tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-105242361638428746.post1107145519719527998..comments2023-03-24T21:49:49.118-04:00Comments on Dubious Prospects: Present necessityGraydonhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/09839374676813519438noreply@blogger.comBlogger2125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-105242361638428746.post-91429914495445907112018-11-04T00:24:28.329-04:002018-11-04T00:24:28.329-04:00+John Snead Chickens (and turkeys) are better fee...+John Snead Chickens (and turkeys) are better feed converters than rodents. And they're opportunistic omnivores, so I suspect probably the prefered choice.<br /><br />Large mammals work fine if you can do prairie pastoralism; carbon-negative, even. Need a major change in how land tenure works.<br /><br />The thing with any of the plausible post-agricultural setups is we have to switch <i>Graydonhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/09839374676813519438noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-105242361638428746.post-39575400329034325152018-11-03T18:36:25.495-04:002018-11-03T18:36:25.495-04:00"diversity; the massive reliance on wheat, ma..."diversity; the massive reliance on wheat, maize, and rice is going to end. We're going to be eating a lot of weird stuff and need to work at getting as much of it into the future as we can." That's a very interesting point that I was considering just yesterday. Permaculture and vertical farms (and ideally the two combined) can grow produce exceptionally well. These methods heron61https://www.blogger.com/profile/06589549903030913452noreply@blogger.com