
Introduction
Organic Agriculture
Pesticides
Fertilizers
GMO
Organic Meat, Dairy & Eggs
Vegan-Organic Gardening
Sources and Resources
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Vegan-Organic Gardening

Vegan-Organic Gardening
From questioning farmers at the local
farmer's market and elsewhere, I've learned that many organic (and even
non-organic) gardeners use blood and bone fertilizer on a regular basis. I
question what to purchase with our dollars: food grown with chemicals that
damage the soil’s fertility and our own health or food grown in blood and bone;
the by-product of an industry that exploits animals. I accompanied a local
organic certifier on an inspection, which made buying organic food less
desirable because of my strong stance on veganism. I needed a solution to this
problem. I never thought I would get my hands in the dirt with the worms, but I
decided to grow the food (vegan-organic) for Gentle World’s Vegan Paradigm
Center on the north island of New Zealand, called Shangri-La.
We started with two large plots for vegetables which were a
success; watermelons beyond what we could eat, delicious sweet corn, excellent
potatoes, and tomatoes to give away free to everyone we knew! The gardens could
have been more successful, but it was enough to inspire me to want to learn all
I could. These large garden plots are surrounded by native forest reserve. The
pristine rivers that come straight to us from the surrounding forest, flow by
the gardens as our irrigation source, if necessary. (It usually rains enough to
water the gardens naturally.)
Since that initial attempt, we have continued to grow our own produce, as much
as possible. In addition, we have planted hundreds of fruit trees: mandarins,
oranges, avocados, pears, plums, apples, feijoas, peaches, blueberries,
nectarines, cherimoyas, sapotes, figs, passion fruit, grapes, macadamias,
walnuts and almonds. Gentle World’s Vegan Paradigm Center in Hawaii also has a
vegan-organic garden, fertilized with spirulina from the Big Island and EM
Bokashi, (see below) and protected by a wall of tropical bananas, strawberry
papayas and pineapples. The ‘Veganic’ gardening system avoids chemicals, as well
as livestock manures and animal remains from slaughterhouses. Alternatively,
fertility of the soil is maintained with vegetable compost, crop rotation,
mulching, and other methods. Soil
Conditioners/Fertilizers
Soil conditioners/fertilizers that
vegans can use, include:
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Lime; which provides calcium and
magnesium for your soil. Calcium is essential for strong plant growth and
aids in the uptake of other nutrients. Most plants prefer a fairly neutral
soil pH for optimum growth. Lime can be used to raise the soil pH level or
'sweeten the soil', if necessary. Your soil can be tested to see if you need
to raise the pH level. Lime is used by some for breaking up heavy clay soil.
Reducing the acidity of the soil is the primary purpose for using lime in
the garden.
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Gypsum (hydrated calcium sulfate)
Gypsum is used where more calcium is needed without raising the pH.
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Dolomite - is a finely ground
rock dust and preferred source of calcium and magnesium.
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Rock Phosphate - is used for its
phosphorus content. Phosphorus is an essential element for plant and animal
nutrition. It is mined in the form of phosphate rock, which formed in oceans
in the form of calcium phosphate called phosphorite. The primary mineral in
phosphate rock is apatite.
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Rock Dusts (or Stonemeal) are
slowly released into the soil and are used in an effort to re-mineralize
soil that has become depleted through industrial and agricultural practices.
Rock dusts can be applied directly to the soil, in combination with other
fertilizers, or added to the compost. These products have a highly
stimulating effect on microbial activity.
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Rock Potash or potassium or wood
ash - potassium is an essential plant nutrient that enhances flower and
fruit production and helps ‘harden up’ foliage to make it less susceptible
to disease. Rock potash is very slow-acting. The potash is released very
gradually as the mineral weathers. This can take years. Use it when
preparing the soil before planting.
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Hay Mulches -Using a thick layer
of hay to cover the earth will feed the soil with organic matter as it
breaks down, suppress weeds, and encourage more worms to live in your soil.
Put gardens to sleep over the winter and cover them with a very thick layer
of hay mulch.
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Composted Organic Matter consists
of fruit and vegetable rinds, leaves, and grass clippings. A compost pile
consists of food waste, i.e. peels from the kitchen, that is covered by
course material like leaves, hay, or grass clippings. The object is to
create layers of food material alternating with covering material to allow
aeration. When a bin is full, the pile is flipped and covered by black
plastic or weed mat to protect it from rainfall and create heat. It can be
flipped again after a period of time, so the bottom becomes the top. Cover
again and within a couple of months, depending on climate, nature's master
recycling plan will have taken it's course and you will have vitamin rich
soil.
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Green Manures or Nitrogen-fixing
crops - 'Green Manure' is a cover crop of plants tilled into the soil.
Fast-growing plants, such as wheat, oats, rye, vetch, or clover, can be
grown as cover crops between garden crops and then tilled into the garden as
it is prepared for the next planting. Green manure crops absorb and use
nutrients from the soil that might otherwise be lost through leaching and
return these nutrients to the soil when they are tilled under. The root
system of cover crops improves soil structure and helps prevent erosion.
Nitrogen-fixing crops such as vetch, peas and broad beans (fava beans), and
crimson clover add some nitrogen to the soil as they are turned under and
decompose. Cover crops also help reduce weed growth during the fall and
winter months.
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Liquid Feeds such as Comfrey or
Nettles.
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Seaweed (fresh, liquid or meal)
is used for trace elements. Seaweed is best used harvested fresh from the
sea as opposed to washed up and sitting on beaches. Some veganic gardeners
use bulk spirulina or kelp meal (used for potash and trace minerals).
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Neem - The Neem tree has been
known as the wonder tree for centuries in India. Neem has been in use for
centuries in Indian agriculture as the best natural pesticide and organic
fertilizer with pest repellent properties and insect sterilization
properties.
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Green Sand - is used as a soil
amendment and fertilizer and is mined from deposits of minerals that were
originally part of the ocean floor. It is a natural source of potash, along
with iron, magnesium, silica and as many as 30 other trace minerals. It may
also be used to loosen heavy, clay soils. It has the consistency of sand but
10 times the moisture absorption.
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EM Bokashi is a fertilizer being
used by some vegans. EM means Effective Micro-organisms and consists of
mixed cultures of beneficial naturally occurring micro-organisms such as
lactic acid bacteria, yeast, photosynthetic bacteria and actinomycetes.
Bokashi is a Japanese term that means 'fermented organic matter'. It is a
bran-based material that has been fermented with EM liquid concentrate and
dried for storage. Bokashi is a pleasant smelling product which you add to
the compost to aid in the fermentation of the organic matter. (EM Bokashi
should be stored in a warm, dry place out of direct sunlight).
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'No Till method', which
ironically rhymes with 'NO KILL method' is a practice that does not till the
earth and kill worms in the soil. It is more gentle, from a vegan
standpoint, and worm castings is an excellent fertilizer for the soil.
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Re-establish natural worm
populations in your garden. Composting worms love cool, damp and dark
environments (like under black weed mat or a thick layer of hay mulch), and
will breed optimally when these conditions are maintained. Worm castings are
a rich, all-natural source of organic matter with lots of nutrients and
moisture-holding capabilities. Earthworm castings are known to have an
extraordinary effect on plant life. They improve the soil structure and
increase fertility.
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Alfalfa meal, Flax Seed Meal,
Cottonseed Meal and Soya Meal are sources of nitrogen.
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Epsom Salts are an excellent
source of magnesium.
Returning to Hawaii from New Zealand,
I went to a natural food store and found tomatoes with a sticker saying 'Vegan
Tomatoes' grown organically with neem oil and vegan fertilizer. There must be
others who feel similar thoughts and are demanding the growers to elevate the
standards. Some organic certifiers do not not allow the use of blood and bone
anymore. I believe this was because of the United Kingdom’s problems with mad
cow and hoof and mouth diseases. By growing our food veganically, there is also
a greater hope of eliminating transmittable diseases and bacteria. Growing
‘veganic’ is a healthier and more compassionate alternative to chemical or even
organic agriculture. I never conceived what a fulfilling experience it would be
to work hand in hand with nature and witness this miracle of life; that of
growing your own produce, the vegan-organic method. |