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2 responses to “Basket Feb. 5, 2010 – Same ole same ole!”

  1. I reckon the baskets are pretty darn good; no need to apologise. If predictable means the best tasting and most nutritious rice you’ve ever had, enough unusual fresh greens and veges for the week, delicious duck eggs, bananas and papayas from time to time, plus the odd surprise, keep it predictable!

    Given the short time that the soil has been worked on, it is a remarkable achievement to produce as much as you do. To say the soil on the farm is fairly challenging is like saying the Tanami desert is a bit dry! If the veges don’t grow in it, you could probably make some of the famous Chiang mai Celadon pottery with it.
    Consider the creation of soil as a product. The soil in the annual beds now bears no resemblance to the paddy mud that was dredged up there about a year ago, and the soil in the rice paddies bears no resemblance to the paddy soil in neighbors adjoining (chemical) plots. It would be interesting to know how much carbon had been sequestered in the creation of that soil; a pollutant converted to a resource.
    Also, the many trees on the farm are booming. Trees take at least five to eight years before they really produce worthwhile crops, and when this happens the amount and variety of produce will increase exponentially.
    Of course there will always be bugs to be ironed out and lessons learnt, but as the system matures it will accumulate biomass and more niches and edges will appear, creating new opportunities for increased yield. I predict this will occur simultaneously with the growth and expansion of your social and professional network, which will be vital for the harvesting and utilisation of the many and varied yields. One of the best products (which won’t be in the baskets and is already abundant) is knowledge and mutually beneficial relationships with all who are associated with the farm.

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