"Shovel in hand, Duane Hager heads for his cornfield and digs up a
shovelful of dirt, revealing wriggling earthworms. Although a pelting
rain has soaked his gray T-shirt in seconds, not a single puddle lies in
the field or in the cow pasture beyond - a sign of vigorous,
uncompacted earth.
"'If you have soil that is healthy and balanced, it translates into your animals,' says the Kellogg, Minn., dairy farmer.
"Across
the American Midwest and Plains, small groups of farmers are looking at
their most important resource - the soil - and contemplating big
change. Their grandfathers and great grandfathers planted trees for
windbreaks and planted along the contours of the slopes rather than up
and down them to reduce soil erosion. Their fathers began leaving crop
stubble in their fields to improve moisture retention, and some gave up
tilling the soil altogether. Now, the new generation of producers is
looking underground to try to replenish their soils, and they’re doing
it by growing something in addition to corn and soybeans. . . ."
A recent Christian Science Monitor report examined some initiatives designed to improve soil quality.
To access the complete Christian Science Monitor report, please visit:
Christian Science Monitor: Millet anyone? Facing soil crisis, US farmers look beyond corn and soybeans (28 DEC 18)
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