Page 82 - How to Be a Conscious Eater - Making Food Choices That Are Good for You
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                SOS: SAVE OUR SOULS SOILS




                  nyone who has read The Grapes of Wrath may have in mind
                  clear images of the ominous black cloud that came roar-
             Aing across the Plains states of this country in the 1930s.
             A massive environmental disaster created what is known as
             the Dust Bowl, but dust doesn’t quite do justice to the magical
             material that was being disrupted. Soil is one of the most pre-
             cious resources on planet Earth. Plant life, animal life, and the
             biodiversity of both all rely on the stuff. As does our entire food
             and water supply. Soil is also alive. Like our gut microbiomes,
             soils have their own microbiomes.
                Although soil health is not yet a top-of-mind factor in most
             Americans’  food  decisions,  there’s  a  hint  in  the  air  from  a
             growing movement of farmers, manufacturers, investors, and
             consumers that it soon will be. You may have already noticed
             that  the  growing  practices  showing  up  on  food  labels  are
             expanding beyond just conventional versus organic. You may
             have seen biodynamic wines, for instance. And coming to a
             supermarket near you: regenerative agriculture.
                You  can think of it  as  organic  plus. Or, put another way,
             rather than just doing less bad, regenerative agriculture does
             more good: The farming methods shift from simply not using
             stuff or doing stuff to the earth that’s harmful to actively
             enriching the soil and the surrounding ecosystems—i.e., leav-
             ing the land even better than when you found it. Another way
             to think about the comparison is that organic agriculture is
             primarily about the process—how food is grown; regenerative
             agriculture is about the outcome or result—how the land, wild-
             life, water, and so forth are affected by the way food is grown.


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