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Farmers of Forty Centuries
For more than 40,000 years, Asian farmers worked the same fields repeatedly without sapping the land's fertility and without applying artificial fertilizer! How they accomplished this miraculous feat is described by author Franklin Hiram King, a former official of the U.S. Department of Agriculture. King traveled to Asia in the early 1900s to learn how farmers in China, Korea, and Japan were able to achieve successful harvests century after century without exhausting the soil ā one of their most valuable natural resources. This book is the result of his extraordinary mission.
A fascinating study of waste-free methods of cultivation, this work reveals the secrets of ancient farming methods and, at the same time, chronicles the travels and observations of a remarkable man. A well-trained observer who studied the actual conditions of life among agricultural peoples, King provides intriguing glimpses of Japan, China, Manchuria, and Korea; customs of the common people; the utilization of waste; methods of irrigation, reforestation, and land reclamation; the cultivation of rice, silk, and tea; and related topics.
Enhanced with more than 240 illustrations (most of them photographs), this book represents an invaluable resource for organic gardeners, farmer, and conservationists. It remains "one of the richest sources of information about peasant agriculture [and] one of the pioneer books on organic farming." ā The LastWhole Earth Catalog.
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A fascinating study of waste-free methods of cultivation, this work reveals the secrets of ancient farming methods and, at the same time, chronicles the travels and observations of a remarkable man. A well-trained observer who studied the actual conditions of life among agricultural peoples, King provides intriguing glimpses of Japan, China, Manchuria, and Korea; customs of the common people; the utilization of waste; methods of irrigation, reforestation, and land reclamation; the cultivation of rice, silk, and tea; and related topics.
Enhanced with more than 240 illustrations (most of them photographs), this book represents an invaluable resource for organic gardeners, farmer, and conservationists. It remains "one of the richest sources of information about peasant agriculture [and] one of the pioneer books on organic farming." ā The LastWhole Earth Catalog.
Reprint of the Mrs. F. H. King, Madison, Wisconsin, 1911 edition.
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For more than 40,000 years, Asian farmers worked the same fields repeatedly without sapping the land's fertility and without applying artificial fertilizer! How they accomplished this miraculous feat is described by author Franklin Hiram King, a former official of the U.S. Department of Agriculture. King traveled to Asia in the early 1900s to learn how farmers in China, Korea, and Japan were able to achieve successful harvests century after century without exhausting the soil ā one of their most valuable natural resources. This book is the result of his extraordinary mission.
A fascinating study of waste-free methods of cultivation, this work reveals the secrets of ancient farming methods and, at the same time, chronicles the travels and observations of a remarkable man. A well-trained observer who studied the actual conditions of life among agricultural peoples, King provides intriguing glimpses of Japan, China, Manchuria, and Korea; customs of the common people; the utilization of waste; methods of irrigation, reforestation, and land reclamation; the cultivation of rice, silk, and tea; and related topics.
Enhanced with more than 240 illustrations (most of them photographs), this book represents an invaluable resource for organic gardeners, farmer, and conservationists. It remains "one of the richest sources of information about peasant agriculture [and] one of the pioneer books on organic farming." ā The LastWhole Earth Catalog.
natural farming;farming systems;human goal;modern agribusiness;alternative food;corrective actions;global systems;agricultural methods;modern agricultural;traditional farming;agricultural research;citrus trees;harmful insects;natural diet;organic agriculture;vandana shiva;deep observation;soil fertility;healthy soil;true culture;letting nature;modern farming;sowing seeds;chemical fertilizers;organic material;arable land;organic matter;industrial farming;agricultural practices;farming techniques;sustainable farming;modern methods;spiritual awareness;living simply;sustainable agriculture;farming methods;farming practices;brown rice;natural processes;stop indulging;grow food;organic gardening;practical knowledge;plant seeds;food movement;wendell berry;human knowledge;vegetable garden;east asia;billion people;michael pollan;food production;mother nature;scientific method;ultimate goal;natural world;tillage;masanobu;fukuoka;desertification;mollison;herbicides;korn;do-nothing;permaculture;soils;inputs;tilling;irrigation;composting;mulch;compost;pesticides;weeding;cultivation;yields;clover;grains;chemicals;deserts;crops;straw;farmers;japan;books on true cultures;books on human goals;books on corrective actions;books on farming systems;books on modern agribusinesses;books on global systems;books on organic agricultures;books on soil fertilities;books on natural farmings;books on agricultural researches;books on natural diets;books on agricultural methods;books on alternative foods
A fascinating study of waste-free methods of cultivation, this work reveals the secrets of ancient farming methods and, at the same time, chronicles the travels and observations of a remarkable man. A well-trained observer who studied the actual conditions of life among agricultural peoples, King provides intriguing glimpses of Japan, China, Manchuria, and Korea; customs of the common people; the utilization of waste; methods of irrigation, reforestation, and land reclamation; the cultivation of rice, silk, and tea; and related topics.
Enhanced with more than 240 illustrations (most of them photographs), this book represents an invaluable resource for organic gardeners, farmer, and conservationists. It remains "one of the richest sources of information about peasant agriculture [and] one of the pioneer books on organic farming." ā The LastWhole Earth Catalog.
Reprint of the Mrs. F. H. King, Madison, Wisconsin, 1911 edition.











