He took barren and dry lands and turned them into incredible forests. People thought he was insane as they fled dying villiages. They burned his forests. He replanted his forests and tripled his crop yields, becoming a hero to farmers all over.

  • andrew_bidlaw
    link
    fedilink
    arrow-up
    1
    ·
    11 months ago

    I’m not an agriculture laborer, so I’m ignorant in how it works. Are his ways revolutionary not only to his nation, but to the world too? From the article I thought it was more about him being a tough bastard who ignored the dogma, did the things he discovered as working (that we already know), to the result achieved by his relentless work in these conditions everyone gave up in.

    • winterayars
      link
      fedilink
      arrow-up
      4
      ·
      edit-2
      11 months ago

      Well that’s a little skewed imo, though it’s a typical way of thinking about things so i don’t blame you. It’s not that this process can just be replicated worldwide to get the same results, that wouldn’t work. It’s that he optimized the process to his specific conditions, taking advantage of the tools and opportunities his environment presented. He was able to do that probably because he experimented and paid careful attention to the results. That’s the real secret.

      The Western model is to find something that works and then replicate it as much as you can, but if you do that with agriculture it’s no good. The conditions of the soil, weather, plants and animals, how all those things play off of the crop you’re growing, etc all influence the results and can be different in different areas, even ones nearby.

      What made him successful wasn’t that he invented something new to the whole world but that he figured something out that worked for his specific situation.