BD Now! Wendell Berry Article
October 21, 2005
from ORION magazine
REMEMBER WELL a summer morning in about 1950 when my father sent a
hired man with a McCormick High Gear No. 9 mowing machine and a team
of mules to the field I was mowing with our nearly new Farmall A.
That memory is a landmark in my mind and my history. I had been born
into the way of farming represented by the mule team, and I loved it.
I knew irresistibly that the mules were good ones. They were stepping
along beautifully at a rate of speed in fact only a little slower
than mine. But now I saw them suddenly from the vantage point of the
tractor, and I remember how fiercely I resented their slowness. I saw
them as "in my way."
This is not an exceptional or a remarkably dramatic bit of history. I
recite it to confirm that the industrialization of agriculture is a
part of my familiar experience. I don't have the privilege of looking
at it as an outsider.
We were mowing that morning, the teamster with his mules and I with
the tractor, in the field behind the barn on my father's home place,
where he and before him his father had been born, and where his
father had died in February of 1946. The old way of farming was
intact in my grandfather's mind until the day he died at eighty-two.
He had worked mules all his life, understood them thoroughly, and
loved the good ones passionately. He knew tractors only from a
distance, he had seen only a few of them, and he rejected them out of
hand because he thought, correctly, that they compacted the soil.
Even so, four years after his death his grandson's sudden resentment
of the "slow" mule team foretold what history would bear out: the
tractor would stay and the mules would go. Year after year,
agriculture would be adapted more and more to the technology and the
processes of industry and to the rule of industrial economics. This
transformation occurred with astonishing speed because, by the
measures it set for itself, it was wonderfully successful. It "saved
labor," it conferred the prestige of modernity, and it was highly
productive.
During the fourteen years after 1950 I was much away from home,
though I never entirely departed from farming or at least from
thoughts of farming, and my affection for my homeland remained
strong. In 1964 my family and I returned to Kentucky and settled on a
hillside farm in my native community, where we have continued to
live. Perhaps because I was a returned traveler intending to stay, I
now saw the place more clearly than before. I saw it critically, too,
for it was evident at once that the human life of the place, the life
of the farms and the farming community, was in decline. The old
self-sufficient way of farming was passing away. The economic
prosperity that had visited the farmers briefly during World War II
and for a few years afterward had ended. The little towns that once
had been social and economic centers, thronged with country people on
Saturdays and Saturday nights, were losing out to the bigger towns
and the cities. The rural neighborhoods, once held together by common
memories, common work, and the sharing of help, had begun to
dissolve. There were no longer local markets for chickens or eggs or
cream. The spring lamb industry, once a staple of the region, was
gone. The tractors and other mechanical devices certainly were saving
the labor of the farmers and farmhands who had moved away, but those
who had stayed were working harder and longer than ever.
HE EFFECTS OF THIS PROCESS of industrialization have become so
apparent, so numerous, so favorable to the agribusiness corporations,
and so unfavorable to everything else, that by now the questions
troubling me and a few others in the '60s and '70s are being asked
everywhere. It has become increasingly clear that the way we farm
affects the local community, and that the economy of the local
community affects the way we farm; that the way we farm affects the
health and integrity of the local ecosystem, and that the farm is
intricately dependent, even economically, upon the health of the
local ecosystem. We can no longer pretend that agriculture is a sort
of economic machine with interchangeable parts, the same everywhere,
determined by "market forces" and independent of everything else. We
are not farming in a specialist capsule or a professionalist
department; we are farming in the world, in a webwork of dependences
and influences probably more intricate than we will ever understand.
It has become clear, in short, that we have been running our
fundamental economic enterprise by the wrong rules. We were wrong to
assume that agriculture could be adequately defined by reductionist
science and determinist economics.
It is no longer possible to deny that context exists and is an issue.
If you can keep the context narrow enough (and the accounting period
short enough), then the industrial criteria of labor saving and high
productivity seem to work well. But the old rules of ecological
coherence and of community life have remained in effect. The costs of
ignoring them have accumulated, until now the boundaries of our
reductive and mechanical explanations have collapsed. Their collapse
reveals, plainly enough for all to see, the ecological and social
damages they were meant to conceal. It will seem paradoxical to some
that the national and global corporate economies have narrowed the
context for thinking about agriculture, but it is merely the truth.
Those large economies, in their understanding and in their
accounting, have excluded any concern for the land and the people.
Now, in the midst of so much unnecessary human and ecological
destruction, we are facing the necessity of a new start in
agriculture.
HE TRACTOR'S ARRIVAL HAD SIGNALED, among other things, agriculture's
shift from an almost exclusive dependence on free solar energy to a
total dependence on costly fossil fuel. But in 1950, like most people
at that time, I was years away from the first inkling of the limits
of the supply of cheap fuel.
We had entered an era of limitlessness, or the illusion thereof, and
this in itself is a sort of wonder. My grandfather lived a life of
limits, both suffered and strictly observed, in a world of limits. I
learned much of that world from him and others, and then I changed; I
entered the world of labor-saving machines and of limitless cheap
fossil fuel. It would take me years of reading, thought, and
experience to learn again that in this world limits are not only
inescapable but indispensable.
Mechanical farming makes it easy to think mechanically about the land
and its creatures. It makes it easy to think mechanically even about
oneself, and the tirelessness of tractors brought a new depth of
weariness into human experience, at a cost to health and family life
that has not been fully accounted.
Once one's farm and one's thoughts have been sufficiently mechanized,
industrial agriculture's focus on production, as opposed to
maintenance or stewardship, becomes merely logical. And here the
trouble completes itself. The almost exclusive emphasis on production
permits the way of working to be determined not by the nature and
character of the farm in its ecosystem and in its human community,
but rather by the national or the global economy and the available or
affordable technology. The farm and all concerns not immediately
associated with production have in effect disappeared from sight. The
farmer too in effect has vanished. He is no longer working as an
independent and loyal agent of his place, his family, and his
community, but instead as the agent of an economy that is
fundamentally adverse to him and to all that he ought to stand for.
HE WORD "HUSBANDRY" is the name of a connection. In its original
sense, it is the name of the work of a domestic man, a man who has
accepted a bondage to the household. To husband is to use with care,
to keep, to save, to make last, to conserve. Old usage tells us that
there is a husbandry also of the land, of the soil, of the domestic
plants and animals -- obviously because of the importance of these
things to the household. And there have been times, one of which is
now, when some people have tried to practice a proper human husbandry
of the nondomestic creatures, in recognition of the dependence of our
households and domestic life upon the wild world. Husbandry is the
name of all the practices that sustain life by connecting us
conservingly to our places and our world; it is the art of keeping
tied all the strands in the living network that sustains us.
Most and perhaps all of industrial agriculture's manifest failures
appear to be the result of an attempt to make the land produce
without husbandry. The attempt to remake agriculture as a science and
an industry has excluded from it the age-old husbandry which was
central and essential to it.
This effort had its initial and probably its most radical success in
separating farming from the economy of subsistence. Through World War
II, farm life in my region (and, I think, nearly everywhere) rested
solidly upon the garden, dairy, poultry flock, and meat animals that
fed the farm's family. Especially in hard times farm families, and
their farms, survived by means of their subsistence economy. The
industrial program, on the contrary, suggested that it was
"uneconomic" for a farm family to produce its own food; the effort
and the land would be better applied to commercial production. The
result is utterly strange in human experience: farm families that buy
everything they eat at the store.
An intention to replace husbandry with science was made explicit in
the renaming of disciplines in the colleges of agriculture. "Soil
husbandry" became "soil science," and "animal husbandry" became
"animal science." This change is worth lingering over because of what
it tells us about our susceptibility to poppycock. Purporting to
increase the sophistication of the humble art of farming, this change
in fact brutally oversimplifies it.
"Soil science," as practiced by soil scientists, and even more as it
has been handed down to farmers, has tended to treat the soil as a
lifeless matrix in which "soil chemistry" takes place and "nutrients"
are "made available." And this, in turn, has made farming
increasingly shallow -- literally so -- in its understanding of the
soil. The modern farm is understood as a surface on which various
mechanical operations are performed, and to which various chemicals
are applied. The undersurface reality of organisms and roots is
mostly ignored.
"Soil husbandry" is a different kind of study, involving a different
kind of mind. Soil husbandry leads, in the words of Sir Albert
Howard, to understanding "health in soil, plant, animal, and man as
one great subject." We apply the word "health" only to living
creatures, and to soil husbandry a healthy soil is a wilderness,
mostly unstudied and unknown, but teemingly alive. The soil is at
once a living community of creatures and their habitat. The farm's
husband, its family, its crops and animals, all are members of the
soil community; all belong to the character and identity of the
place. To rate the farm family merely as "labor" and its domestic
plants and animals merely as "production" is thus an
oversimplification, both radical and destructive.
"Science" is too simple a word to name the complex of relationships
and connections that compose a healthy farm -- a farm that is a full
membership of the soil community. The husbandry of mere humans, of
course, cannot be complex enough either. But husbandry always has
understood that what is husbanded is ultimately a mystery. A farmer,
as one of his farmer correspondents once wrote to Liberty Hyde
Bailey, is "a dispenser of the 'Mysteries of God.'" The mothering
instinct of animals, for example, is a mystery that husbandry must
use and trust mostly without understanding. The husband, unlike the
"manager" or the would-be objective scientist, belongs inherently to
the complexity and the mystery that is to be husbanded, and so the
husbanding mind is both careful and humble. Husbandry originates
precautionary sayings like "Don't put all your eggs into one basket"
and "Don't count your chickens before they hatch." It does not boast
of technological feats that will "feed the world."
Husbandry, which is not replaceable by science, nevertheless uses
science, and corrects it too. It is the more comprehensive
discipline. To reduce husbandry to science, in practice, is to
transform agricultural "wastes" into pollutants, and to subtract
perennials and grazing animals from the rotation of crops. Without
husbandry, the agriculture of science and industry has served too
well the purpose of the industrial economy in reducing the number of
landowners and the self-employed. It has transformed the United
States from a country of many owners to a country of many employees.
Without husbandry, "soil science" too easily ignores the community of
creatures that live in and from, that make and are made by, the soil.
Similarly, "animal science" without husbandry forgets, almost as a
requirement, the sympathy by which we recognize ourselves as fellow
creatures of the animals. It forgets that animals are so called
because we once believed them to be endowed with souls. Animal
science has led us away from that belief or any such belief in the
sanctity of animals. It has led us instead to the animal factory
which, like the concentration camp, is a vision of Hell. Animal
husbandry, on the contrary, comes from and again leads to the
psalmist's vision of good grass, good water, and the husbandry of God.
Agriculture must mediate between nature and the human community, with
ties and obligations in both directions. To farm well requires an
elaborate courtesy toward all creatures, animate and inanimate. It is
sympathy that most appropriately enlarges the context of human work.
Contexts become wrong by being too small-too small, that is, to
contain the scientist or the farmer or the farm family or the local
ecosystem or the local community-and this is crucial. "Out of
context," as Wes Jackson has said, "the best minds do the worst
damage."
UR RECENT FOCUS UPON PRODUCTIVITY, genetic and technological
uniformity, and global trade -- all supported by supposedly limitless
supplies of fuel, water, and soil -- has obscured the necessity for
local adaptation. But our circumstances are changing rapidly now, and
this requirement will be forced upon us again by terrorism and other
kinds of political violence, by chemical pollution, by increasing
energy costs, by depleted soils, aquifers, and streams, and by the
spread of exotic weeds, pests, and diseases. We are going to have to
return to the old questions about local nature, local carrying
capacities, and local needs. And we are going to have to resume the
breeding of plants and animals to fit the region and the farm.
The same obsessions and extravagances that have caused us to ignore
the issue of local adaptation have caused us to ignore the issue of
form. These two issues are so closely related that it is difficult to
talk about one without talking about the other. During the half
century and more of our neglect of local adaptation, we have
subjected our farms to a radical oversimplification of form. The
diversified and reasonably self-sufficient farms of my region and of
many other regions have been conglomerated into larger farms with
larger fields, increasingly specialized, and subjected increasingly
to the strict, unnatural linearity of the production line.
But the first requirement of a form is that it must be comprehensive;
it must not leave out something that essentially belongs within it.
The form of the farm must answer to the farmer's feeling for the
place, its creatures, and its work. It is a never-ending effort of
fitting together many diverse things. It must incorporate the
lifecycle and the fertility cycles of animals. It must bring crops
and livestock into balance and mutual support. It must be a pattern
on the ground and in the mind. It must be at once ecological,
agricultural, economic, familial, and neighborly.
Soon the majority of the world's people will be living in cities. We
are now obliged to think of so many people demanding the means of
life from the land, to which they will no longer have a practical
connection, and of which they will have little knowledge. We are
obliged also to think of the consequences of any attempt to meet this
demand by large-scale, expensive, petroleum-dependent technological
schemes that will ignore local conditions and local needs. The
problem of renewing husbandry, and the need to promote a general
awareness of everybody's agricultural responsibilities, thus becomes
urgent.
How can we restore a competent husbandry to the minds of the world's
producers and consumers? This effort is already in progress on many
farms and in many urban consumer groups scattered across our country
and the world. But we must recognize too that this effort needs an
authorizing focus and force that would grant it a new legitimacy,
intellectual rigor, scientific respectability, and responsible
teaching. There are many reasons to hope that this might be supplied
by our colleges of agriculture.
The effort of husbandry is partly scientific but it is entirely
cultural; and a cultural initiative can exist only by becoming
personal. It will become increasingly clear, I believe, that
agricultural scientists will need to work as indwelling members of
agricultural communities or of consumer communities. It is not
irrational to propose that a significant number of these scientists
should be farmers, and so subject their scientific work, and that of
their colleagues, to the influence of a farmer's practical
circumstances. Along with the rest of us, they will need to accept
all the imperatives of husbandry as the context of their work. We
cannot keep things from falling apart in our society if they do not
cohere in our minds and in our lives.