Tarwyn Park Training

Upper Bylong Road, Bylong, NSW 2849 ,Australia
Tarwyn Park Training Tarwyn Park Training is one of the popular Region located in Upper Bylong Road ,Bylong listed under Education in Bylong ,

Contact Details & Working Hours

More about Tarwyn Park Training


Slow the flow
Let ALL plants grow
Careful where the animals GO
Remember, to FILTER is a must know.



‘Tarwyn Park’ sits in a functioning, ecologically, healthy watershed, which has been aggrading for more than 4 decades.

40 years ago TP was an eroded, degrading, incised, salinised-farming system.

Today, ‘Tarwyn Park’ is absolutely unique, in that it farms living water moving over and thru the regolith, which supports a huge biodiversity of living systems. This is our point of difference with traditional agriculture, which farms soil.


‘Tarwyn Park’ operates as a complex open system, which optimizes the energy from the sun, the fertility of the land and atmosphere and minimises the losses of matter, water and energy, due to gravity. And because Tarwyn Park is a living ‘complex open system’ it can import and store matter like atmospheric dusts and moisture, insect and bird droppings, and, of course, rainfall from water outside the watershed... meaning they can convert these materials into more energy and increase their energy stores. If the watershed is healthy, these imports can be aggraded at rates higher than erosion rates meaning, the potential of the system is growing.

It may surprise everyone to read the following statement: ’Tarwyn Park’ does NOT farm soil ~ WHY? Because SOILS don't grow plants ~ soils are simply nutrient-laden conduits for the living water that feeds and sustains plant communities.






***Nutrient-rich WATER grows plants, not SOIL!



WATER WATER WATER WATER WATER


FIVE POINTS ON WATER

1. Tarwyn Park has a 2000,000,000 litre dam sitting in its floodplain. Prof Haikai Tane described the floodplain as a step-diffusion system of BROAD acre hydroponics ~ the most productive growing system, all designed and created by Nature.



2. It functions at = or
• maximum productivity
• optimal Cation Exchange Capacity (CEC)
• Optimal pH
• Optimal aeration
• And, all of this is done AUTOMATICALLY !!!

3. Tarwyn Park has soil organic matter (SOM) levels 7- 915% on infertile, gravely, sandy material by allowing aerobic water to infuse through natural recharge/discharge cycles in combination with 100% cover of bio-diverse plants. This equates to soil carbon levels in a range from 4-7%, well above national averages of <15 and in line with Strezlecki’s findings in the 1840’s.

4. Today Tarwyn Park is closely aligned with a suite of practices traditional in the Asia Pacific, known as TERRAQUAEOUS, wetland-farming systems or Terraquaculture, and as such it is drought and fire proofed because of its aggrading watershed.

5. Australia's unique hydrology, meant that fresh water was stored in surfical aquifers, which was protected by a dense, bio diverse, plant cover. This, in turn, prevented EVAPORTIVE losses to the system. Water loss was also assisted by the
evapotranspiration cooling of the dense plant cover, which returned water to the farm daily, via the small water cycles and the daily dew. The two combined, maximized production potential. It is as Peter Andrews describes, "A grass covered dam".


AGRICULTURE AS A SOIL BASED METHODOLOGY IS FAILING and HAS FAILED. FOR
US IN THE WEST natural WETLAND-FARMING systems will give us the tools and information for a sustainable, more abundant future.




PLANTS PLANTS PLANTS PLANTS PLANTS

FIVE POINTS ON PLANTS

1. It is an unassailable FACT that ALL plants are the primary converters of the sun's energy. The variety and species of plants contribute to the over 3 million compounds required for human health. All plants are needed in the system therefore for maximum biodiversity.



2. Plants perform many ecological services not the least of which is that they change the state of water from a liquid to a gas which sees water expand as it evaporates, cooling the microclimate and then shrinks as it condenses, changing back to a liquid, usually at night and warming the microclimate. Plants are solar powered air-conditioners!



3. Sustainable, abundant production relies on achieving the capture of the maximum amount of sunlight through plants to build and aggrade NEW carbon (fertility) reserves. Previously and currently, agriculture has been mining reserves of previous fertility cycles (hence Australia’s current low Soil Carbon levels) and not building and aggrading NEW reserves. Many plants can perform this eco-function, cheaply and quickly and are commonly thought of as 'weeds' rather than their more technically correct name, herbs or forbs. Because current Agricultural methods mine soil reserves, we need to have an efficient, cost-effective recycling process of utilizing the sun's energy via plant photosynthesis into plants, which produces high quality, organic products for sale.



4. All farming systems build from the HIGHEST points in the landscape. The transport system that allows this building to happen is WIND, ANIMALS (including stock), BIRDS and INSECTS. Human intervention normally inverts and inhibits these natural processes.



5. Plants, in combination, with microorganisms, in wet, damp aerobic conditions, do the processing and filtering of all organic compounds into their simplest, water-soluble parts.




ANIMALS ANIMALS ANIMALS ANIMALS

FIVE POINTS ON ANIMALS

1. The Australian landscape evolved in the absence of hard-hoofed animals. Their introduction has created areas of immense environmental damage by destroying the natural recharge/discharge sequences that once existed for rehydrating and fertility capture. This means then, that their management to prevent ongoing damage to farming systems is critical.



2. Stock need to be keep out of the flow lines, especially wetland areas and riparian zones, to prevent pugging and subsequent damage to the natural recharge/discharge function of the soil’s hydrology.



3. Introduced, hard hoofed mammals are DRAINAGE experts. They destroy the cryptogram bio-seals that allow recharge and discharge to occur naturally in the regolith and in wetland farming systems. Hard-hoofed animals need to be carefully managed to prevent ongoing ecological damage to farming and natural intact systems. These ungulates have had a major impact on our landscape causing plant biodiversity loss, wetland and stream degradation and incision, which have led to widespread salinity and desertification.



4. Stock monocultures are like plant monocultures. Perhaps try aiming for diversity and polycultures of animal’s including birds, bees and pigs.



5. Encourage stock to camp on the high ground by placing food, water and shade there in the form of trees. By feeding stock on the high ground, graziers can use GRAVITY to recycle fertility because 90% of their productivity comes out their rear end





FILTER FILTER FILTER FILTER FILTER


FIVE POINTS ON FILTERING

1.In the Australian landscape, wetlands used DENSE planting of reeds (grass) and their associated micro-organisms, to capture and process then FILTER complex organic matter into soluble Plant nutrients



2. Because these nutrients were contained in a wet, aerobic wetland with moving water, nutrients were not lost by either oxidation or drainage.



3. Must have the filter zone below cropping/grazing area.



4. Use last paddock on property as filter zone to capture your losses and harvest material from this zone and transfer to the higher ground. Grasses are one of nature’s best filtering plant systems.



5. Any excess water in filtration areas can be transferred to higher, less fertile areas via a natural contour.





Demonstrations for TP Field Day

• A core sample of the parent material ~ Gravely sand
• A core sample of the 300-400 black C rich soil sitting above the soil Parent Material


Next, mount a series of demos to highlight our farming point of difference:

• Onion growing in a glass of water
• Plants growing in blue metal or gravel
• Plants growing in a bag of cow manure
• Plants growing in a bag of lucerne hay
• Plant growing in soil in a pot with NO water ~ it will be dead!!

Map of Tarwyn Park Training