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| #Post#: 16589-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Returning the �Three Sisters��Corn, Beans and Squash�to Native A | |
| merican Farms Nourishes People, Land and Cultures | |
| By: guest78 Date: November 21, 2022, 10:43 pm | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| Returning the �Three Sisters��Corn, Beans and Squash�to Native | |
| American Farms Nourishes People, Land and Cultures | |
| [quote]For centuries Native Americans intercropped corn, beans | |
| and squash because the plants thrived together. A new initiative | |
| is measuring health and social benefits from reuniting the | |
| �three sisters.�[/quote] | |
| [img] | |
| https://pocket-image-cache.com/direct?resize=w2000&url=https%3A%2F%2Fimages.the… | |
| [quote]Historians know that turkey and corn were part of the | |
| first Thanksgiving, when Wampanoag peoples shared a harvest meal | |
| with the pilgrims of Plymouth plantation in Massachusetts. And | |
| traditional Native American farming practices tell us that | |
| squash and beans likely were part of that 1621 dinner too. | |
| For centuries before Europeans reached North America, many | |
| Native Americans grew these foods together in one plot, along | |
| with the less familiar sunflower. They called the plants sisters | |
| to reflect how they thrived when they were cultivated together. | |
| Today three-quarters of Native Americans live off of | |
| reservations, mainly in urban areas. And nationwide, many Native | |
| American communities lack access to healthy food. As a scholar | |
| of Indigenous studies focusing on Native relationships with the | |
| land, I began to wonder why Native farming practices had | |
| declined and what benefits could emerge from bringing them back. | |
| [/quote] | |
| Side note: | |
| [quote]Wild�but not domestic�turkey was indeed plentiful in the | |
| region and a common food source for both English settlers and | |
| Native Americans. But it is just as likely that the fowling | |
| party returned with other birds we know the colonists regularly | |
| consumed, such as ducks, geese and swans.[/quote] | |
| https://www.history.com/topics/thanksgiving/first-thanksgiving-meal | |
| Back to the original article: | |
| [quote]To answer these questions, I am working with agronomist | |
| Marshall McDaniel, horticulturalist Ajay Nair, nutritionist | |
| Donna Winham and Native gardening projects in Iowa, Nebraska, | |
| Wisconsin and Minnesota. Our research project, �Reuniting the | |
| Three Sisters,� explores what it means to be a responsible | |
| caretaker of the land from the perspective of peoples who have | |
| been balancing agricultural production with sustainability for | |
| hundreds of years.[/quote] | |
| https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lSwGxJe4bVs | |
| [quote] | |
| Abundant Harvests | |
| Historically, Native people throughout the Americas bred | |
| indigenous plant varieties specific to the growing conditions of | |
| their homelands. They selected seeds for many different traits, | |
| such as flavor, texture and color. | |
| Native growers knew that planting corn, beans, squash and | |
| sunflowers together produced mutual benefits. Corn stalks | |
| created a trellis for beans to climb, and beans� twining vines | |
| secured the corn in high winds. They also certainly observed | |
| that corn and bean plants growing together tended to be | |
| healthier than when raised separately. Today we know the reason: | |
| Bacteria living on bean plant roots pull nitrogen � an essential | |
| plant nutrient � from the air and convert it to a form that both | |
| beans and corn can use. | |
| Squash plants contributed by shading the ground with their broad | |
| leaves, preventing weeds from growing and retaining water in the | |
| soil. Heritage squash varieties also had spines that discouraged | |
| deer and raccoons from visiting the garden for a snack. And | |
| sunflowers planted around the edges of the garden created a | |
| natural fence, protecting other plants from wind and animals and | |
| attracting pollinators. | |
| Interplanting these agricultural sisters produced bountiful | |
| harvests that sustained large Native communities and spurred | |
| fruitful trade economies. The first Europeans who reached the | |
| Americas were shocked at the abundant food crops they found. My | |
| research is exploring how, 200 years ago, Native American | |
| agriculturalists around the Great Lakes and along the Missouri | |
| and Red rivers fed fur traders with their diverse vegetable | |
| products. [/quote] | |
| [quote]Displaced From the Land | |
| As Euro-Americans settled permanently on the most fertile North | |
| American lands and acquired seeds that Native growers had | |
| carefully bred, they imposed policies that made Native farming | |
| practices impossible. In 1830 President Andrew Jackson signed | |
| the Indian Removal Act, which made it official U.S. policy to | |
| force Native peoples from their home locations, pushing them | |
| onto subpar lands. | |
| On reservations, U.S. government officials discouraged Native | |
| women from cultivating anything larger than small garden plots | |
| and pressured Native men to practice Euro-American style | |
| monoculture. Allotment policies assigned small plots to nuclear | |
| families, further limiting Native Americans� access to land and | |
| preventing them from using communal farming practices. | |
| Native children were forced to attend boarding schools, where | |
| they had no opportunity to learn Native agriculture techniques | |
| or preservation and preparation of Indigenous foods. Instead | |
| they were forced to eat Western foods, turning their palates | |
| away from their traditional preferences. Taken together, these | |
| policies almost entirely eradicated three sisters agriculture | |
| from Native communities in the Midwest by the 1930s. [/quote] | |
| Entire article: | |
| https://getpocket.com/explore/item/returning-the-three-sisters-corn-beans-and-s… | |
| BONUS: | |
| Three Sisters � Native American Flute Song � Jonny Lipford | |
| https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=--Rjjny6H1U | |
| Three Sisters | |
| https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_3gnxcpeCj8 | |
| #Post#: 22186-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: Agorism | |
| By: Scythe Date: September 17, 2023, 7:47 pm | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| How to Scythe + STOP Weeding, Watering and Fertilizing | |
| https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VVn1kiZnldQ | |
| The company this guy bought is scythe from has been in business | |
| for 500 years... | |
| #Post#: 24549-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: Agorism | |
| By: 90sRetroFan Date: December 21, 2023, 3:04 pm | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| A rare flash of sanity from Greece: | |
| https://www.theguardian.com/world/2023/dec/19/greece-to-legalise-papers-for-tho… | |
| [quote]Thousands of migrants are to have their papers legalised | |
| in Greece as part of efforts to curb an acute labour shortage | |
| that is hitting key sectors of an otherwise resurgent economy. | |
| In a move that has thrown his centre-right party into turmoil, | |
| the Greek prime minister, Kyriakos Mitsotakis, pushed through | |
| legislation on Tuesday regularising the status of about 30,000 | |
| unregistered labourers. | |
| Critics of the bill, which was passed in a parliamentary vote | |
| with the endorsement of the leftwing opposition, have described | |
| it as dangerous. Mitsotakis�s predecessor, Antonis Samaras, who | |
| voted against the law, had argued it risked turning Greece into | |
| �a beacon of attraction for illegal migrants�. | |
| Defending the one-off measure, the country�s migration and | |
| asylum minister, Dimitris Kairidis, told the Guardian that the | |
| legislation would help with not only labour shortages but also | |
| social cohesion.[/quote] | |
| 30000 is a tiny number (the population of Greece is >10 | |
| million), but it is better than none. Why should it be a one-off | |
| measure? The workers will eventually move to other EU countries, | |
| and Greece will need new workers. It should be regular policy. | |
| [quote]Agricultural associations, which depend on immigrants to | |
| gather fruit and vegetables, have increasingly complained of | |
| their produce rotting, and MPs in rural areas have exhorted | |
| Mitsotakis to take action. Fears for this year�s olive harvest | |
| have similarly grown, with farmers whose yields have fallen | |
| because of the climate crisis voicing alarm over the prospect of | |
| reduced pickings on account of the labour shortages. | |
| Under the bill, migrants will be able to legalise their status | |
| more easily by acquiring residence permits in three years rather | |
| than seven if they can prove they are employed. Greek government | |
| officials have been quick to emphasise that by integrating | |
| �invisible people�, the measure will help boost public revenue | |
| with employment taxes and contributions. Many of the jobs that | |
| people from abroad are willing to do are ones that unemployed | |
| Greeks will not touch, unions say. | |
| At a time when anti-immigrant sentiment is fuelling far-right | |
| support across Europe, the law has been welcomed, with the left | |
| seeing it as overdue, if also opportune. | |
| �Simply because it has proven incapable of confronting the big | |
| problem of labour shortages, the government has been forced to | |
| adopt [our] proposal and has moved ahead with the rapid | |
| legalisation of work and residence permits for undocumented | |
| migrants,� said Theodora Tzakri, who heads the main opposition | |
| party Syriza�s parliamentary group.[/quote] | |
| Greece still deserves to be made Ottoman again, though: | |
| [quote]On Europe�s south-eastern frontline, Greece has long been | |
| a gateway to the EU, and the centre-right administration has | |
| faced criticism for enforcing self-declared �tough but fair� | |
| migration policies that have sought to keep asylum seekers at | |
| bay through illegal �pushbacks� at land and sea borders, | |
| according to human rights groups. | |
| With ruling party MPs told they would face discipline if they | |
| failed to back the bill on Tuesday, cabinet ministers were at | |
| pains to stress that the measure in no way presaged a relaxation | |
| of the government�s migration management agenda.[/quote] | |
| See also: | |
| https://trueleft.createaforum.com/enemies/hungary-v4/ | |
| #Post#: 27758-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: Agorism | |
| By: rp Date: September 6, 2024, 1:25 pm | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| https://x.com/1shankarsharma/status/1828657060000444499?t=5GM_IqChI-utnGwVLSPTJ… | |
| [quote] | |
| After deep analysis of several nations, I have come to the | |
| GRAND conclusion that: | |
| India is the best country to be poor in: | |
| - Food is cheap, plentiful (rice,gram ,banana, guava etc) | |
| - fuel via lakdi, koyla, goitha ( dung) is cheap | |
| - weather doesn't require warm clothes. " Sooti" thin cotton | |
| cheap and good enough | |
| - water via myriad rivers is plentiful | |
| - Agri offers good enough employment | |
| - transport is cheap via taanga, cycle, etc | |
| Views? | |
| [/Quote] | |
| This is not a "poor" lifestyle, but is in fact how nearly | |
| everyone in India lived prior to colonization. The Western | |
| lifestyle should be seen as a wasteful one. | |
| #Post#: 29299-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: Agorism | |
| By: rp Date: February 4, 2025, 1:52 pm | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| https://www.reddit.com/r/solarpunk/comments/rg55ja/subsistence_farming_vs_self_… | |
| [quote] | |
| I have been thinking recently about peoples attitudes towards | |
| subsistence farming. In my experience when I have seen people | |
| discussing subsistence farming it is usually a negative context | |
| and some people seem to view this as a lower type civilization/ | |
| society. Yet hunter gatherer society is somewhat romanticised. | |
| These distinctions seem to be drawn at arbitrary levels. | |
| Homesteaders for example can be held up as self sufficient and | |
| living some form of an ideal. Where as when subsistence farming | |
| is used it is often In a context implying poverty. Is this a | |
| post colonialism hang up? | |
| As solarpunks is it when sustainability and quality of life | |
| ideals meet that is the sweet spot to strive for? | |
| Just curious as to what others think about these distinctions, | |
| not as means of living exactly but in the cultural context and | |
| how people react to the terms and the connotations connected? | |
| [/Quote] | |
| #Post#: 29301-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: Agorism | |
| By: 90sRetroFan Date: February 4, 2025, 4:58 pm | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| The following comments get it: | |
| [quote]It's definitely a colonialist hangup. "Subsistence" feels | |
| like it's used to look down on people who don't really want more | |
| than farming enough for their community. If you don't produce | |
| (or want to produce) enough crops to trade/sell, and especially | |
| if you live outside the Western world, you get labeled | |
| "subsistence farmer." It might be helpful in a larger | |
| agricultural sense, but it is definitely used to otherize the | |
| Global South.[/quote] | |
| [quote]Seems to me like the �difference� between immigrant and | |
| expat. One is �classy� and reserved for white people.[/quote] | |
| Self-sufficient "white" = "homesteader" | |
| Self-sufficient "non-white" = "subsistence farmer" | |
| [quote]Yup I�ve been thinking about this for so long. It�s | |
| basically racism.[/quote] | |
| In other words, it's OK for self-sufficiency to be "white". | |
| #Post#: 29307-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: Agorism | |
| By: rp Date: February 4, 2025, 10:04 pm | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| It's also because "white" homesteading is often associated with | |
| heavy machinery such as tractors along with livestock rearing | |
| (ranching), while "non white" subsistence farming is purely | |
| associated with pre industrial agriculture. | |
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