Well, to be honest, Rex, I only skimmed the article. My experience with no
till is tiny garden scale via Ruth Stout (is it?) and it worked quite well
here to reclaim some land from thick weeds and yucky grasses. It added nice
crumbly soil, attracted earthworms galore and made sense at the time.

This carbon credits business is out of my league, sounds like pollution
credit schemes to me.

I first heard about no till on the organic gardening list where people
certainly don't advocate the use of chemicals.

Best,
Jane

> From: RH <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> Reply-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Date: Sun, 06 Oct 2002 15:00:55 -0400
> To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Subject: Re: [globalnews] Farmers Fight Global Warming with No-Till Farming
> 
> The no-till scheme Jane posted is a chemical Trojan horse and I
> suggest you stay away from it.  I suspect she was just trying
> to warn us of the danger.  No-till pushers are in the category
> of those who coin "war is peace" and "slavery is freedom"
> doublespeak phrases.

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