Homeopathy should also help with your crops?
I have two purple thumbs so it would be a very bad idea if I tried to farm. I can hardly grow radishes.
But I come from a large family of farmers, each with their own small farm. By large I mean my dad's dad had 11 siblings and his mom had 13 siblings (I had great aunts and great uncles coming out of the woodwork, never quite understood/believed it as a child - nobody could have that many surely and ALL on farms?), and they all lived off their farm produce and lived to an average age of 105 years. They worked extremely hard, were extremely fit, healthy and happy, and I suspect that an enormous volume of farming knowledge, including homeopathy, as there were homeopaths in the family dating way back, died with them.
The library of inherited homeopathy books went to my cousin (the eldest of the cousins) and it was she who first taught me homeopathy.
I wish I remembered all the wisdoms of this amazing generation. I know one key was to ensure they had the right fruit, animals, veg, fruit or whatever for the climate and soil and especially the *slope* of the land visa vis the sun. So they lived all over the place and no two farmed the same things. Always it has to do with what was best suited to where they were. My gran was in what is now Harare, and her farm was Cape gooseberrieis, pineapples and pawpaws. Uncle Tin had pheasants, and kudu. Another great uncle had dairy cows and teff, and made a good living from cream, butter, milk, cheese, yogurt etc - plus teff products. (Teff was great to use in poor years to supplement feed). His brother had nectarines, peaches, quinces and apricots, and grew veg between the orchard rows. Some years one did better, other years the opposite. Another had pork with a factory for sausage and we'd joked that the pigs went in one end and came out the other squished into tubes. Another had merino sheep, very hardy and usable for meat or wool or sheep milk products. And so it went; But they'd all scoff at anyone who told them *what* to farm - they said the situation and soil told them what to farm. That it could not be forced or there'd be problems. They alternated one set of things with another or had more than one "string to the bow" to get results in dry or wet times. I wish I remembered more but it was all back in the 50s and 60s I went to their farms, and they were all in their 90s and 100s then.
They just must have had an enormous knowledge passed down over generations, for small organic farming - not that it was called organic farming back then!
I wonder if there is a record anywhere of their and other accumulated generations of knowledge and wisdom somewhere - or was it all word of mouth. know there were homeopathy books (with fascinating case notes in the margins) but I remember no farming books. I suspect too many extremely valuable pearls of wisdom go with the older generations, with them to the grave, that we are finally coming to realize are truly valuable after all.
Being "modern" s not always the best way..........
Namaste,
Irene
REPLY TO: only
--
Irene de Villiers, B.Sc AASCA MCSSA D.I.Hom/D.Vet.Hom.
P.O. Box 4703 Spokane WA 99220.
www.angelfire.com/fl/furryboots/clickhere.html (Veterinary Homeopath.)
"Man who say it cannot be done should not interrupt one doing it."