I am brand new to this board. Right now I live with a very high level of frustration. My husband and I are cattle farmers in mid Missouri. I view peak oil from an agriculture view point. I also view peak oil as it is being played out in small town midwest America. The picture is not a pretty one. I am hoping that I may add my insights to this board from where I see it. Please let me know if I am posting this on the wrong forum.
In this post I will just start with two aspects of peak oil that really frighten me:
First, I have attempted to start discussion groups, show films, etc. I have been shot down at every turn. Even our local public library has refused to allow me to show the film "End of Suburbia". At first I thought the negative response was just that people thought I was a left wing nutcase. Slowly, and eerily, it has evolved that people already know what is happening. People do not know consciously, they know it deep down inside. They want to keep this information hidden. I would call this a form of social cognitive dissonance. Tell me if I am off base here. From what I am picking up in the Midwest, there are basically just two groups of people; those that just don't understand this, and those that do, but don't want to. My level of frustration drove me to this board.
Second, my husband and I own 160 acres, and raise cattle with what is known as a cow/calf operation. Our 160 acres is entirely in pasture/woods. We raised crops, but had to stop in 1990 because of soil depletion. This is a common history for Missouri farms. The average size of a small Missouri farm is 160 acres. About 30 head of cows (breeding females) can be raised on this acreage. With mamas and offspring, bulls and steers, (meat animals) the head count usually runs about 60-75 animals.
Most people think that the backbone of farming is the gigantic conglomerate farms. A person doesn't have to do a lot of math to see that these farms will collapse first with the decline of natural resources. Most people think that the population can then fall back on the "small farm". Well, we are that small farm, and I can tell you right now, that it just won't work. For instance. 10 years ago we paid 26 cents a pound for synthetic nitrogen fertilizer, which is made from natural gas (another depleting resource). This year we paid 40 cents a pound. We could only afford to fertilize about 60 acres of land, at a cost of about 2,000.00 dollars. Without synthetic fertilizers to create nutritious grass, our head count on the farm would drop drastically. Carrying capacity on almost all farm land in the United States is artifically maintained by synthetic nitrogen fertilizer. Most people think of crops, combines, and large petroleum inputs, when they think of agriculture and oil depletion, but the picture is much broader.
My husband and I do our utmost to farm in a manner that preserves the farm while maintaining our carrying capacity for our cattle. We use huge amounts of ground water to water our cattle, and a lot of petroleum to put up hay for them to consume in the winter. We fertilize with synthetic nitrogen fertilizer. We cut the hay with a large International Harvester tractor. We rake the hay with a tractor, bale the hay with a tractor and a big baler. Then we use the same tractor to put the hay in the barn. We then use the same tractor to haul the hay out of the barn in the winter to feed it to the cattle. We use the pick-up truck and trailer to haul the cattle to the sale barn, or the slaughterhouse. We have ponds to water naturally, but their use is limited. Most of our watering is done with watering systems that utilize water that we pay for. We are part of a water co-op. We are using underground well water to water our cattle. We fence our cattle with electric fence. We use what is known as an intensive grazing management system. We move the cattle to new pasture every 3 or 4 days. This method prevents overgrazing and drastically reduces erosion, but we have a lot of fence, almost all of it electric.
Our farm is considered small, and we utilize a lot of energy saving practices. We have quail habitats, and many wild places that we keep fenced from cattle to prevent habitat destruction. Nonetheless, I do not know how we could continue our operation without our present use of petroleum. We raise a large garden, and have peaches, apples, strawberries and blackberries. We use no petroleum based insecticides of any kind. My husband ceased using herbicides years ago.
Now, that might sound like we use a lot of petroleum, but actually, we use less than most farming operations.
When we put up our big bales of hay, they are composed of grass that has just been allowed to sit and dry for a couple of days. You can't bale wet hay. The hay will mold and be ruined. The exception to this is a product called haylage. Haylage is similar to silage. Silage is fermented corn. Haylage is fermented hay. The standard way to achieve fermentation is to remove oxygen from the product. In farming, you do this with a silo. Modern silos are the large blue towers that you see on some farms. The blue silos are called harvestores. They work beautifully, are very airtight, and create wonderful haylage and silage. Cattle love haylage. it smells kind of like beer, and the fermentation process increases nutrition content and digestability. The problem with this system, and the link to petroleum depletion is that harvestores are very expensive. They start at about 80 thousand dollars. Farmers are now utilizing an inexpensive method to imitate the fermentation of harvestores. They are using a large machine that runs on petroleum to wrap the bales in plastic wrap made of petroleum. In all of my years in farming I have never seen such a stupid wasteful practice. The waste percentage is huge. So many bales do not ferment. Rips in the plastic, along with waste on the end bales of the wrapped rows make this a wasteful procedure. The plastic is not reused. We had neighbors who were doing this with thousands of bales per year. they were burning the plastic. I guess somebody reported them to the EPA because they have not burned any plastic in two years. I do not know what they do with the plastic now. More and more farmers are switching to this method of roughage production for cattle. The process is wasteful, expensive, and extremely energy and labor intensive. The world has gone crazy.
Sorry this is so long.
Phebagirl {pargraph editing by MQ}








