Growing with the Patterns of Nature
“An observer can easily distinguish the clean intricate patterns of holistically grown produce from the broken and coarse patterns of old or conventionally grown produce. The analogy of a photograph of a jigsaw with pieces missing and slightly out of focus, compared to one that is complete and in clear focus, could be made to illustrate this difference. The consciousness naturally spots between the two patterns a teleological impression that appears to aspire towards an involuted and intricate order. The organic plant achieves this mysterious becoming better than the non-organic one….”
Published on April 20, 2019 02:21
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Eric Fisher's Goodreads Author Blog
This blog was set up to promote my works, discuss related topics and ongoing writing projects. My first serious work aside from academia was published in July this year - 'Compost Teas for the Organic
This blog was set up to promote my works, discuss related topics and ongoing writing projects. My first serious work aside from academia was published in July this year - 'Compost Teas for the Organic Grower' (Permanent Publications). Topics revolved around alternative agriculture - permaculture, composting, compost teas (obviously !), its applications, indicator plants, companion plants, beneficial and essential elements, organic growing, seedballs and no-till. I also had a look at the fringe which culminated in a rationale for alternative practice.
It WAS a heavy project. Regarding writing and publishing I am of a mind that if you find yourself a decent publisher, which I managed to do, the main clawing and hand to hand comes before you publish. If you self-publish the clawing and striving comes after. I'm gonna find that out because as a short break from nature stuff I did a lovely little book on a different topic 'The Little Black Book of European Stereotypes' (Amazon, soon)
...more
It WAS a heavy project. Regarding writing and publishing I am of a mind that if you find yourself a decent publisher, which I managed to do, the main clawing and hand to hand comes before you publish. If you self-publish the clawing and striving comes after. I'm gonna find that out because as a short break from nature stuff I did a lovely little book on a different topic 'The Little Black Book of European Stereotypes' (Amazon, soon)
...more
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