THIS IS AN INCREDIBLE NATURAL FOOD
FOREST GROWN IN AUROVILLE, TAMIL
NADU, INDIA
1,117,431 views
Feb 20, 2020
Down To Earth
307K subscribers
#TamilNadu #Goodfood
#Naturalfarming
Farmer and musician Krishna
McKenzie runs a six-acre permaculture farm in Tamil Nadu’s Auroville. He grows
around 150 varieties of plants using natural farming techniques. Many of them
are local and edible wild plants, considered to be ‘super-foods’ with medicinal
properties.
A permaculture farm has
different layers of vegetation and a diverse range of crops. This biodiversity
provides nutritional security and a climate-resilient farming system.
McKenzie said his farming
practices are inspired from those of Japan's Zen master farmer Masanobu
Fukuoka, famous for his experiments with natural farming techniques.
A healthy soil is the first
requirement of natural farming, according to McKenzie. One of the sustainable
farming practices used by him include non-tillage, in which soil is not
distributed by the process of tilling.
McKenzie mixes leave and crop
residues to maintain soil health. These biomass components decompose and work
as soil nutrients. He also abhors the use of machinery, generally used in
traditional farming.
“The first step of natural
farming is returning organic matter back to soil,” according to McKenzie.
Flowers, fruits, vegetables,
oilseeds, cereals and millets are grown by him this way.
To financially support his
farm, McKenzie also provides services to the local population. This includes
running a popular restaurant and a weekly subscription-based basket service.
McKenzie started a
farm-to-plate restaurant in 2011. The restaurant’s motto is to promote and
serve the local bio-region’s delicacies.
With his basket service,
McKenzie gives customers the option to subscribe and make advance payments for
the same.
McKenzie believes the way we
grow and consume food is a major cause of global warming. Industrialised food
production, transportation and distribution worldwide are responsible for at
least one-fourth of total greenhouse emissions.
As a teen, he went to J
Krishnamurti School in the United Kingdom, where he discovered his passion for
farming and a life close to nature. He wanted to live close to nature and grow
his own food. A school teacher inspired him to go to Auroville.
When he eventually reached
there in the 1990s, he fell in love with Tamil Nadu. He then began his
‘Solitude Farm’ along with other young residents in 1996.
His fellow farmers left after
some time but McKenzie stayed on, gradually implementing permaculture in
‘Solitude Farm’.
Around three million farmers
currently practise permaculture across 140 countries.
License
Creative Commons Attribution
license (reuse allowed)
Grateful
thanks to 4K URBAN LIFE and YouTube and all the others who made this video
possible
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