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Excellent, thanks for that. McWilliams is always a good debunker of food/enviro woo.
Excellent, thanks for that. McWilliams is always a good debunker of food/enviro woo.
OK Great! Nice post Scrut. This is a good time to teach you how to use critical thinking skills to pick apart a biased propaganda blog.
(To put that claim in perspective, note that the Earth’s oceans and plants currently absorb only half of the 7 billion metric tons of carbon that human activities release into the atmosphere each year.)
...“Eat MORE meat?” ... The takeaway was clear: If you’re interested in saving the planet, sharpen your steak knives.
The most systematic research trial supporting Savory’s claims, the Charter Grazing Trials, was undertaken in Rhodesia (Zimbabwe today) between 1969 and 1975.
“Savory’s method won’t scale.”
Extreme example of ignorance. The amount of biomass consumed by cattle, and thus the nutrient cycling caused by their grazing is orders of magnitude larger than the weight of a cow. First off the conversion rate of biomass to meat varies from 5:1 to 20:1. In pastured livestock, that means instead of the irrelevant 10% claimed in the blog, nutrient cycling is actually as high as 2000% the weight of the animal, not including the mother cow that bore the meat animal which does usually live 20 years or more. But there is more. Holistic managed grazing never takes more than approx 40% of the above ground biomass, laying much on the ground as mulch. That is recycled by other organisms in the processes of decay. But there is more. There is a much larger underground community in the Rhizosphere that dwarfs what is happening above ground. Even the insect community hugely outweighs the livestock. This so called "concern" is actually trivial and easily outweighed by natural nutrient cycling. Just a red herring.Cows live up to 20 years of age, but in most grass-fed systems, they are removed when they reach slaughter weight at 15 months. Cheating the nutrient cycle at the heart of land regeneration by removing the manure-makers and grass hedgers when only 10 percent of their ecological “value” has been exploited undermines the entire idea of efficiency that Savory spent his TED talk promoting.
No. Not grassland. Grassland co-evolved with large herbivores. Some deserts may have evolved without grasslands and with different herbivores, but grasslands/savannas and large herbivores co-evolved together. That's working backwards and thinking that the current state with large herbivores removed due to human impact is the state they were when the ecosystem was evolving. Big fallacy.In many desert ecosystems, desert grasses evolved not alongside large animals but in concert with desert tortoises, mice, rats, rabbits, and reptiles.
In 1990, Savory admitted that attempts to reproduce his methods had led to “15 years of frustrating and eratic [sic] results.” But he refused to accept the possibility that his hypothesis was flawed. Instead, Savory said those erratic results “were not attributable to the basic concept being wrong but were always due to management.”
And there is the clincher. Finally the blogger lets their guard down and exposes their real agenda. The elimination of beef eating. Discovering an environmental technique that includes beef goes contrary to their preconceived ideas, their whole world view....we have long known: There’s no such thing as a beef-eating environmentalist.
OK Great! Nice post Scrut. This is a good time to teach you how to use critical thinking skills to pick apart a biased propaganda blog.
False statement. Actually, the estimated total absorption by vegetation alone is ~ 123 PgC/yr. They substituted a net value where gross values should have been used.
No, Not necessarily more meat animals. Simply a change in the way they are raised. What it really means is closing down the environmentally destructive industrial CAFO system and exchanging it with a pasture based system instead. Not necessarily more, just raised and fed differently.
Completely false. Those trials were the earliest developmental phase of his system, long before his idea of adding the science of holism to that land management. They don't have much at all to to with Holistic management because Holistic management wasn't even developed yet. Savory as a scientist back then was still experimenting with and working out the biophysical reactions of rangeland to animal impact. Holistic management came decades later. The same fallacy of claiming short duration and holistic management are the same are also found in the Holechek articles the blog references.
Oh, you mean it doesn't really fit the current industrial model that has caused such huge destruction to the environment? Gee. Even if that were true that it can't scale, (it isn't) and what? We are discussing land management that is good for the environment, not necessarily what may or may not be good for large scale industrialists in the food industry.
Extreme example of ignorance. The amount of biomass consumed by cattle, and thus the nutrient cycling caused by their grazing is orders of magnitude larger than the weight of a cow. First off the conversion rate of biomass to meat varies from 5:1 to 20:1. In pastured livestock, that means instead of the irrelevant 10% claimed in the blog, nutrient cycling is actually as high as 2000% the weight of the animal, not including the mother cow that bore the meat animal which does usually live 20 years or more. But there is more. Holistic managed grazing never takes more than approx 40% of the above ground biomass, laying much on the ground as mulch. That is recycled by other organisms in the processes of decay. But there is more. There is a much larger underground community in the Rhizosphere that dwarfs what is happening above ground. Even the insect community hugely outweighs the livestock. This so called "concern" is actually trivial and easily outweighed by natural nutrient cycling. Just a red herring.
No. Not grassland. Grassland co-evolved with large herbivores. Some deserts may have evolved without grasslands and with different herbivores, but grasslands/savannas and large herbivores co-evolved together.
Correct. That's the developmental phase discussed earlier. You think Edison developed the light bulb on his first try? So why would this blog use Charter Grazing Trials done between 1969 and 1975 as proof it doesn't work, when that was early developmental stages and experiments?
And there is the clincher. Finally the blogger lets their guard down and exposes their real agenda. The elimination of beef eating. Discovering an environmental technique that includes beef goes contrary to their preconceived ideas, their whole world view.
Holistic managementMaybe you could outline just what you are talking about when you say holistic management?
Typical!tl;dr
Now you are back to dismissing something away with a hand wave, but instead of dismissing it due to the connotation evoked by the equivocation fallacy of its name, this time you are dismissing it due to what? The post is too long? Can't be bothered to even read it? Really?
And you called yourself a critical thinker in post #33?
Those of us who are critical thinkers know that anything with the word "holistic" attached is most likely nonsense.
Excellent, thanks for that. McWilliams is always a good debunker of food/enviro woo.
Reading that re-reminded me of the fact that RBF also had a difficult (more like impossible) time understanding that the purpose of the BLM'S management is/was not sustainable grazing, but the maintenance of a bio-system-that being a health desert environment, not a grasslands-which the rainfall in that environment would never support anyway
..
HLM Apologist said:But!
But!
Holistic Grazing is MAGICAL and can TURN dessert into fertile land just by having cattle eat the vegetation in the right way.
It HAS to be the right way, or you're doing it wrong. Anytime it fails it's because the rancher is having their cattle doing it wrong!!!!
I can envision the response now...
Reading that re-reminded me of the fact that RBF also had a difficult (more like impossible) time understanding that the purpose of the BLM'S management is/was not sustainable grazing, but the maintenance of a bio-system-that being a health desert environment, not a grasslands-which the rainfall in that environment would never support anyway
..
I can envision the response now...
Nope :crickets:
It's a blind spot ignored .....
No. Not grassland. Grassland co-evolved with large herbivores. Some deserts may have evolved without grasslands and with different herbivores, but grasslands/savannas and large herbivores co-evolved together. That's working backwards and thinking that the current state with large herbivores removed due to human impact is the state they were when the ecosystem was evolving. Big fallacy.
And elsewhere on JREF it's being vigorously argued that adopting a vegan lifstyle is the way to lower atmospheric CO2 and, hence, the global warming trend.
Aren't you exaggerating? Ignorant of those specific facts would suit better.I think the only people who could possibly argue against the claim that a vegan diet requires less fossil fuel use would be people who are deeply, deeply irrational. It's just a fact about the world.
AHA Not entirely false. See the current industrial model for meat production is in fact a major contributor to all sorts of ecological harm including global warming. Even primitive subsistence methods can be destructive as well.And elsewhere on JREF it's being vigorously argued that adopting a vegan lifstyle is the way to lower atmospheric CO2 and, hence, the global warming trend.
Actually that's a framework and you are drawing specific conclusions from a non specific example. Actually at the learning center, they do leave patches bare on purpose. How? Simply keeping the livestock off those areas. Savory discusses it here: Excerpted from Allan Savory's presentation on January 25, 2013 at Tufts University's Fletcher SchoolFrom the section on "Framework" in the Wikipedia article above:
"One of the best examples of an early indicator of a poorly functioning environment is patches of bare ground."
On a golf course, yes. Otherwise, I disagree. Bare ground is a vital component of rangeland condition. Blanket statements like the above without any reference to scale make it difficult to discuss HM without the possibility of proclaiming that it works wherever it works and they "they did it wrong" wherever it doesn't.
So yes Shrike you are correct, and Savory would agree just as emphatically.What we are doing is preserving some bare ground for wildlife, because we want to increase the whole biodiversity and these bare areas are terribly critical.......
^But what I shared was a direct quote from the link you provided to show what it's all about.
I think one of my issues with it is the No True Scotsman fallacy. When a question about some tenet is raised the response is very often some form of "well that's not what it is" or "what you're talking about is very much in line with HM".
It's all so vague that proponents have remarkable latitude to promote the alleged merits and deflect criticisms willy-nilly.