2019/12/25

Natural farming - Wikipedia

Natural farming - Wikipedia

Natural farming

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Masanobu Fukuoka, originator of the natural farming method
Natural farming is an ecological farming approach established by Masanobu Fukuoka (1913–2008), a Japanese farmer and philosopher, introduced in his 1975 book The One-Straw Revolution. Fukuoka described his way of farming as 自然農法 (shizen nōhō) in Japanese.[1] It is also referred to as "the Fukuoka Method", "the natural way of farming" or "do-nothing farming". The title refers not to lack of effort, but to the avoidance of manufactured inputs and equipment. Natural farming is related to fertility farming, organic farmingsustainable agricultureagroecologyagroforestryecoagriculture and permaculture, but should be distinguished from biodynamic agriculture.
The system works along with the natural biodiversity of each farmed area, encouraging the complexity of living organisms—both plant and animal—that shape each particular ecosystem to thrive along with food plants.[2] Fukuoka saw farming both as a means of producing food and as an aesthetic or spiritual approach to life, the ultimate goal of which was, "the cultivation and perfection of human beings".[3][4] He suggested that farmers could benefit from closely observing local conditions.[5] Natural farming is a closed system, one that demands no human-supplied inputs and mimics nature.[6]
Fukuoka's ideas radically challenged conventions that are core to modern agro-industries; instead of promoting importation of nutrients and chemicals, he suggested an approach that takes advantage of the local environment.[7] Although natural farming is considered a subset of organic farming, it differs greatly from conventional organic farming,[8] which Fukuoka considered to be another modern technique that disturbs nature.[9]
Fukuoka claimed that his approach prevents water pollutionbiodiversity loss and soil erosion, while providing ample amounts of food.[10]

Fukuoka's principles[edit]

In principal, practitioners of natural farming maintain that it is not a technique but a view, or a way of seeing ourselves as a part of nature, rather than separate from or above it.[11] Accordingly, the methods themselves vary widely depending on culture and local conditions.
Rather than offering a structured method, Fukuoka distilled the natural farming mindset into five principles:[12]
  1. No tillage
  2. No fertilizer
  3. No pesticides or herbicides
  4. No weeding
  5. No pruning
A young man helps harvest rice by hand at a natural farm in a production still from the film "Final Straw: Food, Earth, Happiness"
A young man helps harvest rice by hand at a natural farm, in this production still from the film "Final Straw: Food, Earth, Happiness"
Though many of his plant varieties and practices relate specifically to Japan and even to local conditions in subtropical western Shikoku, his philosophy and the governing principles of his farming systems have been applied widely around the world, from Africa to the temperate northern hemisphere.
Principally, natural farming minimises human labour and adopts, as closely as practical, nature's production of foods such as ricebarleydaikon or citrus in biodiverse agricultural ecosystems. Without plowingseeds germinate well on the surface if site conditions meet the needs of the seeds placed there. Fukuoka used the presence of spiders in his fields as a key performance indicator of sustainability.[citation needed]
Fukuoka specifies that the ground remain covered by weedswhite cloveralfalfaherbaceous legumes, and sometimes deliberately sown herbaceous plantsGround cover is present along with grain, vegetable crops and orchards. Chickens run free in orchards and ducks and carp populate rice fields.[13]
Periodically ground layer plants including weeds may be cut and left on the surface, returning their nutrients to the soil, while suppressing weed growth. This also facilitates the sowing of seeds in the same area because the dense ground layer hides the seeds from animals such as birds.
For summer rice and winter barley grain crops, ground cover enhances nitrogen fixationStraw from the previous crop mulches the topsoil. Each grain crop is sown before the previous one is harvested by broadcasting the seed among the standing crop. Later, this method was reduced to a single direct seeding of clover, barley and rice over the standing heads of rice.[14] The result is a denser crop of smaller, but highly productive and stronger plants.
Fukuoka's practice and philosophy emphasised small scale operation and challenged the need for mechanised farming techniques for high productivity, efficiency and economies of scale. While his family's farm was larger than the Japanese average, he used one field of grain crops as a small-scale example of his system.

Yoshikazu Kawaguchi[edit]

Yoshikazu Kawaguchi at Akame Natural Farm School
Widely regarded as the leading practitioner of the second-generation of natural farmers, Yoshikazu Kawaguchi is the instigator of Akame Natural Farm School, and a related network of volunteer-based "no-tuition" natural farming schools in Japan that numbers 40 locations and more than 900 concurrent students.[15] Although Kawaguchi's practice is based on Fukuoka's principals, his methods differ notably from those of Fukuoka. He re-states the core values of natural farming as:
  1. Do not plow the fields
  2. Weeds and insects are not your enemies
  3. There is no need to add fertilizers
  4. Adjust the foods you grow based on your local climate and conditions
Kawaguchi's recognition outside of Japan has become wider after his appearance as the central character in the documentary Final Straw: Food, Earth, Happiness, through which his interviews were translated into several languages.[16] He is the author of several books in Japan, though none have been officially translated into English.
Since 2016, Kawaguchi is no longer directly instructing at the Akame school which he founded. He is still actively teaching however, holding open farm days at his own natural farm in Nara prefecture.[17]

Climax ecosystems[edit]

In ecologyclimax ecosystems are mature ecosystems that have reached a high degree of stability, productivity and diversity (see old-growth forest). Natural farmers attempt to mimic those virtues, creating a comparable climax ecosystem, and employ advanced techniques such as intercroppingcompanion planting and integrated pest management.[citation needed]

No-till[edit]

Natural farming recognizes soils as a fundamental natural asset. Ancient soils possess physical and chemical attributes that render them capable of generating and supporting life abundance. It can be argued that tilling actually degrades the delicate balance of a climax soil:
  1. Tilling may destroy crucial physical characteristics of a soil such as water suction, its ability to send moisture upwards, even during dry spells. The effect is due to pressure differences between soil areas. Furthermore, tilling most certainly destroys soil horizons and hence disrupts the established flow of nutrients. A study suggests that reduced tillage preserves the crop residues on the top of the soil, allowing organic matter to be formed more easily and hence increasing the total organic carbon and nitrogen when compared to conventional tillage. The increases in organic carbon and nitrogen increase aerobic, facultative anaerobic and anaerobic bacteria populations.[18]
  2. Tilling over-pumps oxygen to local soil residents, such as bacteria and fungi. As a result, the chemistry of the soil changes. Biological decomposition accelerates and the microbiota mass increases at the expense of other organic matter, adversely affecting most plants, including trees and vegetables. For plants to thrive a certain quantity of organic matter (around 5%) must be present in the soil.
  3. Tilling uproots all the plants in the area, turning their roots into food for bacteria and fungi. This damages their ability to aerate the soil. Living roots drill millions of tiny holes in the soil and thus provide oxygen. They also create room for beneficial insects and annelids (the phylum of worms). Some types of roots contribute directly to soil fertility by funding a mutualistic relationship with certain kinds of bacteria (most famously the rhizobium) that can fix nitrogen.
Fukuoka advocated avoiding any change in the natural landscape. This idea differs significantly from some recent permaculture practice that focuses on permaculture design, which may involve the change in landscape. For example, Sepp Holzer, an Austrian permaculture farmer, advocates the creation of terraces on slopes to control soil erosion. Fukuoka avoided the creation of terraces in his farm, even though terraces were common in China and Japan in his time. Instead, he prevented soil erosion by simply growing trees and shrubs on slopes.

Variants of natural farming[edit]

Ladybirds consume aphids and are considered beneficial by natural farmers that apply biological control.
Although the term "natural farming" came into common use in the English language during the 1980s with the translation of the book One Straw Revolution, the natural farming mindset itself has a long history throughout the world, spanning from historical Native American practices to modern day urban farms.[19][20][21]
Some variants, and their particularities include:

Fertility farming[edit]

In 1951, Newman Turner advocated the practice of "fertility farming", a system featuring the use of a cover crop, no tillage, no chemical fertilizers, no pesticides, no weeding and no composting. Although Turner was a commercial farmer and did not practice random seeding of seed balls, his "fertility farming" principles share similarities with Fukuoka's system of natural farming. Turner also advocate a "natural method" of animal husbandry.[22]

Native American[edit]

Recent research in the field of traditional ecological knowledge finds that for over one hundred centuries, Native American tribes worked the land in strikingly similar ways to today's natural farmers. Author and researcher M. Kat Anderson writes that "According to contemporary Native Americans, it is only through interaction and relationships with native plants that mutual respect is established."[21]

Nature Farming (Mokichi Okada)[edit]

Japanese farmer and philosopher Mokichi Okada, conceived of a "no fertilizer" farming system in the 1930s that predated Fukuoka. Okada used the same Chinese characters as Fukuoka's "natural farming" however, they are translated into English slightly differently, as nature farming.[23] Agriculture researcher Hu-lian Xu claims that "nature farming" is the correct literal translation of the Japanese term.[23]

Rishi Kheti[edit]

In India, natural farming of Masanobu Fukuoka was called "Rishi Kheti" by practitioners like Partap Aggarwal.[24][25] The Rishi Kheti use cow products like buttermilk, milk, curd and its waste urine for preparing growth promoters. The Rishi Kheti is regarded as non-violent farming[citation needed] without any usage of chemical fertilizer and pesticides. They obtain high quality[citation needed] natural or organic produce having medicinal values. Today still a small number of farmers in Madhya Pradesh, Punjab, Maharashtra and Andhra Pradesh, Tamil Nadu use this farming method in India.[citation needed]

Zero Budget Farming[edit]

Zero Budget Farming is a variation on natural farming developed in, and primarily practiced in southern India. It also called spiritual farming .The method involves mulchingintercropping, and the use of several preparations which include cow dung. These preparations, generated on-site, are central to the practice, and said to promote microbe and earthworm activity in the soil.[26] Indian agriculturist Subhash Palekar has researched and written extensively on this method.

See also[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ 1975 (in Japanese) 自然農法-わら一本の革命 (in English) 1978 re-presentation The One-Straw Revolution: An Introduction to Natural Farming.
  2. ^ "Life and Death in the Field | Final Straw – Food | Earth | Happiness"www.finalstraw.org. Retrieved 2017-04-16.
  3. ^ Floyd, J.; Zubevich, K. (2010). "Linking foresight and sustainability: An integral approach". Futures42: 59–68. doi:10.1016/j.futures.2009.08.001.
  4. ^ Hanley, Paul (1990). "Agriculture: A Fundamental Principle" (PDF)Journal of Bahá'í Studies3 (1). Archived from the original (PDF) on March 27, 2013. Retrieved April 28,2014.
  5. ^ Colin Adrien MacKinley Duncan (1996). The Centrality of Agriculture: Between Humankind and the Rest of Nature. McGill-Queen's Press - MQUP. ISBN 978-0-7735-6571-5.
  6. ^ Trees on Organic Farms, Mirret, Erin Paige. North Carolina State University, 2001
  7. ^ Stephen Morse; Michael Stockin (1995). People and Environment: Development for the Future. Taylor & Francis Group. ISBN 978-1-85728-283-2.
  8. ^ Elpel, Thomas J. (November 1, 2002). Participating in Nature: Thomas J. Elpel's Field Guide to Primitive Living SkillsISBN 1892784122.
  9. ^ What Does Natural Farming Mean? Archived 2011-07-20 at the Wayback Machineby Toyoda, Natsuko
  10. ^ Priya Reddy; Prescott College Environmental studies (2010). Sustainable Agricultural Education: An Experiential Approach to Shifting Consciousness and Practices. Prescott College. ISBN 978-1-124-38302-6.
  11. ^ "Masanobu Fukuoka and Natural Farming | Final Straw – Food | Earth | Happiness"www.finalstraw.org. Retrieved 2017-04-11.
  12. ^ Helena Norberg-Hodge; Peter Goering; John Page (1 January 2001). From the Ground Up: Rethinking Industrial Agriculture. Zed Books. ISBN 978-1-85649-994-1.
  13. ^ 1975 (in Japanese) 自然農法-わら一本の革命 (in English) 1978 re-presentation The One-Straw Revolution: An Introduction to Natural Farming
  14. ^ Masanobu Fukuoka (1987). The Natural Way of Farming: The Theory and Practice of Green Philosophy. Japan Publications. ISBN 978-0-87040-613-3.
  15. ^ (Japan)), Hokazono, S.(Mie Univ., Tsu; K., Ohara (2007-01-01). "The role of a learning site for urban residents hoping to do farming: Focusing on the spread of 'natural farming' by the Akame Natural Farming School"Journal of Rural Problems (Japan) (in Japanese). ISSN 0388-8525.
  16. ^ "Final Straw – Food - Earth - Happiness"www.finalstraw.org.
  17. ^ "'Body and Earth Are Not Two': Kawaguchi Yoshikazu's NATURAL FARMING and American Agriculture Writers"ResearchGate. Retrieved 2017-04-16.
  18. ^ Sylvia, D.M.; Fuhrmann, J.J.; Hartel, P.G.; Zuberer, D.A. (1999). Principles and Applications of Soil Microbiology. New Jersey: Prentice Hall. pp. 39–41. ISBN 0130941174.
  19. ^ Lydon, Patrick (2015-09-16). "Social Practice Artwork: A Restaurant and Garden Serving up Connections to Urban Nature"The Nature of Cities. Retrieved 2017-04-11.
  20. ^ "Artwork / Urban Empathy Garden | SocieCity"sociecity.org. 2015-06-23. Retrieved 2017-04-11.
  21. Jump up to:a b ANDERSON, M. KAT (2005-01-01). "Native American Knowledge and the Management of California's Natural Resources". Tending the Wild: Native American Knowledge and the Management of California's Natural Resources (1 ed.). University of California Press. ISBN 9780520238565JSTOR 10.1525/j.ctt1ppfn4.
  22. ^ Newman Turner (1951). Fertility Farming. Faber and Faber Limited. ISBN 978-1601730091.
  23. Jump up to:a b Xu, Hui-Lian (2001). NATURE FARMING In Japan (Monograph). T. C. 37/661(2), Fort Post Office, Trivandrum - 695023, Kerala, India: Research Signpost. ISBN 81-308-0111-6. Retrieved 6 March 2011.
  24. ^ "Masanobu Fukuoka: The man who did nothing By Malvika Tegta" "DNA Daily News and Analysis". "Published: Sunday, Aug 22, 2010, 2:59 IST". "Place: Mumbai", India. (Retrieved 1 December 2010)
  25. ^ "Natural farming succeeds in Indian village By Partap C Aggarwal" in the 1980s Satavic Farms (India), "Slowly, bit by bit, we found ourselves close to what is called ‘natural farming’, pioneered in Japan by Masanobu Fukuoka. At Rasulia we called it 'rishi kheti' (agriculture of the sages)."
  26. ^ "Zero Budget Natural Farming in India" (PDF). Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations. Retrieved 25 January 2018.

External links[edit]

Mokichi Okada - Wikipedia Nature Farming



Mokichi Okada - Wikipedia



Mokichi Okada
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

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Mokichi Okada

Mokichi Okada (岡田茂吉 Okada Mokichi, 23 December 1882 – 10 February 1955) was the founder of the Church of World Messianity, in which he is known by the honorific title Meishū-sama (明主様, lit. "Lord of Light")[1]. He is also the founder of Johrei, a healing ritual that claims to use "divine light" to dissolve the spiritual impurities that are the source of all physical, emotional, and personal problems.


Contents
1Biography
2Nature Farming
3See also
4References
5External links



Biography[edit]

According to his official biography,[2] Okada was born to a poor family in Tokyo and, after many trials and tribulations, eventually made his fortune in the jewellery business.

Initially a follower of Shinto offshoot Oomoto,[3] Okada claimed to have received a special revelation from God in 1926, leading him to found a new religion in 1935 to spread the teachings. Okada soon expanded to open a rehabilitation center centering on the healing powers of light, but it was shut down in 1936 as a violation of the Medical Practitioners' Law (医師法違反).[4]

The Sangetsu (山月) school of ikebana, inspired by Mokichi Okada, was founded in June 1972.[5] The Mokichi Okada Association (MOA) was established in 1980 to continue his work "toward the creation of a new civilization to be undertaken without confining Okada's principles and their implementation within a religious framework" (MOA[6] acquired the status of a legal entity as a limited liability intermediary corporation in 2005, then transferred to one of general corporation in 2009, officially called MOA International Corporation). Much of Okada's extensive art collection is now housed in the MOA Museum of Art in Atami, Japan.


Nature Farming[edit]

Main article: Nature Farming

In 1936, Okada established an agricultural system originally called "no fertilizer farming" or "Nature Farming".[7][8] Offshoots such as the Sekai Kyusei Kyo, promoting "Kyusei nature farming", and the Mokichi Okada Association formed after his death to continue promoting the work in Japan and South-East Asia.[9]

According to the International Nature Farming Research Center in Nagano, Japan, it is based on the theories that:

  1. Fertilizers pollute the soil and weaken its power of production.
  2. Pests would break out from the excessive use of fertilizers
  3. The difference in disease incidence between resistant and susceptible plants is attributed to nutritional conditions inside the body.
  4. Vegetables and fruits produced by nature farming taste better than those by chemical farming.[10]

See also[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ Arman Hassan, the main antagonist in the anime series Tiger Mask II, is called so by his subordinates.
  2. ^ Johrei History Archived August 14, 2007, at the Wayback Machine
  3. ^ JapanFile - the website of Kansai Time Out magazine - Japanese culture, news, events, music, literature, and reporting Archived November 23, 2015, at the Wayback Machine
  4. ^ "岡田茂吉(1882-1955)". FFortune.net. Retrieved 30 April 2017.
  5. ^ "sangetsu". Sangetsu.org. Retrieved 30 April 2017.
  6. ^ "一般社団法人MOAインターナショナル". MOAInternational.or.jp. Retrieved 30 April 2017.
  7. ^ "Overview of organic agriculture". Kristiansen, P. and Merfield, C. (2006) Overview of organic agriculture. In: Kristiansen, P.; Taji, A. and Reganold, J. (Eds.) Organic Agriculture: a Global Perspective, CSIRO Publishing, Collingwood, pp. 1–23. "Independent developments were occurring in Japan. In 1936, Mokichi Okada began practicing 'nature farming'. Nature farming includes spiritual and well as agronomic aspects with a view to improving humanity."
  8. ^ Sustainable Agriculture: Definition and Terms. Special Reference Briefs Series no. SRB 99-02, September 1999. Compiled by: Mary V. Gold, Alternative Farming Systems Information Center, U.S. Department of Agriculture
  9. ^ Setboonsarng, S. and Gilman, J. 1999. Alternative Agriculture in Thailand and Japan. HORIZON Communications, Yale University, New Haven, Connecticut.
  10. ^ Scientific Proof of Mokichi Okada's Nature Farming Theories by Xu, Hui-lian. Agricultural Experiment Station, International Nature Farming Research Center, Nagano

External links[edit]
MOA International Home Page




Nature Farming

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Jump to navigationJump to search
"Nature Farming" was established in 1936 by Mokichi Okada, the founder of the Church of World Messianity, an agricultural system originally called "no fertilizer farming" or 自然農法 (shizen nōhō) in Japanese.[1]
Offshoots such as the Sekai Kyusei Kyo, promoting ‘Kyusei nature farming’, and the Mokichi Okada Association formed after his death to continue promoting the work in Japan and South-East Asia.[2]
ZZ2, a farming conglomerate in South Africa has translated the term to Afrikaans, "Natuurboerdery".[3]
According to the International Nature Farming Research Center in Nagano, Japan,[4] it is based on the theories that:
  • Fertilizers pollute the soil and weaken its power of production.
  • Pests would break out from the excessive use of fertilizers
  • The difference in disease incidence between resistant and susceptible plants is attributed to nutritional conditions inside the body.
  • Vegetables and fruits produced by nature farming taste better than those by chemical farming.
The term is sometimes used for an alternative farming philosophy of Masanobu Fukuoka.

Natural Farming[edit]

Another Japanese farmer and philosopher, Masanobu Fukuoka, conceived of an alternative farming system in the 1930s separately from Okada and used the same Japanese characters to describe it.[5] This is generally translated in English as "Natural Farming" although agriculture researcher Hu-lian Xu claims that "nature farming" is the correct literal translation of the Japanese term.[5]

See also[edit]

Bibliography[edit]

  • 自然農法解說 / Shizen nōhō kaisetsu by Mokichi Okada. Publisher: 榮光社出版部 Eikōsha Shuppanbu, Tōkyō 1951.

References[edit]

  1. ^ Sustainable Agriculture: Definition and Terms. Special Reference Briefs Series no. SRB 99-02, September 1999. Compiled by: Mary V. Gold, Alternative Farming Systems Information Center, U.S. Department of Agriculture
  2. ^ Setboonsarng, S. and Gilman, J. 1999. Alternative Agriculture in Thailand and Japan. HORIZON Communications, Yale University, New Haven, Connecticut.
  3. ^ Silent, Taurayi, (March 2011). An investigation of natuurboerdery (natural farming) approach : a ZZ2 case study (Thesis). Stellenbosch : University of Stellenbosch.
  4. ^ Scientific Proof of Mokichi Okada's Nature Farming Theories by Xu, Hui-lian. Agricultural Experiment Station, International Nature Farming Research Center, Nagano
  5. Jump up to:a b Xu, Hui-Lian (2001). NATURE FARMING In Japan (Monograph). T. C. 37/661(2), Fort Post Office, Trivandrum - 695023, Kerala, India.: Research Signpost. ISBN 81-308-0111-6. Retrieved 6 March 2011.

External links[edit]