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It's also a fact that rural areas are also ecologically unsustainable - that is, outside of a romanticized view of "Nature."
And now, if you'll excuse me, I need to send off a package, and guess what? cardboard boxes don't grow on trees, but they're pretty easy to recycle from city streets.
Founder and CFO, The Giddiyap Society.
by Trotsky the Horse on Thu Jan 24, 2008 at 09:56:35 AM PDT
[ Parent ]
have had little to no loss of soil fertility over millenia of farming. "Millenia" is enough sustainability for me.
It's not a romanticized view of nature that's at work here; just straightforward agroecological knowledge, of the type that capitalist agribusiness has attempted to destroy...
"The freeway's concrete way won't show/ you where to run or how to go" -- Jorma Kaukonen
by Cassiodorus on Thu Jan 24, 2008 at 10:03:30 AM PDT
have had millenia (close to three, I reckon), of close interaction with a complex culture of production and exchange that did not necessarily draw a fixed line between the urban and the rural. Tikal, for instance, appears to have been a vast, self-sustaining agro-urban, commercial and religious center. A nice chunk of the religious narrative was recycling - including the recycling of human bodies. People is Soylent Green no matter where they live.
by Trotsky the Horse on Thu Jan 24, 2008 at 10:28:30 AM PDT
seeing Maya women farming corn - and in Guatemala brocoli, etc on steep slopes - and in Peru seeing some of the Incas' intricate water systems still in use for agriculture (even in an otherwise desert)- has helped my appreciation of how, if one keeps it simple, but is clever with use of water and does not abuse the soil and respects the Earth (Pachamama), it's possible (though barely) to have sustainable food production.
Buy a Boat. Save the Seed.
by cumberland sibyl on Fri Jan 25, 2008 at 08:35:28 AM PDT
and I will try to reflect some of this (at least in the Maya sense) in my next diary...
by Cassiodorus on Fri Jan 25, 2008 at 09:07:28 AM PDT
wide narrow
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