How technology and chemicals have transformed farming in just one lifetime with Roland James: 033

Published: Sept. 8, 2017, 10:32 a.m.

b'This is gonna be a pretty special episode in that I\'ll actually be interviewing a man who has seen an incredible transformation in \\u201cconventional\\u201d farming during his lifetime. My guest is Roland James, but to me he\'s my Grandpa. Now Roland grew up in a small farming community in the midlands of England near the southern border of Wales. He well remembers the very first tractors coming onto his family\'s farm in the early 1940s. Before then all of the fields were plowed with horses or oxen. As he grew up he took over the family farm and adapted to the rapidly changing industry just as the rest of the farmers around him were doing. The stories and perspectives that my Grandpa has are a great reminder of how recent the technological ways of farming really are. As he often tells me, he\'s seen the first mechanization of simple tasks on the land all the way to fully automated machinery that communicates with satellites to gauge the amount of fertilizer that it spreads on different parts of the farm. All this in one person\'s lifetime.\\n\\n\\n\\nThis interview is a remarkable look into just how much our food supply systems have changed in such a short time and why many \\u201cconventional\\u201d farmers struggle to break out of the cycle of debt that keeps them buying industrial chemicals to mitigate the damage being done to their ecosystem.\\n\\n\\n\\nI hope you find as much value in this perspective as I do and that it will help you better understand how we got into the modern farming systems that we now have.\\n\\n\\n\\n\\n\\n\\n\\nFor "The Abundant Edge" listeners only, you can now get 50% off your digital subscriptions to\\xa0Permaculture Magazine North America\\xa0by entering the code\\xa0PMNA50abedge\\xa0at checkout.\\xa0Get your subscription today and dive deep into the local and global solutions that go beyond sustainability.'