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Health & Nutrition
Livestock loss due to GMO corn
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<blockquote data-quote="Banjo" data-source="post: 972720" data-attributes="member: 17304"><p>I'm glad I can be entertaining if nothing else...........I did some research on the watermelons and they are as you say, they have not been truly genetically modified in the sense of gene splicing. but I have to say, not to be difficult, I have never liked seedless watermelons I have never ever had one that would stack up with a locally grown seeded watermelon, but the seedless is all you can get in the supermarkets untill the local crops come in.</p><p>Go back and re-read my post I said a lot of farmers are planting ryegrass after their crops.....not most farmers. Maybe the better word should be SOME farmers if we want to be technical.</p><p>I don't know if watermelon growers ever rotate their fields or not. Here tobacco growers plant the same field year after year after year. I guess with more fertilize and more chemicals one is able to mask the need for rotation. Even the RRcorn and soybean growers alternate years. Trying to grow corn for example in the same field year after year after year will lead to sharply falling yields whether it be GMO, conventional, OP corn.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Banjo, post: 972720, member: 17304"] I'm glad I can be entertaining if nothing else...........I did some research on the watermelons and they are as you say, they have not been truly genetically modified in the sense of gene splicing. but I have to say, not to be difficult, I have never liked seedless watermelons I have never ever had one that would stack up with a locally grown seeded watermelon, but the seedless is all you can get in the supermarkets untill the local crops come in. Go back and re-read my post I said a lot of farmers are planting ryegrass after their crops.....not most farmers. Maybe the better word should be SOME farmers if we want to be technical. I don't know if watermelon growers ever rotate their fields or not. Here tobacco growers plant the same field year after year after year. I guess with more fertilize and more chemicals one is able to mask the need for rotation. Even the RRcorn and soybean growers alternate years. Trying to grow corn for example in the same field year after year after year will lead to sharply falling yields whether it be GMO, conventional, OP corn. [/QUOTE]
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Livestock loss due to GMO corn
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