Regenerative farming: A 'natural way' to help counteract drought | Charlie Massy | Australian Story

For five generations, Charles Massy's family rode on the sheep’s back and nearly destroyed their land in the process.
When drought in the 80s and 90s almost sent him broke, the Cooma farmer switched to regenerative agriculture and watched his overgrazed land recover.
In his mid-50s, Charles Massy started a PhD, visiting 80 top regenerative farmers to see what they were doing differently.
That led to his ground-breaking book Call of the Reed Warbler, a plea to farmers to start working with nature.
* National Farmers' Federation's Fiona Simson says this story does not fully represent her position on regenerative agriculture, which is one of broad support.
#AustralianStory #regenfarming #regenerativefarming #CharlieMassy
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Пікірлер: 343

  • @alexanderalexander9759
    @alexanderalexander97593 жыл бұрын

    This should be the most talked about subject in australia right now

  • @wendyscott8425

    @wendyscott8425

    3 жыл бұрын

    All over the world, actually.

  • @geojelly9830

    @geojelly9830

    3 жыл бұрын

    Watch "Kiss the ground" on Netflix, it's a documentary about how the way we're farming is damaging the soil and how that affects our climate and turns our pastures into deserts. This is not only a problem in Australia, but everywhere around the world

  • @PatBoyd59

    @PatBoyd59

    3 жыл бұрын

    In the world! I'm an Aussie living in Canada and regenerative agriculture is necessary everywhere. Current farming practices are degrading the worlds soils. The sooner regenerative agriculture is the normal for farming practices the better it will be for the land, environment and the consumer.

  • @charlesapina7731

    @charlesapina7731

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@wendyscott8425 try to apply nano clay technology..for massive wheat growing..and bio-mass energy use.

  • @charlesapina7731

    @charlesapina7731

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@wendyscott8425 Congratulations to Charles Massy.

  • @yoopermann7942
    @yoopermann79423 жыл бұрын

    thats my whole goal TO LEAVE THE LAND IN A MUCH BETTER CONDITION THEN WHAT I FOUND IT IN !! these are not my original words as i borrowed them from the elders of whom i came across during my travels.. great video!!!!!!

  • @peterjones9629
    @peterjones96293 жыл бұрын

    I just read 'Call of the Reed Warbler'. I think it is an outstanding publication with a very important message. As a recently retired environmental scientist having completed 40 years in tertiary education, I wish this book was available at the beginning of my working life. Why? Because I would not have left the family farm in the Namoi Valley feeling disheartened and disillusioned to see a rich Popular Box / grassy woodland heading toward a thirsty laser-levelled cotton field (as it is now) inhabited by transient / itinerate workers. If I was back on the family farm with the clock turned back, and I had your book in hand, I would have made a more substantial positive contribution to saving landscapes, waterways, sustainable incomes and healthy communities than I have by a lifetime as an environmental scientist. May the time that has been lost to me be made up by those smart regenerative farmers of today and tomorrow. Thankyou Charles for your inspiration, passion, intelligence and beacon of hope.

  • @credenza1

    @credenza1

    3 жыл бұрын

    I read it recently (Christmas gift). I am so sorry that you lost such an opportunity with the family farm. I hope your work helped others to understand the environment better and thus be prepared for the regenerative agriculture movement as it spreads.

  • @robertgreen7255
    @robertgreen72553 жыл бұрын

    Thank you, Mr. Charlie Massy, and profoundly appreciate ABC Australia Story. It will be a long fight and lots of patience, but I strongly believe that Australians are smart and resilient to the call of nature. It is time to re-wild our continent for many generations to come.

  • @jesswatt5824
    @jesswatt58243 жыл бұрын

    I've read the Call of the Reed Warbler, this dude knows his stuff. I'm so fascinated by regenerative ag.

  • @credenza1

    @credenza1

    3 жыл бұрын

    I read it recently as well and found it fascinating and inspiring. My only criticism is that when he addressed indigenous knowledge (and rightly so) there was a certain amount of cultural cringe going on. Indigenous people took tens of thousands of years to develop their land management practices and post-colonial Australians are going to find new and appropriate ways of doing so as well. Care for the land is a universal human instinct.

  • @looksea2me
    @looksea2me3 жыл бұрын

    Great to see the movement taking off, I first learned about it from a TED talk by Allan Savory regarding desertification and thought we have the answers but lack the will to follow it through. Now in my country, we are gaining the will. Keep the farms Aussie cause foreign investors I believe would lack the foresight and the will to bring this into fruition. Well done Mr Massey, keep up your good work.

  • @tophercIaus

    @tophercIaus

    3 жыл бұрын

    Yep, large scale and multinational Ag is basically a soil mining activity. They're not planning for generational wealth and wellbeing.

  • @pascalsliepen7332

    @pascalsliepen7332

    3 жыл бұрын

    In short term yes it cost money in long term you need less chemicals

  • @Leopold5100

    @Leopold5100

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@tophercIaus even local small farming still same outcome. I have seen this cycle twice now. Too much political subsidy goes into unhealthy land practices and when things fall apart, drought assistance, subsidies and Barnaby Joyce types corrupting greening and water conservation efforts.

  • @barrybr1
    @barrybr13 жыл бұрын

    Even if its economically difficult to shift to Regenerative Agriculture I reckon we all need to push for it. The benefits look fantastic. So telling when that couple spraying the natural fertilizer noted how ugly it was when they were spraying chemicals, the wind shifted and the risk of inhaling them. I can only imagine the pleasure and mental relief shifting to more natural techniques.

  • @ZennExile

    @ZennExile

    3 жыл бұрын

    they aren't using "natural fertilizer". This is legal speak because ABC is sponsored by companies like DuPont and Monsanto. What they are using is Aerated Compost Tea. They pump air into vats containing solid organics like worm castings and manure in order to grow a population of bacteria and fungus. This ACT is then used to inoculate the soil. The bacteria and fungus are the real story here. But ABC is trying to gloss over that simple fact for some *unknown* reason.

  • @wendyscott8425

    @wendyscott8425

    3 жыл бұрын

    True, and the way we can push for it if we're not farmers is to buy the products these farms produce, effectively voting with our dollars. They're not only better for us, they taste fantastic! Pasture-raised bacon is heavenly, and I've never had a more tender and tasty rib-eye steak or filet mignon than from a cow grown entirely on grass. Where I live, we now have milk from grass-fed cows available in several different brands, including raw milk, all of them delicious! And the butter? Yum! Who knew it would make such a difference to use such regenerative methods in the taste of their products. Oh, and did I forget to mention the chicken and the eggs? Wow. :)

  • @wendyscott8425

    @wendyscott8425

    3 жыл бұрын

    @Mr. Moon Right, and just because they're natural doesn't make them good for us or for the food we eat, not to mention the soil those foods are grown in. There's an entire microbiome in the soil that needs to be nurtured and protected from our chemicals if we want nutritious and delicious food. Every chemical input kills at least part of that microbiome and makes the soil lifeless.

  • @wendyscott8425

    @wendyscott8425

    3 жыл бұрын

    @hudson I must say, it took me a while to find these products, and when I did, I felt like I had come across buried treasure. But now I have four stores I can rely on for all the things I want. My husband passed away 10 months ago, so I don't go to many restaurants anymore, especially with the pandemic, so it's nice to have such lovely tasty food on my table, and with just one person, it's not much more in price. I just wish I had a chance to give my husband some of it. With cancer, his appetite was non-existent for the last 3 months of his life, the time when I first discovered regenerative farming and what it can do for this planet and its people. I can hardly think of a problem it wouldn't solve, from unemployment to global warming. I can't help wondering if he might not have gotten cancer if we had known about this years ago and been able to buy this nutritious chemical-free food. And btw, we always got everything we could organic. It didn't help.

  • @wendyscott8425

    @wendyscott8425

    3 жыл бұрын

    @hudson Haven't heard of this. All I know is supporting regenerative agriculture by buying their products is something I can do to help this planet and my own health, not to mention the farmers who go to the trouble of making their products available to us.

  • @ingridfromm7719
    @ingridfromm77193 жыл бұрын

    It's so important to keep documenting these experiences. Around the world, we're facing similar challenges in agriculture. If farmers in Australia can make this shift, it's possible to replicate these experiences in other parts of the world. Please keep reporting on these issues! In these times of the COVID-19 pandemic it's important to reflect on landscapes and the link between ecosystems, agriculture and human health.

  • @followthemoney6905
    @followthemoney69053 жыл бұрын

    Wonderful Story - well done ABC

  • @harrywilson404
    @harrywilson4043 жыл бұрын

    This is helping a beautiful country become even more beautiful. From a Yank!

  • @deefee701
    @deefee7013 жыл бұрын

    As an Australian I can never understand why our ancestors pushed farmers off the best, fertile land into the desert and then built houses, roads and shops on it. And now farmers are arguing over whether to listen to this man? Insanity continues.

  • @williamchamberlain2263
    @williamchamberlain22633 жыл бұрын

    Incentives drive practices. Chemical industry wants to incentivise chemical use, equipment manufacturers want to incentivise larger machinery, supermarket duopoly wants to incentivise low prices at the farm gate - we could do with an agency to step up and incentivise farming practices that mean our kids and grandkids don't end up hating us.

  • @ZennExile

    @ZennExile

    3 жыл бұрын

    they will already hate us, but the only thing that matters is that farmers use what's in those giant vats at 19:01. It's called Aerated Compost Tea. It's the secret to all terrestrial life on Earth. It's like plankton is to the Ocean.

  • @williamchamberlain2263

    @williamchamberlain2263

    3 жыл бұрын

    @Mr. Moon riiiiight - all those no-gooders working in the Dept Health, for example

  • @williamchamberlain2263

    @williamchamberlain2263

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@ZennExile if you mean soil bacterial, microorganisms, and nutrients - fine. If you mean _specifically_ Aerated Tea - then you sound a little over-zealous.

  • @ZennExile

    @ZennExile

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@williamchamberlain2263 and when say sht like this you sound a little stupid.

  • @williamchamberlain2263

    @williamchamberlain2263

    3 жыл бұрын

    @Mr. Moon health services are often among the largest government agencies - beside the military - because everyone needs health care. What about government running the military? Would it be better under a feudal-style system of levies?

  • @BluegroperAuWeb
    @BluegroperAuWeb2 жыл бұрын

    Great story and remember the dust bowl in the worst drought in history dumping topsoil across Eastern Australia and on New Zealand. You can see why more farmers are now using regenerative farming practices as droughts increase.

  • @GowthamV07
    @GowthamV072 жыл бұрын

    Atleast someone is doing farming along with nature.

  • @sanjeeva311076
    @sanjeeva3110763 жыл бұрын

    Open minded, smart agriculture minister with the courage of her convictions...I never thought I'd ever respect any politician

  • @anna-lenameijer9942

    @anna-lenameijer9942

    3 жыл бұрын

    What does it take to wake up politicians? Shaking up side down? Let madame Minister write a law against RoundUp too. Then there really is hope.

  • @theamiatufamily3469
    @theamiatufamily34693 жыл бұрын

    Am here after watching "Kiss the Ground" on netflix. So inspirational and educational for me. Gives me hope for our planet so our future generation can enjoy.

  • @howdyshaun6139
    @howdyshaun61392 жыл бұрын

    Just ordered the book, we own 100ac which has been pillaged of all its nutrients over the years and now all it grows is weeds and limestone rock; I look forward to the read.

  • @ARK1phil
    @ARK1phil3 жыл бұрын

    A most excellent story and message. .. many thanks for your commitment..... spreading the word without BS propogander.

  • @ariadnepyanfar1048
    @ariadnepyanfar10483 жыл бұрын

    Mental health sustenance, and ideas for my little hillside patch.

  • @mahjowee20
    @mahjowee203 жыл бұрын

    I'm more intrigued to read his book. Such a well timed post of this video. Kiss the Ground, the movie on netflix was released last week. And emphasises that climate change can be solved by changing Big Ag to apply regenerative farming. Great story. Sincerest best wishes to the Massy family and their brighter and greener farming future ❤

  • @ZennExile

    @ZennExile

    3 жыл бұрын

    all you need to know is "AACT". Aerated Compost Tea is the real story here. Everything else is meaningless.

  • @AmyHopkins_deMereliot

    @AmyHopkins_deMereliot

    3 жыл бұрын

    Well-timed after Kiss The Ground's release hey? Here's hoping the momentum kicks off something big.

  • @greatdane3343

    @greatdane3343

    3 жыл бұрын

    His book is amazing, Marj. Get after it.

  • @MrBilld75

    @MrBilld75

    3 жыл бұрын

    It's a pity that Kiss the Ground, while an excellent flick, has a Vegan agenda with a Vegan narrator, Woody Harrelson. Although I could certainly cite worse Vegan propaganda flicks, for sure. At least this is bringing attention to regen. ag. unlike other flicks by Vegans with a hidden agenda, like The Need To Grow, with NOT ONE mention of regen. ag. just permaculture. Zero mention of animal inputs.

  • @wandaacat

    @wandaacat

    3 жыл бұрын

    Check out Sacred Cow, it will be released soon. Sign up for free viewing. I saw advance copy - it clearly covers benefits of meat and grazing, it is well put together.

  • @thomasadams9346
    @thomasadams93466 ай бұрын

    Thank you Mr Massey for your book. The Reed warbler. Your work plus Alan Savoury, Gabe Brown,Christine Nichols Elaine Ingham is outstanding. We are implementing many of the ideas here in the middle of England, but only starting our journey. The Groundswell show at laycock farm is brilliant. Stepping outside of box, takes courage, God bless you pioneers

  • @nothingbutchappy
    @nothingbutchappy3 жыл бұрын

    This is the future.. Not gas...

  • @conan2735

    @conan2735

    3 жыл бұрын

    this for agriculture, and nuclear fusion for energy.

  • @dynolandsculptor1967

    @dynolandsculptor1967

    3 жыл бұрын

    This is the future along with natural hydroelectric and solar energy !

  • @DragonFae16
    @DragonFae163 жыл бұрын

    I'm not a farmer, but it really makes sense. If you take care of the land, the land will take care of you.

  • @zoekenny3619
    @zoekenny36193 жыл бұрын

    Wow a good news story about farming and the environment! Here's to hoping that some kind of sea change is coming🤞

  • @michaelellard4664
    @michaelellard46643 жыл бұрын

    Very enjoyable video and good news for once.

  • @jamesduff6937
    @jamesduff69377 ай бұрын

    Bloody loved it! Thank you for all your hard work, education and research to solve such a big problem and to share your wisdom with the community. It was so good to hear that the farmers aren't so stressed out too.

  • @samantaray
    @samantaray3 жыл бұрын

    Love you Charlie and Fiona Massy and your inspiring kids (...Tanya, little Hamish), Ian and Di Haggerty and all our wonderful regenerative farmers, Dr Patrice Newell, Anthony James. ♡♡♡ Regenerative farmers have better mental health. Blessings!

  • @lisadolan689
    @lisadolan6892 ай бұрын

    This is my favourite video on KZread

  • @islandgardener158
    @islandgardener1583 жыл бұрын

    This is awesome, keep up the great work AU!

  • @padraigsisk4057
    @padraigsisk40573 жыл бұрын

    Great clip. Every country needs successful farming industry. If that means taking a step back but have to be backed by central government. Well done to Charles and his family.

  • @carbonpositiveaustralia
    @carbonpositiveaustralia Жыл бұрын

    Well. Done Aussies👏

  • @rozzziee6525
    @rozzziee65253 жыл бұрын

    Fantastic!! Well done all.

  • @jo-annepyrke1296
    @jo-annepyrke1296 Жыл бұрын

    Just amazing what this farmer Charles Massey has achieved...To change practises to save farmers and their farms.And their income....Allana Mctiernan bravo you have got courage to back this....

  • @schmetterling4477

    @schmetterling4477

    11 ай бұрын

    There are always more than enough people on the internet who are proving day in and day out that they didn't pay attention in high school chemistry. ;-)

  • @anakamhi7097
    @anakamhi70973 жыл бұрын

    This is incredible! Thank you for making this. I hope more farmers do the same as for the rest if us city dwellers we can do the same but in small scale. 🙏🏼

  • @christopherscobie
    @christopherscobie3 жыл бұрын

    Permaculture ideas been around forever. Pity people arrive there after so much suffering.. nice story. Thanks. Way to go.

  • @ZennExile

    @ZennExile

    3 жыл бұрын

    that's not the story here. The Story is those big vats at 19:01 making Aerated Compost Tea. It's the same secret the ancient people of the Amazon used to cultivate the black soil that the Amazon itself was cultivated with following the Clovis Event that killed off all the North and South American mega fauna around 12,700 years ago.

  • @beewinfield

    @beewinfield

    3 жыл бұрын

    @Riki Rikin kanayin thats an unfair and cynical statement . Permaculture is all about 2 ethics, Earth care and people care. Originators Bill Mollison and David Holmgren were always on the search for ways which didn't require fossil fuel. They certainly were not credit stealers .

  • @kimberlymaxey4349

    @kimberlymaxey4349

    3 жыл бұрын

    @Riki Rikin kanayin man thanks for that someone needed to say it

  • @kimberlymaxey4349

    @kimberlymaxey4349

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@beewinfield okay so what culture did they credit Lakota national um the Hindus amazonians.

  • @MatMcPhee
    @MatMcPhee3 жыл бұрын

    Read the book. The Call of the Reed Warbler - Charles Massy

  • @wendyscott8425

    @wendyscott8425

    3 жыл бұрын

    I love the title!

  • @wandaacat

    @wandaacat

    3 жыл бұрын

    Wonderful, wonderful book 🌱

  • @aeronwynschache2257
    @aeronwynschache22573 жыл бұрын

    Yes! Let's get these types of projects more funding and support

  • @janetbrewster680
    @janetbrewster6803 жыл бұрын

    I thoroughly enjoyed this video. I hope your farm survived the dreadful fires of this past year. I love Australia and hope that your message and example spreads to those in charge of the land to regenerate it.

  • @steveturpin4242
    @steveturpin42422 ай бұрын

    Taken a few generations to learn about the American Dust Bowl of the 30's...we are now on our way to restore the land, thank goodness.

  • @NikeMS11
    @NikeMS113 жыл бұрын

    Thi shappened in the USA in the mid-west because farmers were doing exactly the same thing...we gotta learn from the past so our future isn’t cyclical in nature and we have to deal with this over and over again.

  • @chongseitmooi2593
    @chongseitmooi25933 жыл бұрын

    Precious exposure of farming methodology n honesty of experience telling

  • @johndinon1730
    @johndinon17303 жыл бұрын

    I saw Charles talk at a seminar in South Australia a couple of years ago . Very inspiring guy

  • @josecamara9517
    @josecamara95175 ай бұрын

    Great work, should be top gvt priority

  • @vivalaleta
    @vivalaleta9 ай бұрын

    "It was a major life shift that cracked their minds open" Reminds me of Gabe Brown. Three years of calamity and it forced him to seek a better way.

  • @jamesduff6937

    @jamesduff6937

    7 ай бұрын

    I liked that saying too. Thanks. I just googled Gabe Brown and will watch some of his videos. Cheers.

  • @vivalaleta

    @vivalaleta

    7 ай бұрын

    @@jamesduff6937 You will not be disappointed. Brown is a grand speaker.

  • @kitsapcraig
    @kitsapcraig3 жыл бұрын

    Wow, mind altering stuff here. Wonderfully informative

  • @santillbrezon2161
    @santillbrezon21613 жыл бұрын

    David marsh and the other farmers that have adopted regenerative farming are wonderful and are very good farmers, hopefully more farmer's will start to farm this way.

  • @lisadolan689
    @lisadolan6892 ай бұрын

    Cooma is god forsaken land. 🥺 What Charlie has done is absolutely incredible! This man should be teaching the WHOLE of Australia about land management

  • @zacharyallen7773
    @zacharyallen77733 жыл бұрын

    The good thing about truth is it shows and spreads, the fact his farm is flourishing will cause other farmers with deteriorating land to follow.

  • @craigperry7376
    @craigperry73763 жыл бұрын

    Really enjoyed the program.

  • @jeffweiss6346
    @jeffweiss63463 жыл бұрын

    It's nice to see people acknowledging the laws of physics and chemistry that preempt any agenda we might have. It's not in the world psyche to see nature as first. Talk of sustainable agriculture is an oxymoron. It assumes an endless supply of repair parts to produce the enormous amounts of food. It would be endless bio-mining. The people that the British replaced were were the finest humans to exist in Australia. They lived in ambient continuity with no deliveries necessary.

  • @saltymonke3682

    @saltymonke3682

    3 жыл бұрын

    and no civilization

  • @credenza1

    @credenza1

    3 жыл бұрын

    The book goes further. It does not propose sustainable agriculture, but regenerative agriculture which increases the fertility and health of soil systems, based on solar energy from photosynthesis and providing for increased productivity. Concerning the virtues of indigenous people, I am sure that most were perfectly decent and kind. Archeological evidence, however, shows there was a certain amount of brutal personal violence as well, particularly to women. Overall, they were probably much like every other population - a mixed bag.

  • @davidhauser2665
    @davidhauser26653 жыл бұрын

    This is the way

  • @timdatoolman83
    @timdatoolman833 жыл бұрын

    Absolutely beautiful

  • @selunrad1276
    @selunrad12763 жыл бұрын

    Its nice to see this vids. I hope I can apply it here in my farm in the Philippines.

  • @normsawyer4192
    @normsawyer41923 жыл бұрын

    Good on you

  • @annburge291
    @annburge2913 жыл бұрын

    Very inspiring. It's a step in the right direction. I would have liked a little more detail about what was done in creek beds, the design of reforestation considering the flow of fire through the landscape, how the farm animals are controlled and moved so grazing is controlled, the roll of native animals as part of the landscape, design of water flow and wind flow... how quickly carbon can be built in the soil... bit more technical data along side the personal story of a great farmer....

  • @wendyscott8425

    @wendyscott8425

    3 жыл бұрын

    You ask a lot to be covered in half an hour. LOL But there are books, and lots of videos on KZread. I've been watching KZread videos about regenerative agriculture for over a year now, and I still haven't watched them all.

  • @beewinfield
    @beewinfield3 жыл бұрын

    Wonderful show, thank you Aussie Story . I applaude Charles, the Minister for Agriculture in WA Alannah MacTiernan and the regenerative farmers featured. But surly the Farmers federation President is unfit for her job? There was only one stick in the mud on the show, and Fiona was it. Perhaps the chemicals have affected her, but she seems unable to grasp the damage done by chemical agriculture to the land, to farming families and to consumers. Wake up Fiona and LISTEN.

  • @aurorad3522
    @aurorad35225 ай бұрын

    America did this in the Great Plains that started with besutiful soil. Regenerative farming is the only way forward. Help farmers & ranchers make a living, not just struggle to survive!

  • @santillbrezon2161
    @santillbrezon21613 жыл бұрын

    These people are very nice poeple and this is an interesting video.

  • @ithinksustainable
    @ithinksustainable3 жыл бұрын

    I loved it! Thank you so much Charles Massy!! Do you think reader/viewer Sustainable too? ♻️

  • @josecamara9517
    @josecamara95175 ай бұрын

    This should be top priority for gvt, without good soil there is no food

  • @fandangoyoga
    @fandangoyoga3 жыл бұрын

    I love this story. It is so encouraging without using chemicals. Thank-you Charlie!

  • @pierrerossouw6083
    @pierrerossouw60833 жыл бұрын

    I live in the city but I believe the essence remains. In 2016 we had a flood that stripped the last of our remaining top soil. Combine that with 35 years of mismanagement and I returned home, from abroad, to a garden that resembled brick paving. For the past two years I have been fanatical, preaching soil rehabilitation to anyone that would listen. Nature wants to live and thrive. This season alone I have tomato, onion, potato, sweet potato, garlic, butternut, gem squash, beets, carrots, every variety of capsicum; not to mention about a dozen herbs. I might even plant a cannabis plant one of these days! No chemicals, fungicides or any dodgy additive. Even if I rehabilitate 20cm of soil a day I am happy. It's been blood, sweat and tears, but, the carpet of blue rock vine and lemon daylily that greeted me today made it all worthwhile. Videos like this inspire me and reassure me I've chosen the right path. If we all take responsibility for our little patch of earth . . . just imagine . . . .

  • @daz7122

    @daz7122

    3 жыл бұрын

    Push local politicians to get low level prisoners mobilised in the fight to regenerate land, better than leaving them in crim university.

  • @jamesduff6937

    @jamesduff6937

    7 ай бұрын

    @@daz7122 Brilliant idea. And it would give them a good education and purpose too. It would help them a lot.

  • @The1stLumiens
    @The1stLumiens3 жыл бұрын

    100% agree. We need to look at the land as if we were its stewards.

  • @ZennExile

    @ZennExile

    3 жыл бұрын

    no, what we need to do is grow trillions of tiny little stewards and put them back to their evolutionary purpose. At 19:01 those vats are bubbling together what is know as AACT, Aerated Compost Tea. They are breeding vats for oxygen loving bacteria and fungus that serve a very specific purpose in the soil. To provide the EXACT amount of nutrients any and ALL plantlife needs to thrive. Humans trying to be the stewards themselves is why nearly 40% of global farmland is poisoned and dying.

  • @wendyscott8425

    @wendyscott8425

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@ZennExile Do you expect to sell a lot of those giant vats here on this thread?

  • @hokokkeongjimmy6533
    @hokokkeongjimmy65339 ай бұрын

    When our land is healthy, we will be healthy ❤

  • @shaneemanuelle6243
    @shaneemanuelle62433 жыл бұрын

    The most important story to tell

  • @ZennExile

    @ZennExile

    3 жыл бұрын

    no, the real story is about those giant Vats at 19:01. Everything else is nonsense. Those vats contain Aerated Compost Tea and that is the real secret to all of this, and to literally all terrestrial life on this planet.

  • @wendyscott8425

    @wendyscott8425

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@ZennExile Are you an Aerated Compost Tea vat salesman?

  • @schdifn4025
    @schdifn40253 жыл бұрын

    Hero! ...

  • @altha-rf1et
    @altha-rf1et3 жыл бұрын

    Looks like the same thing that happened here in the USA the Dust Bowl during the Depression

  • @trevorsnuggs3193
    @trevorsnuggs3193 Жыл бұрын

    Thank you American audience here I get your message and I'm doing my part

  • @EarthloveGlobal
    @EarthloveGlobal3 жыл бұрын

    Mycorestoration Services is the solution to current challenges. Totally agree Charlie Massy

  • @zodjenkins2595
    @zodjenkins25953 жыл бұрын

    good story thumbs up

  • @darkhunter135
    @darkhunter1353 жыл бұрын

    Peter Andrews was talking about regenerative and drought proofing farms years ago.

  • @xyooj96
    @xyooj963 жыл бұрын

    brilliant man

  • @loricochran4692
    @loricochran46923 жыл бұрын

    Knf drake, and chris trump are great teachers as well. They practice Korean natural farming, worth a look.

  • @loricochran4692

    @loricochran4692

    3 жыл бұрын

    No relation to the president.

  • @mikeefoss
    @mikeefoss3 жыл бұрын

    Legend...

  • @neilrowe119
    @neilrowe119 Жыл бұрын

    So good

  • @guydauderman1645
    @guydauderman16457 ай бұрын

    Charlie Massy is the Allen Savory for Australia

  • @sunraylight8
    @sunraylight8 Жыл бұрын

    Wow!

  • @panchamama
    @panchamama Жыл бұрын

    A national treasure

  • @rmar127
    @rmar127 Жыл бұрын

    Farmers need to make a living. Selling the economic benefits of regen agriculture is the way to bring them on board.

  • @BoggWeasel
    @BoggWeasel3 жыл бұрын

    Corporate farming and retail of food pushes farmers to overwork and destroy land as shareholders demand higher growth and return on their investment, farmers get paid less to produce more. Once the land and profit disappears, shareholders move on to something else leaving behind a wasteland and broken farms.

  • @trishhoney2172
    @trishhoney21723 жыл бұрын

    Make the whole world No Till Organic and Regenerative NOW

  • @credenza1

    @credenza1

    3 жыл бұрын

    RA is a very good and necessary response to land degradation. Making people do things by force is not a good idea. That is a large part of the problem with the Green movement and its allies - it tends to favour totalitarian force over calm, respectful dialogue. The former creates resistance, the latter invites authentic change.

  • @richarddaniel2416
    @richarddaniel24163 жыл бұрын

    Great story, 40 years ago I was taught and practised bio dynamics, everyone around me thought I was a nut case...education continues and the results prove them selves.

  • @checle4499
    @checle44993 жыл бұрын

    Doing what you love instead of being trapped by what you do is the better choice. I follow Joel Salatin, have 50 years worth of "Mother" here in the US and there is no way to put a price on what people like Mr. Massey and others are teaching us. It is time to think about the big picture and how it is all interconnected. The health of one is health for all.

  • @AlexandreLollini
    @AlexandreLollini3 жыл бұрын

    Soil covering can deal with part of the zetajoules of Earth energy imbalance, if farmers do their job and the other guys do theirs too. On my terrain, covering the soil with woodchips enabled me to reduce watering. I see a lot more birds too. that and terraces are important to combat aridity.

  • @unstoppableExodia
    @unstoppableExodia3 жыл бұрын

    The guv needs to incentivize farmers to adopt regenerative farming. There should be no reason for farming to be comparable with mining

  • @ZennExile

    @ZennExile

    3 жыл бұрын

    No, the only thing they need to do is provide training in the generation of Aerated Compost Tea (in those big vats 19:01 ) and a complete ban on all industrial fertilizers. AACT is all any farmer needs to provide any and all plant life with absolute perfect nutrition.

  • @petawatson5120

    @petawatson5120

    3 жыл бұрын

    The tea is a very good interrum step while paddocks are regaining top soil and rebuilding the nutrient cycle. Once properly regenerated, it should not be needed because the soil biology and cover crop residue will be creating the compost and the worms in the soil will be putting it precisely where its needed without any blowing away in the wind, washing off, or causing short rooted plants (long roots have greater access to water and hold on to soils better). Its a great step on the way, and alot better than synthetics.

  • @wendyscott8425

    @wendyscott8425

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@ZennExile Those big vats cost a lot of money no doubt, so that's not something a person just starting out in this may be able to afford. I'm also not a fan of spreading that stuff with those huge tractors that smash down the soil and mess with the microbiome. Again, money should be spent on stuff that makes you money, like livestock, especially at first when you don't have a lot of profits from your business yet.

  • @ZennExile

    @ZennExile

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@wendyscott8425 is there something wrong with your brain?

  • @ZennExile

    @ZennExile

    3 жыл бұрын

    @akbrs it's a legitimate question. It's only insulting if the answer you imagine is yes.

  • @juliankirby9880
    @juliankirby98803 жыл бұрын

    It starts with home and commercial business treating thier lawns with regenerative methods. And home gardeners using them in their own gardens. With out normal people doing it we can’t expect it to be commercially viable for big agriculture to try and replicate these methods to try and participate in the market of sustainable food products. It may start out more expensive but make it desirable for the corporations to become sustainable!

  • @paulwhelan7781
    @paulwhelan77813 жыл бұрын

    Everyone read his book Call of the Reed Warbler it is a inspiring wonderful insightful book.

  • @soilwaterx
    @soilwaterx3 жыл бұрын

    At Rescaype UK we help land mangers increase speed of their soil regenerative process. From a 5 year LEY farming process to a 12 month Rescaype process! Biodegradable and proven, m-PAM is the quickest and best way to start and then allow the natural process to actually have production route with little interruption to ongoing productivity.

  • @peterdesborough7193
    @peterdesborough71933 жыл бұрын

    I would like to hear more about treating the causes, rather than treati g the symptoms. Also what role has the application of calcium,if any has played.

  • @janelightning73
    @janelightning733 жыл бұрын

    U.S. also had a massive dust bowl when settlers plowed up every shred of prairie grass. Then, they killed all the wolves & coyotes. Massive plague of jack rabbits resulted, who ate all the crops. Ken Burns did a documentary.

  • @Kannot2023
    @Kannot20233 жыл бұрын

    The problem is the economic system, when you have to pay loans, you cannot reduce farm output

  • @Paraclef

    @Paraclef

    3 жыл бұрын

    money is not real.... this is slavery

  • @ggmoneylol
    @ggmoneylol3 жыл бұрын

    Lets all buy farms and start holistic grazing

  • @sunraylight8
    @sunraylight8 Жыл бұрын

    Basic human rights is not poison on plants and animal using harmful chemicals thats is agriculture rachel carson... i inspire on this book my name is ray vincent tan i am philosophy student friend of RIED WISEMAN ISS ASTRONAUT :) AND FIRST YOUNG FILIPINO ASTRONAUT GO ON FARTHEST ON SPACE ON ASTEROIDS... I LIKE THE VIDEO IT GIVES FOR ME A MORAL OF HOPE TO MAKE LIFE ON PLANTS BY PLANTING...

  • @kotahurt
    @kotahurt2 жыл бұрын

    Hope you is getting rain out there Charlie

  • @russellgillick7637
    @russellgillick76373 жыл бұрын

    Farmers need to get out of the 1850's go past the Liberal party who are in the 1950's And look at what it's GOING to be like in the 2050's if we stick with the same outdated ideologies, fears and greed.

  • @decem_unosquattro9538
    @decem_unosquattro95383 жыл бұрын

    How will farmers deal with the chemical corporations, the machinery corporations? They wont want no chemicals thats for sure. Same with machinery. You better start prepping for propaganda and strong arm tactics.

  • @tophercIaus

    @tophercIaus

    3 жыл бұрын

    They've been pushing back against this movement for a long time already. The message is still getting across.

  • @wandaacat

    @wandaacat

    3 жыл бұрын

    We the public/the consumer can incentivise farmers more than any other thing - ask loudly everywhere you go for food grown regeneratively... if a farmer knows there is profit they will persue this way of farming. Young farmers particularly are wanting to persue this way... let’s encourage them!

  • @wendyscott8425

    @wendyscott8425

    3 жыл бұрын

    To answer your question, I think the farmers will ignore them. No one makes them buy all that stuff. It's not that hard to say no when you're having to write big checks.

  • @anakamhi7097

    @anakamhi7097

    3 жыл бұрын

    So glad the documentary kiss the ground from Netflix got made so the general public is aware

  • @wendyscott8425

    @wendyscott8425

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@anakamhi7097 I really enjoyed that movie. A few people in it I was already familiar with, too, so that was very cool.

  • @sunraylight8
    @sunraylight8 Жыл бұрын

    Whoa whao philosophy? I never read biography of philosophy it amaze its true but I goosebump! Ohw... the ancient philosopher... i read it on Aristole plato and socrates about plants they say on idea.

  • @jrtaylor1275
    @jrtaylor12753 жыл бұрын

    Hi it’s God here.. There’s a natural desalination effect that I made in the laws of nature.. above the canopy of forests that draws water off the ocean, the forest canopy creates a ‘feedback loop’ asking for the rain to be attracted to where it needs to go. I made everything in the universe reciprocal..

  • @wendyscott8425

    @wendyscott8425

    3 жыл бұрын

    It isn't only forests that do that. Grasslands are huge attractors of water, putting rain and dew back into the soil and keeping it there in case of drought. They also attract carbon, putting it back into the soil and keeping it there to grow the microbiome and the plants that feed it and thrive because of it. The more carbon in the soil, the less CO2 in the air. Regenerative ag people have claimed that with only a 1% increase in soil carbon in half the farms of the world (I may have this wrong, but it's big), we would go back to CO2 levels equal to what they were before the industrial revolution. We wouldn't even have to cut back on energy use. Fossil fuel pollution would be sucked out of the air and put into the soil through photosynthesis. A lot of regenerative farmers have increased their soil carbon over thousands of acres of land by way more than 1%, so you can just imagine what would happen if everyone raised our food this way.

  • @SILSAL67
    @SILSAL67 Жыл бұрын

    It's not a matter of being bad .....it's a matter of being wrong. Humans hate being wrong. But, it happens. You can be wrong and figure out how to be right. Life depends on it.

  • @schmetterling4477

    @schmetterling4477

    11 ай бұрын

    Yes, everybody who pretends that regenerative farming is the solution is wrong. :-)

  • @regiodeurse6513
    @regiodeurse65133 жыл бұрын

    overgrazing they say.. Not once mentioning tillage not once mentioning bare winter kills with herbicides. Grazing is the answer..

  • @wendyscott8425

    @wendyscott8425

    3 жыл бұрын

    They only had half an hour. Can't cover everything about this in half an hour. :)