Thank you so much for watching the first episode of The Huw Richards Show which will be initially running on a bi-weekly basis, with a goal of weekly. Available also on Spotify and Apple Podcasts🌱
@buzzyhardwood294920 күн бұрын
Well done, Huw. From Montana, USA.
@elainesommers910920 күн бұрын
I'm following now on Podbean, my go-to podcast provider. No censoring 😊
@Kightravin11 күн бұрын
Check out, David the good, in the USA and his grocery row garden. It's very much on the same lines.
@Kightravin11 күн бұрын
Check out, David the good, in the USA and his grocery row garden. It's very much on the same lines.
@KristaMarkstrom28 күн бұрын
Brilliant interview/conversation. I’m almost 70. The destruction of the natural ecosystem has been apparent to me over these many years. And over these years I’ve seen too many people my age already having many serious illnesses compared to those in my parents’ lifetime. Learning how to healthily grow our foods without leaning on chemicals for higher yield production yet death to the natural ecosystem is imperative for all living beings.
@pazlacostaverde24534 күн бұрын
Yes! 😁😇🍀 #Gaia
@laurahigdon535324 күн бұрын
My brain is exploding! Sooo many important views shared here for such an amazing really zoomed out perspective on how to steward land and everything that lives there. I will listen to this several times I’m sure!! Thank you for both of your expertise, morals and commitment to growing food in the best way possible.🌱🙏🌱
26 күн бұрын
This is one of the most accurate descriptions of syntropic agriculture (I am a personal friend of Ernst Gotsch).Ernst chose this term as "Syntropy" nothing to do with tropics. In Syntropy you are gaining energy , from the simple to the complex, (Increase in life) as contrasted to entropy, from the conplex (Ecosystems) to the simple (monocultures). Agrobusiness, in Ernst´s s view, is literally "the agriculture of death", as it leads to fewer life forms. Another important aspect of Syntropic is that it is an agricultural system which evolves over time. It is not static. Joshua explains this very well. Many people have not yet understood this dynamic aspect.
@regenmediaofficial26 күн бұрын
That is really cool to know! Particularly the tropic missunderstanding - I really appreciate that! Joshua indeed understands syntropics, and it really shows when you visit Birch Farm. Out of interest, do you think Ernst would be interested in being interviewed for this podcast?
@Atimatimukti25 күн бұрын
Syntropy uses the devil eucalyptus from Austrália. Why not tge native trees of each country? Such a nonsense to plant the tree that the australians call "gasoline tree" and that drinks all the undergrond water. Besides being a bacterecide and a fungicide. And to think you can control that tree is hubris. Use local solutions, not exotic invasives. And to call it natural when you are just pruning all the time, it's even funny
@feralkevin22 күн бұрын
@@regenmediaofficial Super cool, wasn't aware of that aspect of it either.
@davileon87213 күн бұрын
Good to point out that calling Syntropics a ''Competition System'' is a hang up from the paradigm of destruction. Ernsts main point is that the system works from Cooperation and Unconditional love. Thats the shift in perspective and relationship... Cultural change driving landscape change
@Patrick-ge1qg2 күн бұрын
@@regenmediaofficial You'd have to visit him at his farm in Bahia. There's a new doc featuring him called Food Unfolded
@Syntropicfarmer26 күн бұрын
Best video I’ve ever experienced on KZbin. Seriously. You matched my farming style exactly. Beatle farmer . . . perfect! This was a joy for me to watch, two farmers who love what they do and how they do it. Awesome.
@regenmediaofficial26 күн бұрын
Wow, thank you! Quite the comment!
@billiverschoore246611 күн бұрын
@Syntropicfarmer Always lovely to hear from others who are on the case! Heck of a battle where you are, i hear... 🙏🏽🙏🏽🙏🏽 🌳🕊💚
@tampeirce424123 күн бұрын
This is your very best Huw . I enjoy watching KZbin to inform myself about alternative agricultural methods . This such a fresh , frank intelligent conversation. Bravo and thank you Both
@ShawnRitch28 күн бұрын
What an amazingly informative discussion / interview. I too believe in your methods of natural farming, by way of perennial crops with syntropic agriculture( farming ), will be the way of the future :)
@regenmediaofficial26 күн бұрын
Thank you Shawn!
@ThrashingCoyote15 күн бұрын
This is fantastic. What an inspiring talk. Please, is there anywhere posted where we can see his garden?
@patrick_laslett_allotment25 күн бұрын
Yes at 77 I'm feeling less guilty wandering around my allotment chopping and dropping rather than digging in the muck. My allotment is in the East of the country and we did get a summer this year that was hot and dry for a couple of months. And at the moment we are lucky and our wood chip is still free - I have had three loads put on the end of my plot this summer - I'm not sure what I'm going to do with it all yet. Perennial vegetables? I must get some. Loads of great content in your talk with so many topics covered that will each make a video in their own right - keep up the good work. Love it!
@elainesommers910920 күн бұрын
Old hay and straw is a great way to do this too. Please look at reading Ruth Stout's books on growing food. She was elderly and became famous for using spoiled hay and anything else that would rot down as mulch. She never dug anything.
@billiverschoore246611 күн бұрын
@patrick_laslet_allotment I can recommend frog leafed cress, of high nutrition and vitality, grows best in winter, in slightly damp and lightly shaded spot. 🙏🏽🙏🏽🙏🏽 🌳🕊💚
@bradliston899016 күн бұрын
absolutely amazing, I wanna go spend a month in the fields with both of these guys. Good interview choice Huw. You can't change the way the wind blows, but we can adjust our sails. Seeing that thought applied to a resilient garden/farm is spot on. What else can we do but grow and adjust ourselves.
@carolvandale559719 күн бұрын
So informative and unique! Adds to my knowledge of permaculture and food forestry. I live off grid in NCentral Saskatchewan.. Zone 2b (or not 2b, lol) I too am growing for the future. This year I added walnuts and hazelberts ( from prairie cultivars ) to my permaculture orchard. And i too will learn from the little fly/root magots who decimated our brassicas. Love your work!!
@maryobrien556827 күн бұрын
Thank you. An amazing interview which chimed with what my thoughts have been and what I aspire to do in my own back garden.
@regenmediaofficial27 күн бұрын
Really pleased you enjoy this! Thank you so much
@MichaelJohnField23 күн бұрын
This is a wonderful and inspiring interview - Joshua is so enthusiastic and knowledgeable....I loved the story regarding the Sawfly and how the Goldfinches appeared and resolved the situation. I hope more farmers can follow his example - as it sounds so great for improving biodiversity and providing a wealth of different micronutrient-rich and exciting food choices in our changing climate.😊
@ajb.82227 күн бұрын
So much very nifty info within ! Thanks to you both ! On cutting the grass, remember, one can use a scythe, or herbivores as well although I take it that the latter won't be desired if you're intention is for the biomass to all be left behind in it's as-is state. On the other hand, I think regenerative and holistically-planned grazers have demonstrated the extreme benefits to the soil and entire ecosystem, of grazing herbivores in these ways. Greg Judy has show how, on his farm in MO, USA , that ground-nesting birds co-habitate just fine with his moving of the cattle through the landscape. While occasionally he does fence around something needing protection, he doesn't have to with most things like this. I would think maybe a super-excited herd who's been penned up awhile and/or hasn't has fresh vegetation in awhile, may be less likely to step around things like nests in the grass, so, know cattle b4 counting on it ! ( I'm from a dairy farm). My BFF's OG dairy farm seems to have plenty of foxes... . I agree that the beetle and etc. activity seems a lot less than when I was a kid, too, ( I'm 44). I would say that there's actually MORE completely un-disturbed land in parts of west-central WI - old, small, hilly pastures are now just a sea of golden rod ... abandoned old farmhouses are left in a tangle of overgrowth, but the animal activity doesn't seem to be abounding in these places, either, (tho there's some). I don't thing their ecosystems benefit with NO human/livestock interaction, compared to a healthy one. What the biggest problem likely is though (besides things like chemtrails possibly, and some towns spraying insecticides against mosquitos etc. in their neighborhoods), is the loss of smaller farms & farmers, AND field sizes. As diary farmers retired with no-one taking it over ( and BTW many greatly discouraged their kid's from pursuing farming, and others were very difficult to get along with, so, it's not only due to lack of interest by the kids), they transitioned to beef and cash crops, then as they aged more, just crops. Finally, land getting sold or rented to the nearest big farm wanting more crop land. In those final stages, the land changed dramatically ! As fences became dilapidated OR the farm's new machinery wouldn't fit, fence-rows came out, along with all the trees, bushes and etc. which nearly always is part of them here. Other edges but without fences... same thing. Neighboring farms all ran by one outfit now, using big equipment and the old farm boundary can just get outta the way. The now-grown-up farm kids running it, usually have has little to no exposure to why anything would be unwise with that choice ( & btw I don't care the technical size of a farm or if their business is set up as a corp. . Makes no difference to their farming practices, & it's super annoying that ppl don't realize that. I know small, family farms who are a "corporation" . I know ones who aren't, and who's animal welfare sucks. I know of giant farm businesses doing things "right" and awesomely.). Much of my home county and surrounding area of "west-central" WI is now a disgusting sea of "wall to wall" corn and beans. Narry a treeline to break up the monotony. Nothing against corn or beans but when you know they're GMO, how they're grown, and that this is ALL annual cropping, and either tillage or herbicide based (or both).... it looks like a dustbowl in the making, on steroids ( with addtl., side problems ). I get further north and excepting, again, the amount of abandoned homesteads and lack of pastures happening, I breathe SO much easier... relax a little... feel less far from home.
@petekooshian559522 күн бұрын
I don't have land of any size yet (I'm 28) but I'm thankful to be learning the things to do when I have space and the things to avoid in order to have a successful farm
@MycelialSuperFanКүн бұрын
I am so glad I stumbled upon this episode, and I am really looking forward to the next one. This was a fascinating watch/listen, densely packed with some novel concepts. First time I've heard of syntropy, and it makes complete sense. I'll have to listen to this one more than once to catch all the pearls of wisdom. Well done!!
@michaelspano406726 күн бұрын
outstanding! i enjoyed and learned so much from this conversation. i was especially interested in hearing about the beetles. i had already noticed a huge increase in our ground beetle population since we have implemented some of these regenerative practices. i was also excited to hear about the white mulberry, tilia and goji leaves for salad alternatives. this episode is exactly the kind of content we need to learn more about.
@regenmediaofficial26 күн бұрын
Ahh thanks Michael really pleased you found it interesting! And I agree, I am going to do whatever I can to have these kinds of conversations with these incredible individuals.
@RaikoRBLX25 күн бұрын
VERY inspiring video😊 I would love to see more of this kind of stuff! Keep up the good work!
@regenmediaofficial24 күн бұрын
More to come!
@anamnesiser25 күн бұрын
Wow methods discussed here, combined with the 'back to eden' method i have a feeling is going to be🔥
@dogontheplotКүн бұрын
Absolutely fascinating. Such a valuable conversation. I will be listening multiple times! I thought what Joshua was saying towards the end about finding somewhere that will let you grow in these ways was really interesting for us hobby gardeners - some allotments will not even allow no dig, let alone more advanced natural growing techniques.
@3_Star_Belt23 күн бұрын
Absolutely loved the conversation! Informative, entertaining and hope inducing. Joshua is a wealth of knowledge and has his heart in the right place. Looking forward to more of the like! Greetings from Berlin :)
@ninad962627 күн бұрын
So interesting, I have a lot of terms to go look up now 😂Great conversation between the two of you, so much to think about 🙏might have to listen twice!
@regenmediaofficial26 күн бұрын
Glad you enjoyed it! We indeed covered a lot in this!
@TeamPlanlos18 күн бұрын
15:27 thats the most beautiful and honest motivation I heard in a long time!
@enyaspermaculture13 күн бұрын
I am from Slovakia, trying to set out the movement in this system. Thank you for the conversation and much needed informations 🌲💚
@billiverschoore246611 күн бұрын
@enyasppermaculture 🙏🏽🙏🏽🙏🏽 🌳🕊💚 Whereabouts are you?
@EcceRem16 күн бұрын
Great conversation, I found it inspiring and will be looking to adapt some of these concepts in my allotment. I enjoyed the uncut nature of this video, very human and relatable - keep it up!
@cecilialind947422 күн бұрын
Absolutely amazing conversation, I enjoyed it so much, learned a lot and gained new perspectives! Thank you!
@vrma_steve20 күн бұрын
The syntropic name refers to syntropy defined as: The tendency toward increased organization, cooperation, and order. It suggests that certain processes or systems evolve toward unity, balance, or complexity. While not universally recognized in physics, it’s commonly used in ecology, systems theory, and psychology to describe self-organizing systems. Great interview and inspirational for temperate climate syntropic systems
@buzzyhardwood294920 күн бұрын
Excellent interview. Thank you, Huw. Montana, USA
@tomatito382427 күн бұрын
This interview is pure gold. Definitely a must-listen like you said. Going full natural or syntropic farming is such a massive mental exercise in observation, patience and other things. Shared experiences like this one are quite enriching and encouraging. Thank you!
@regenmediaofficial27 күн бұрын
You are most welcome!!
@EverettSmithLoveisAll23 күн бұрын
BRAVO! Excellent interview and overview of syntropic natural farming! This is exactly the direction my food systems are heading. Thank you!
@feralkevin21 күн бұрын
Nice! I have been growing weird and unusual perennial and otherwise super resilient crops for a couple of decades. Some the chefs are super into -- but they usually want super small quantities, and others are more homesteader type crops
@lorebrown530725 күн бұрын
You guys are awesome. You're creating the world I want to live in. Thanks for renewing my hope. There's a lot of farm to table organic, regenerative, artisanal food cropping up in the Pacific Northwest U.S. as well. Can't wait to visit the Farmers Arms and woolsery collective. The food looks fabulous.
@regenmediaofficial24 күн бұрын
That is so kind of you, thank you!
@alastairmackenzie63915 күн бұрын
Yes to limes over lettuce! Great work you are both doing to spread the future systems of food and nature restoration
@kamielvreugdenhil737015 күн бұрын
It was a bit unclear to me which species he used instead of lettuce. White Mulberry and Tilia/Lime/Linden? Do you know which species he was referring to?
@billiverschoore246611 күн бұрын
@@kamielvreugdenhil7370 I would think Tilia x europaea (i have a stooled one on my allotment), you'd be extremely lucky to have a small- or large- leaved linden tree, though i'd say those may be even more nutritious/vital than the hybrid European Tilia... 🌳🕊💚
@troygoss64005 күн бұрын
This is the future. I'm a huge follower of masanoba fukuoka and " one straw revolution ". Thank you for this dialog.
@tlowday392526 күн бұрын
Martin and Sara are trail blazers! They grow delicious food and their farm is FULL of wildlife. They are the nicest people too!!
@regenmediaofficial26 күн бұрын
Will absolutely be visiting!
@tlowday392525 күн бұрын
@@regenmediaofficial well worth a visit. His journey from conventional farming, to what he has now created is pretty special, on ‘land that can’t grow anything!’
@LittleKi123 күн бұрын
I had to laugh at the American vs. Brit approach to trying new things. I am definitely on team "let's do it and figure it out later!" but have also had plenty of failures using that approach. That didn't stop me from immediately whacking in a few more willow and red alder as soon as I heard something along the lines of "your support plants are going to be willows and poplar." I had already started using willow for ramial wood chips and was thinking about dialing it up and this convinced me to wade in a bit deeper in figuring out how to make that work. (There is something to be said for the more measured approach, too....)
@Crina-LudmilaCristeaAuthor26 күн бұрын
Brilliant, wonderful conversation!
@regenmediaofficial24 күн бұрын
Thank you!
@pietsnot700212 күн бұрын
Nice interview. For anyone wanting to dive deeper into syntropic agriculture, l recommend Byron grows and Scott Hall, Byron just released a video ”how to become a beter food forest garden designer” where he explains syntropy realy well.. Happy growing everyone.
@AmourEtLiberte8886 күн бұрын
Thank you so much…This is what I am starting to do on my 29 acres in the forest, zone 3 to 4 in Ontario Canada. It is so hard when you are alone. Would love to get help !!! I really appreciate your input…very uplifting and give me hope. I have to say: it is a lot of fun to do this method.
@janew535122 сағат бұрын
Which perennial foods are you growing? I’m just north of Brighton.
@johnmccarthy11512 күн бұрын
Fantastic chat with Josh 👍 as said elsewhere, mind exploding/expanding 😁 Never thought of using lime leaves as salad leaves, which is bloody annoying as we had a street of the damn trees lol. I just remember how sticky everywhere got from them grrr. I'd also never heard of turnip sawfly, wee buggers, they're bad enough on my goosegogs, live n learn 😁
@ajb.82225 күн бұрын
On "no dig" , I also keep in mind that for many, the true meaning of the term is in reference to the old gardening directive to "double dig" your garden beds, even every year (!). Not necessarily to tillage, esp. shallow tillage.
@viking722nj3 күн бұрын
Very interesting conversation!
@rowanwhite352014 күн бұрын
Awesome video! Thanks
@bigbadthesailor517315 күн бұрын
three cheers for this: helps me feel some hope ...
@annikaziegler38272 күн бұрын
Wonderful conversation and sooo much food for thought. I just want to share that syntropic/syntropy is actually coming from greek and points to the process of succession, the process of going from simple to complex - it has nothing to do with the tropics per definition of the word:)
@elainesommers910920 күн бұрын
Permaculture has been working along these lines for many years now. Geoff Lawton is amazing. Robert Hart and Forest Gardening also. All these amazing techniques of working with and not against nature.
@chaosinthecraftroom19 күн бұрын
This was extremely interesting to listen to. Thank you for both sharing so much knowledge. Eucalyptus was mentioned as a plant to cause biomass. However I have heard that Eucalyptus has numerous downfall so I am interested to hear more about how you find them? Issues I have heard about are high transpiration rates, declining soil fertility, incompatibility with the preservation of biodiversity, and allopathic impacts that impede undergrowth regeneration.
@MaxSafeheaD9 күн бұрын
This is GREAT! Thank you =)
@vivalaleta8 күн бұрын
Regenerative agriculture is win-win!
@lynnrisser19 күн бұрын
What a gift.
@mrtickles212921 күн бұрын
Josh needs to write a book so that I can buy it!
@bernadettemccluskey281223 күн бұрын
Fabulous interview and information - will definitely be revisiting. Wanted to book onto his Agroforesty course next year but booked up already, and no wonder. Soo want to visit the farm. Am curious as to how he deals with the weeds before sowing vegetables, especially if their roots are long, or does he just leave them in, like in the salad beds. I let the weeds grow intentionally amongst the vegetables at my allotment ahead of the heatwave we had in Ireland two summers ago during which I was away for a month so couldn't water - yet I got good veg harvests because the weeds helped keep water in the ground via shade, plus, I guess, because of their associations with the micorrhizal fungi underground. If Joshua's style of growing resonates with anyone in Ireland who'd be keen to do something similar, I'd be delighted to hear from you.
@timbushell864019 күн бұрын
It would be nice to 'see' some of the developing rows, and the soil. Especially weeds as a crop, around the hour mark.
@TheSphat16 күн бұрын
finally a farmer, who thinks radical like me. It is hard to swim against the currents, but it is rewarding.
@andrejskoda961024 күн бұрын
fascinating interview ❤!
@portail226 күн бұрын
Thank you for this episode. So interesting about the beetles! I have a ton of them and slugs do seem under control but what about snails? Snails are much more prevalent here. And they ravage everything!! Can anyone suggest anything aside from poison, copper, beer or yeast traps?
@__Shellspace__26 күн бұрын
definately building more bug hotels after watching this i want all the beetles in my garden i managed to increase the lady birds and i would love to see the lacewings more too
@ricos149719 күн бұрын
Took me a few days to make time to listen to it all in one go. Well worth it. I'd say that you can probably close down the podcast now, as everything that needed to be said was said here. It'll be downhill from now on! I'd hate to be the next guest, trying to live up to that. I'd class myself as a "systems thinker", and it's great to see someone else going so deep in thought as to the consequences of their actions. Everything is extrapolated back the way to source, with no shortcuts or exclusions from the calculations. Ive seen so many claims of "regenerative" farming, from grass fed beef to barely adapted monocultures, that claim to be regenerating soil. Yet they ignore swathes of non-regenerative land used to grow their external inputs, which are conveniently missed from the calculations. A bit like reducing your carbon emissions by importing all your industrial goods. There doesn't appear to be any accounting anomaly in Joshua's setup, because it's built around a belief and moral framework which is exceptional. I hope that you can hold future guests to this standard, pushing back on anything that claims to be something it isn't. In an inspiring manner, of course, I'm not suggesting you slaughter them!
@billiverschoore246611 күн бұрын
@ricos1497 As you mention CO2, so important to know that CO2 is a gas of life and essential for plant growth, as it is to our own breathing (no CO2 means no oxygen exchange...). 🙏🏽 🌳🕊💚
@ricos149711 күн бұрын
@@billiverschoore2466 I'm not a moron. Neither, I expect, are the majority watching this channel.
@billiverschoore246610 күн бұрын
@@ricos1497 my apologies, twasn't meant to imply that you or anyone else aren't aware of this, or indeed are morons, but i still meet folks, even some who are into "alternative" gardening, who are unaware of the CO2 thing. These folks might also read comments, and my one might be useful to thEm... 💛
@ricos149710 күн бұрын
@@billiverschoore2466 you've met people who are into alternative gardening, that are actively restricting CO2 to their plants? By what mechanism?
@billiverschoore246610 күн бұрын
@@ricos1497 I'm obviously not wording my comments right; didn't think i said anything about actively restricting CO2 to plants... No, folks who are still on the zero carbon track. Takes all sorts, right? - and we were all beginners at some point 🙂
@GrowBagUK27 күн бұрын
The use of 'weeds' as cover crops is the way forward....I have been much more accomodating of 'weeds' - they only really need to be controlled when they are interfering with your crops too much.
@Seven30onFriday6 күн бұрын
It would be helpful to understand more about Joshua's comment about choosing not to use a polytunnel. It seems from the farm's website that Joshua is making use of at least one glasshouse, so no wonder he doesn't need a polytunnel.
@shrimuyopa811723 күн бұрын
"You can't eat trees!" Clearly they have never heard of Moringa (yes I know that Moringa really isn't a tree that is suited for the UK's various climates but, actually, you can grow it in certain parts of the UK through a specific system of coppicing and covering during winter).
@christinemcjannett3594Күн бұрын
Thanks so much. I want to ask, are you mulching all the cut and drop or leaving the bigger wood to rot down?
@Quasime427 күн бұрын
Any good videos on how to make acorn flour and tips on using it?
@carolinehaywood92503 күн бұрын
Love it.
@nathanaelstunt73177 күн бұрын
What were the cashcrops planted in the beginning?
@lucschoonen24 күн бұрын
is there online footage of his farm?
@nathanaelstunt73177 күн бұрын
I believe acacia were used heavily in the past for flour.
@Captain_Mulligan14 күн бұрын
Omg i love this
@shanefredrickson625524 күн бұрын
Any clue what is said @ 1:00:28 regarding horse manure and "amuno pids ?" (from the transcript). My N.A ear struggles..... I compost a LOT of horse manure.....
@regenmediaofficial24 күн бұрын
Yes, aminopyralid!
@buzzyhardwood294920 күн бұрын
These are persistent weed killing chemicals used commonly on horse pasture. They take YEARS to break down and lose their toxicity. These have ruined production in many a garden.
@lokalnawrozka6 күн бұрын
Slugs are the joker 😂❤ oh my . I hate them this year they ate all my plants.
@thedevilsoffspring657517 күн бұрын
Do you ever have problems with deer on your land, if so how do you combat them when trying to grow your trees?
@sarahgriffin43413 күн бұрын
Fencing - only way we discovered but would be very interested is someone has a cheaper way
@pietsnot700212 күн бұрын
Sepp Holtzer says to plant vegetables and soft plants that are more palatable than trees so they eat that while your trees grow big and strong.. and if they leave some you get to eat as well..
@nnwk796616 күн бұрын
what is the fifth leaf that grows well?
@sparkysmalarkey5 күн бұрын
Sterile = Dead. I've been annoying Ag teachers since I was a child with this question. Teaming with life is the answer.
@louiseswart131514 күн бұрын
Maybe more steward of the soil than shepherd, maintaining the balance needed for nature to do what nature does.
@Power_Prawnstar13 күн бұрын
Chickens cured my slug problem, gave me eggs. Now I have no garden cause they also cured my vegetable garden 😂😂 bless em.
@pietsnot700212 күн бұрын
Lucky you, my chickens back in the day had a look at a slug and left it.. ducks on the other hand 🤟
@Power_Prawnstar12 күн бұрын
@pietsnot7002 Ha ha, that would be soul destroying.
@richrogers215726 күн бұрын
The human population is dying back, it’s called a demographic correction which could actually fit well with your dream. As the corporate world of supermarkets becomes unprofitable the pressures to feed ourselves should push us towards your envisioned agricultural system. Alternatively [because there is so much profit to be had ] all nutrition may come from precision fermentation and cellular agriculture. Hopefully natural farming by the people will flourish. Good luck fellows.
@viking722nj3 күн бұрын
I was surprised not to hear the word "livestock" once.... was that forbidden in the conversation?
@BeritBjerkestrand16 күн бұрын
Sorry, forgot to write his name: Stephen Barstow
@yellbyful27 күн бұрын
what beetles are you talking about?
@regenmediaofficial27 күн бұрын
Ground beetles
@saucywench91229 күн бұрын
Sooo, it's a food forest/permiculture.
@asbjorgvanderveer505028 күн бұрын
So much of this discussion is about how to garden, replicating systems as perfected over millennia by nature. Why? To drive profits. If we would allow the systems of nature, the earth's ecosystems to work, rather then destroying them in the name of development and agricultural progress we would not be facing a future of having to rebuild soils, river deltas, prairies, forests, water and atmosphere. We've made endless war and industries out of the destruction of life-giving natural systems, while creating endless work- attempting to rebuild lands, and repair our relationships with indigenous cultures around the planet. May I suggest a moratorium on this war on nature, for at least long enough to stop destroying earth systems we have yet to fully understand or appreciate? As long as our intentions are exclusively focused on profit, at the expense of all other species on earth we are diseased and doomed. As humans we can make a conscious choice to respond to the gift of life we have been granted.
@tomatito382427 күн бұрын
"Why?" Because even if you have land (not everyone does), it doesn't automatically produce enough food nor in enough frequency for you and your family to survive. Maybe absolutely virgin land does (if you also inherit all the knowledge about which plants are edible and how), but not any land that can be bought nowadays. Learning how to create harmonious agroecosystems fast is very much needed. And there's always going to be some kind of tradeoff you have to accept for the greater good.
@LittleKi123 күн бұрын
There are eight billion people on this planet. If they had to all start producing their own food, they would absolutely decimate nature. There is nothing unethical about experimenting with the best way to produce enough of a surplus to feed everyone.
@robpaton724 күн бұрын
Syntropy is the opposite of entropy - accumulation of energy and resources vs depletion in conventional agriculture. Think “trophic levels”… actually, “THE tropics” as a geographic area probably take their name from this, as the high light intensity and long growing seasons lend themselves to rapid accumulation of biomass? Great video, similar to what I’m doing but I’m not such a good businessman!
@dantheman913526 күн бұрын
Crush on...
@sjk73149 күн бұрын
Can anyone help me with an IMBALANCE of spiders? Thank you.
@litsci187713 күн бұрын
I've been listening to him talk about "centropic" for a solid 20 minutes and still haven't a clue what he's talking about
@annikaziegler38272 күн бұрын
He is talking about syntropic agriculture by Ernst Götsch