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Agnew Books sorted by Average customer review: high to low .

Agnew
Mastering Space: Hegemony, Territory and International Political Economy
Published in Paperback by Routledge (1995-03-28)
Author: John Agnew
List price: $59.95
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Average review score:

Great Book!!!!!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-09-24
This book was excellent. The explanation for space was one of the best I've ever been exposed to as a Geography student.

Agnew
The Mathematics of Turfgrass Maintenance
Published in Paperback by Ann Arbor Press (1997-02)
Authors: Nick Christians and Michael Lewis Agnew
List price: $34.95
Used price: $38.96

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This book is Misnamed....
Helpful Votes: 9 out of 9 total.
Review Date: 2000-04-30
It should be named something like the "Essential Math Reference Book for Farmers, Landscapers, Golf Course Superintendants, Nursery Managers etc." What a wonderful and easy to use reference book for anyone dealing with the frustrating world of area measurements, volume/fertilizer/pesticide/irrigation/seeding rate calculations, and spreader and spayer calibration. I've worn out one copy and am on my second. I use it on my farm, at work as a pesticides applicator, and in my landscaping business. This is a must-have book for folks like me that hate math but have to use it almost everyday....believe me your money won't be wasted on this one and it won't just collect dust on your shelf.

Agnew
Meant to Be
Published in Paperback by Cerridwen Press (2007-03-01)
Author: Denise A. Agnew
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Meant to Be
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-07-03
Courtney Devons won an all-expense paid vacation at one of the most exclusive resorts in the Rockies. The Heart Inn Resort has a reputation of being the most romantic place in the Rockies; many couples have met, married and honeymooned there. There was only on catch: she had to bring her husband. Only she wasn't married.


She needed a vacation desperately, and sure, she wouldn't mind meeting the man of her dreams there. But who could she bring that wouldn't mind playing her husband long enough to get them there and registered? Why, her best friend Morgan Lucas, of course! Morgan volunteers and they head off for the resort.


Unfortunately, Courtney's ex-boyfriend Stan shows up at the resort and she and Morgan have to play a loving newlywed couple instead of heading their separate ways as they had planned. The magic of Heart's Inn is more potent than they think, Morgan and Courtney find themselves less than reluctant to play the loving couple than they first believed.


Meant to Be was a thrilling, magical ride that I loved from start to finish! I felt the mysterious romance that surrounded the Heart Inn Resort and the beautiful and passionate way both the land and lovely surroundings of the Inn were presented. A truly sweet and sexy story, Meant to Be is surely a keeper if you love to dream about a fairy-tale type of passionate love.

Cassidy
reviewed for Joyfully Reviewed

Agnew
Mr. Facey Romford's hounds
Published in Unknown Binding by Bradbury, Agnew & Co (1892)
Author: Robert Smith Surtees
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Fox-hunting highjinks
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2006-05-16
Robert Smith Surtees devoted his life basically to two things: fox hunting and novel writing, actually combining both into a single pursuit. He wrote a number of delightful novels centering around the fox-hunting society in and about Durham, England; this was his last book, published posthumously, and among his best. Facey Romford is a confidence trickster who passes himself off as his wealthy namesake, using the other's stationery to pull off the switch. He becomes Master of the Hounds of the Heavyside Hunt, and from that vantage point we are privy to all kinds of characters and happenings. The novel ends with Facey and his new bride going to Australia, not in disgrace, as was hoped by all who knew him, but where his fortunes only increase and all is well. Surtees's humor is broad and ruthless, and his observations on what makes this society tick are keen and perceptive. The novel presents an entertaining look at the sporting side of Victorian England.

Agnew
Portrait of a Lady: Sargent and Lady Agnew
Published in Paperback by Antique Collectors Club Ltd (1997-08)
Author: Julia R. Rolfe
List price: $19.95
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Average review score:

The woman whose portrait launched his market in England
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-04-14
Lady Agnew was a very attractive woman and Sargent's portrait of her got very high praise from his contemporary art critics. Because of the portrait she became a society "beauty" and Sargent, who hadn't made much of an impression in the art market in England overnight found himself inundated by commissions from the English aristocracy. She married a man quite a bit older than she was and who had to attend to his obligations in Scotland as a wealth landowner, leaving her alone a great part of the time at their London residence. She became a society hostess whose invitations were much sought after. Sargent was, of course, a guest as were some other artists of that time; and she was also a guest of Sargent's. He was well liked by people who met him as he was also a talented pianist who would entertain his guests and his sitters by playing music for them when he wanted to take a break from his painting. I ran across his portrait of Lady Agnew in a catalog raisonné and I became so fascinated by their story that I purchased this book in order to find out more about their relationship. Besides a number of images of Lady Agnew, there is a good sampling of Sargents society portraits in color and in black and white. It also has a goodly amount of text to help fill in the gaps lacking in other sources. This book was issued by the National Gallery of Scotland for a special exhibition featuring the lady and the artist. The National Gallery of Scotland is the proud owner of the painting. I love this book and am not ready to put it on Amazon; it's a "keeper".

Agnew
Sword: Tales from the Green Sahara
Published in Paperback by Pen Press Publishers (2001-10-01)
Author: Lisa Agnew
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Review by Nan Kilar - One of the best!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2006-02-07
What an interesting and unique approach to this historical/fictional/sci-fi tale! This is the story of a sword and its life through the ages as told by Abeth, the Sword's conscience. The Sword was forged of metal stronger than any known at the time and was slightly curved at the tip. The hilt was loaded with many valuable colorful gems.

The story of this magnificent Sword opens in 223BC as a mercenary is fighting in Wales with the Sword he found when he was a boy. Throughout history, the possessors of the Sword are envied by their fellow soldiers; there's a mystique about it. Legends abound about the Sword and by 1100AD, it was allegedly King Arthur's Excalibur; by 1335, it had reached Africa; by the 1650's, it was in the West Indies; by 1759, it was fighting in North America. By this time, it's believed the Sword can guarantee its owner immortality. After the American Revolution, the Sword eventually found its way back to England and rested in a countryside museum for several hundred years. By 2201, many years after mankind has destroyed the ozone layer and some of the remaining of civilization is living in Domes, an Outsider has found the Sword, but loses it to a creature of the deep...where it still lies.

Abeth only knows what it has seen in battles since killing is its career. It is a fearsome dispenser of justice and vengeance as well as a sign of man's power and responsibility.

Agnew
Treacherous Wishes
Published in Paperback by Treble Heart Books (2002-07)
Author: Denise A. Agnew
List price: $14.99
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Average review score:

Not to be missed read--superbly penned!
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2002-10-06
For years, Tammy Carter has denied her psychic abilities. But after a recent case involving the company she works for-Taggart Security Team-her abilities were resurrected to help in a rescue. Now, she's receiving threatening phone calls at home and at work, and her psychic abilities have returned with a vengeance. The image that won't go away is that of the death of her sister-a death she feels she could have prevented. But why were these phone calls bringing back all those old awful images---- to the point that she couldn't hardly function after an image? She's appalled when a co-worker, bodyguard Kyle Hawthorne, discovers what is happening to her-at least, he discovers that she's apparently being stalked, and that there is something wrong with her. But Kyle has a hang up about psychic abilities-how is Tammy to tell this sexy man that she's falling for the whole truth without pushing him away?

Kyle Hawthorne, Taggart Security Bodyguard, has always thought Tammy Carter was sexy and special-but when she begins receiving threatening phone calls, Kyle realizes just how special she truly is. He's always held himself aloof to a certain degree-but no more. The attraction between them was so hot that he just couldn't leave it alone-they were meant to be together. But first Kyle has to discover what it is that is wrong with Tammy-and who this stalker is.

Tammy and Kyle make a wonderful couple, and the sparks fly every time they're in the vicinity of one another. Kyle is strong, sexy and protective-and Tammy is strong, spunky and independent--- which gives you a clue that the sparks really fly like crazy in this story! Ms. Agnew has done a stupendous job keeping us guessing on who the `Sweet Magnolia' stalker could be, and at keeping the romance the focal point of the story. With secondary characters that we met in Dangerous Intentions, she adds some great depth to the story.

This is the sequel to Dangerous Intentions-but it is most definitely a stand along read. However, it's this reviewer's opinion that once you read this book, you won't be able to resist reading the first one. Wonderful job, and I'm definitely hooked on the Taggert Security Team-and can't wait for the next installment!

Agnew
Up Close & Personal
Published in Mass Market Paperback by Triskelion Publishing (2007-02-05)
Authors: Maggie Nash, Tess Harrison, Pam Champagne, and Denise A. Agnew
List price: $7.99

Average review score:

This is one you won't want to miss!!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-12-07
Deep Cover by Maggie Nash
Helena Peters has been partners with Dimitri Michaels since she joined the police force five years ago and has been in love with him for the same amount of time. She can't say anything to him since she doesn't want to ruin their friendship and with his constant parade of girlfriends she can plainly see that she's not his type. However, this new under cover op they have been placed on requires them to go in as a couple and it's making it very difficult for her to hide her true feelings.

Deep Cover is an enchanting story with bold, likable characters that share a sizzling hot chemistry that will leave you wanting more. The action and adventure in this tale is exhilarating and only adds to the relationship between Helena and Dimitri.

Weapons of Pleasure by Elektra Cross
Nikki DeCarlo works undercover in the sex crimes unit and instead of the usual assortment of police weapons to take down the bad guy, she carries a selection of specially modified sex toys. When her boss feels that her past is starting to interfere with her job, he orders her to see the new sex therapist on staff. Nikki thought that she had dealt with the attack when she was nineteen and doesn't need some therapist digging through her past, even if the man in question is the handsome Donovan Webber.

Weapons of Pleasure is an electrifying tale set in the future. I liked that Nikki was a strong woman intent on putting the past behind her while also protecting others from the trauma she suffered. The relationship between Nikki and Donovan was exciting to behold and had me rooting for the both of them.

Dance For Me by Pam Champagne
When four strippers are found murdered in four months, Detective Lara Stevens knows her only chance to find the killer is to go undercover as a dancer, and with her partner out on leave, Lara will be on her own. While Lara is looking over the reports on her desk, a sexy and very mad Reno Larkin bursts into the police station demanding to know what is being done to find his friend's killer. When Reno discovers that Laura will be working at the strip club alone, he decides to tag along to keep an eye on her while also trying to get her to give into the attraction that's simmering between them regardless of the age difference.

Dance For Me is an exciting adventure filled with passion and intrigue. I liked the premise of the younger guy going after what he wanted and thought that the sexual tension between Lara and Reno was perfect.

Closing The Deal by Tess Harrison
When Lani Morgan's doctor convinces her to take time off work due to health problems, Lani decides to go for a weekend at the Alluring Isle Resort. She hopes the peace and quiet will get her blood pressure under control so she can get back to work, but her plans don't go exactly as intended when the sexy guy next door sends her blood pressure soaring.

Ty Roberts is at the resort to finish one last job, to find the best way for his client to take over Lani's company. However, after spending the night with her he isn't sure how to break the news to her that he isn't the person she thought she knew. Plus he's not sure if he can give the information he has to his client.

Tess Harrison has written a great story that pulls you so far into the tropical world she has created that you would swear you could feel the warm breeze coming off the water. I wasn't sure I was going to like Ty at first but it didn't take long before I came around. Closing The Deal was a fabulous ending to this thrilling anthology.

Up Close & Personal is a collection of four erotic stories from four very talented authors. Each author adds her own unique writing style and flavor to the book so that they complement each other perfectly. The book flows smoothly from one story to the next and the characters in each have explosive chemistry and sizzling hot encounters that are sure to leave you breathless. Each tale in this book is great but with all four stories combined into one book; this is one you won't want to miss!! 5 Angels!

By Tammy
Fallen Angel Reviews

Agnew
White Hot Holidays, Vol. II
Published in Paperback by Elloras Cave Pub Inc (2006-10-31)
Authors: Sherri L. King, Annie Windsor, Sylvia Day, Lynn LaFleur, Denise A. Agnew, Rachel Carrington, Maggie Casper, and Suz De Mello
List price: $17.99
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Average review score:

White hot and sexy!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-07-28
Excellent collection of erotica stories, centered around the holidays. Most are very hot and good, totally sexy and fun to read. I read this one first, but might also get the first volume. A total recommend, along with Husband Swap and Roughing It: Two Dirty Stories.

Agnew
Back from the Land: How Young Americans Went to Nature in the 1970s and Why They Came Back
Published in Paperback by Ivan R. Dee, Publisher (2005-09-25)
Author: Eleanor Agnew
List price: $16.95
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Average review score:

Wish it were a DVD
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-07-31
This is a great personal history of the "back to the land" movement of the 70s and what happened to the folks who went there. I only wish there were a History Channel video version so I could show it to my younger friends who don't ever seem to have time to read. Some are, unfortunately, considering a similar path with many of the same unrealistic expectations. They call it "sustainability" these days but to far too many that buzzword is nothing more than the same old simplicity-lust that rears its longing head every every now and then in complex cultures. There is surely some path to a less hectic, more meaningful, more holistic life to be had than the conventional materialistic overachiever society we are (once again) ensconced in but my tongue-in-cheek advice to young friends, largely ignored, has been: "The 'simple life' isn't all that simple, the 'natural life' doesn't occur naturally, and the only real way to get 'back to the land' is through a six foot hole in the earth."

The author illustrates through stories about the lives of those who were there just how difficult it was to jump back into a more self-sufficient country life, especially as we had children who needed more social interfaces. Or as we just realized that getting sick, injured, and just plain older and feebler away from the protective elements of mainstream culture wasn't as great as it seemed when we were young, invincible, and blind with our own ideals. Maybe a few young people will actually read this book before taking a similar plunge and be better off for it. Forewarned is forearmed after all. I'd like to hope the new generation will find itself more prepared to create a better life by paying attention to what has gone before and what failed and succeeded.


A blast from the past ...
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-03-07
Back in the 70's, I never dropped out of society and lived on the land, but I have friends that did .. and while they have some "conveniences" these days, to some degree they still lead the simple life. I am very much into voluntary simplicity but I never felt it should be so extreme. This was an awesome read that brought back many wonderful memories. At times, I was confused as to whether the author was talking first person or if she was quoting an interviewee, but despite that, the author did a great job of illustrating why folks dropped out and then what influences led them to come back to mainstream. Some of this I was exposed to ... some of this I lived ... but all of this book, I thoroughly enjoyed and I think you will, too.

Worth reading
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-10-26
Like an earlier reviewer stated, take it with a grain of salt. It is evident in this book that the author has a lot of nagative energy from her experiences attempting to homestead. It is well written, intersting and thought provoking. This book is worth reading if you would like a prespective of why homesteading did not work for many people.

Honest
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2006-06-26
One of the better books by former Hippies about the 60's and 70's. Well written and insightful. If you are really interested in the back to the land phenomenon and what it was really like this is highly recommended. If you want a light, "and then we all got stoned" sort of retrospective this will be too analytical but still interesting.

The Back to the Land Movement: Why it Failed and Why we Need to Try Again Anyway
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 2008-02-22
As oil and natural gas decline, many of us will have to go back to the land. There is something to learn from those who have tried this in the past. Although much has been said about why communes and Utopian communities failed, little has been written about the fate of individual homesteaders.

Part 1 is a book review of Agnew's very insightful history of this movement, and Part 2 is why I believe we need to go back to the land again and how to do it right this time given the problems and failures of homesteading in the `70s.

Part 1. Review of Agnew's "Back From the Land"

Eleanor Agnew, in her 2004 book, "Back from the Land. How Young Americans Went to Nature in the 1970s, and Why They Came Back", discusses the millions of young adults who tried homesteading. Agnew speaks from experience -- she went back to the land with her husband and two boys in Troy, Maine.

Agnew estimates between 750,000 and one million people dwelled on communes then. Millions more went back to the land independently. On the whole the movement consisted of educated, young, white, middle class men and women.

Their rejection of the current system wouldn't have been possible if the overall economy hadn't been so wealthy. It was a luxury to be able to experiment.

There were many reasons people went back to the land. The value system of American society was repulsive to many. They abhorred the rat race, boring jobs, crowds, the corrupt establishment; consumerism, destruction of wilderness, and advertising to get people to buy things they didn't need. Some also felt the need to "redeem their souls" because they'd done nothing to deserve the abundance they'd experienced. America has a long tradition of associating virtue with moderation, hard work, self-denial, and simple living. Many associated farming with the romantic notion of self-sufficient pioneers.

The oil crisis in 1973 led some to believe that the capitalist system was in imminent danger of collapse, so going back to the land would be a matter of survival.

Homesteaders wanted to invent a new and better civilization based on community, healthy food, a love of nature, and avoidance of toxic chemicals.

Many, if not most, were unrealistic about what it would take to make the urban to country transition.

Raising animals meant no days off, and the joy of raising them was shattered when they were slaughtered.

Farming was hard. Some bought land that was mostly rocks, which made building homes and starting gardens very hard. Good topsoil was washed away in storms. Then there were assaults by flies and no-see-ums, blistered hands, and aching muscles while tending crops, which in the end might be lost to drought, frost, hail, and pests. The surviving crops required hard work to harvest and prepare for storage.

In the winter, scraping ice off floors and walls, chopping wood, frozen pipes, broken cars, icy paths and roads, and uncovered wood piles frozen into a block of ice added to the discomfort and hard work.

Fires could be a problem if the wood hadn't been aged long enough - at least a year - because it didn't burn well and added creosote to the chimney - a fire hazard.

There were many new skills to master. Building a home, clearing the land, digging holes for the foundation through rock, fixing tractors, cars, chainsaws, chasing down escaped farm animals, cooking with wood, and canning food are just a few of the many skills needed to successfully homestead.

Although many had realized they'd be cash poor on the land, they hadn't thought of this as being real poverty. After all, they'd grow their own food, build their own homes, and trade with other community members for anything missing.

But they found out they couldn't be independent of the outside economy. Isolation meant even more dependence on cars, which were absolutely essential in the country, and repairs were expensive. People couldn't grow all of their own food and needed to get some items at the supermarket. And just about everything required money on the farm: seeds, animals, stoves, and so on.

People and publications made it seem easy to live off the land

Books like "Independence on a 5-acre Farm" made it seem like it was no big deal to go back to the land. Mother Earth News had articles such as "Raise Worms for Fun and Profit" that misled people into thinking they'd earn enough money on the farm to pay for necessities.

Eliot Coleman told people that they didn't need health insurance, and since everyone was young, healthy, and thought insurance companies were evil, they were glad to opt out. Agnew devotes a hair-raising chapter to how wrong Coleman was - just because you're young doesn't mean there won't be a need for emergency care, especially on a farm doing heavy manual labor, where the odds are many times higher than an office job that an accident will occur.

Health care was often poor in the country - there weren't enough doctors per capita.
Those who thought they could doctor themselves with herbs were sometimes dead wrong. Comfrey, which was supposed to cure just about everything, turns out to have liver damaging and carcinogenic effects. An alternative doctor prescribed Chinese herb cocktails that led to total kidney destruction in 100 women. Natural is not always better.

Scott and Helen Nearing were the role models for the back-to-the-land community. They built an ideal homestead working four hours a day, spending the rest of their time reading, playing music, etc. They made it seem possible to do this with very little cash.
But the Nearings made money from speaking, writing books, and donations. They had many followers who worked on their farm free of charge.

Thoreau made it sound easy to build a cabin and live in the wilderness. But the truth is, he was two miles from town, where he went nearly every day and visited friends, family, and where he dined out often.

Back From the Land - Why did people leave?

Economics. Many idealists had one-dimensional ideas about capitalism, that it was nothing but ruthlessness, and that they could avoid the capitalist system by becoming self-sufficient.

But Copthorne Macdonald believes alternative society never got large enough to separate from the mainstream society. You had to buy your tools at the hardware store since there weren't enough people making them on forges. The basic infrastructure of the economy forced people to buy outside the alternative lifestyle community. The bottom line is that small economies like communes and homesteads don't have the "size, complexity, cash flow, or diversity of goods and services to survive very well independently".

Doing something at home didn't pay well either. One farmer worked out he was making about ten cents an hour by the time he'd grown wheat and turned it into flour.

People had confused consumerism with cash - but even a sparse existence requires goods that can't be made or grown on the homestead.

To afford necessities and improvements, people found they had to take jobs that were boring, low paying, with no benefits, and sometimes dangerous. Those who'd thought their middle class careers were hard or dull discovered otherwise. Since most lived far out in the country, it wasn't usually possible to return to abandoned careers. By leaving homesteads to work outside, they lost the time and energy needed to make themselves self-sufficient - time versus money. They needed time to build homes and garden, but they needed money to buy cement and garden tools.

Homesteads failed as they tipped towards more time spent off the farm working than improving the homestead. People began to realize that rather than being homesteaders with outside jobs, they had awful jobs and happened to own a homestead. So many decided to return to the middle-class high-paying, rewarding careers they'd abandoned.

And many had no choice but to leave the land - they were bankrupt, out of savings if not deeply in debt. Many couples had children, and didn't feel it was fair to them to lead isolated lives on farms, far from good schools.

Divorce. Despite love being what the counterculture was all about, the reality of never-ending hard work, poverty, and lack of privacy in small cabins took a toll on marriages.
When a marriage failed, one partner usually had to quit the land and go back to civilization. The other partner often found someone who didn't want to homestead, or found no one and couldn't cope with all the work alone.

Commune failures. Meanwhile, people on communes were returning as well. Agnew lists these reasons for commune failures: lack of clear goals and structures, aggravations of shared space, irritating personal habits, and not liking each other once acquainted. Factions developed over all sorts of things - religion, politics, etc.

The "unanimous consent" nature of decisions also caused problems - either there was a hung jury or underground resistance. Mutual consent favors the verbally aggressive and quiet people lose out, but giving in all the time soon made the silent ones resentful.

New members threw communes off balance if they weren't screened well enough to see if they fit in.

Probably the most important factor that broke communes up was the resentment hard workers felt for slackers. People disagreed about work contributions and money making efforts. Those who worked hard didn't want to share money with those who didn't, and tried to get shirkers to work, but there was no way to enforce it, so these measures failed.

The Malthusian Die-off didn't happen. Back-to-the-landers hoped to escape the famine, overpopulation, war, and chaos that threatened to result from energy shortages and ecological destruction. But life went on, and friends and family on the outside were having it much easier, having more fun, living in warm homes, and leading far more interesting and intellectual lives in cities.

Fatigue. The novelty and idealism of hauling spring water in heavy buckets over rough ground, endlessly chopping wood, feeding fires all night and other hardships grew thin.

Conclusion. According to Jeffrey Jacob's research on the success rate of back-to-the-landers, only 3% subsisted on a combination of cash crops and bartering, only 2% through "intensive cultivation of cash crops". The others all found themselves preoccupied with money:
44% worked full-time away from homesteads
18% had pensions and investments
17% survived on part-time or seasonal work
15% got their income from businesses they could run from home

In the end they found they had to participate in the economy, capitalism infused every aspect of life and was beyond overthrowing or disregarding.

Part 2. Peak Energy: Time to Go Back Again

In the `70s, ecology, energy, population, and environment were common topics of conversation. Not anymore. It seems as if institutions and people have retreated from reality and reason. Environmental groups have abandoned population as an issue, even though they know it's responsible for all of the issues they're seeking donations for. In social networks, there's a taboo against discussion of ecological issues--the social pressures are to be witty and entertaining, yet another insidious influence of TV.

Most young people are aware they're being handed a crummy planet, but they have a vague sense of unease, not a fine-tuned understanding of the situation, because the vast majority don't read due to sedentary computer games, TV, and cell phones.

There's little awareness, as there was in the `70s, that a back to the land movement is even needed. If there were, would Generation Y, overweight and suffering from nature deficit disorder, be willing to be at the forefront of a growing return to agriculture?

Those who are aware, and would like to go back to the land, usually can't afford to buy a farm. Land is more expensive now than in the 70's because there are 100 million more of us, the majority immigrants and their children. We are losing land from development, erosion, and population at a rate where there won't be any crop land in 140 years.

Population has increased 2% a year since 1950, a rate 133 times faster than before fossil fuels powered civilization.
.
One of the reasons we were even able to grow from 100 to 300 million people in only a century was to shift to vehicles from oxen and horses, which did the most brutal farm work and transportation. Not having to pasture oxen and horses on at least two acres per animal for labor and transport freed up a lot of land, which was then used to grow food for people and build suburbia on instead.

What needs to be done

Hirsch pointed out that you'd want to prepare for Peak Oil 30 years ahead of time with heavy oil, gas-to-liquids & liquefied natural gas, enhanced oil recovery, efficient vehicles, and coal liquids to mitigate the most critical weakness in our infrastructure: the utter dependence of combustion engines on liquid oil.

We don't have an alternative liquid fuel to replace oil, and it doesn't look like we'll have one for over a decade, if ever. Chris Somerville, head of the Energy Biosciences Institute (EBI), the joint $500 million collaboration between BP, U.C. Berkeley, LBNL, and the University of Illinois, has ruled out ethanol or biodiesel as potential biomass fuels. Instead, EBI is focused on researching how to make cellulosic biofuels from bio-diverse grasses with end-products of gasoline and diesel. Such fuels are at least 15 years away since there are so many problems to overcome. Dr. Somerville thought biofuels had more promise than solar and other alternatives (slides and lecture here).

Nearly everyone assumes that the next step is to throw huge amounts of money at energy research and building coal liquefaction and nuclear power plants, windmills, solar panels, and so on. Yet if all of the problems in all of these energy sources were solved today, there were enough engineers, and population growth stopped, it would still take decades to scale up enough to provide the same energy fossil fuels provide now.

And as Congressman Bartlett has pointed out, there's no point to all-out energy projects - because if we succeed, the population will double again, and the number of people experiencing hardship when the fuel runs out yet again will be even greater. Not to mention the continued destruction of fisheries, forests, and aquifers and potential extinction of humankind and other species from climate change by burning coal.

Even if an energy "Manhattan project" is attempted, we will also need to employ more people in agriculture to make up for the coming shortfall in energy. Changing agricultural methods and infrastructure takes decades as well.

The downshift from an industrial to an agricultural society must be funded by both government and private capital, because a huge amount of capital is needed.

Government needs to be in the driver's seat, since energy will need to be allocated across many other essential services besides agriculture, such as water purification, delivery, and treatment, garbage collection, military and police, roads, disaster recovery, and to keep our poorly maintained infrastructure from failing.

Educating and retraining people for coping with energy descent is essential. But since less than ten percent of Americans are scientifically literate, and any politicians who tried to educate Americans on how serious our energy and population situation is wouldn't get re-elected, it's unlikely any action will be taken at the top. The necessary changes and awareness will have to come from a grass roots movement of self-educated citizens.

The local food movement is one such effort. Many people are buying local organic food to encourage organic farming, assuming that capitalism will take care of the situation, because if we pay more for organic food, more people will become organic farmers.

But it's likely that once energy shocks hit, there'll be massive unemployment. People will have a hard time affording enough food, let alone farm land.

The local food movement also ignores the potentially higher amount of energy used to deliver local food. Mariola, in his paper "The Local Industrial Complex? Questioning the Sustainability of Local Foods", points out that energy used to move a large amount of food by ship or rail is probably less, due to economies of scale, than having hundreds of local farmers move tiny amounts of food to local markets which thousands of people drive to. Perhaps if customers walked, biked, took mass transit, the energy balance might be better, this needs to be researched further.

The most important lesson learned from the previous back-to-the-land movement is that we are all part of the capitalist system, and consequently, a new organic farming movement will not survive without government help. Large, industrial farms now depend on government help to some extent, and receive billions of dollars in subsidies. Over 5 million farmers were driven out of business against their will in the last century as farmers were forced to get bigger or go out of business. Now there are only 2 million farms left.

So the most critical reform would be to shift subsidies to organic Community Supported Agriculture (CSA) and small farms, and to stop all development of prime farmland.

Making a downshift to agriculture will take many years to:
* Train enough people in soil science, plant propagation, integrated pest management, etc for outreach to farms to make the industrial-to-organic transition
* Shift people from ecologically unsustainable regions to food producing areas
* Improve topsoil. Industrial farming has ruined soil structure and nutrition. It will take at least five years to for soil to recover before organic food production gets back to previous levels.
* The learning curve for organic farming done in a sustainable way can take up to ten years.
* Plant forests to provide firewood, lumber, etc

The downshift needs to start now to mitigate suffering. Our nation needs to focus on a return to agriculture, not new energy infrastructure. To stay under the depletion curve, the number of people returning to the land to grow and distribute food needs to steadily increase.

As far as reducing the energy used in agriculture, we can start now by cutting back on calories, eat a vegetarian diet, grow victory gardens, use less packaging, etc. David Pimentel has a paper that will be published soon on how to cut the energy used in agriculture by half.

We need university students to major in agricultural disciplines, and above all, to try to shift mostly petrochemical and mechanization-oriented agriculture departments to teaching and researching sustainable farming methods. Cuba's success in coping with their downturn was partly due to having enough people trained in organic farming to train petrochemical farmers how to switch to organic methods.

The huge number of agricultural students we need doesn't exist. The Los Angeles Times article, "Agriculture schools Sprucing up their image", says that many professional agriculture workers in soil science, pest management, and growing crops are about to retire, but enrollment in these areas is declining.

Instead, students are majoring in professions that can easily be off-shored and will be useless in a world of declining energy.

Given the short window of time we have left, a better alternative than university agriculture departments would be John Jeavon's bio-intensive workshops, Rodale Institute programs, and gaining experience on sustainable organic farms (not all organic farms grow food with topsoil sustaining methods).

This time around, the model to follow for a group endeavor is already here - Community Supported Agriculture. Lazy members who don't farm their tract will earn far less than hard-working members. Pooling resources will be an advantage over individual farms, if the members can learn to get along, cooperate, and select good leaders.

CSA's and homesteads should be forming now, with a government agency acting as the central agent for connecting people who want to farm, providing agricultural scholarships, training, outreach, buying land and loaning money to farmers, and so on.

It will not be simple to make the transition. The easiest path is to ration the remaining oil to essential services like agriculture and continuing on as usual, not only to maintain social order, but to have food to export in exchange for oil and natural gas based fertilizers. Land will continue to be concentrated in a few hands, pushing society towards feudalism and fascism as people work for minimal wages to survive. Business as usual, until energy shortages cause sudden dislocations, leads to civil wars and collapse.

If the U-turn can start now, there's a better chance of remaining a strong democratic nation, and to finally do what we always should have done: live within our means -- what the ecosystem can provide sustainably.

There's no point trying to prepare for energy descent and climate change if the current levels of immigration, birth rate, and loss of prime farm land continues.

Everyone needs to get involved, because we're a social, cooperative species, utterly dependent on each other as much as bees or ants are. Peter Corning's brilliant book, "Nature's Magic", shows that synergy and cooperation at group levels were far more important in the emergence of homo sapiens than competition between individuals. We must all pull together and work towards the best possible future we can imagine, because we're all in this together.

It would be better if people chose an agricultural future with hope and courage. Farming can be an immensely satisfying and rewarding way of life. It would be best for democracy and preserving our remaining resources if Americans could embrace reality and take appropriate back-to-the-land action.


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