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		Wicking beds are well known, the simplest and most common is to have a 
		flower pot standing in saucer of water so the water wicks up into the 
		soil. There are now many variants of this theme but having two separate 
		containers one for the soil and plant roots the other one for the water. 
		There is some wicking connection between the two chambers, sometimes 
		just soil in others with a wicking material such as a cotton wick. 
		
		The type of wicking bed I have pioneered has only one chamber and works 
		on the principle of increasing the water holding capacity of the soil. 
		Now I must declare my interest is in regenerating soil. 
		Soils around the world are slowly degrading due to a combination 
		of tillage, use of inappropriate chemicals. 
		The loss of productivity from the poorer soils has been more than 
		offset by the use of fertilisers, irrigation and genetic engineering or 
		breeding of more productive plants. 
		
		While there will continue to be improvements in technology there will be 
		some point when the degradation of the soil is so severe that they are 
		no longer effective.  With 
		the global population now at 7 billion people and expecting to increase 
		to 9 billion within twenty years the sustainable production of food 
		presents a major challenge. 
		
		Experiments I conducted on soil regeneration in the mid nineteen 
		seventies clearly showed that the key to regenerating soil is to grew 
		something (anything) and keep the soil moist. 
		If the soil is too wet or too dry the regeneration will stop.  
		
		Applying water using the wicking action ensures that the soil is always 
		moist, never to dry or too wet. We now understand that fungi are 
		critical in regenerating soil and they are very sensitive to water 
		level. 
		
		The standard single chamber wicking bed is very simple; a water 
		reservoir is maintained below the root zone such that water wicks up to 
		the roots. Many wicking bed users have tried to improve on this simple 
		system by going back to the two chamber system by having one chamber for 
		water (often filled with scoria or rocks) separated from the soil by 
		some form of membrane. 
		
		To my mind this just makes the system more complicated with no real 
		benefit.  I have seen 
		wicking beds made by simply digging a hole, throwing in an old tyre, 
		covering with a piece of plastic to form an underground basin, then back 
		filling with the soil.  Any 
		rainfall is caught in the reservoir and wick up to the roots. 
		The grower just carries on in the normal way virtually forgetting 
		about the underground reservoir. 
		
		There are many variations on the basic single chamber theme but it is 
		important to understand the basic principles of how they work which is 
		essentially increasing the water holding capacity of the soil. 
		Although this is well known this is so important I will review 
		the basic principle.  
		
		Soil has two critical water levels. The upper level is the amount of 
		water that the soil can hold without water draining away (e.g. the water 
		is held in the soil by surface tension and known as the field capacity). 
		All the small pores in the soil where surface tension is greatest are 
		full of water while the water in the large pores drains away. 
		
		The lower level is set by the ability of the plant to extract water from 
		the soil and is referred to as the wilt point. 
		
		The difference between the two is the water holding capacity of the 
		soil.  Obviously these 
		values vary with the soil and plant type but just to illustrate let us 
		take a wilt point of 10% and a field capacity or 20%, this means that 
		the water holding capacity per unit volume of soil is 10%. 
		For a plant with say a 300 mm root system this is not very much 
		water so frequent watering (assuming water is available) is needed. 
		
		The aim is twofold, to increase the available water in the soil and 
		increase the volume of soil that the plant has access to. 
		
		There are a number of ways of achieving this. The simple wicking bed has 
		a water proof liner under the soil, which is filled with water and of 
		course the soil or whatever is in the reservoir is now saturated so the 
		soil hold much more water.  
		Let us for the sake of argument say the saturation level is now 30%. 
		This has increased the available water from just 10% to (30-10) 
		20% so nominally doubling the available water. 
		But also the volume of soil that the plant has access to is 
		substantially increased. 
		
		In practise this means that the frequency of irrigation has increased 
		from one of two days up to often seen days, (depending on the plant 
		type). 
		
		But the overall aim is to increase the soil quality. This is done by the 
		soil biology, the millions of weird and wonderful creatures that inhabit 
		the soil.  But virtually 
		none of these can photosynthesise (some algae can) so they need a source 
		of energy which comes from plants. 
		This energy can come from simply adding some organic material 
		(dead plants) to the bed or growing plants to provide the energy. 
		
		Some growers do not like the concept of having plastic buried in the 
		soil, largely for environmental reasons. I do not totally agree with 
		this argument but my current research avoids this issue. 
		
		I have found that leaves from certain plants contain waxes which will 
		effectively seal the soil and make a waterproof layer for the water 
		reservoir.  The Australian 
		wattle is such a plant however most desert plants have waxy leaves. 
		My current research focuses on senna alata because it grows so 
		fast and can be grown as an annual or permanent plant. 
		However I do see the benefit in bio-diversity and use a mixture 
		of plants. For simplicity I refer to these as soil plants – plants grown 
		simply to improve the soil. 
		
		There are other ways of increasing the water holding capacity of the 
		soil, particularly the use of laminating where a layer of material with 
		fine pores (e.g. organic material) is placed above a layer with coarser 
		material such that the surface tension pulling he water downwards is 
		removed.  This is a 
		well-established technique used with sand to create a hanging water 
		table.   
		
		However soil is not created by one simple method and needs a system of 
		different organisms.  I 
		therefore inoculate the plants with mycorrhizal fungi. If the soil 
		plants are left in the ground they become a permanent source of fungi 
		which will transfer to the crop plants. 
		
		This has certain advantages. Mycorrhizal fungi are much more efficient 
		than roots in extracting moisture so in effect making more water 
		available so lowering the wilt point. 
		
		They also transfer water and nutrients from one plant to another. 
		My soil plants are deep rooted and are generally grown outside 
		the wicking bed, this means they will put roots down deep into the soil 
		and extract moisture and nutrients from deeper in the soil giving a much 
		greater supply of available water. 
		
		I also add worm eggs, particularly the amynthus variety which are 
		powerful worms which help aggregate the soil as well as moving the 
		fungal spores throughout the soil. 
		
		However perhaps the biggest benefit is the ability to extract nutrients 
		from the soil. We have a very good understanding of the nutrient 
		requirement of plants, but we grow plants to eat and provide us, as 
		animals with nutrients, minerals and trace elements. 
		It appears that the plant may not need these minerals and trace 
		elements in any quantity - but we do. 
		
		Fungi are particularly effective in releasing minerals that may not be 
		accessible to the plants.  
		They exude enzymes from the tips of their hyphae which can dissolve 
		rocks and minerals.  There 
		seems to be lack of understanding on how these minerals and trace 
		elements affect human health. 
		
		I wrote a techno thriller called ‘00 and the soil princess’ (available 
		on my web or kindle) which is pure fancy but 
		like all fancy has its origins in 
		 facts, in this case a remote village in China. 
		The people in the village live to great age, in the nineties and 
		hundreds and there appears to be no cases of cancer or diabetes. This 
		has been extensively studied and there is a higher loading of selenium 
		in the local rocks and water. 
		
		There proves nothing in the strict scientific sense. We live in an age 
		which is dominated by evidence based science, without this science based 
		evidence our political decision making system does nothing. We seem to 
		have lost the ability to take action based on probabilities. 
		
		It is highly likely that our health would be improved with a diet 
		increased in minerals and trace elements. 
		Science as yet cannot prove this beyond doubt, and it may only be 
		possible to prove scientifically by adopting on a reasonable scale. 
		
		Science, quite rightly, has become a corner stone in decision making in 
		our society. The reality is that science does not have answers to many 
		problems and in these cases our political system seems unable to take 
		decisions. In earlier times decisions were taken in a climate of risk, 
		may be not always the right decision but action was taken. 
		
		This is certainly the case with climate change, where despite 
		overwhelming evidence showing an almost overwhelming probability that 
		greenhouse gases created by man are causing climate change with its 
		associated extreme weather events a global action continues to elude us.  
		
		The third of my books on resolving climate change (available on kindle) 
		is subtitled ‘ how science is failing us’ 
		is not so much about the failure of science but our inability to 
		take decisions where the science is presented as probabilities. 
		
		There is overwhelming evidence that soil could absorb some fifty years 
		of manmade emissions.  
		Enough time to find and commercialise alternative energy sources. 
		This is a technology hear and now technology e.g. immediately 
		available which at minimal expense could provide protection from climate 
		change and ensure a sustainable food supply for the world. Yet it seems 
		virtually impossible to get these concepts into the decision making 
		processes to avoid climate change which remain bogged in the mire. 
		 
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