RAMINGSTEIN, Austria -- In the coldest part of Austria, a farmer is turning
conventional wisdom on its head by growing a veritable Garden of Eden full
of tropical plants in the open on his steep Alpine pastures.
Amid average annual temperatures of a mere 39.5 Fahrenheit, Sepp Holzer
grows everything from apricots to eucalyptus, figs to kiwi fruit, peaches
to wheat at an altitude of between 3,300 and 4,900 feet.
Once branded a fool, fined and threatened with imprisonment for defying
Austrian regulations that dictate what is planted where, he is now feted
worldwide for creating the only functioning "permaculture" farm in Europe.
Permaculture, an abbreviation of permanent culture, is the development of
agricultural ecosystems which are complete and self-sustaining.
"Once planted, I do absolutely nothing," Holzer told Reuters. "It really is
just nature working for itself -- no weeding, no pruning, no watering, no
fertilizer, no pesticides."
His 110 acres of land in the mountainous Lungau region in the province of
Salzburg are classed by European Union directives as unfit for agricultural
cultivation due to the steep gradient and poor soil.
When Holzer inherited the farm -- then 44.5 acres -- 39 years ago, it was
only used for the grazing of the family's cows and sheep. He carved
terraces out of the steep inclines --like the ancient Incas and Maya of
South and Central America --to stop erosion and trap rainfall.
He rejected the use of pesticides and fertilizers, which he considered
poisonous, and the concept of monoculture -- the cultivation of just one
plant type over an expanse of land --because he believed it sapped the soil
of all nutrients.
Instead he began growing a host of timber and fruit trees, shrubs and
grasses all mixed up together.
"Everyone said I was mad and I had to pay numerous fines because the
authorities said that it was illegal to plant such a combination," Holzer
said.
"When I bought this patch of land off a farmer, it was not fit for the cows
and sheep grazing on it. People scoffed that I was neglecting my land --
but now they come to harvest cherries from June to October."
"This is the worst type of soil, which just goes to prove that there is no
bad soil, just bad farmers," he added.
PROOF IS IN EATING OF PUDDING
Most of the plants Holzer and his wife Vroni grow at his "Krameterhof"
holding are not meant to flourish in Alpine conditions, according to
experts.
In winter, the temperature can fall to below minus 22 degrees Fahrenheit
and a blanket of snow lingers into May. Snow can even fall in the height of
summer.
Holzer said he found agricultural textbooks and his own years at
agricultural college virtually useless.
"I followed their advice initially, but my trees started dying off. I then
realized that I had to eradicate from my memory all that I'd learnt at
college," he said.
Enlightenment came one winter during one of Holzer's routine moonlight
strolls, when he noticed that the only apricot tree faring well in the
harsh winter conditions was one he had forgotten to cut back according to
ministerial regulations.
Unlike the pruned trees whose main lower branches snapped off under the
weight of snow, the "neglected" tree's branches were intact.
Their unrestricted length had allowed them to droop with the tips touching
the ground for support while the snow slid off, Holzer found. Allowing
natural vegetation to grow around the trunk provided further support and
nourishment for the tree.
"If people would only realize that if one leads a life in cooperation with
nature and not against it, then nobody in the world need die of
starvation," he said.
LET NATURE TAKE ITS OWN COURSE
Holzer's philosophy is that nature knows best and needs negligible
interference from Man.
"We're born into paradise, but are destroying its foundation, the soil. The
soil can look after itself, there's no need for Man to tamper with it."
Giant stone slabs pepper the landscape and serve as incubators by absorbing
the sunlight and giving off warmth. The trees do their part as well in
keeping the ground warm. Fallen foliage helps keep frost from reaching the
roots.
Tree stumps dot the plantations to regulate irrigation. Like
a sponge they soak up water and later distribute it.
Animals too have a role in the Holzer ecosystem. Scavenging pigs till the
soil in place of a tractor, while grass snakes were reintroduced to keep
voracious slugs and mice in check.
Holzer is modest about his achievement which has led to projects in more
than 40 countries and lectures on "the elimination of poverty in
agriculture." He has rejected suggestions that he should have his method of
permaculture patented.
"I would consider that as theft from nature. It's not my possession, I got
it from nature and have an obligation to pass this knowledge on," the
bearded 59-year-old said.
INSPIRATIONAL, BUT ECONOMICALLY VIABLE?
Holzer says his method of organic farming produces a much higher quality of
crops than conventional farming, and at a fraction of the cost and effort.
He says his rare strain of grain contains 12 times the goodness of
conventionally grown grain and as a result fetches a price 100 times
higher.
His success means that he no longer lives directly off the crops in his
sprawling garden, or the rare fish in his Alpine ponds and lakes.
People pay to pick their own fruit from his land, experts visit to study
"Holzer Permaculture," and the man himself regularly holds seminars when
not in a far-off country such as Colombia solving chronic problems of the
soil.
And only one thing has so far stumped the man with green fingers.
"Bananas," he said with a shrug of his burly frame. "They froze. It's no
surprise as they need an average temperature of 30 degrees. But I'm still
working on it."
Copyright 2001, Reuters