No, this
isn’t a blog entry about indulging in eating live oysters; this is about freshly
picked “living” fruit and vegetables grown on soils rich in organic matter and abundant
in life.
I used to
work as a “professional” horticulturist growing vast acres of tomatoes on
hydroponic systems. The plants were grown in sand and watered with solutions
that contained all the necessary nutrients the plants could need. Any weeds were controlled with weed killers
and a weekly spraying of pesticides would keep the plants free of any bugs. Plants
produced in this sterile lifeless environment might look good but I am sure
they were lacking.
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Hydroponic tomatoes in sterile lifeless conditions |
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Tomatoes growing in our vegetable garden with lots of life rich compost. |
Now I am a
small scale organic grower and amongst other things I regularly mulch my
vegetables. As I fork the compost around the plants I am amazed to see all the different types of life
crawling around; worms, centipedes, spiders and many insects I have no idea
what they are. Then there is all the life in the compost and soil that you know
is there but can’t see; fungi, bacteria, protozoa, nematodes etc. All this life
or “biotic mass” is present in our organic soil living in harmony with the
plants and making an array of different organic compounds available to them.
The soil looks so healthy and full of life, and so do our vegetables growing in
it.
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Healthy vegetables in a healthy soil |
There are
studies which say food produced in sterile hydroponic systems is as good for
you as organic food. I don’t believe it! The problem is; on farms like ours
with soils rich in organic material and full of life there are just so many
different components present its difficult to understand how they all help to
make a healthy crops. But what is for sure is that healthy living soils produce
healthy living food and healthy living food produces healthy living people.
I often
look with concern at salad packs with a 15 day shelf life sitting under a
neon light on a supermarket shelf. The salad leafs were probably grown on a
sterile soil dosed with pesticides and then packed in a bag with a modified
atmosphere. Can that really be healthy eating?
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Freshly picked vegetables |
Here at the
hotel I normally go to the vegetable garden about four o clock in the afternoon
and pick the vegetables from our living soil. By eight o clock our team of
cooks has prepared these vegetables into an array of delight full tasty salads
and then the first guests start to serve themselves.
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The hotel salad buffet |
Now that’s healthy eating.
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