N80
Super Member
Why is it that if we want to grow something it is hard to grow despite our best efforts and if we don't want something to grow it grows well despite our best efforts to keep it from growing.
I asked a farmer who is wise enough but is a man of few words. All he had to say was "sin"...... as in the Garden of Evil and the Fall of man. As a religious person, I can buy that. And that may be THE overriding reason.
"cursed [is] the ground for thy sake; in sorrow shalt thou eat [of] it all the days of thy life;
But is there more to it in the details? (They say the devil is in the details, you know). In other words, I look at a food plot in which I have gone to great lengths and effort to make plant 'x' grow in it. It does so-so. But the weeds, briars and grasses that I have plowed under, etc. Pop up and flourish as if they were the desired crop. And when drought and poor soil are thrown into the mix the weeds hold up fine while the crop dies. I want to know the science behind that. And I can only think of one thing. Genetics and breeding. Is it just that over thousands of years we've bred crop plants to be so fruitful that we have bred the ability to deal with anything but perfect conditions out of them?
Just a guess.
I asked a farmer who is wise enough but is a man of few words. All he had to say was "sin"...... as in the Garden of Evil and the Fall of man. As a religious person, I can buy that. And that may be THE overriding reason.
"cursed [is] the ground for thy sake; in sorrow shalt thou eat [of] it all the days of thy life;
Thorns also and thistles shall it bring forth to thee; and thou shalt eat the herb of the field;
In the sweat of thy face shalt thou eat bread"
In the sweat of thy face shalt thou eat bread"
But is there more to it in the details? (They say the devil is in the details, you know). In other words, I look at a food plot in which I have gone to great lengths and effort to make plant 'x' grow in it. It does so-so. But the weeds, briars and grasses that I have plowed under, etc. Pop up and flourish as if they were the desired crop. And when drought and poor soil are thrown into the mix the weeds hold up fine while the crop dies. I want to know the science behind that. And I can only think of one thing. Genetics and breeding. Is it just that over thousands of years we've bred crop plants to be so fruitful that we have bred the ability to deal with anything but perfect conditions out of them?
Just a guess.