Food Production Through Inexpensive Farming

In tropical countries like that some parts of Asia, the Pacific rim, Latin America and Africa, crop production need not be expensive. With raw materials in abundance that come from forests and farms are easy sources of raw materials; plant prunnings, corn husks, worm wastes, soya beans, sugar cane tops and the likes; mud from lakes and rivers is another source of raw materials for organic fertilizer production as pointed out by a scientist and acknowledged fertilizer expert.

Organic fertilizer is friendly to crops and the environment. In contrast with synthetic fertilizer which makes the soil acidic and makes the soil barren in the long run. Organic fertilizer is a complete food for crops aside from enriching the soil, it enhances plant growth.

Organic fertilizer production is a result of painstaking research for a technology that converts forest, farm and river wastes into fertilizer. Since raw materials are easily sourced, production cost is low and reaches to farmers at affordable prices.

More significantly, there has never been an instance where organic fertilizer is harming the farmers and the agricultural industry. The use of inexpensive organic fertilizer is highly significant in the light of food shortage and its supply-demand  problem worldwide.

Farmers had attributed the problem to unaffordable prices of synthetic fertilizer and irregular weather pattern that brought calamities due to climate change and thus, crop production yields are inevitably low particularly rice and other staple crops.

With the availability of Vermi technology, farmers can now easily produced organic fertilizer at their own backyard. It is an environmentally friendly way of decomposting farm and other agricultural wastes. Its byproduct is a definitive answer to skyrocketing prices of synthetic fertilizer which its use is now being discouraged by environmentalist.

2 Responses to “Food Production Through Inexpensive Farming”

  1. rim Says:

    […] parts of Asia, the Pacific rim, Latin America and Africa, crop production need not be expensive.http://affleap.com/blog/food-production-through-inexpensive-farming/Tahoe Rim TrailThe 150-mile trail travels along the ridges that bound the Tahoe Basin. Trail […]

  2. Alex Says:

    I found your site on technorati and read a few of your other posts. Keep up the good work. I just added your RSS feed to my Google News Reader. Looking forward to reading more from you down the road!

Leave a Reply