This book was converted from its physical edition to the digital format by a community of volunteers. You may find it for free on the web. Purchase of the Kindle edition includes wireless delivery.
Fascinating blend of turn-of-the-century steam and rail and rickshaw travelogue through the Far East, but entirely focused on a technical analysis of farming productivity and management. Pushes a central message that US practices of large low-labor farming were/are based on extractive depletion of the soil's resources, compared to the high-labor intensive cyclical management of compost - reuse of all wastes - and irrigation that have sustained generations on much less cultivated land area.
Three main ideas I think are to be learned here. 1. Erosion was still a problem, however it didn't become a critical problem for 4,000 years since due to the amount of canals silt could be recovered by dredging. This means that eroding highlands can be acceptable providing that those highlands themselves aren't being cultivated and that the resulting fertility can be recovered before it reaches the sea. 2. Yields per area can be greatly increased with more human labor if/when needed. This is no doubt familiar to anyone who has gardened, but it is a good case study in how farming methods are driven more by the economics of what pays versus the maximum physical yield per area. 3. All organic matter must be recovered and returned to the soil. All of it.
I skimmed through most of this book as I was really only interested in the agricultural sections and King spent a lot of time detailing his travels as well as his observations throughout Asia but on the whole it was good. Basic message: compost, cover crop, rotate and interplant to maintain fertility. Considering that this book was written just over a 100 years ago, the underlying emphasis on the importance of maintaining soil fertility is pretty current and the methods discussed in the book (with some modifications) are still being practiced today.
An excellent and thoroughly detailed analysis of farming in China, Japan, and Korea in 1911 with practical recommendations for adopting elsewhere certain practices as may be learned there to improve soil quality and more frugally use resources. There is also a plee implicit to state not to tax farmers too heavily nor to subsidize them for fear crop prices might then fall. There is moreover the very optimistic vision of a world sharing its crops via the peaceful commerce of equals to mutual improvement.
Fascinating account of an agronomist's journey through the fields, gardens and villages of southeast Asia before the advent of modern agriculture (and fertilizers!). Makes it clear that the well-organised cycling of nutrients, including human manure, allows a high population density to be fed without much dependence on external inputs. More than a century old but still very relevant!
This is more a travelogue than it is a book on how Asian agriculture is practiced. It was originally written in 1918 with a new forward or something. Slightly deceptive in title. Disappointed.
China has a long history. This book tells about its tradition in farming. Tenant farmers were forty per cent of the total. Their system was labor-intensive, with two or three crops per year, and the continuous application of green manure, human waste (carried from the cities and villages), animal manure, and in a minimal part from commercial fertilizers. The average income was very scarse, near zero, for the poor farmer. He simply worked very hard to live, or survive, in a primitive way.
Quotes: The first condition of farming is to maintain fertility.
... during the winter and early spring, grain, cabbage, rape, peas, beans, leeks and ginger may occupy the fields
The tea orchards as we saw them on the steeper slopes, not level-terraced, are often heavily mulched with straw which makes erosion, even by heavy rains, impossible, while the treatment retains the rain where it falls, giving the soil opportunity to receive it under the impulse of both capillarity and gravity, and with it the soluble ash ingredients leached from the straw.
Precisely 100 years ago, the American author visited the eastern sections of China (along with Korea and Japan). He documented his journey with anecdotes, photos, and vivid prose.
A great look at the organic farming systems in Asia from a century ago. Many of their practices and ways of life carry relevant, practical application for agriculture today. Most notably, their ingrained "no-waste" mentality in all areas of life. We can still learn much from this historic and cultural account. One of the best parts of the book is that it is filled with lots of black and white photographs that help convey their agriculture systems and way of life.
Very impressive observations of how the farmland of 40 centuries has not become depleted like in the USA, but remained fertile and productive without the use of chemical fertilizers &/or pesticides. A confirmation that returning to the soil what you take out maintains a healthy outcome even after 40 centuries.