Close
Home
Help
Library
Login
FAO Staff Login
Register
0
Selected
Invert selection
Deselect all
Deselect all
Click here to refresh results
Click here to refresh results
Digital Asset Management (DAM) by Orange Logic
Go to Login page
Hide details
Alternative Versions
Explore More Collections
Conceptually similar
ITALY 2007. Marchigiana cattle. The Marchigiana breed is indigenous to Italy.
ITALY 2007. Marchigiana cattle. The Marchigiana breed is indigenous to Italy.
ITALY 2007. Marchigiana cattle. The Marchigiana breed is indigenous to Italy.
ITALY 2007. Marchigiana cattle. The Marchigiana breed is indigenous to Italy.
ITALY 2007. Marchigiana cattle. The Marchigiana breed is indigenous to Italy.
ITALY 2007. Marchigiana cattle. The Marchigiana breed is indigenous to Italy.
ITALY 2007. A herd of Marchigiana cattle. The Marchigiana breed is indigenous to Italy.
ITALY 2007. A herd of Marchigiana cattle. The Marchigiana breed is indigenous to Italy.
ITALY 2007. A herd of Marchigiana cattle. The Marchigiana breed is indigenous to Italy.
ITALY 2007. Two Marchigiana cows. The Marchigiana breed is indigenous to Italy.
ITALY 2007. A view of a barn on a biodynamic cattle farm just south of Rome.
ITALY 2007. A view inside a greenhouse of biodynamically grown radishes.
ITALY 2007. A view inside a greenhouse of biodynamically grown radishes.
ITALY 2007. A farm worker harvesting biodynamically grown radishes.
ITALY 2007. A view inside a greenhouse of biodynamically grown radishes.
ITALY 2007. A view inside a greenhouse of biodynamically grown lettuce greens.
ITALY 2007. A view inside a greenhouse of biodynamically grown radishes.
ITALY 2007. A view inside a greenhouse of biodynamically grown radishes.
ITALY 2007. A farm worker harvesting biodynamically grown radishes.
ITALY 2007. A view inside a greenhouse of biodynamically grown lettuce greens.
Similar tones
View images with similar tones
Add to collection
ITALY 2007. Marchigiana cattle. The Marchigiana breed is indigenous to Italy.
This cattle farm, established in 1987 just south of Rome, changed from organic to biodynamic management in 1993 after Austrailian biodynamic farming pioneer, Alex Podolinsky, visited and presented the benefits of this method. The farm exemplifies a complete supply cycle method which entails crop production (230ha), seed production (1,500sq.m.), greenhouse cultivation (200,000sq.m.), beekeeping (100 hives), indigenous bovine husbandry, biodynamic compost making, post-harvest handling (1,500sq.m. of washing and packaging area), storage (1,000sq.m. with 500sq.m. refrigeration cells), quality control (HACCP, Codex and Demeter Certification) and marketing.
05/05/2007
Credit
© FAO/Giulio Napolitano
File size
655.08 KB
Unique ID
UF11DA1
FAO. Editorial use only. Photo credit must be given.