We wake up at 4:50 in the morning. At that time of the morning anyone can become suicidal, but we resist the urge to kill ourselves, get dressed, and arrive at our school just as the sun rises at 5:15. We are trying out a method called trench farming which is supposed to promote the growth of soil. We dug long lines of trenches, filled them with capina (which is rotting tall grass) and then buried it, leaving some sand on either side to protect the new soil from the wind. The capina should continuously decompose under the top layer of sand, offering rich nutrients for our little seedlings.
It has taken much longer than we thought it would. We've been working on this particular project for two months now, and we've only planted one trench. The students and administrators have become very impatient with the project. They think you can just plant a seed in crappy soil, water it, and then you'll have a tomato in a few days. They don't understand that this project is investing inthe future of the soil. Even things like fertilizer are completely new for them. We've had some lectures explaining the importance of fertilizer, pest controls, consistent water schedules and so on. I'm not sure id anything is sinking in.
So far these are our two biggest barriers:
1. a perfectionist boss: The trenches are supposed to be 40 centimeters wide and deep. If they are 39 or 41 centimeters he makes us do it over again. If the trenches are not in a straight line we do it over again. I don't think he understands that 40 centimeters is a suggested guild, not the end all and be all of gardening. He loves his measuring stick.
In addition to the trench farming we're also planting fruit trees all over the school and planting some decorative gardens. Sometimes I really don't understand their reasoning for things. The director will say that we need more trees at the school so he'll have a students cut down a huge beautiful tree that has been here forever and plant two baby trees there in its place. Can't we plant the new trees in a different aread!? It doesn't make sense to me.
2 comments:
sounds like you've been keeping busy. And who said you'd never amount to much... experimental agriculture, who would have thought.
-keith
experimental agriculture...that was not something i saw in your future. i hope you're loving life!!!
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