitrogen
 

I spent a day with Elias Zelaya, a pioneer of sustainable farming who has spread the message of the magic bean to scores of other small-holders in the area.

As I walked the hillsides, visiting neighbours with him, there was a refreshing absence of that sense of despair that pervades too much of Central America.

Even farmers with the poorest soils are able to increase their yields dramatically with very little investment other than knowledge.

Brazil at the forefront of sustainable farming

But mucuna is just one of a number of crops which are transforming farming in Central and South America.

I was astonished to discover that Brazil is in the very forefront of sustainable farming.

Fourteen million hectares of arable land is never ploughed.

elias portrait

Elias Zelaya
 

Using the "zero tillage" system, it is in permanent cultivation, using a wide variety of cash crops, cover crops and green manures.

In Santa Catarina State, government agricultural policy is increasingly radical.

"The government has thrown down a challenge to make Santa Catarina the first Brazilian state to be free of the use of agrochemicals," said local government adviser Jose Cesare Pereira.

In the state of Rio Grande du Sul, 95% of arable land has become zero-tillage in the past decade and sustainable farming is promoted with evangelical zeal. Brazil, that was so recently the by-word for environmental destruction, is now setting the agenda for sustainable management of its natural resources.

That's good news for Latin America and for all of us.

 

SOIL 

The worlds most important commodity along with water.

More to come.

Did you know that a large part of the rise in fresh water dropping into the North Atlantic, comes from increased run off, from good old USA and Europe. The depletion of soil by modern farming techniques is totally to blame. That is ignoring the increased urban structures. Not all melting ice, I am afraid.

Granite or ground granite to be more exact is another over looked soil creating nutrient.

Soil, Dirt or Just Muck?