by bart » Tue 08 Feb 2005, 14:38:37
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')but a fast solution is to import enough soil so your garden is a foot or more deep.
Just curious about where this soil would come from....
Right now, it's easy to get soil trucked in ready to garden. Amendments, etc. are cheap in the quantities needed for gardening.
In a post-peak world it won't be so easy, as you point out. Transporting a bulky item like soil is a hassle. Even so, I don't think soil is a limiting factor for gardening. You can only garden so much land intensively before you are overwhelmed.
Sand and clay are what the land surface of the earth is made up of, so we won't run out of these. The problem is getting them in the right proportions, and having enough nutrients and organic material in the soil.
For starters, we could start directing our waste stream into compost instead of to landfills and rivers. We would need:
Carbon sources: paper, wood, brush, clippings.
Nitrogen sources: food scraps, vegetation that's still green, urine, animal manure, etc.
As long as there is plant and animal life, we won't run out of these.
Organic farmers and gardeners are creating compost and soil now. On a national basis, Cuba is doing it. Over the millenia, farmers in China and other traditional cultures did it. Our ancestors did it.
Once we get over our cultural hangups, we will do it too.