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Regenerative Farmers of America
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Добавлен 22 ноя 2021
Are you ready to join the regenerative agriculture movement? At Regenerative Farmers of America, we're on a mission to educate and inspire people to start their own regenerative farming projects. We share the latest industry news, research, and best practices for implementing regenerative farming practices in an easy-to-follow format. Follow us and become an expert in regenerative agriculture today!
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Regenerative agriculture is the key to creating a healthier, more sustainable world. At Regenerative Farmers of America, we show you how to apply regenerative practices and increase soil fertility, biodiversity, and farm resilience. From crop rotation to composting, we demonstrate how to implement regenerative agriculture in your own backyard or business. Join us and learn how to create a more sustainable future for generations to come!
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Regenerative agriculture is the key to creating a healthier, more sustainable world. At Regenerative Farmers of America, we show you how to apply regenerative practices and increase soil fertility, biodiversity, and farm resilience. From crop rotation to composting, we demonstrate how to implement regenerative agriculture in your own backyard or business. Join us and learn how to create a more sustainable future for generations to come!
Buckwheat: Best for lysine and protein you can grow for the least amount of effort
In this video, we delve into the amazing benefits of buckwheat, an easy-to-grow superfood that's packed with lysine and protein as natural forage for your livestock. Discover why buckwheat is the best crop you can cultivate with minimal effort and how it can boost your animals diet and health.
Join us as we explore the world of buckwheat and unlock its potential for your cows, pigs, and pollinators. Don't forget to like, comment, and subscribe for more about regenerative agriculture.
#Buckwheat #Superfood #cattle #Lysine #Protein #regenerativeagriculture #HealthyEating #SustainableLiving #GrowYourOwnFood #pigs
Join us as we explore the world of buckwheat and unlock its potential for your cows, pigs, and pollinators. Don't forget to like, comment, and subscribe for more about regenerative agriculture.
#Buckwheat #Superfood #cattle #Lysine #Protein #regenerativeagriculture #HealthyEating #SustainableLiving #GrowYourOwnFood #pigs
Просмотров: 14 910
Видео
Studies Found 7 Ways to Sequester Carbon are Equal in Regenerative Agriculture
Просмотров 12 тыс.14 дней назад
A recent studies that reveal seven equally effective ways to sequester carbon through regenerative agriculture practices. From cover cropping to agroforestry, we'll explain each method in detail, backed by scientific research and real-world examples. Learn how these techniques can be implemented on your farm to increase soil carbon levels and contribute to a healthier farm. Don't forget to like...
Pearl Millet: The Drought-Resistant Grain
Просмотров 4,9 тыс.21 день назад
Discover the amazing benefits of pearl millet in our latest video! 🌾 Pearl millet is a resilient and nutritious grain that's transforming agriculture and diets worldwide. Join us as we explore: 🌱 Agricultural Benefits: Learn how pearl millet thrives in dry, arid conditions, making it an ideal crop for farmers facing climate challenges. Understand its role in improving soil health, promoting cro...
Teff: The Gluten Free High Nutrient No Nonsense Super Grain That Feeds You and Your Livestock
Просмотров 6 тыс.28 дней назад
Discover the wonders of Teff, the gluten-free super grain that's packed with nutrients and benefits for both humans and livestock. Learn all about this versatile grain in this video! #grains #teff #crops #regenerativeagriculture #regenerativefarming #commodities #farming #agriculture #supergrains
How Regenerative Agriculture Prevents Avian Flu & Other Livestock Diseases
Просмотров 898Месяц назад
Learn how regenerative agriculture practices can prevent avian flu and other livestock diseases in this informative video. Find out how regenerative farming methods can keep animals healthy and reduce the risk of outbreaks. #regenerativeagriculture #regenerativefarming #avianflu
How Cats Dogs and Ducks Shaped Modern Homesteading & Farming
Просмотров 344Месяц назад
Discover how cats, dogs, and ducks have played a crucial role in shaping modern homesteading and farming practices. This video explores the unique contributions these animals have made to the agricultural world. #homestead #homesteading #farming #regenerativefarming #smallscalefarming #dogs #cats #ducks
Is Crop Insurance Stopping Regenerative Agriculture?
Просмотров 878Месяц назад
Discover how crop insurance is preventing the transition to regenerative agriculture in this eye-opening video. Learn about the challenges faced by farmers and the impact of traditional insurance policies on regenerative farming practices. #regenerativeagriculture #cropinsurance #rowcrop #sustainableagriculture #sustainablefarming #regenrativefarming
Virtual Fencing for Rotational Grazing in Regenerative Agriculture
Просмотров 6 тыс.Месяц назад
We delve into the cutting-edge world of virtual fencing technology and its pivotal role in revolutionizing rotational grazing practices within the realm of regenerative agriculture. Join us as we explore the latest advances in mobile fencing solutions tailored for cattle, goats, and sheep, uncovering how these innovative systems work and the myriad benefits they offer for both farmers and the e...
Fencing Options for Rotational Grazing
Просмотров 1,3 тыс.Месяц назад
Looking for the best fencing options for rotational grazing? Watch this video to learn about the different types of fencing you can use to effectively manage your pastures and livestock from permanent to temporary fencing options and everything in between. 4 Reel Gallagher System - amzn.to/44zbVuE Premier1 Netting - amzn.to/3QFvxYi Gallagher Reel - amzn.to/4dJOFhM PVC Timeless Fence - timelessf...
Triticale: the Supergrain that You've Never Heard of
Просмотров 70 тыс.2 месяца назад
Discover Triticale, the supergrain you've never heard of! Learn more about this nutritious and versatile grain in this video and its significance in agriculture and how it became more sustainable #tritcale #agriculture #farming #grain #grainfarming
Total vs Partial Grazing: Which is better for Rotational Grazing?
Просмотров 9 тыс.2 месяца назад
In this video, we'll explore the debate between total and partial grazing in rotational grazing systems. Find out which method is more effective for maximizing pasture productivity and livestock health! #regenerativeagriculture #regenerativefarming #rotationalgrazing #grazing #grazing #cattle #sheep #cattlefarm
Grazing Cattle on Commodities Crops with Re.Farm
Просмотров 3,1 тыс.3 месяца назад
Learn how Re.Farm is using an old regenerative agriculture technique by grazing cattle on commodities crops. Find out how this innovative approach benefits both farmers, profits, and soil health. Get everything from practical grazing tips to the full financial breakdown of why they use this method! Learn more about this amazing Farming duo here: refarm.market/ #regenerativeagriculture #regenera...
7 Regenerative Ways to Manage Drought
Просмотров 11 тыс.3 месяца назад
Learn about 7 regenerative ways to manage drought in this informative video. These sustainable techniques can help combat the effects of drought and promote water conservation. Watch now to learn more! #drought #regenerativeagriculture #regenerativefarming #swales #rainwater
Chickens & Compost: How to feed chickens without grains, and making compost at the same time!
Просмотров 55 тыс.3 месяца назад
In this video, learn how to feed chickens without grains and make compost at the same time! This sustainable method not only benefits your feathered friends, but also creates nutrient-rich compost for your garden. Watch now to discover this eco-friendly approach to chicken care. #regenerativeagriculture #permaculture #homestead #homesteading #regenerativefarming #backyardchickens
Biochar: What is it and is it worth the hype?
Просмотров 18 тыс.3 месяца назад
Find out what biochar is and whether it lives up to the hype in this informative video. Learn about its benefits and potential uses for sustainability and regenerative agriculture. Watch now to discover the truth about biochar! #biochar #regenerativeagriculture #sustainableagriculture #gardenamendment
Alcohol Brands Transitioning to Regenerative Agriculture?
Просмотров 1,3 тыс.4 месяца назад
Alcohol Brands Transitioning to Regenerative Agriculture?
Reseeding Pasture with Pigs: The Cost Effective Low Maintenance Solution To Feeding Your Pigs
Просмотров 17 тыс.5 месяцев назад
Reseeding Pasture with Pigs: The Cost Effective Low Maintenance Solution To Feeding Your Pigs
Sorghum: An Alternative for Animal Feed in Regenerative Agriculture
Просмотров 254 тыс.5 месяцев назад
Sorghum: An Alternative for Animal Feed in Regenerative Agriculture
Deep Bedding: Over-wintering cows to chickens!
Просмотров 2,2 тыс.7 месяцев назад
Deep Bedding: Over-wintering cows to chickens!
Can Regenerative Agriculture Produce Enough Food to Feed the World?
Просмотров 1,3 тыс.7 месяцев назад
Can Regenerative Agriculture Produce Enough Food to Feed the World?
Can Regenerative Agriculture Work Large Scale? and Should It?
Просмотров 7 тыс.7 месяцев назад
Can Regenerative Agriculture Work Large Scale? and Should It?
Regenerative Chocolate: The Dark Secret of the Chocolate Industry & Solution!
Просмотров 1,7 тыс.8 месяцев назад
Regenerative Chocolate: The Dark Secret of the Chocolate Industry & Solution!
Why Winter Cover Crops Are a Game Changer
Просмотров 3,4 тыс.8 месяцев назад
Why Winter Cover Crops Are a Game Changer
10 Affordable Hay Alternatives for Feeding your Animals
Просмотров 10 тыс.8 месяцев назад
10 Affordable Hay Alternatives for Feeding your Animals
Regenerative Coffee: Does how its grown matter?
Просмотров 8028 месяцев назад
Regenerative Coffee: Does how its grown matter?
Regenerative Orchard: Frog Hollow Farm's Journey to Healthier Soils
Просмотров 3,3 тыс.9 месяцев назад
Regenerative Orchard: Frog Hollow Farm's Journey to Healthier Soils
Secrets of Rotational Grazing for Horses
Просмотров 3,3 тыс.9 месяцев назад
Secrets of Rotational Grazing for Horses
What Weeds Tell You About Your Soil
Просмотров 133 тыс.10 месяцев назад
What Weeds Tell You About Your Soil
Out of the 2 types of grazing, which is more recommended in areas with fire risk?
Does Gabe brown castrate or band bull calves.
Pancakes, buckwheat honey
I am using a partial grazing strategy with my small flock of sheep. I am doing this because my goal is to build soil (the land has been heavily degraded), increase its organic matter content, and in turn increase its moisture-holding capacity. So far, the partial-grazing method seems to be doing the job and moving me toward achieving my goals. Species diversity in the pasture has increased dramatically.
Conventional farming is NOT farming; it is mining. When the fertility is reduced to obtain food the soil slowly degrades, becoming less able to produce crops. This fact was not considered for thousands of years. Most desertification is manmade. Successful farms were the result of ignorance and the resilience of nature. From the early 20th century industrialization was applied by a few to maximize profits, at the expense of the many. How? The populace was tricked into using "free" govt. education, i.e., public schools. They had already paid for it with forced (stolen) money. The stated goal of public school was to create obedient servants of political authority, without question/thought by indoctrination. This insidious, malicious psychological system of stunting cognitive growth was developed in Europe to create zombie citizens to be exploited. It was known as "The Prussian System". When it was resisted, questioned, boycotted, governments forced this CHILD ABUSE on the populace. It remains today, expressed as "The Most Dangerous Superstition" by Larken Rose. When superstition trumps reason, survival is impossible. That is why we need to boycott public education for our children's mental health. That would set our species free if the first priority was teaching children how to think.
I enjoy the thought going into the imagery used, and the credits given. AI makes only glancingly appropriate choices of illustrations for the text.
This is a reply to my comment and deserves to be reposted. @carsonrush3352 20 minutes ago "Why do they insist on industrial, monocrop agriculture when permaculture is so much better for the environment?" I'll say it in one word: control. Henry Kissinger once said: "if you control the food then you control the nation." Industrial farming means that fewer people are needed to farm and that food production can be absolutely controlled by the elite 0.1%. Farmers are the most independent, no nonsense, actively problem solving people on planet Earth, bar no one. As they're learning in Europe right now, if you anger the farmers, the farmers will inform you of what the pecking order is. They're passing policies that are destroying small farming operations across the world, and forcing these generational farmers to sell out to corporations. It all comes back to the WEF, Great Reset, Klaus Schwab, Black Rock/ State Street/ Vanguard, Digital Currency, and ESG scores. It isn't even a conspiracy theory anymore. They've outright advertised it on RUclips with commercials they made promoting it. "You will own nothing and be happy." 1 Reply
Comfrey: I exist
Wow... I've always enjoyed buckwheat; not sure why I don't eat it more often in fact. But I had no idea how high in minerals it is or how easy it is to grow! We're in an area that sounds like the perfect place to grow it, so I'm going to try putting in a patch of the perennial kind. Thanks for sharing!
I thought it was just grown by people that couldnt grow human grade grain, so grew stock feed
Just watch out if you have kidney stones, as it is sort of high in oxalates. All of us could probably benefit from reducing intake. I'm interested in it as rabbits feed...thanks for the video.
Probably, most Americans trying to eat healthy need to be aware of it anyway, as they tend to eat a lot of foods high in oxalates and without cooking them in water which u then discard, either. Which brings us to that : reducing oxalate content by doing that or sprouting, rinsing well & etc. . Also, this isn't just about kidney stones but a variety of symptoms. For kidney stones, I have to wonder if the vit. K in animal foods helps with this too, or only with helping prevent Vit. D supplementation from, along with the calcium it's helping absorb (?), go to kidney stones vrs. your bones etc. ( my Dr. told me this about that).
"[Sheep and goats] have similar nutritional requirements." This is false. Copper is poison to one of them, so you have to figure out a solution to feed them separately one pasture, or they should not be grazed together.
Thank You Been Doing it last 8 years started with 4 ducks now have 32 + Goats herd starting this year. Great Information!
Buckwheat is definitely NOT cheap anymore lol...huge demand for cover cropping so not enough supply...2$ a lb in sw washington IF you can find it
We have grown and used this. It matures super-fast, so you can get at least 2 crops in a season. Just know that if you get a heavy rain during pollination, there will be almost no grain. But at least, if turned under, it make a decent green manure.
I've almost got the trees and logs cleared out of the new pig pasture. We'll be planting buckwheat in one quadrant early next spring. I can't wait.
We plant buckwheat,cereal rye and kale behind our pigs and it thrives..pigs love it
I decided to plant a small plot of buckwheat this year as an experiment to see how well it would do. We are in mountains in Nicaragua, so I waited until the wet season to plant it, when temperatures are a little lower and there would not be as much stress on the plants. So far, it has been doing great. I am very impressed. When we bought this farm, it was inundated with a variety of switchgrass that grows in clumps, which can become huge over time. It also has an allelopathic quality that prevents other things from growing around it. This means that the diversity of forage material for our small flock of sheep is inadequate, and I have been slowly trying to dig up the switchgrass and replace it with some other things that will increase diversity. Right now, buckwheat is looking like a good option. As you say, it is not adequate on its own but seems like a good option for a diverse forage pasture.
not the right kind of protein. there are many types of protein. part of the big deception. grains are some of the most gmo'd and lab manipulated unnatural things in the food market.
A little generic, but ok.
Changing farming and ranching practices to restorative ones have the most effect. Accompanying better ag methods with rainwater harvesting earthworks further increases the amount of usable land, especially for agriculture. Small, frequent, hyperlocalized swales, check dams, zai planting pits, etc have the greatest impact. These have other benefits, such as reducing downstream flooding, ground subsidence, reduced erosion, lower irrigation costs, etc. Disappointed with this presentation, it was poor on explanation...
Xxxx
Necesitamos con urgencia difundir la Agricultura Regenerativa acá en Perú, mi país.
In one word, it's called permaculture
Restorative ag is larger scale, better adapted to harvesting equipment. It's a subset of permaculture methods that improves soil, efficiency, etc.
@@b_uppy Its just adding commercial production perspective to PC, but that has consequences to the effectiveness. You cant just add 100 giant tractors to a permaculture system and keep everything else the same, that makes it a different thing.
@@falsename2285 Restorative ag minimizes tractor use so as to avoid soil compaction. Good farmers and ranchers know soil compaction reduces productivity. Restorative ag is organizing PC to commercial harvest, on a very large scale. Typical PC fails at that and is too fussy for large scale production, AKA it's very niche. Restoration ag uses biome-appropriate plants instead of attempting "boutique" growing conditions. It's modeled specifically upon savanna spacing organized into alleycropping, --because it's the optimal spacing for most biomass. It incorporates livestock as part of the land management team. It's designed to transition easier from conventional ag to large scale permaculture. It's also growing a lot more food better than conventional methods and that's where the *appropriate, but minimized use of technology* comes in. Restoration ag is something other than "100 tractors" as you mischaractize it...
@@b_uppy You are uninformed. I have been designing and implementing sustainable agriculture systems for 15 years buddy. I have fixed more "appropriately teched out" farms than youve ever seen. Youre wrong. You cannot change the scale of the system to that extent AND keep it sustainable, it will always fail on an energy audit. And from the sound of it, you have never seen real permaculture, only the hippy dippy wannabe version of it.
@@b_uppy You fundamentally dont understand what PC is. I have fixed more "appropriately" teched-out farms than you have ever seen in your life. I have been doing this full time for 15 years dude. You are wrong. What you think of as PC is 1 expression of the concept, the hippy dippy lala land bullshi* type. PC is a series of filters that systems and techniques must be run through in order to insure sustainability, and maximize ecosystem functions and gains, nothing else. Increasing the scale of the system IS what breaks it, you cannot have 1 guy sustainably maintain 1000 acres, its impossible, the system needs to be broken up and a higher HUMAN LABOR input needs to be there or sustainability is not an option, entropy and consumption limitations on resources dictates this. PC is an energy audit. You are misinformed by the way that some people talk about and practice the concept. "boutique" growing conditions, I know what you are talking about, its dumb I agree, it is a misuse of the concepts to try to force unnatural conditions. Essentially you have only seen people using PC through the same thought process pitfalls as what commercial ag did to subsistence farming.
All true but regenerative agriculture alone cannot begin to feed the 8 billion on the planet. There are just too many mouths to feed. Thus Haber-Bosch & intensive farming (incl monoculture) are now necessary. Furthermore, intensive livestock farming, on its present global scale, is incredibly damaging to the ecosphere.
Check out our videos about scale and regenerative ag
That's a false premise. The opposite of true. Conventional ag is degrading land so bad that it's reducing the amount of land we can grow food on, as well as depleting water sources such as the Oglala Aquifer. As the quality of soil lessens under conventional ag practices, there is a reduction in food and biomass produced. While things like polycropping mean your main crop will produce at 90%, this is more than made up for in the secondary and tertiary crops alongside. It also has the benefit of more resilienxy in the way of crop failure because if one crop goes, the others may still be viable, or at least usable biomass for the livestock also on the property, for example.
Sounds like a computer voice
Concerning that we now think real humans are computers :)
Post links to the studies please
www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fsufs.2023.1234108/full?
Working or restoring a degraded cattle farm with syntropic agroforestry. Planning on having coffee and cocoa as cash crops once the system is working well. In the meantime we will have multiple annual crops and pasture chickens. Long term will be timber production and dairy.
What? No mention of biochar?
The study didn't find it equal to the other systems
Magic. Many thanks!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Come to Uganda and learn about permaculture in its natural and rudimentary sense 😎😎
Can you cover syntropic agriculture bi ernst götsch. He csn build up to 3cm of soil per year. It's a spesific type of agroforestry system witch works with heavy pruning of fast growing tree species. Agenda götsch is the official canal
The farmers need to make money. It is a difficult story to sell to the farmer: Produce less, manage less, don't specialice on what you are good at, but be a generalist with many different crops and many different animals? This is a very contra-intuitive idea of making more money. Usually, they make all to little money. And use smaller machines, if you are using machines at all? Farmers just love big machines. The biggest tractor and the biggest equipment is the farmers biggest pride. I have no direct relation to farming at all, but have been working at a farming school for 25 years. The pupils are great, but beleive me: The biggest tractor is the best. The ideas presented may be correct, but they are unsellable for the typical farmer. They need more money. The society needs it to be on an industrial scale, or else too many will work in the fields.
More farmers on the land means more resilience. Larger equipment means more dept, when farmers had smaller tractors and had more diverse farms was the era where farmers where doing really well financially.
Look into high intensity rotational grazing. Same land, more animals, demonstrates increasing profits and land regeneration by updated management practices. See any of many presentations by Mr Savory.
See our videos on scaling regenerative ag. We have two good ones
Which study are you referring to in this video?
www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fsufs.2023.1234108/full?
What a scam the UN is playing on the most naive of them public.
Industrial agriculture is here to stay. I look forward to the day when regenerative practices can be incorporated into industrial agriculture. My layman’s bet is that various precision agriculture technologies will enable the combination of the two. Imagine your typical vast corporate farm, with drones able to tend to the various species of plants and animals. Go down a mixed row of crops, squirt tiny amounts of fertilizer on any that need it, while zapping pests and weeds with lasers.
The weed laser tractor. ruclips.net/video/_2s-0wgQWXM/видео.html
It’s a very good podcast on how to start a meat processing industry in the usa?We’re gonna start a meat processing plant in Pennsylvania next month. It’s gonna be highly appreciated if you help educating the new entrepreneurs in this field by sharing more information about the industry.
Resources for more information are in the video description
BLESS YOU
What about the increased methane from high density grazing?
Increased methanotrphs, increased plant growth. It's human activity which is a major methane emitter
High density grazing has always been part of Nature. Methane is a cycle. Carbon Dioxide is a cycle. Water is a cycle. Hydrogen is a cycle. Earth has never had so few grazers like today. We need more cows, more bison, more antelope - and not less. You should worry more about the plastic greenhouses that are polluting the land everywhere, and have distorted the meaning of growing "organic" vegetables. For one example, check Almeria, Spain. Then let me know if cattle grazing is the problem.
Supplement the grazing with kelp
@@billiebruv Life is a methane emitter. Reductionist thinking doesn't work when dealing with ultra complex systems. Just doesn't.
The soil sequesters more carbon and this offsets methane. Importantly you avoid overgrazing as that is as bad as CAFOs. High stocking rates must be accompanied with daily/even hourly moves. Grass should never be eaten to below half/seven inches. It's important that sufficient green material remain to protect soil from solarization/dessication, hence the frequent moves. It has the added benefit of producing more biomass per acre, per year.
Polycultures allow for biological regulation of pests and disease. For example, the role of insectivorous birds and parasitic wasps in managing tomato horn worms. The key thing is areas to allow these critters to avoid predators.
Also, improvements in feeding cultures more than a reductionist-type NPK will increase the plant's resilience to pests of every kind.
@@marlan5470 You mean polycultures contribute more to natural fertility? Because they do. More life above means better soil biomes that can improve bioavailabilty of nutrients.
Great video every politician should have to watch all these videos about regenerative farming.
I posted it in Friday for future Germany fb group. Lets shere this were ever we can. Also directly to local politicians.
Politicians don't care about nothing but money! No money in this so it would go no where. In reality they would pay a scientist to say it's not true.
"Why do they insist on industrial, monocrop agriculture when permaculture is so much better for the environment?" I'll say it in one word: control. Henry Kissinger once said: "if you control the food then you control the nation." Industrial farming means that fewer people are needed to farm and that food production can be absolutely controlled by the elite 0.1%. Farmers are the most independent, no nonsense, actively problem solving people on planet Earth, bar no one. As they're learning in Europe right now, if you anger the farmers, the farmers will inform you of what the pecking order is. They're passing policies that are destroying small farming operations across the world, and forcing these generational farmers to sell out to corporations. It all comes back to the WEF, Great Reset, Klaus Schwab, Black Rock/ State Street/ Vanguard, Digital Currency, and ESG scores. It isn't even a conspiracy theory anymore. They've outright advertised it on RUclips with commercials they made promoting it. "You will own nothing and be happy."
@@carsonrush3352 Agreed 100% You are well informed and that was a perfect short precise statement.
Do it have to much copper for sheep 🐑
I have never find any video as beneficiary as this, i am so thankful and hope you can continue sharing information as this one
ruclips.net/video/oss7kyIlNgg/видео.htmlsi=bdqci3L_WOPJux9V
Indians from Southern India have around 15-20 types of unique millets and rice varieties that they consume. Found many lately. Super healthy.
No shit!
Why not host a debate between the gurus on each side. From what i have seen, one side freely discusses their methods and the other tries to sell their consulting without explaining anything except that their system is great. (Though i just recently found one new practitioner who does explain some of the "more hidden techniques" side). Would love an indepth comparison! My background is CAFO dairy milking 750 head (i did the vet tech tasks) and was a teacher/naturalist intern in the 1990's at a suburban Philadelphia nature center. I suspect that each side's techniques would be what is needed depending on CONTEXT as Understanding Ag folks point out often.
Because no one watches our interviews:)
You might find that " all of the above" including CAFO works best at any given time and situation on your farm
Australia is phasing out dirty battery hen production by 2036. So it will be interesting how they will manage the new production system
Ah, I can taste home just hearing about mahangu! Nothing reminds me of my childhood more
All millets are drought resistent
I'm in the Ozarks and I'm gonna be the first tk actually adopt full regenerative organic practices in the central and northern part, atleast at a large scale, ain't no one doing anything around here