The Lomandra Manifesto: Why There Must Be An Ecology-Based Agriculture
The Lomandra Manifesto: Why There Must Be An Ecology-Based Agriculture
The Lomandra Manifesto: Why There Must Be An Ecology-Based Agriculture
Done poorly, as it has been for much of history across many landscapes,
agriculture is destructive—not because farming is inherently a destructive
act, but due to ignorance, poor decisions, and flawed notions of the rights of
land ownership.
Ecological agriculture aims to align food and fibre production with natural
processes. Farm management becomes less focused on minimising nature’s
variables and seeks instead to work within natural cycles; the farm produces
not only food, but clean air, clean water, and progressively more fertile soils—
all of which contribute to the welfare of plants, animals and people.
History is full of individual farmers, and a few cultures, who have envisioned
and created a truly integrated agriculture; farming systems that are not only
productive and profitable, but which complement and extend the natural
world. The world today has thousands of such farmers, with a unique
historical perspective: the breakdown in the perception that there is a
difference between “agriculture” and “the environment”.
Agriculture is the environment, and always has been. How agriculture is
conducted determines water quality and quantity, the extent of habitat
available to plants and animals, air quality and the beauty of landscapes,
among other things.
Agriculture provides the most powerful tool for environmental change that
humanity has at its disposal. Most of Earth’s land surface is influenced by
agricultural activity. Creating an ecology-focused “agri-culture” that
acknowledges humanity’s need to sustain ecological health is the single most
important step we can take as a species.
There is a growing recognition that the agriculture of the past cannot be the
agriculture of the future. Fortunately, this understanding is dawning at a
time unlike any other in history, when new knowledge can be broadcast
across the planet in seconds.
Lomandra was formed to connect people with the land that sustains them.
This isn’t an original idea. Many individuals, and the philosophies they have
founded, have been aimed at a better relationship between people and the
soil.
Holistic Management had its origins in Rhodesia in the 1960s. Allan Savory,
a game ranger, and later politician and educator, found that rangelands
responded to management that mimicked the migrations of the great African
herds. Savory subsequently realised that most land management is
performed reactively, in response to circumstances, when it could only be
ultimately successful if conducted proactively towards “holistic” goals—goals
that balanced social, economic and environment outcomes. He developed a
framework for making decisions that asks that the ecological, social and
financial consequences of an action be accounted for. His philosophy has
become widely known as “triple bottom line” thinking.
Biological farming emphasises a living, fertile soil as the necessary basis for
successful agriculture. Management practices revolve around maintaining
life within the soil. Unlike organic farmers, practitioners choose to use
chemical solutions, if necessary; but biological farming recognises that soil is
a living community that is often damaged by chemical use. The approach is
proving to be an important bridge between conventional and organic
agriculture.
Lomandra: Why?
The first meeting of the group was held at Chris and Margot Wright’s grazing
property “yerrabinda”, on the Eastern Fall of the NSW New England region,
in late 2007. A defining feature of pastures in the area is a dryland rush of
the Lomandra family. Large sums of money, and thousands of litres of
chemical, have been expended by landholders on eliminating the invasive
rush.
When the Wrights began to practice Holistic Management in the 1990s, they
began to consider Lomandra in a different light. Long rest periods between
grazing allows pasture species like clover to climb up through the rush.
Grazing cattle, seeking clover, also take a mouthful of rush, letting more light
into the plant and encouraging more pasture species to grow through it on
the next rest—and more rush to be eaten on the following graze. Today the
Lomandra population on “yerrabinda” is either steady, or in retreat, simply
by managing for a better pasture.
Along with the understanding that Lomandra, with its enormous root mass,
is holding carbon and moisture in the soil profile, providing a protected seed
bed for pasture species, and spoils winter wind flows over the landscape, the
Wright’s perception of the rush has changed from that of pest to just another
member of the paddock plant community.
.../to be continued...