• Print
  • Send to a friend
  • Comment (0)
  •  

A destructive pattern of agriculture

Published on February 8, 2013
Published on February 7, 2013
Letters to the Editor (The Guardian)  RSS Feed

ditor:

Islanders are looking at the Lands Protection Act again. There is a ‘want' by the large farms to get even larger and let corporations get more land, too. This is what they say they need for viability.

Today, at my place, snow in my woods and on my barns, house, and fields are all covered in silt from blowing topsoil from the huge fields beside my farm. This happens every winter. This is not viable or sustainable.

The finest particles of topsoil are called colloids. These take a thousand years to develop in nature and are the most important part of the soil structure. Their fineness allows for plant nutrient exchanges to occur in the best way. The colloids are the first particles to be lost in wind and water erosion.

P.E.I. had great land once. Now, year over year, potato production per acre on P.E.I. is dropping. It is a fact. The thought of giving more land over to such a destructive pattern of agriculture that exists now is stupid.

Ranald Macfarlane,

Fernwood

Advertising

Newsletter

Please enter your email to receive our free newsletter

Subscribe to news alerts
loading...

Expert bloggers

Ride for Heart
Blogger
Heart and Stroke Foundation
Let's go ride a bike
[Sponsored]

More bloggers here

The Guardian Twitter

Advertising