Living at Nature's Pace: Farming and the American Dream

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Chelsea Green Publishing, Feb 1, 2000 - Technology & Engineering - 257 pages
For decades, Logsdon and his family have run a viable family farm. Along the way, he has become a widely influential journalist and social critic, documenting in hundreds of essays for national and regional magazines the crisis in conventional agri-business and the boundless potential for new forms of farming that reconcile tradition with ecology.

Logsdon reminds us that healthy and economical agriculture must work "at nature's pace," instead of trying to impose an industrial order on the natural world. Foreseeing a future with "more farmers, not fewer," he looks for workable models among the Amish, among his lifelong neighbors in Ohio, and among resourceful urban gardeners and a new generation of defiantly unorthodox organic growers creating an innovative farmers-market economy in every region of the country.

Nature knows how to grow plants and raise animals; it is human beings who are in danger of losing this age-old expertise, substituting chemical additives and artificial technologies for the traditional virtues of fertility, artistry, and knowledge of natural processes. This new edition of Logsdon's important collection of essays and articles (first published by Pantheon in 1993) contains six new chapters taking stock of American farm life at this turn of the century.
 

Selected pages

Contents

Foreword by Wendell Berry Acknowledgments
Introduction
Green Fields Red
For Amber Waves of Green
Our Hidden Wound
The Failure of Agricultural Education
Traditional Farming
Knowing Ones Place
The Barn Raising
Not So Friendly Persuasion
A Patriarch Passes
A Woodcutters Pleasures
The Pond at the Center of the Universe
My Wilderness
Im Glad Im Not a Real Farmer
Going to Market on a Warm Day in November

More Farmers Not Fewer
An Ecologically Sane Farm
Amish Economics
A Horsedrawn Economy
Looking for a Midwestern Culture
The Folly of Trying to Repress the Agrarian Impulse
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About the author (2000)

Over the course of his long life and career as a writer, farmer, and journalist, Gene Logsdon published more than two dozen books, both practical and philosophical, on all aspects of rural life and affairs. His nonfiction works include Gene Everlasting, A Sanctuary of Trees, and Living at Nature’s Pace. He wrote a popular blog, The Contrary Farmer, as well as an award-winning column for the Carey, Ohio, Progressor Times. Gene was also a contributor to Farming Magazine and The Draft Horse Journal. He lived and farmed in Upper Sandusky, Ohio, where he died in 2016, a few weeks after finishing his final book, Letter to a Young Farmer.

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