“ compare uh recycling of fertility with domesticated animals with a factory system …” You make a very interesting point here. The embedded CO2 in all the fertilizers, pesticides and machinery used in conventional farming processes are ignored. Second, methane as a GHG is very short lived compared to CO2 and is unnecessarily blamed. It would be interesting to have a detailed comparison of organic farming and industrial farming practices, on CO2 emissions, that includes indirect / embedded CO2.
Is the guy interviewing an Indian??? Didnt he see/knew that a Palmyra tree doesnt depend on water resources until his beard has turned white !!! What kind of an Indian is he and how are we living so disconnected from nature....sad sad....But Interview is Good Bro. I appreciate
@@airlinesafety5667 his name is Shameek Chakravarty and going by his Bengali heritage, I am sure he must have had an abundance of Palmyra produce during his childhood. :)
Superb one. Both questions and the answers! Great job Shameek and Sudhakar!
Amazing efforts and results by the couple who need to be applauded .
Farmizen too for the well produced video as always
Glad you enjoyed it
Thank you!
This was a lovely conversation, Shameek! Thank you as always! I want to turn the tables someone and listen to your story as well :)
Great work ! Thanks for such good insights
Glad you liked it!
“ compare uh recycling of fertility with domesticated animals with a factory system …”
You make a very interesting point here. The embedded CO2 in all the fertilizers, pesticides and machinery used in conventional farming processes are ignored.
Second, methane as a GHG is very short lived compared to CO2 and is unnecessarily blamed. It would be interesting to have a detailed comparison of organic farming and industrial farming practices, on CO2 emissions, that includes indirect / embedded CO2.
Please interview Sankalp Sharma, from narmada natural farm
great idea
Agriculture is not fun either at traditional farmer level or at new generation farmer level.
@@kumarvipinverma it is the people that make anything fun! :)
Right? How many times! 😜
I didn't understand
Sir can we visit your farm could you please share your contact details
Is the guy interviewing an Indian??? Didnt he see/knew that a Palmyra tree doesnt depend on water resources until his beard has turned white !!! What kind of an Indian is he and how are we living so disconnected from nature....sad sad....But Interview is Good Bro. I appreciate
@@airlinesafety5667 thank you for your valuable inputs :)
@@airlinesafety5667 his name is Shameek Chakravarty and going by his Bengali heritage, I am sure he must have had an abundance of Palmyra produce during his childhood. :)
What is Sudhakar's number, U want to visit his place