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Well, at our school we have annual Soil&Water Conservation Essay Contests, and this year its also for a grade in English.How could I start it off, and where could I get information on soil and water conservation?

2007-02-11 06:33:27 · 3 answers · asked by Anonymous in Environment

3 answers

Water Conservation Tips:

http://www.waterconserve.info/

http://www.monolake.org/socalwater/wctips.htm

http://www.wateruseitwisely.com/index.shtml

Soil Conservation Tips:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Soil_conservation

http://www.nrcs.usda.gov/

http://www.agriculture.state.ia.us/soilconservation.html

http://www.tucson.ars.ag.gov/isco/

2007-02-12 02:42:32 · answer #1 · answered by Legomanyacts 3 · 0 0

A "reflective summary about the course" would mean we'd have to know the contents of the course in order to be able to help you. You say you are not sure how philosophy has impacted you or even what your philosophy really is. I would start be asking whether you have even attended the lectures and done the readings. Because a generalized ramble of 300 words on the subject of philosophy itself is not what's wanted, I think. What's wanted is for you to demonstrate that you have done the work and have thought about what you have read and heard in lectures. If you have not done the work, how can we help? You might, just once, get away with 300 words on why you do not understand the assignment, and go into meta-questions such as "what is the definition of philosophy," but eventually you will have to attend the lectures and read the textbooks. You can probably hedge on what "your philosophy" is by giving 300 words to questioning whether this is supposed to be about moral philosophy or existentialism or analytic techniques in philosophy, and by stating that you simply do not yet know what "your philosophy" really is. But you'd better be prepared to show off what you have learned so far.

2016-03-29 02:22:02 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

the way to manage the soil is by planting and treating it correctly with out chemicals and planting a diversity of plants .
to plant one specie means that too many plants require the same chemicals and also secrete the same chemicals and so polute the soil.

And one prevents this by diversification.their are specific plants that produce nitrogen like an Acacia tree or the marijunana fiber plant which is not the illigal drug version
but there are many others.

only use manures and animal urine to fertilise,one can plant plants for mulch on the edges of vegetable plots to be chopped down for green mulch
many weeds have natural properties that are good for insect repellents

another priceless pest control is the silky and bantum chickens which dont rake the ground but only run and eat 70% of all walking and jumping insects and they also leave quit a lot of manure behind ,if you have enough of them

guiny fowel and partridge will do almost the same job
snakes kill rats.iguanas eat a variety of pests

the top part of the soil where the topsoil is being produced houses a world or microbiotic life.
Conventional plowing breaks open the soil and throws every thing up to dry in the sun, killing all this.

a new and very old concept is -no till farming- which plants in a mulch cover.

Mulch is organic material green or dry that covers the ground,the thicker the better the composting process will turn it in to black topsoil

the humidity is preserved underneath and promotes the devellopment of worms(their exists no better compost than their excrements)and a variety of micro biotic life which together with the mulch produce more topsoil.

the mulch also keeps the ground temperature even and guards against the impact of the rain ,which would other wise brings salt to the surfave if on unprotected land

Mulch also prevents the soil from drying out because of the sun and, lay it open to wind erosian.

One should always shape the land inicially and make it bowel shaped (if small)terassed if on a slope with an edge around it so that it becomes receptive as aposed to repellent of the water that falls on it and to prevent erosion.

if on the flats it should be self draining.but with cannals also bringing water flows into the land from higher up.

I have connected cannals to road gutters to bring more water in.

soil management should be a component of a larger concept
which includes ,waterharvesting (to zero run off)and form
as well as pest control and diversity of plants
WATERHARVESTING

the natural way of nature is to evaporate moisture for clouds and this gets blown to places with less water any way ,what obstruct the clouds from getting to deserts ,tend to be mountains that are in the way,
but generally speaking ,the normal weather patterns spread rain evenly over the planet to balance out the temperatures and humidity.

As far as catching rain is concerned ,we do this all the time ,and have done so already since Babylonian times,and is a part of the more advanced Agriculture,that existed with the Egyptians,Central ,and south American indigenous peoples,and many others ,today we call this water harvesting.

In Permaculture the rule is to harvest water to the point of Zero runoff.
this means that all of the rain that falls on an area is absorbed by the terrain and not a drop leaves it.

by building dams,ponds or swales, with interconecting ditches,
if there are enough of these ;the places ,where before the rain water ran over the ground into the rivers and on to the sea ,(in a matter of hours or days),It now runs into absorbant dams or swales and saturates the ground and eventually reaches subteranean water deposits ,taking many months to do so.
Or it fills up ponds that can be used for Aquaculture.
And so a convex situation that repels water is transformed in a concave ,absorbant one and turning the area in to a sponge.

in Spain and Portugal ,which still display many examples of the conquering Moorish influence,One can find many remnants of Waterharvesting,such as aquaducts and tanks underneath the patios ,which collect the rain water from the roofs ,to be used in dryer times.

in Arabia ,on a large scale ,land has been shaped to catch and lead,rain water into sandy areas or to agricultural lands.sand is almost as good as dams because it absorbs water and holds it.

to find out more about Water harvesting I recomend:
the designers manual by Bil Mollison,which cost about 40 dollars.
and is the best all round book you can get.(tagiari publishing, tagariadmin@southcom.com.au)

Permaculture means permanent agriculture
a concept put forward by Bill Mollisson in the 60`s
which is a complete hand book for environmental design.
for those who seek an ambiotic relationship with our planet
With practical solutions for energy systems ,infratructure ,housing,
animal shelter ,water systems and sustainable agricultural practises.
With the world and it`s history as it`s source
From the chinampas of Mexico to the teraced gardens of the Andes.
From the dessert whadis to the steppes of Russia.
Covering all climatic conditions temporal, dessert, humid and dry tropics.
with chapters on soil ,Water harvesting and land design,
Earth working ,Spirals in nature,Trees and water ,utilising energy flows,
Strategy for an alternative nation Source(s) some other writers that are on the internet are
david Holmgren
Larry Santoyo
Kirk Hanson

Masanobu Fukuaka has written ,
One-Straw Revolution
The Road Back to Nature
The Natural Way of Farming
http://www.context.org/iclib/ic14/fukuok...
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/masanobu_fu...

Simon Henderson
and Bill Molisson.

a representitive of the concept in USA is
Dan Hemenway at YankeePerm@aol.com
barkingfrogspc@aol.com
http://barkingfrogspc.tripod.com/frames....
http://csf.colorado.edu/perma/ypc_catalo...

I am a permaculture consultant for the department of Ecology for the regional government of Guerrero in Mexico

i got a yahoo 360 which has some stuff in English as well as this spaces
http://spaces.msn.com/byderule

2007-02-16 19:08:57 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

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