SolveYourProblem
Article Series: Organic Gardening
Organic
Gardening Tips & Advice
Organic
Gardening - What Are The Benefits?
Many people have been seeing the benefits
of organic gardening in their lives over the last few decades.
It is a way of cultivating plants that does not use artificial
chemicals that may damage the planet, kill wildlife and possible
injure the health of people who eat the produce that is grown
with the aid of these pesticides and weed killers.
It is too soon to be sure what the effects of mass chemically
assisted agriculture and genetically modified crops will be,
either on consumers or on the earth. They simply have not been
around long enough for anybody to be sure. In the face of this
uncertainty, more and more people are turning to organically
grown fruit and vegetables and meat that has been reared on
organic land.
Organic gardening and agriculture is nothing new. In fact,
if you go back beyond the last 60 years or so, everything was
grown organically because laboratory-produced pesticides and
fertilizers simply did not exist.
We tend to think of organic food as a modern trend, but it
is not at all. The word is new because there was no need for
it before, that is all. The organic way of growing things was
practiced throughout history from the time that people first
learnt to plant seeds until very recent times. It is the chemicals
that are the modern fad.
It was the introduction of the pesticide DDT in farming in
the 1950s that led to a turn in public opinion. Books like
'Silent Spring' by the well known natural historian Rachel
Carson, published in 1962, started an environmental movement
that has grown steadily in the decades since. The book's title
came from the discovery that DDT was damaging the egg shells
of birds, preventing them from reproducing. At the same time,
it killed many of the insects that were their food. Carson
envisaged a world where there would be no more bird song.
Largely as a result of this movement, DDT is now illegal in
almost all countries. However, many other pesticides are available
both to farmers and to us as gardeners, and we cannot know
what the long term effects of using them will be.
Most gardeners have a fairly small area of land to nurture,
and there is no need to use chemical sprays on our home grown
flowers and vegetables. If our tomato crop fails one year,
we will not starve. If our honeysuckle becomes diseased, perhaps
it is time to replace it with another climbing plant. If our
roses are home to more insects than we would like, we can wash
them off or encourage their natural predators to inhabit our
garden too.
There may be more benefits of organic gardening than we currently
know. Isn't it better not to take a chance with our land, our
lives and our children's health?
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SolveYourProblem.com
: 2009
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