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8 forms of capital active hope adaptation agroecology agroforestry alder buckthorn Amazon anxiety apples arable art arthritis austrian scythe UK autumn Autumn equinox award back garden back yard Be The Earth beans Bec Hellouin beech tree bees beneficial berries biochar biodigester biodiversity biodynamics blackberries blackthorn book review brain brassica cage budget build building campesino capital card deck celebrate Celtic festivals change changes chemical-free chickens christmas circular city farm clay pot clean air cleansers cleansing milks climate change climate chaos climate collapse climate emergency climate grief climate solutions climbers climbing cob comfrey communities community Community Nature Network community projects compost compost teas composting conference connection consciousness conservation container cooking coppice coppicing cordial cosmology courgettes crafts creativity crisis crop diversity crop protection Cross Quarter Festival cultural emergence culture cut flowers cycles degraded design diary diversity DIY do it yourself Donella Meadows drought dryland earth care earth's cycles Earth's energy earths cycles ecoculture ecological emergency economics ecopoetry ecosystem ecosystem restoration ecosystem restoration camps ecosystems edges edible edible flowers education efficiency elder elderflowers elements elixir emergence endangered birds energy equinox Ethical Consumer ethics face mask fair shares Fairtrade farming farms feedback feminine ferns festivals figs film firewood floristry flower essence flower garden flowers food food forest food garden footbath forage foraging forest garden forest gardening forests fruit fruit leather fruit trees full moon funding fungi future future care gardening gardens garlic gift economy gin Give Nature a voice Glennie Kindred global poverty glut grapes grassroots green space greenhouse grief groundcover grow grow food grow your own growing growing food guilds habitat habits handcream harvest harvests hawthorn hazel hazelnut healing shrubs healing trees health healthy soil heart health hedgerow hedgerows hedging herbal herbal remedies herbal teas herbalist herbs holistic holistic planned grazing home homeless homemade wine homestead hope Hugelkultur humanure hummus hungry gap IBC tanks Idler Imbolc incense increase yields Indigenous indigenous knowledge indoor inexpensive influence inspiration International Womens Day jam keyline kingfisher kitchen garden lacto-fermentation Lammas land land restoration landscape landscapes leaf mould leverage points life lifestyle limeflowers livelihood livestock living labs logs Looby Macnamara lotion low cost low-impact lunar Lush Cosmetics Lush Spring Prize macerations magazine Manda Scott Mangwende Orphan Care Trust Māori Maramataka market garden market gardening marmalade marshmallow mass heater meadow meadowsweet medicinal micro microbes microfarm microgreens Midwest Permaculture mimic mindset mini veg mitigation money moon phases Morag Gamble moringa Mother Earth movement mow mulch multifunctional mushrooms native plants natural natural building natural fertiliser natural skincare natural swimming pool nature nature connection nitrogen no dig no waste no-dig north-facing novel November nutrition nuts oak woodland observe oca October off-grid oil cleansing Open Shell Farm orchard orchards organic organic flowers organic gardening outdoor shower oven oxymel oyster pallets pasture-fed patterns peat-free people people care peoplecare perennials permaculture permaculture course permaculture design Permaculture Magazine permaculture magazine award permaculture projects permaculture week permaculutre permayouth pesto pests philippines pied flycatcher pine tree pips pizza oven plant profile plants politicians doing nothing pollinators pollution polyculture polycultures positive change preserving principles prize projects propagating protection pruning prunings psycho-spiritual awareness psychospiritual transformation rainforest rainwater raspberries re-green recipe recipes Red List reduce reed beds regeneration regenerative regenerative agriculture regenerative farming regenerative projects relative location relative matter remedy renewable renewable energy resilient resources restoration reuse revolution rhythms rootstock rootstocks roundhouse roundwood runner beans Rupert Read sage Sahel salad salads salve Samhain Savitri Trust schools Scotland scotts pine scythe scything seasonal seasons seeds selfcare Sepp Holzer september septic tanks sewage treatment shade shamanism sheet mulching shrubs silvoculture silvopasture skincare sloes slugs small solutions small-scale smallholding social justice soil health solar solstice solutions sowing spiritual spring squash stacking functions stock-free straw straw bale summer support sustainable Swayyam Sweet Bay sweet corn Swift Street swifts syntropic systems temperate terraces thistles thrutopia timber timber framing tincture tonic toolkit tools transformation Transformative Adaptation trees upcycle urban urban farm urban gardening veg garden vegan veganic verges vermicomposting vinegar visionaries walnuts waste water water cleansing watering weeds wellbeing wetland wild edges wild flowers wild food wild garlic wildflower wildlife win wine recipes wings winter winter greens winter salads winter solstice wisdom wood stove woodburner woodland woodland management woodlands world is possible worms yarrow year round year-round food yield young people youth zai zai pits zone 00 zoning

Topics

8 forms of capital active hope adaptation agroecology agroforestry alder buckthorn Amazon anxiety apples arable art arthritis austrian scythe UK autumn Autumn equinox award back garden back yard Be The Earth beans Bec Hellouin beech tree bees beneficial berries biochar biodigester biodiversity biodynamics blackberries blackthorn book review brain brassica cage budget build building campesino capital card deck celebrate Celtic festivals change changes chemical-free chickens christmas circular city farm clay pot clean air cleansers cleansing milks climate change climate chaos climate collapse climate emergency climate grief climate solutions climbers climbing cob comfrey communities community Community Nature Network community projects compost compost teas composting conference connection consciousness conservation container cooking coppice coppicing cordial cosmology courgettes crafts creativity crisis crop diversity crop protection Cross Quarter Festival cultural emergence culture cut flowers cycles degraded design diary diversity DIY do it yourself Donella Meadows drought dryland earth care earth's cycles Earth's energy earths cycles ecoculture ecological emergency economics ecopoetry ecosystem ecosystem restoration ecosystem restoration camps ecosystems edges edible edible flowers education efficiency elder elderflowers elements elixir emergence endangered birds energy equinox Ethical Consumer ethics face mask fair shares Fairtrade farming farms feedback feminine ferns festivals figs film firewood floristry flower essence flower garden flowers food food forest food garden footbath forage foraging forest garden forest gardening forests fruit fruit leather fruit trees full moon funding fungi future future care gardening gardens garlic gift economy gin Give Nature a voice Glennie Kindred global poverty glut grapes grassroots green space greenhouse grief groundcover grow grow food grow your own growing growing food guilds habitat habits handcream harvest harvests hawthorn hazel hazelnut healing shrubs healing trees health healthy soil heart health hedgerow hedgerows hedging herbal herbal remedies herbal teas herbalist herbs holistic holistic planned grazing home homeless homemade wine homestead hope Hugelkultur humanure hummus hungry gap IBC tanks Idler Imbolc incense increase yields Indigenous indigenous knowledge indoor inexpensive influence inspiration International Womens Day jam keyline kingfisher kitchen garden lacto-fermentation Lammas land land restoration landscape landscapes leaf mould leverage points life lifestyle limeflowers livelihood livestock living labs logs Looby Macnamara lotion low cost low-impact lunar Lush Cosmetics Lush Spring Prize macerations magazine Manda Scott Mangwende Orphan Care Trust Māori Maramataka market garden market gardening marmalade marshmallow mass heater meadow meadowsweet medicinal micro microbes microfarm microgreens Midwest Permaculture mimic mindset mini veg mitigation money moon phases Morag Gamble moringa Mother Earth movement mow mulch multifunctional mushrooms native plants natural natural building natural fertiliser natural skincare natural swimming pool nature nature connection nitrogen no dig no waste no-dig north-facing novel November nutrition nuts oak woodland observe oca October off-grid oil cleansing Open Shell Farm orchard orchards organic organic flowers organic gardening outdoor shower oven oxymel oyster pallets pasture-fed patterns peat-free people people care peoplecare perennials permaculture permaculture course permaculture design Permaculture Magazine permaculture magazine award permaculture projects permaculture week permaculutre permayouth pesto pests philippines pied flycatcher pine tree pips pizza oven plant profile plants politicians doing nothing pollinators pollution polyculture polycultures positive change preserving principles prize projects propagating protection pruning prunings psycho-spiritual awareness psychospiritual transformation rainforest rainwater raspberries re-green recipe recipes Red List reduce reed beds regeneration regenerative regenerative agriculture regenerative farming regenerative projects relative location relative matter remedy renewable renewable energy resilient resources restoration reuse revolution rhythms rootstock rootstocks roundhouse roundwood runner beans Rupert Read sage Sahel salad salads salve Samhain Savitri Trust schools Scotland scotts pine scythe scything seasonal seasons seeds selfcare Sepp Holzer september septic tanks sewage treatment shade shamanism sheet mulching shrubs silvoculture silvopasture skincare sloes slugs small solutions small-scale smallholding social justice soil health solar solstice solutions sowing spiritual spring squash stacking functions stock-free straw straw bale summer support sustainable Swayyam Sweet Bay sweet corn Swift Street swifts syntropic systems temperate terraces thistles thrutopia timber timber framing tincture tonic toolkit tools transformation Transformative Adaptation trees upcycle urban urban farm urban gardening veg garden vegan veganic verges vermicomposting vinegar visionaries walnuts waste water water cleansing watering weeds wellbeing wetland wild edges wild flowers wild food wild garlic wildflower wildlife win wine recipes wings winter winter greens winter salads winter solstice wisdom wood stove woodburner woodland woodland management woodlands world is possible worms yarrow year round year-round food yield young people youth zai zai pits zone 00 zoning

Arable Farming and Permaculture

Could traditional Arable Farming be reformed, improved, and innovated through permaculture theory, agroforestry and methodology?

Much of the motivation behind the organic movement and other alternative agricultural movements has been the desire to offer potential solutions to the short and long-term negative consequences of industrial agriculture. Whilst sharing the same fundamental motivation to move away from the industrial model, a crucial distinction between the organic approach and permaculture theory is the latter’s critique of arable farming per se. 

For example, tillage, which is central to arable farming, both traditional and industrial, is often presented as one of the main problems with annual field crop production. Indeed, regular soil disturbance, and upturned and exposed soil, are uncommon in Nature, and can lead to erosion, loss of organic matter, and nutrient depletion. Tillage is labour and energy intensive and leads to greater vulnerability to both drought and flood. The continuous turning and cultivation of the soil creates conditions that could not come about without human intervention, and which have long term consequences, as examples of agricultural failure, both ancient (the Fertile Crescent) and recent (the Dust Bowl), seem to demonstrate. 

Similarly, the dominance of annuals in arable farming is at odds with natural ecosystems, which are dominated by perennial plants. Not only are annuals rarer than perennials, but monocultures of single plant species are even more uncommon in Nature, where plant diversity is the norm.

Practical permaculture solutions and methods 

Does that mean that arable farming, and staple annual crops can never be sustainable? I would argue that permaculture can offer a helpful critique of arable farming, including preindustrial or organic, without promoting its abandonment. As commendable as permaculture systems almost entirely dominated by perennials can be, it is not a given that these are the only viable permaculture systems available to us. Given the critical, fundamental importance of annual crops, it behoves us to explore alternative ways in which they can be grown without compromising our future.

What would that look like? As a starting point, the goal of ‘arable permaculture’, by definition, must be ‘the conscious design and maintenance of agriculturally productive ecosystems which have the diversity, stability and resilience of natural ecosystems’. (Mollison, 1979). These ecosystems could work by applying the following principles:

Purposeful and minimal tillage

A key feature of permaculture design is purposeful action. Before any field cultivation, both its purpose and consequences must be considered. Here in the UK, it is commonplace to see fields ploughed in autumn, after the summer harvest, only to be left fallow over winter. This has no tangible purpose or benefit, and several negative consequences. From my own research and practice, I would recommend the following practices:

  • Never till the soil if it is not being prepared for immediate sowing or planting.
  • Unless sowing a cover crop, a catch crop or a winter crop, leave the field fallow over winter.
  • Do not dig in manures and compost when leaving fields fallow: mulch it.
  • Plan rotations so that we do not heavily till the same areas over and over again; allow for brief fallows, leys, and crops that do not require heavy tillage.

Grass ley in between arable crops. Credit: @escapetheofficejob

Localising annual crops

Whether crops are native or exotic, it is crucial to allow crops to acclimatise over time and succeed and fail on their own terms. Seed saving, the development of unique local varieties, and the selection of crops particularly suited to local ecology and climate, are all practices that would build resilience in arable systems.

Cover crops in an agroforestry arable system, Gloucestershire

Crop diversity and polyculture

A key challenge in arable systems is to maintain plant diversity whilst producing a single crop, such as wheat, from a given field. One approach would be to develop and plant landraces as opposed to single cultivars. Landraces are genetically diverse, locally adapted varieties of a given crop, which change and adapt over time. Heritage wheats also tend to be far taller, co-exist with weeds and wildflowers, have low fertility requirements and provide a vast yield of straw, which can be used as fodder, fuel, and building material. It would also be important to challenge the overwhelming dominance of grains in arable systems. There are other annual crops that could replace some of the acreage currently devoted to cereals, which might also, depending on the landscape and local climate, be more suitable and resilient.

A more complex challenge is to create polycultures on a field scale, in which two or three annual crops are planted on the same field at the same time, or a single crop is grown with under sown green manures, as described by Masanobu Fukuoka (1978) and, more recently, by Gabe Brown (2018).

The role of perennial crops

It is not necessary to convert arable systems to perennial systems, and not just because they will have different outputs, but because there is an alternative middle way. There is no sense in which every arable farm needs to be converted to the type of perennial system advocated by Shepard (2013), as successful and useful as that is in the right circumstances and location. Perhaps, for most landscapes currently dominated by arable cropping, the best compromise is agroforestry, which combines multipurpose perennial crops with arable crops, and the replanting of hedges to separate fields into smaller parcels.

Complete integration with appropriate livestock

Nature’s blueprint is characterised by symbiotic relationships between soil, plants, and animals. Annual arable crops need to be integrated within a system that includes livestock, grasslands and arboreal cover. It is, by definition, a mixed farming system, in which herbivores play the central role in the maintenance of both grass and arable fields. Where permaculture theory can add value is by encouraging the arable farmer to think about what functions specific animals can play in the overall system, how they can benefit and shape the system beyond their immediate outputs. Can pigs be used to clear a field and cultivate it? Can ducks be used to control slugs? If so, how do we design the farm to incorporate space for these animals so that they can fulfil these additional functions?


Cows grazing in early spring on my old arable field in between crops. The field had been left fallow following the summer harvest. Credit: @escapetheofficejob

Water management 

In much of the world, large scale arable farming relies on either rainfall or irrigation. The former is increasingly unreliable, and the latter is often reckless and unsustainable. The ability to maximise rainfall, and capture and store water is an area in which permaculture design could do much to build resilience in arable systems. Indeed, one of the many reasons to include perennials in the arable permaculture design is to hold water, prevent run-off, and provide shade.

Looking at energy flows

A key differentiator between permaculture and other systems of food production, including organic, is a holistic systems approach which looks at all the inputs to a system, and all its outputs, both desirable and undesirable. A major input in arable farming, including the very best practice organic systems, is energy, which is a prerequisite for field scale tillage, harvest, and transport. Machinery and tractors are mostly powered by fossil fuels, which means that there are significant industrial inputs and outputs in the system, leading all the way to the oil well or iron ore mine. For now, arable farming must rely on fossil fuels and mining to a significant degree. The ideal arable farm of the future might produce some of its power from high-tech watermills and windmills, from alcohol/biofuel made on site, and may reintroduce some horsepower for light work like harrowing and will generate its own heat through its own firewood or other clean, renewable sources of energy. Tractors could definitely already be far smaller and less energy intensive than the extravagant behemoths generally used on farms which, apart from being unnecessary and wasteful, contribute to soil compaction. 

On-farm processing and direct marketing

Very few farms in the UK mill their own wheat and produce their own value-added products, such as bread and cakes, and most arable farmers do not eat food made with their crops. This commodification of arable outputs, and alienation between those who produce food and those who eat it, needs remedy. Permaculture ethics encourage ‘people to become self-reliant, and promote community responsibility’ (Mollison and Slay 1991): the localisation of crop production, processing, and consumption must be part of a more enlightened approach to arable farming.

Conclusions 

Overall, permaculture and arable farming are not incompatible. Arable farmers need to adopt a whole-systems approach and not sacrifice the long-term viability of arable farming by focusing on outputs and ignoring the loose ends and liabilities inherent to all simplified, linear systems of production. Most importantly, permaculture invites the arable farmer to always observe and always ask questions. Why till? Why now? For what purpose? What are the short term and long-term consequences? How should we think about annual crops beyond this season and all foreseeable ones? 

Arable farming: a definition

Arable farming generally refers to the cultivation of annual crops on a field scale. Arable farming dominates global food production, and produces the staple crops of humankind such as wheat, rice, maize, and legumes. The word ‘arable’ comes from the Latin arare, ‘to plough’ and an aratro, in modern Italian, is a plough. Arable farming is therefore a field (ager in Latin, from which the word agriculture derives) based activity; it involves tillage and cultivation of the soil; it is dominated by annual plants, especially grasses.

Arable farming: issues and limitations 

The adoption of agriculture, as clear from the historical record, is ubiquitously associated with civilisation itself: all major civilizations past and present have depended upon the production of arable crops for their survival. These are crops that are high in yield, nutritional value, and storability. They can be traded, fed to livestock, and are easily adaptable to different geographies and climates. 

This interdependence between agriculture and civilisation has been accompanied by several problems, which have afflicted, to varying degrees, most parts of the world where arable farming became the main source of food production. The primary consequences of the adoption of arable farming have included deforestation, soil erosion, loss of biodiversity, water scarcity, and overdependence on a limited range of annual crops. All these problems have been significantly exacerbated by the advent of industrial agriculture. Applying industrial methodology to arable farming has led to several additional problems, including:

Water and air pollution

  • The segregation of arable crops and livestock, and the confinement of the latter and commodification of both.
  • Complete dependence on fossil fuels and mining.
  • Causing and exacerbating anthropogenic climate change.
  • Low food quality and variety.

Federico Filippi is Co-Founder and Director of Local Organic Growers CIC, a volunteer run not-for-profit company based in Watford growing produce for the local community. He is the author of Live to Eat or Eat to Live? Navigating food and dietary choices in a complex world. For more details and direct contact please visit: https://ffoodconsulting.co.uk

More on permaculture farming:

Turning exhausted land into abundant farms

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