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Arable Farming
Cropping
Root intelligence: Plants can think, feel and learn
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<blockquote data-quote="martian" data-source="post: 756894" data-attributes="member: 801"><p>I've been mulling over this all week. First off I'm surprised that the conversation about it just died...I mean here we are farming, which is mostly about growing plants for harvest or grazing, and suddenly a whole new understanding of how plants operate is shown to us and we say 'interesting' and get on with our lives. When we should perhaps be chatting to the wheat.</p><p></p><p>Anyway, it makes much more sense of practices like multi-cropping or companion cropping, where different species interact and you get more than the sum of the parts. Or mob-grazing, where you can 'train' the pasture to grow ever bigger. Or the crucial importance of getting the environment below ground as perfect as possible. </p><p></p><p>After you with that ciggy [USER=166]@Brisel[/USER]...</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="martian, post: 756894, member: 801"] I've been mulling over this all week. First off I'm surprised that the conversation about it just died...I mean here we are farming, which is mostly about growing plants for harvest or grazing, and suddenly a whole new understanding of how plants operate is shown to us and we say 'interesting' and get on with our lives. When we should perhaps be chatting to the wheat. Anyway, it makes much more sense of practices like multi-cropping or companion cropping, where different species interact and you get more than the sum of the parts. Or mob-grazing, where you can 'train' the pasture to grow ever bigger. Or the crucial importance of getting the environment below ground as perfect as possible. After you with that ciggy [USER=166]@Brisel[/USER]... [/QUOTE]
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Arable Farming
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Root intelligence: Plants can think, feel and learn
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