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.
Wednesday, April 03, 2013
Drones and Farming
Via Marginal Revolution, here's a Daily Beast piece on drones in farming. Unlimited possibilities, particularly with precision farming. Meanwhile Conor Friedersdorf has an article on how drones should be limited in the interests of privacy.
Tuesday, April 02, 2013
Crunch[ie] Dairy the Demeter Way
This article at Treehugger describes a German dairy farm (mostly) which adheres to Demeter standards. Amusing throughout, particularly this bit:
An oddity: it sounds as if the cows are never slaughtered, but yet they raise chickens for eggs and meat.
Our guide explains that the hollow horns remaining after a cow's passing are filled with manure, and buried underground through the winter. The composting manure gathers cosmic rays in the cold season, and in spring the mixture is dug up and the manure crumbled into the mixing tanks.A special process of mixing creates a vortex that distributes the cosmic energy in the correct manner (the view from the platform is reported to put the mixer in the right mindset during the hour-long mixing process, but more importantly the elevation obviates the need for pumps, which might disturb the cosmic energy)And here I always thought my German relatives/ancestors were practical, hard-headed types.
An oddity: it sounds as if the cows are never slaughtered, but yet they raise chickens for eggs and meat.
Monday, April 01, 2013
History Repeats: Kenya, Cellphones and I-Cow
Been doing some reading (and a little writing) in the history of USDA, extension, etc. The theme I see there is that USDA worked for the most literate, most progressive farmers. That's why I'm struck by this article in CSMonitor on I-Cow in Kenya; an app helps Kenyan dairy farmers manage their herds.
Kahumbu’s iCow may not be the latest sensation on Wall Street, but experts say it is just the latest example of an innovative high-tech entrepreneurial culture that has started to take hold in Kenya. Following in the footsteps of major commercial successes such as MPESA – a mobile-phone banking application that now rivals Western Union – other Kenyan software developers are setting up shop in Nairobi, creating high-tech solutions for an African market that has long been ignored; universities and private companies are setting up labs and business incubators; and government officials are plotting strategies to transform Kenya into a high-tech hub for the continent.I'd like to celebrate the progress being made, but we should also have a thought for those who will be left behind in the race to the top, to modernity.
Sunday, March 31, 2013
The End of WASP Hegemony
I remember when I was in the Army talking about the old geezers (i.e. 50-60 year olds) who spent their time at the VFW or American legion posts talking about the old days--we agreed we'd never be them. The Times had an article on the current struggles of the American Legion.
And the National Council of Churches has downsized severely.
Bottomline: the old WASP institutions which dominated the nation when I was young are fading, like Gen. MacArthur's old soldiers.
And the National Council of Churches has downsized severely.
Bottomline: the old WASP institutions which dominated the nation when I was young are fading, like Gen. MacArthur's old soldiers.
Saturday, March 30, 2013
The Modern Face of Dairy
$170,000 for a 3-year old Jersey cow. The "Winner-take-all" society expands its reach to the world of dairy. And as a footnote, the owners used to farm a 900 acre farm in upstate New York. Guess it was too small to survive. Hat Tip Northview Dairy, who recently visited NYC. (and didn't like it).
Friday, March 29, 2013
Ads I Hate
For some reason I don't like the ads on the Weather Channel, these two categories in particular:
- the law firms trolling for those who suffer from asbestos or various medicines so they can mount a class action suit. Not sure why they bug me; maybe I remember in the old days when it was both illegal and unseemly for lawyers and other professionals to advertise.
- the medical device makers, particularly the motorized wheelchair ones. Here my puritan soul is aggrieved: you should make do with crutches or walkers, not sit on your butt in a device my tax dollars help pay for.
Thursday, March 28, 2013
Boost Administrative Capacity?--Never Happen
From a Wonkblog post interview on the social security disability insurance program :
" The disability programs could always be run better, and one shortcoming of the “This American Life” story is that there was little discussion of the nuts and bolts of this. For example, it would be wise to make more investments in the administrative capacity of the Social Security Administration so that they could do more reviews, check up on people with continuing disabilities and see if they’re still eligible." [emphasis added]I daresay we will never see mainstream media urging more dollars for greater administrative capacity on the part of the government. [Yes, I'm feeling cynical today.]
Wednesday, March 27, 2013
Trucks: Different Cultures, Different Countries
A cousin observed she didn't see many trucks in Ireland (apropos of the recent snow storm). Just for the hell of it I checked:
In 2009 we had 134,880,000 cars, and 110,561,000 trucks in the US (US Census), or 45 percent of our vehicles were trucks. In Britain there were 28,813,000 cars and 3,767,000 trucks, or 11.5 percent were trucks.
In 2009 we had 134,880,000 cars, and 110,561,000 trucks in the US (US Census), or 45 percent of our vehicles were trucks. In Britain there were 28,813,000 cars and 3,767,000 trucks, or 11.5 percent were trucks.
I Love People Who Act Like Bigshots
Politico reports on a Congressman's kerfuffle with the Park Service.
Monday, March 25, 2013
One of My Pet Ideas Is the Weakness of Government
I'll throw out an example: A map of English counties (before 1974 reorg?)
A map of French departments (colors indicate population density)
If I understand correctly, the French department and the English county are the first administrative subdivision below the country (yes, I realize England isn't a country, but the same would apply if I showed a map of British counties). Compare these, with their relatively equal proportions, with a map of the US at the same level of administration:
A map of French departments (colors indicate population density)
If I understand correctly, the French department and the English county are the first administrative subdivision below the country (yes, I realize England isn't a country, but the same would apply if I showed a map of British counties). Compare these, with their relatively equal proportions, with a map of the US at the same level of administration:
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