Groundswell Agriculture

Groundswell Agriculture

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  • @margittwentyman-jones6707
    @margittwentyman-jones6707Күн бұрын

    Great stuff guys. So interesting.

  • @johnfowler4820
    @johnfowler48202 күн бұрын

    I worked in conventional intensive and extensive agriculture for many years. I was of course exposed to many chemicals in the UK and Australia. I became chemically sensitive and can attest to this doctors example of a patient who can not now be in close contact with someone wearing perfume.

  • @rabkad5673
    @rabkad56732 күн бұрын

    Ditch the '30 plants a week'

  • @vivalaleta
    @vivalaletaКүн бұрын

    Why?

  • @joanhunter7234
    @joanhunter7234Күн бұрын

    @@vivalaleta Look into lectins, oxalates, etc. Plants are not always safe! They have defense mechanisms, which harm predators, US! They can't run so these defense mechanisms serve them well.

  • @peterclark6290
    @peterclark62902 күн бұрын

    Governments can only screw up. That is the most consistent outcome when people interested in power step in to _fix the problem._ A feature of every history book on any topic. They can't help themselves, their ego, their legacy, their clique are breathing hard on the back of their necks. Open Markets is the human solution where there are no places for these people to tell anyone what to do, to think, to sell or buy. Adam Smith: read and understand or slot right into *part of the problem* strata.

  • @infocat13
    @infocat136 күн бұрын

    Let’s study AMP under photovoltaic panels:)

  • @melbradley1397
    @melbradley139710 күн бұрын

    So good to finally watch this as missed it at Groundswell. Exciting to hear about the 'true cost of food' project with Deloitte - what a massive gap that will fill

  • @vivalaleta
    @vivalaleta12 күн бұрын

    Gabe Brown! I got googoo eyed when he said that name.

  • @vivalaleta
    @vivalaleta12 күн бұрын

    Unbroken prairie is fragile soil? I don't understand that remark at all.

  • @vivalaleta
    @vivalaleta12 күн бұрын

    Great speakers. We love regenerative agriculture.

  • @janetjohnson998
    @janetjohnson99813 күн бұрын

    For the US and loving how there are there are so many here on the same page. Carbon Cowboys

  • @Robert-un6uu
    @Robert-un6uu13 күн бұрын

    Hellooooo there is no fibre in animal foods!!!!! There are no phytochemicals in animal foods!!!! Where are you getting your information????? People can say anything and have someone believe it .

  • @vivalaleta
    @vivalaleta14 күн бұрын

    A wonderful future for farmers awaits. It's win win. Gabe Brown has a great story about over coming agricultural adversity and finding his way to regenerative ag.

  • @larrysiders1
    @larrysiders116 күн бұрын

    Artificial Intelligence CAN RIGHT NOW.... Write a John Kempf Compendium Book.... based on all of his public publications and KZread Videos and Podcasts.

  • @johnhawkins973
    @johnhawkins97316 күн бұрын

    The honesty of using the f word whilst you spoke made me laugh😅 wish i had done that there a few years ago😢

  • @fredblogd8448
    @fredblogd844816 күн бұрын

    Keep governments and corporations out of it

  • @PaulBakes-e7q
    @PaulBakes-e7q17 күн бұрын

    Can anyone point me in the right direction with bacillus bacteria please? I assume they're brewed and mixed in the sprayer?

  • @charlespaynter8987
    @charlespaynter898717 күн бұрын

    The parts of this presentation that show growers coming to terms with what they’ve been doing and then facing up to the need for change, which can be very daunting, are hugely powerful. It’s a bit like realising that how you’ve lived your life and brought your kids up has been heading in a wrong direction and that you’ve actually ended up, in some important aspects, doing the opposite of what you thought was right. As a farmer myself, I know this feeling. Credit to all involved in this film for their honesty and basic decency👏

  • @HawkMillFarm
    @HawkMillFarm19 күн бұрын

    Brilliant to be about to catch up on this having missed it on the day. 👏👏 to everyone that made the whole event such a success again.

  • @abhimagarwal
    @abhimagarwal20 күн бұрын

    Amazing conversation! Really enjoyed learning more about what's next

  • @user-hd2uy4ml4q
    @user-hd2uy4ml4q20 күн бұрын

    Снижение давления в шинах - частичное снижение их влияния на пористость почвы. Фермеру приходится выполнять работу на поле и в условиях повышенной влажности почвы, что существенно снижает пористость почвы даже при уменьшения давлениях в шинах! В но-тилле выход есть. Это переход на постоянные большие полевые гряды - все машины должны двигаться только по одной колее! Кроме того, следует полностью отказаться от дисковых сошников! Они также существенно уменьшают пористость почвы. В результате корневая система имеет форму "ирокеза"! Reducing tire pressure is a partial reduction in their effect on soil porosity. The farmer has to work in the field and in conditions of high soil moisture, which significantly reduces soil porosity even with reduced tire pressure! There is a way out in no-till. This is a transition to permanent large field ridges - all cars must move on only one track! In addition, disc coulters should be completely abandoned! They also significantly reduce soil porosity. As a result, the root system has a “Mohawk” shape!

  • @regenerativegardeningwithpatti
    @regenerativegardeningwithpatti20 күн бұрын

    Great chat John and Keon. I appricate your work. I prefer to listen to long form podcast. I find them more interesting and informative than reading books or white papers. I feel as throw I have connected to the people and their stories in the interviews! Thank you.

  • @LindsayEngers
    @LindsayEngers20 күн бұрын

    Great to welcome John to the UK!

  • @peterclark6290
    @peterclark629020 күн бұрын

    The confluence of two factors makes Regen farming at scale relatively simple to achieve. The expanding influence of the carnivore diet (optimally set at only consuming fatty ruminant meat, salt and water: for some and eventually most as old attitudes towards food die out) and the gentle nature of pastoral use of arable land should see (a) billions of acres returned to wildlife and recreation, (b) restoration of entire ecosystems (where possible), (c) clean water rivers and lakes, and (d) drought-proofing the little bit that remains for human use. However the best place to raise hearty, common sense kids is on a farm so many smaller farms are better for society.

  • @b_uppy
    @b_uppy21 күн бұрын

    If you couple restorative ag (over more general regenerative ag) with hyperlocalized earthworks to harvest rainwater, --we can increase the amount of land that sequesters carbon. These earthworks would reduce muddy water washing carbon/topsoil to the ocean, instead being carbon sinks. They would also increase regreening and further draw down carbon in areas long historically lost to overdrying conditions. This increases the area of carbon sequestration. Rainwater harvesting earthworks can be made just about anywhere, including cities in the form of bioswales. Bioswales are planted depressions using native or other biome appropriate plants that allow water to quickly soak excess rainwater runoff. They may have curbcuts and harvest streetwater, or handle roof runoff, etc. They can accumulate windblown trash for easy collection, add beauty, sense of place; reduce ambient temperatures; reduce paving buckling, ground subsidence, brownouts (because irrigation draws a lot of energy to pump it), crime; increases walkability/bikeability; reduce home cooling and heating costs; reduce heat island effects; irrigation costs; reduces flooding, drought and heatwave impacts; etc. Parking lot landscaping can easily convert existing landscaping to bioswales to reduce infrastructure expansion costs as well as maintenance costs. It's win-win-win...

  • @peterclark6290
    @peterclark629020 күн бұрын

    CO₂ is not the GHG some (less honest) humans want it to be. 2. To get cleaner open water (rivers, lakes), restore water tables, resist drought, etc. farmers et.al. create armoured, aggregated soil that soak up rain where it fell at very high infiltration rates. 3. Swales can create downstream springs which weren't there before when that land was selected for other uses, oops. You need to think deeper grasshopper. Start by proving a trace gas @ .042%, Spec.Grav 1.5, has any part in Earth's climate except to indicate an Ice age has _officially_ ended. Like the scientists do.

  • @b_uppy
    @b_uppy20 күн бұрын

    @@peterclark6290 Lol, you are asking the wrong person to discuss climate change. I am trying to improve soil, regreen and recharge groundwater in a hyperlocaluzed way, and harvesting rainwater, changing ag methods, etc. I think it's more important to work on building resources than to solve for controversial claims about human caused climate change. Try your argumentation elsewhere where it will matter more.

  • @peterclark6290
    @peterclark629020 күн бұрын

    @@b_uppy Carbon sequestration is a climate change mantra. If your goal as stated above are true then why haven't you discovered the _soil sponge_ argument provided by Regen as the first major benefit of its practises? You are miles away from seeing the bigger picture.

  • @DCR2301
    @DCR230121 күн бұрын

    Great talk nichole madam🎉🎉🎉🙏🙏🙏, from India🇮🇳

  • @victorjre
    @victorjre22 күн бұрын

    "BTW, it means plants are not vegetarian" 😂

  • @inigomontoya8943
    @inigomontoya894323 күн бұрын

    John was in prime form here.

  • @James-ol2fr
    @James-ol2fr23 күн бұрын

    John Kempf spoke at groundswell!!! I'm so excited, I may wet my plants : ) Thanks, all, for putting this on! -Kat

  • @tommybreen9677
    @tommybreen967724 күн бұрын

    Can’t believe we need this kinda science to tell us growing plants are beneficial. How’s out of touch have we become

  • @inigomontoya8943
    @inigomontoya894323 күн бұрын

    When we have multi billion dollar marketing budgets trying to gaslight farmers into purchasing their “solutions“ that’s what it takes. We need to cross our T’s and dot our i’s. But yes, the truth is plain to see science or not.

  • @ollievw3450
    @ollievw345025 күн бұрын

    Nice, Peter is coming to KZN at a mere 10 minutes drive from my farm (I am Dutch myself). Won’t be able to make it myself, which is a massive disappointment, but I have told everyone I know in the vicinity to attend. Have fun there, SA is great and the people are fantastic. There are lots of little signs everywhere that people are getting into regenerative farming, I am sure his words will hit fertile soil.

  • @sookibeulah9331
    @sookibeulah933123 күн бұрын

    What’s SA and KZN?

  • @carboncowboys
    @carboncowboys21 күн бұрын

    @@sookibeulah9331 South Africa and Kwazulu Natal

  • @triciahill216
    @triciahill21625 күн бұрын

    Great stuff! Thank you, Peter!

  • @mitchell9782
    @mitchell978226 күн бұрын

    Woooo!

  • @johnhawkins973
    @johnhawkins97326 күн бұрын

    This very awesome as advanced knowledge and distilling it down to field scale is possible..cheers Mr K

  • @johnfowler4820
    @johnfowler482026 күн бұрын

    Brilliant. " Teaming with bacteria" by Jeff Lowenfels is a great book about the rhizophagy cycle. Explains it for the layperson. Thank you so much for uploading this lecture.

  • @geog8964
    @geog896426 күн бұрын

    quite true.

  • @smoath
    @smoath26 күн бұрын

    Within minutes the carbon lie is assumed true. We need more, for greater plant life. Many scientists have debunked this narrative.

  • @rikkilee9409
    @rikkilee940927 күн бұрын

    for foliar spray make sure you use fulvic rather than humic. they are out of the same batch but the fulvic has a smaller mol. weight so it penetrates better than humic acid. fulvic-foliat humic -roots

  • @rikkilee9409
    @rikkilee940927 күн бұрын

    good job dude, I great supp. to Harley smiths 3 45 min videos (5-7 years back if u search) watch Harley b4 this

  • @roberthakker5456
    @roberthakker5456Ай бұрын

    I have not found any other practical academic like Mr. Perkins. Knowledge, analytics, application, fiscal responsibility and innovation are his diligence and success. Nice work Sir. P.S. There should be 50,000 comments here. But farmers don't talk much.

  • @roberthakker5456
    @roberthakker5456Ай бұрын

    My son intends to farm better than you. (I love my son and wish him well.) Mr. Perkins sets the bar. I respect his call that he has the cleanest, most organized, productive, & efficient farm out there. There may be ones as good, but I have not seen one.

  • @abittwisted
    @abittwistedАй бұрын

    Business continues because the uneducated consumers want convenient food and clothing and transportation and energy needs. They don’t want the responsibility so just accept what is placed in front of them that is decided by some companies boards of directors on what they will make and sell. If the consumers were not into convenience in everything they would better be able to control what the businesses sell. If the consumer doesn’t buy the companies won’t sell. I promote growing flax for fiber and then process that then spin it then weave it then make the clothing or at least participate in any one of the steps so there is an abundant supply of natural fiber for clothing. Im doing all the steps. Im not very artistic but focus more on plain utility clothing. Fancy is not my focus. So we need to teach then convince the people they don’t need the plastic clothing and they don’t need to spend a fortune on clothing. The cost is way too high even for organic, be it food, fiber or meat. It should be way cheaper, I support small business and small manufactures and not huge concrete jungles full of concrete buildings full of mega machines run by robots. I want people to be fully involved and hands on vs lazy and watching robots do the work.

  • @MrLalasd
    @MrLalasdАй бұрын

    2:50 sounds like fascism. Minority oppress majority.

  • @tomwalsh96
    @tomwalsh96Ай бұрын

    Wait until she learns about polyester, nylon and acrylic

  • @johnfowler4820
    @johnfowler4820Ай бұрын

    A brave and passionate person bringing us a key part of the compassionate future that must be facilitated by all of us. Not just the young Folk who simply require it for their survival. Thank you Groundswell for helping the world to see that change is possible.

  • @rajivkapoor7rk50
    @rajivkapoor7rk502 ай бұрын

    ❤❤❤

  • @geoffreynhill2833
    @geoffreynhill28332 ай бұрын

    I've yet to see mushrooms walking around, Merlin ! (at 1:46 ) 😉

  • @jorgecamachofitopatologo
    @jorgecamachofitopatologo2 ай бұрын

    excellent information, I love Nicole, and already read her BOOK

  • @nowherepeople3431
    @nowherepeople34312 ай бұрын

    Taxation without representation eh? Will George allow the British people to have a say on immigration without being shouted down?

  • @nowherepeople3431
    @nowherepeople34312 ай бұрын

    If all of these questions about yield and being able to feed everyone are so critical why are governments intent on growing western populations through mass immigration?

  • @nowherepeople3431
    @nowherepeople34312 ай бұрын

    Yes, let’s live on lab grown slop. Let’s get people off the land, let it become a restricted zone and an irrelevance to them once they live in smart cities. The real pollution is people.