by Hoke » Mon Aug 01, 2016 3:05 pm
I wonder if AF steadily pines for outhouses in the midst of winter. I suspect she has, utilizes, and appreciates indoor modern plumbing. Yet she thinks her 'beloved' Georgians should not wish for those things?
Against DNA typing? She is against information and knowledge? What is so wrong about using a (now simple) scientific process to know what you have in a vine? Where's the threat there? Unless, of course, ignorance is bliss, and I suppose with some people it is.
Alice reminds me of the major character of the "pneumatic" young lady in the novel "Brave New World" by Alduous Huxley (alas, probably not as widely read as it used to be). For her going to a 'wilderness' excursion was tremendously exotic and inspiring. Of course, the absence of modulated air conditioning, shelter, insulation from the wild animals and the mosqutioes, and all the other hindrances and annoyances crop up, she lost quite a bit of that romantic naivete.
Im willing to bet Alice would be amused by a peasant convincing a mule or donkey to be a beast of burden, and pine of the simple good ol' days. She would never wonder why oh why that same peasant would happily accept a bright green and yellow John Deere tractor if offered.
I once knew a farmer in Mendocino whose vineyard went into some wineries and got great acclaim. It was championed by the marketers as "sustainable, organically farmed, no pesticides or herbicides and largely non-interventional farming philosophy".
When I talked to the farmer, though, and someone lauded his brilliant approach to farming like this, he scruffled his foot around in the dirt and said (paraphrase faithfully): Well, uh, you see, that's how we farmed because that's how we HAD to farm. We were poor, couldn't afford all those chemicals and tractors and irrigation systems and stuff. Besides, the soil was just to damn thin to support a lot. Nothing else would grow there, and, hell, a lot of the vines wouldn't even survive. And of course, although the grapes had good flavor, they never showed much of a crop. If we'd made a little more money off that stretch of vineyard we could've made it pay off better, but we were just to poor. Now they call it "dryfarming"...but that's only because we couldn't afford to drive a well and put in an irrigation system."