Preview
  • Farming for the Long Haul

  • Resilience and the Lost Art of Agricultural Inventiveness
  • By: Michael Foley
  • Narrated by: Madison Niederhauser
  • Length: 7 hrs and 10 mins
  • 3.8 out of 5 stars (40 ratings)

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Farming for the Long Haul

By: Michael Foley
Narrated by: Madison Niederhauser
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Publisher's summary

It’s all but certain that the next 50 years will bring enormous, not to say cataclysmic, disruptions to our present way of life. World oil reserves will be exhausted within that time frame, as will the lithium that powers today’s most sophisticated batteries, suggesting that transportation is equally imperiled. And there’s another, even more dire limitation that is looming: at current rates of erosion, the world’s topsoil will be gone in 60 years. Fresh water sources are in jeopardy, too. In short, the large-scale agricultural and food delivery system as we know it has at most a few decades before it exhausts itself and the planet with it.

Farming for the Long Haul is about building a viable small-farm economy that can withstand the economic, political, and climatic shock waves that the 21st century portends. It draws on the innovative work of contemporary farmers, but more than that, it shares the experiences of farming societies around the world that have maintained resilient agricultural systems over centuries of often-turbulent change. Indigenous agriculturalists, peasants, and traditional farmers have all created broad strategies for survival through good times and bad, and many of them prospered. They also developed particular techniques for managing soil, water, and other resources sustainably. Some of these techniques have been taken up by organic agriculture and permaculture, but many more of them are virtually unknown, even among alternative farmers. This book lays out some of these strategies and presents techniques and tools that might prove most useful to farmers today and in the uncertain future.

©2019 Michael Foley (P)2019 Chelsea Green Publishing
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What listeners say about Farming for the Long Haul

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Sobering assessment of farming

As wool farmer, I found this book very insightful , sighting world agriculture history as the basis for ideas on how to move forward. It accurately portrays how politics has played a part both domestically and globally. And it voices an approach of local cooperation and small scale economics in farming as a means of meeting the population's need for food and fiber. The dinosaur will soon be corporate farming, because their failure to renew resources such as soil and the practice of monoculture farming and debt carried is failing to produce good livings as commodity prices fall. Rising now is the small farmer who raises chickens, vegetables, meat all on small acreage. This method creates a greater yield per acre and renews a charished lifestyle of subsistence and the support of the local community. All these subjects are addressed in the book. I for one appreciate the clarity of perspective and effort in research. I am one of those farmers who is making it work, creating and encouraging the farm to clothing movement. And I do manage to make a bit of money. We are at the forefront of encouraging sustainable clothing and produce socks on the farm where the wool is grown, along with yarn and fiber for hand crafters. I thank this author for pulling together this information and hoping more folks are encouraged to get farming to improve quality of life, and excellent food and fiber. See our Facebook group Farm to Clothing.

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3 people found this helpful

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    5 out of 5 stars
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    5 out of 5 stars

Excellent Socio-Political Farmers Manifesto

First off - This is not a “how to farm book”, nor does it claim to be. Please ignore the reviews by people saying that the title of this is misleading, and they were disappointed...

This is in fact an excellent book. An important book everyone should read/listen to.

It covers the history of agriculture, how different people farmed, the successes, the downfalls, the modern day political issues farmers face, as well as some hopeful suggestions of what can be done before we deplete our Top Soil (which we have less than 60 years left with current agricultural practices)

This should be a mandatory reading for high school students. Educate them on the history of agriculture and they will be our hope for the future.

If you do no know where your food comes from, it is as if you do not know your self.

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1 person found this helpful

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Community building

I loved all the stuff about Community building and in Socioeconomics. It was just the read I wanted,

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  • Overall
    5 out of 5 stars

The way forward is to go back.

loved this book biodiversity always wins. truly will pu tto use some of the things I learned. very well done.

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Thoughtful…

As the early adopters gain a greater audience, I wonder how many of the cult-of-efficiency’s best and brightest will be lost to the farm.

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Don’t waste your time!

What a painful experience! This book is little more than a catalog of cataclysms and impractical ideologies. There is not one bit of actual scientific guidance or a single affirmative strategy. You’ll learn nothing useful from this ideologue. This author has done nothing but poorly copy/paraphrase Wendell Berry’s “The Unsettling Of America”, in every chapter. Berry’s book is excellent. Get That!

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    2 out of 5 stars
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big ole nothing burger

This book just rattles off a list historical practices but provides no technical knowledge on these practices or how they are actually executed. The author argued that we go back to a trying a feudalism like system today bc private property is inherently theft. the author conveniently doesn't discuss the horrible failures of Soviet collective farms. The author is completely bought in on the noble savage motif of Americans Indians. I made it halfway through chapter 7 out of 10 and gave up. the book reads like Chat GPT/ Gemini wrote this. I could tell early on that the author had some radical ideas and decided that I should continue listening for the exposure but ultimately after making it this far, I'm not sure that there is a baby in this bath water

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  • Overall
    1 out of 5 stars

drek

I had expected to find a book on regenerative agriculture and got a diatribe decrying the evils of private property and returning to a system of commons such as found in medieval Europe, he claims that arable land will be gone on 60 years and quotes Dr David R Montgomery who in fact says we're are losing topsoil at a rate of 0.3% per year, which is way too fast, but this nets a 30% loss in a century.
I purchased this on audible and made it about halfway through chapter 6 before being so disgusted I found something else to listen to.
if I wanted anti capitalist rhetoric I would turn on any number of socialist networks, not subsidize it with my hard earned money.

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9 people found this helpful

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Not what I expected

This is really a social commentary that uses farming as the vehicle. It has very little to do with actual farming.

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7 people found this helpful

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A few gold nuggets if you can get past the contradictory worldview of the author.

There are a just a few nuggets in this book in the form of short blurbs about some long lost methods of sustainable and regenerative production. However these small morsels exist in a deep and wide pot of soup which consists of contradictory ideology and world views of the author. It also reads quite dry which I personally don’t mind, but I’m sure will bore the heck out of people who value the power fo story in communication.

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