The slow march of domestication

Kris’s Archaeology Blog at About.com has a short post summarizing recent work which suggests that there may have been a gap of a millennium between domestication of, and dependence on, broomcorn millet (Panicum miliaceum) in China — and similar gaps for a number of other crops in different centres of origin.

What this is telling us, is that hunter-gatherers took the initial steps towards farming many generations before their descendants became dependent on domestic crops. Interesting, don’t you think?

Indeed.

Kava future bright, but not yet

Mental Floss has a longish, well-informed post on kava in Vanuatu, accompanied by some nice photos. You may remember a post I did a couple of years ago now during the last attempt to clear the drink’s name in Europe. Seems like only yesterday. Anyway, this got me wondering whether kava exports to Europe from places like Vanuatu and, in particular, Fiji had indeed resumed. It seems not, but, according to a recent piece on Radio Australia, the prospects for the Fiji kava industry look reasonable. Or at least they did in January, before the latest round of political uncertainty.

Russian agriculture as it was in living colour

English Russia is an “entertaiment blog devoted to the events happening in Russian speaking countries.” Quite often fun but not, you would have thought, likely to feature much of agrobiodiversity interest. And you’d be right. For 99% of the time at any rate. Because there was a post a few days ago with truly amazing colour photographs of the Russian Empire from a hundred years ago, and many show farming products and activities. They’re by Sergei Mikhailovich Prokudin-Gorskii, according to one of the comments, and he had a Library of Congress exhibition devoted to him in 2003, whose website is where it seems most of the images in the English Russia post originated. Well worth exploring. I wonder if some of these images could be used to compare with the present. For example, are these melons still to be found in Samarkand?

Happy World Fair Trade Day!

Today, May 9th is World Fair Trade Day, apparently. I had no idea until I saw this poster a few days ago. And even then there was some confusion as for some reason the date on it is the 10th.

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The theme is food sovereignty and sustainable agriculture. There’s a great-looking programme being organized here in Rome. Anyway, as an old germplasm collector, I can really relate to all those seeds on the poster.