Glyphosate - related to bee decline

   / Glyphosate - related to bee decline #11  
Just one more of a GREAT many traps waiting in store for us.

I once got up to go to an auction back in the 90s. A few hours later I lost half my field of vision. Like having a jagged line running dawn the center of your monitor with just black on the one side. Eventually, I lost my ability to communicate or form thoughts and ended up in the ER. They could find nothing wrong and I recovered within hours.

Only years later, I was watching a Documentary about insectisides and associated health problems. It was focused on (DOW) DURSBAN. I remembered that I had a jug of KILLER that I had bought in COSCO in the states to battle the carpenter Ants in the Barn. I ran out, found the jug and sure as sheit, it had this DURSBAN stuff in there. Funny, how it took years to solve that mystery.

CRAZY, stupid sheit, us humans play with!

Oh, I still have the jug!
 
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   / Glyphosate - related to bee decline #12  
Deep-seated distrust of science?

With all the junk science around these days, it's easy to understand some people's distrust. In most cases, following the money behind the "science" can be quite revealing. Not all science is bad. But, there's entirely too much propaganda parading as science, and that benefits no one but the people funding it.
 
   / Glyphosate - related to bee decline #13  
Vinegar with a dash of Dawn dish soap is an effective organic replacement for Glyphosate. Works well on my gravel driveway to kill ALL vegetation. Dunno what effect (if any) it has on bees?
 
   / Glyphosate - related to bee decline #14  
I spray fencelines, but only close to the fence so I don't have to weed trim. I leave lots of brush for birds and small critters. I try not to use Monsanto products when doing it, but I can't say if the others are any safer. I avoid Monsanto in a large part due to the Monsanto Protection Acts.

One thing I noticed recently. They came through and sprayed power line right of ways about a month or so back. 30 feet or so each side is now brown, totally dead. Everything from scrub brush to 20' and taller trees. Yeah, it's nice for trees not to fall on power lines and knock our power out. But they left the 50' and taller trees that are within 30' feet, so there is still a significant chance of disruptions. I don't see scrub brush as being a threat to utility lines either.

I have no idea what they sprayed with, or how concentrated, but the stuff is dead .... quick.
 
   / Glyphosate - related to bee decline #15  
Lots of maybe scientific research on GMO's and chemicals.
I consider roundup to be one of the milder herbicides available for use, supposedly it breaks down in seven days after application.

For all those that complain of chemical and GMO's, stop and consider what food costs and food productivity would be today without the
huge advances in yields in the 70 years.

We may not like chemicals but I'm also not a fan of "organic" the production and yield is much less per acre and the cost of production is much higher.
And many times the quality of the product decreases.

Without chemicals you could and would easily triple your food bill, it would also be great for the small farm and hurt so many of the large agri-business farms.
That in my mind is the only benefit of restricting chemicals and research.

Also GMO is really just an accelerated hybrid crop.

You all have a good day
 
   / Glyphosate - related to bee decline #16  
Yes, "science" is wonderful when politics and money get involved. I learned about the history of lead use in this country a few years back. The US, because of industry money, was almost 100 years behind the rest of the world!!!

I wonder how many years we'll be behind the world of this. As for organic farming production/yield being less that industry farming, again follow the money. I heard about a "study" where they took a dead field that had been used with industry farming for many years. They planted organic seeds and nothing else. They called that organic gardening and reported how the world would starve if we didn't do industry farming. Yes, organic gardening is more labor intensive and food cost will be higher. Bring on the real food with higher cost.

My grandfather was a farmer. He couldn't believe how cheap food at Aldis was. He also couldn't believe what passed for "farming" these days.
 
   / Glyphosate - related to bee decline #17  
I use both organic and non organic foods. Most of the organic taste better to me, and i even go so far as to say better "quality". The things i use to determine the "quality" are probably different from Lou's, say for instance blemishes in the product, taste is very important to me.

I use both GMO and non-GMO products, but i wouldn't characterize GMO as fast forward Mendel process. GMO actually more like adding plant and animal or created DNA together to create new products.
 
   / Glyphosate - related to bee decline #19  
I agree, and consider GMOs to be a major threat to our food supply worldwide.

I agree, lack of GMO products would greatly decrease the supply of food Worldwide. Every living thing has been genetically modified by mother nature or it is no longer in existence. Scientist simply speed things up. If plants (and animals including humans) didn't change to meet the environment, then they become extinct which has been happening for millions of years. We cant change nature and save all the species that are declining.
 
   / Glyphosate - related to bee decline #20  
Lots of maybe scientific research on GMO's and chemicals.
I consider roundup to be one of the milder herbicides available for use, supposedly it breaks down in seven days after application.
Actually the half-life is anywhere from 2-147 days. It does bind to the soil though, so it isn't in free form for that length of time.

For all those that complain of chemical and GMO's, stop and consider what food costs and food productivity would be today without the
huge advances in yields in the 70 years.
I've never bought that argument. Granted the more necessary something is the less we are willing to pay for it; however, the human population has grown almost 10 fold since 1900 and at some point we need to acknowledge the toll that is causing.

We may not like chemicals but I'm also not a fan of "organic" the production and yield is much less per acre and the cost of production is much higher.
And many times the quality of the product decreases.

Without chemicals you could and would easily triple your food bill, it would also be great for the small farm and hurt so many of the large agri-business farms.
That in my mind is the only benefit of restricting chemicals and research.
I'm not necessarily an organic fan either, yet there's a happy medium between the two extremes.

Also GMO is really just an accelerated hybrid crop.

You all have a good day
Not really. Whereas hybridization is combining two different strains through ****** reproduction, GMO is actually tampering with the plant's DNA. Reproducing a hybrid needs to be done by cloning, whereas the GMO does it naturally; if there are unforeseen problems down the road it's almost impossible to stuff the genie back into the bottle.
 

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