251 Quotes About Agriculture
- Author Mark L. Winston
-
Quote
Our very human to simplify and seek one answer may explain our ongoing difficulty in recognizing impending synergy and acting before systems collapse. We are prone to accept death by a thousand little cuts, in which one degraded aspect of our environment or health becomes familiar and accepted as normal--and then another.
- Tags
- Share
- Author Grant McConnell
-
Quote
Farmers had freed themselves in part from the blind natural forces of storm and insects only to become increasingly the victims of the equally blind forces of market fluctuations. (p. 14)
- Tags
- Share
- Author Daniel Stone
-
Quote
What would normally be good news instead laid bare a pesky side effect of innovation: greater efficiency required fewer workers, leaving rural communities with little to support themselves.
- Tags
- Share
- Author Sarah Waring
-
Quote
The honeybee, Apis mellifera, is a species on the cusp of culture and nature … If we’re to seriously improve honeybee health and with it our own wellbeing, we need to make the most of this timely opportunity to realise a more interconnected approach to agriculture and ecology.
- Tags
- Share
- Author LORD NORTHBOURNE
-
Quote
For we must farm or die. In undertaking farming we undertake a responsibility covering the whole life cycle. We can break it or keep it whole. We have broken it, but there is yet time to mend it; perhaps only just time.
- Tags
- Share
- Author Yuval Noah Harari
-
Quote
The Agricultural Revolution was history's biggest fraud. Who was responsible? Neither kings, nor priests, nor merchants. The culprits were a handful of plant species, including wheat, rice and potatoes. These plants domesticated Homo Sapiens, rather than vice versa.
- Tags
- Share
- Author Srinivas Mishra
-
Quote
Reforms inAgriculture, the service sectors, vehicles and factories play a key role in tackling the economic downturn in India.
- Tags
- Share
- Author William Kamkwamba
-
Quote
After a few days of rain, the seedlings will push through the soil and unfold their tiny leaves. Two weeks later, if the rain is still good, we then carefully apply the first round of fertilizer, because each seedling requires love and attention like any living thing if it's going to grow up strong.
- Tags
- Share
- Author Russell Lord The Care of the Earth a History of Husbandry
-
Quote
Considering the comparative lifespans of simpler tribal societies and that of the more advanced agri-urban empires of antiquity, even here in the New World, it would be possible, indeed, to make out quite a case for illiteracy as a factor of the safety in keeping population and essential supplies in a working balance, with little or no damage to the basic sources of renewal.
- Tags
- Share