'It's a groundswell': the farmers fighting to save the Earth's soil
Farmers across the world are ditching their ploughs to protect ecosystems – and it’s working
by Matthew Taylor
Apr 24, 2019
5 minutes
John Cherry bends down and takes a handful of soil in his hands, brings it up to his face and breathes deeply.
“You can smell when it is good,” he says, poking it with a finger. “This smells of roots … there is a rich, organic quality to it. It is a good smell.”
Cherry is one of a growing army of UK farmers who are turning their back on the plough – and centuries of farming tradition – in an effort to tackle a little-noticed but potentially devastating environmental crisis: the degradation of the Earth’s soil.
The UN has warned that soils around the world are heading for exhaustion and depletion, with an estimated 60 harvests left before they are too barren to feed the planet.
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