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FOOD PRODUCTION

Irradiation destroys vitamins

Rock dust super-veg flourish
on barren land

Organic milk just
oozes health

Organic farms have twice
the butterflies

BSE, infrasound and
deep vein thrombosis


Essential oils for cows

Food irradiation is
nuclear fix

Chemicals to replace
animal antibiotics

Fish and the
ethical consumer


Feng shui farming

Green revolution exhausts
India's rice growing areas


Mixed-strain crop
growing success


Nitrates in water linked
with diabetes


Organic crops
more nutritious


Organic farming doubles
minerals in soil


Mineral deficiencies
in UK soil


The true cost of chemically
farmed food


Wild salmon threatened
by farmed salmon

 
Organic practices double mineral content in soil

The Good Gardeners Association (GGA) suspect that 'factory' or 'chemical farming' is to blame for the impoverishment of our soil and has been conducting trials comparing the mineral content of broad beans and onions grown with a chemical fertiliser or organic mushroom compost (and various mixes). Initial findings indicate a direct correlation between mineral content and the proportion of organic compost used. The mineral content of the vegetables grown in pure organic compost was over double that of those grown using just the chemical fertiliser.

The GGA explains that a strong presence of mycorrhizal-forming fungi in the soil (which occurs naturally in the soil) helps plants absorb minerals but that chemical fertilisers kill the fungi off.

See also Organic crops more nutritous

(8645) Good Gardeners Association