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Ray Archuleta, Ademir Calegari, and Ben Taylor-Davies discuss regenerative arable farming

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Welcome to the 9th of the monthly expert panel discussions. As I mentioned before, each month Iā€™ll be hosting discussions and debates between some of the most prominent voices in regenerative agriculture, soil science, restoration land management and more.


In this session I hosted a discussion on regenerative arable farming with my friends and colleagues at Climate Farmers, a non-profit organization working to build the infrastructure to scale regenerative agriculture in Europe.
In this panel I invited three of the most experienced and influential educators in the field of arable farming from the USA, Brazil, and England.

Arable farming is often the first agricultural practice that comes under fire with criticisms about industrial ag, the troubles of monocropping, tillage, chemical use, and many of the other management methods that need to be abandoned are most closely associated with large scale grain and legume production. Yet cultivation of annual crops, especially grains, are some of the oldest cultivars from the dawn of agriculture itself. Though itā€™s still common practice to destroy the ecology of a piece of land to produce these products, thereā€™s still potential to regenerate that ecology if we can move beyond the paradigm of recent decades and learn from natural biological processes.


Donā€™t forget that if you want to hear the full, unedited version of this interview with the entire Q&A session at the end, be sure to check out the different subscription options on the Regenerative Skills Patreon page.
Since these discussions are longer than the regular weekly episodes, Iā€™ll keep the intro short and jump right into the introductions for our panelists.

Links:

https://www.agroforestry.org/the-overstory/337-overstory-261-alley-cropping

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