The wonderful skill of the Chinese in improving their soil not so good as most parts of our own naturally by which they are enabled as it is now well ascertained to support a population of more than 300,000,000 throughout their vast empire is owing to their wisdom and care in adapting their manures and modes of cultivation to the peculiarities required by the soil As they separate its enriching elements rejecting the parts that can have no effect they are not constantly exposed to a new growth of weeds and the seeds of which are sown among the loads of compost had other manures carried out into the field Hence a weed is a rare thing in their fields and as soon as it makes its appearance is easily seen and eradicated The time is not far distant when the ammonias silicate of potash phosphates &c which render a particular manure valuable will be prepared and used in the form of salts or in a liquid form sprinkled over the soil instead of whole loads being carted out from the barn yard and compost heap for this purpose
Blogging on bureaucracy, organizations, USDA, agriculture programs, American history, the food movement, and other interests. Often contrarian, usually optimistic, sometimes didactic, occasionally funny, rarely wrong, always a nitpicker.
Sunday, December 02, 2012
When China Was a Role Model
From the report of the Commissioner of Patents in 1843:
Saturday, December 01, 2012
South Versus the West in Ag
Sen. Roberts says he'll accept target price supports for southern crops if he can get crop insurance for his crops. See this Politico article. Back in the old days we had separate programs for each crop, but we gradually simplified the programs and legislation down to cover almost all crops the same. But realities sometimes break through the best plans of bureaucrats, legislators, and simplifiers.
Friday, November 30, 2012
Factoid of the Day: NH Legislature
" At 400 members (for 1.3 million people) it's the third-largest
legislative body in the English-speaking world, and you only need about
a thousand votes to win a seat."
link
link
Thursday, November 29, 2012
Lincoln, the Movie, and Bureaucracy
Just came from seeing the movie. Very good, well-acted, mostly well-written, but I'm no critic. Why then do I blog about it? Simple: one of the bad guys, i.e., a leading opponent on the 13th Amendment in the House was George Pendleton. Yes, you're right--some 18 years later he was to be the sponsor of the Pendleton Act, which established the civil service.
Metrics and Dollar Coins: Once More Into the Breach
GAO says we'll save money using dollar coins, which is true. We'd also save money by converting to metrics. But neither is going to happen.
Wednesday, November 28, 2012
White House Garden Gets Full Time Gardener
That's the word from Obamafoodorama. Over the course of 3.5 years the garden has evolved considerably. If I remember correctly it started off as more of a family project, with the idea the daughters were going to get their hands dirty. I haven't heard that in a while, about 3.4 years in fact.
With the garden being in the public eye there's lots more emphasis now on how it looks, which means they do a lot of swapping transplants in. Most real gardeners don't have that room, nor that concern. Although I remember my aunt and uncle had a terribly obnoxiously neat and pruned garden, which went with the terribly clean and organized house. But then my aunt was the youngest daughter in a house with German parents and a mother who apparently was a bit of an obsessive. But I digress.
A full-time gardener seems overkill for the square footage involved, but I suspect he's got other duties. As the concerns for how the garden looks grow, the garden itself becomes less realistic. The first year garden a tourist could view and say to herself: "mine is just as good or better" or "I could go home and do that". I don't think a tourist could say that now, and a first-time gardener might not realize how high the hurdle has been set.
There's more emphasis on the organic plants being used, though I'm not clear that they are claiming the garden itself is organic. I believe they could, since it's now been more than 3 years since the beginning and I haven't noted any reports or inorganic fertilizer or pesticides being used.
So the bottom line is the garden is much more a public relations thing than an Obama family thing, not that there's anything wrong with that. Perhaps it's an indication of how hard it is to maintain a normal existence in the White House.
With the garden being in the public eye there's lots more emphasis now on how it looks, which means they do a lot of swapping transplants in. Most real gardeners don't have that room, nor that concern. Although I remember my aunt and uncle had a terribly obnoxiously neat and pruned garden, which went with the terribly clean and organized house. But then my aunt was the youngest daughter in a house with German parents and a mother who apparently was a bit of an obsessive. But I digress.
A full-time gardener seems overkill for the square footage involved, but I suspect he's got other duties. As the concerns for how the garden looks grow, the garden itself becomes less realistic. The first year garden a tourist could view and say to herself: "mine is just as good or better" or "I could go home and do that". I don't think a tourist could say that now, and a first-time gardener might not realize how high the hurdle has been set.
There's more emphasis on the organic plants being used, though I'm not clear that they are claiming the garden itself is organic. I believe they could, since it's now been more than 3 years since the beginning and I haven't noted any reports or inorganic fertilizer or pesticides being used.
So the bottom line is the garden is much more a public relations thing than an Obama family thing, not that there's anything wrong with that. Perhaps it's an indication of how hard it is to maintain a normal existence in the White House.
Tuesday, November 27, 2012
Estate Tax/Death Tax
I note a couple of items on the estate tax problem, as part of the fiscal cliff negotiations. I'm struck by the fact it's now "estate tax", no longer the "death tax". I don't know if that's just my limited sample, or the juice has gone out of the effort to stigmatize estate taxes.
Drought Costs 3.3 Percent
That's the takeaway from the Des Moines Register piece on the USDA estimate of 2012 income. That says to me, whatever I think of crop insurance, the current system puts an effective floor under income for most crop producers.
Monday, November 26, 2012
Dairy Farmers Needed?
This is rather stale now. I have seen pieces saying dairy farmers are in trouble because the law covering their current program expires at the end of the year. Who to believe?
Farm policy
In other policy related news, Rick Barrett reported on Sunday at the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel Online that, “Thirsty for milk, and the money that comes with it, South Dakota has ramped up efforts to recruit dairy farmers from other states and countries, including England, Ireland and The Netherlands.
Farm policy
Sunday, November 25, 2012
Black Mouth Curs
For some reason I find the idea of tree-climbing dogs and the name "Black Mouth Curs" to be amusing on this Sunday morning. Life on a Colorado Farm has the blog post.
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