Farm On

Follow Farm On
Share on
Copy link to clipboard

Hosted by Joe Phillips. New episodes monthly. Conversations with agriculturists, artists and activists on the front lines of the food movement. Subscribe on iTunes, or wherever you get your podcasts. To hear more episodes or to read my essays on everything from zucchini to Zen, visit dharmaonthefa…

Joe Phillips


    • Apr 18, 2018 LATEST EPISODE
    • infrequent NEW EPISODES
    • 57m AVG DURATION
    • 27 EPISODES


    Search for episodes from Farm On with a specific topic:

    Latest episodes from Farm On

    FARM ON #27 - Making our art & our lives with LAURA DUNN

    Play Episode Listen Later Apr 18, 2018 57:06


    LAURA DUNN is a filmmaker based in Austin Texas who directed a documentary called THE UNFORESEEN, as well as a more recent documentary which is the focus of our conversation: LOOK & SEE: A PORTRAIT OF WENDELL BERRY. The film is available on Netflix and I can't recommend it enough. Laura and Wendell have a similar approach to their work, in that they are not putting themselves out there as a personality to shine brighter than the content of the work itself. Look & See isn't merely a biopic with a message, but it's capturing the essence of a person, in this case a giant of the written word, someone who is as illusive as he is influential. You will hear me try (and fail) to persuade Laura to get her two executive producers - Terence Malick and Robert Redford - to come on the show. You will also hear street noise, chirping birds, and a chatty toddler in the background (Laura conducted this phone conversation while walking her 2 year old to sleep).You will also hear the conviction of an artist who is using her chosen medium - film - to ask essential questions about the nature of life as we experience it, and all the contradictions and vulnerability that comes from such an inquisition. Laura certainly embodies a notable quote by Berry that goes: "when we are making our art, we are also making our lives. and I'm sure the reverse is equally true". Find the film here: https://lookandseefilm.com/

    FARM ON #26 - Peeling back the layers with DAVID METTLER

    Play Episode Listen Later Mar 13, 2018 64:24


    DAVID METTLER is a nice guy who happens to be married to my good friend Kim. We occasionally bump into each other to eat and/or drink things over pleasant conversation. He's quite tall. Sometimes he is bearded. Other times, not so much. David works as a freelance writer, producer and director of nonfiction tv and film in New York. He's worked across multiple genres for networks including History Channel, MTV, PBS, Discovery Channel, etc. David is most interested in telling stories that tie specific personal experiences of subjects together with larger social, historical, and cultural patterns. He is currently finishing a one hour documentary for MSNBC about the Iran-Contra affair. But the gist of our conversation revolves around one of two wonderful episodes David wrote and directed for the new NETFLIX series ROTTEN. The piece we dig into is called GARLIC BREATH, a story that involves intrigue, scandal, greed, heroism, and yes, lots and lots (and lots) of garlic.

    FARM ON #25 - Reflecting on reflections with MELISSA COLEMAN

    Play Episode Listen Later Feb 8, 2018 58:20


    Imagine the scene: it's 1968, and you make the brazen decision to move with your soon-to-be pregnant wife to the country where you build a simple house from trees you cut down by hand, with no power tools. You then raise three children with no electricity or running water, subsisting on a system of vegetable plots that are innovative in the way they harness the innate power of nature. On these 60 acres you become a hero of the Organic movement by teaching apprentices, authoring pivotal books on growing methods, and even creating your own custom handtools that are sold as your signature models decades later. If this bio describes you, then you are ELIOT COLEMAN. Now, imagine that your first daughter, born in the midst of this Back To The Land story and raised on the 60 acres of rugged Maine coastline utterly disconnected from modern society, decides to write a tell-all memoir about her experience, drawing from memories as young as infancy. The book tells of the timeless Summer afternoons, the joyful cycles of life, the struggles of survival, and the deepest recesses of mourning and loss. The book of course is called THIS LIFE IS IN YOUR HANDS, written by MELISSA COLEMAN and published in 2011 by HarperCollins, and it is a precious thing to discover. The first time I read the book, I was just starting my own journey as a grower of things. Many years later after my son was born, the second reading revealed emotional notes that weren't available the first time around. I started my conversation with Melissa asking about what it was like to start her own family, in light of her own extraordinary childhood.

    FARM ON #24 - Going greenhorn with STEVE SUDERMAN

    Play Episode Listen Later Jan 8, 2018 57:21


    Happy new year, and happy birthday to FARM ON! The show is turning one year old, and I want to send a hearty THANK YOU to everyone for tuning in, and sharing these episodes with like-minded folks. As a documentary director and producer, STEVE SUDERMAN has spent the last decade immersing himself in intimate and personal stories of people going through life-altering experiences. This trajectory started with Over Land (2008), a portrait of his own family in crisis as they lose their farm on the Canadian prairies. The bulk of our conversation is on Steve's feature documentary, TO MAKE A FARM. The film follows five young people with urban backgrounds who decide to take up small scale organic farming. Facing daily challenges and overwhelming obstacles their first season on the land, joys and disappointments become a quiet manifesto for social change. To Make A Farm won the Santa Cruz audience choice award as well as three Golden Sheaf awards including Best of Festival in 2012. It was commissioned by TVO. Soon to premiere on TVO and CBC documentary channel is Steve's new feature documentary, BEYOND THE SPECTRUM. This multi-platform project includes a theatrical documentary and mobile app. The film delves into the story of a family grappling with their two-year-old son's autism diagnosis. The accompanying free app (My Autism Passport), created through a partnership with St. Michael's Hospital in Toronto, is designed to help parents plan, navigate and manage their child’s developmental treatment journey after they have received an autism diagnosis. Follow Steve's films at his website: http://www.orangevilleroad.com

    FARM ON #23 - Designing for resistance with the BEEHIVE DESIGN COLLECTIVE

    Play Episode Listen Later Dec 27, 2017 56:36


    Ever heard of Mesoamerica? I'll be honest. I was clueless about the place until I stumbled on the work of today's guest. Mesoamerica is a cultural and geographic region that forms a thin land bridge (or isthmus) between North and South America and the Atlantic and Pacific Oceans—and is one of the most biodiverse areas on the planet. Mesoamerica is also a Mega-development free trade disaster zone. A conduit for extractive industries from global South to global North. A monopoly board for international banks. A justification for CIA profits thanks to the ongoing so-called War on Drugs. A militarized zone. A roulette wheel where corporations spill blood for bananas. Mesoamerica is caught between the trade winds of the dark North cloud that rains down violence, toxins, and cultural thievery - and the hurricane of the climate-changed South that rips through already marginalized communities, opening the door for disaster capitalism. The global East spews a typhoon of mass production, while a whirlwind of disposable consumerism gobbles it up in the global West. King Kool-Aid sails the crowded seas, dumping slavery-made sugar into every processed food in the grocery, while the Burger King Beef Boat tows a few thousand acres of clear-cut farmland, and leaves in its wake massive deforestation due to rampant cattle ranching. And in a twisted version of Noah's Arc, exotic animals snared after such deforestation are shipped far from their native habitat, replaced by cute, fuzzy animatronic icons of mass media. Mesoamerica is drenched in pesticides and then greenwashed under the guise of conservation by the private sector, while the Wold Bank plays poker with loans sprung to life by economic bear traps. Mesoamerica receives gifts from the North in the form of military weapons wrapped with a bow. And that's just the first 1/3 of a monumental graphic called MESOAMÉRICA RESISTE, meticulously researched and hand-drawn over the course of nine years by the BEEHIVE DESIGN COLLECTIVE: a loose conglomeration of anarchists who dedicate themselves to "cross-pollinate the grassroots" by creating collaborative, anti-copyright images for use as educational and organizing tools. To see a web version of the explosive work Mesoamérica Resiste, including a full-screen flyover with a narrative tour, click the link below, and get ready to get drawn into a very deep rabbit hole. http://beehivecollective.org/graphics-projects/mesoamerica-resiste/ The collective remains anonymous by choice, but I was lucky enough to sit down with one of the group's members, who goes by the name TYLER BEE. Since he met with me in between trips to Mexico, I started by asking Tyler Bee about the challenge of balancing a worldwide network of activism while at the same time remaining dedicated to the hyper local issues that fuel the group's mission. Mentioned in our talk are two examples of work by others inspired by the Beehive Design Collective: WATERWAYS is fighting the spread of fracking in Pennsylvania (https://www.thewaterways.org/), while PROJECTE UTER is a group that is fighting for abortion rights in Spain (https://projecteuter.wordpress.com/)

    FARM ON #22 - Exercising the right to know with CAREY GILLAM

    Play Episode Listen Later Dec 14, 2017 54:32


    In the early 60's, Rachel Carson's book Silent Spring was instrumental as a catalyst for the modern environmental movement. In fact, Silent Spring altered the course of history by forcing a ban on the herbicide DDT - an active ingredient in Agent Orange during the Vietnam war - and spurring sweeping changes in the laws that affect our air, land, and water. My guest today has been compared to Carson for her book White Wash: The story of a weed killer, cancer, and the corruption of science. And it's a valid comparison. CAREY GILLAM is a veteran investigative journalist with 25 years under her belt as former senior correspondent for Reuters international news service, and she's been researching and writing about the health dangers associated with the agrochemical companies - namely Monsanto - and their products - namely RoundUp otherwise known as glyphosate - which continue to be so widely used in our food that we could easily remain uninformed if it weren't for the dedicated reporting of journalists like Gillam and organizations like the US Right To Know, a group that is Pursuing truth and transparency in America's food system. Interviewing Carey was a stretch for me since she is an expert interviewer herself, but I think we had a good chat. I started by asking her about one of her most frequently practiced skills: filing for Freedom of Information Act requests. I hope you enjoy. Learn more about White Wash here: http://www.careygillam.com As always, I am seeking a sponsor to help keep Farm On, well, farming on. Contact me to keep it growing: Twitter: Farm_on_dharma email: dharmaonthefarm@gmail.com

    FARM ON #21 - Finding yourself in paradise with KAREN MAEZEN MILLER

    Play Episode Listen Later Nov 26, 2017 64:23


    For this episode I'm going to step out of the usual mode and talk to someone who stumbled onto gardening by a twist of fate, and who uses her garden's many lessons to teach us the living wisdom in our natural world. KAREN MAEZEN MILLER is a Zen priest at the Hazy Moon Zen Center in Los Angeles, and the author of Mama Zen, Hand Wash Cold, and a slender book called Paradise In Plain Sight which is the focus of our talk. Through Maezen's no-nonsense prose, rocks convey faith, ponds preach stillness, flowers give love, and leaves express the effortless ease of letting go. And the green space that provides her so many lessons is no ordinary patch of land, but a 100-year-old Japanese garden that she painstakingly restored with no prior gardening experience. This "one foot in front of the other" approach is often referred to as The Path in Buddhism, and I begin our conversation by asking Maezen about her own path from starting a business to shedding the trappings of success, and eventually earning the robes of a Zen priest. Learn more about Maezen's writing and find her teaching and retreat schedule here: http://karenmaezenmiller.com

    FARM ON #20 - Rebuilding shattered hearts with MARY REYNOLDS

    Play Episode Listen Later Nov 12, 2017 63:17


    Back in episode #16, LARRY KORN was very excited to tell me about an Irish garden designer named MARY REYNOLDS. It turns out he helped to edit and wrote the forward for her phenomenal book THE GARDEN AWAKENING: DESIGNS TO NURTURE OUR LAND AND OURSELVES. Mary's life and work has been committed to discovering the sacred and the magical in every piece of land, because "the veil between this world and the world of spirit is very thin". In this conversation, I ask Mary about fairy magic, sacred spaces, and the independent film inspired by her adventures becoming the youngest person to win the prestigious Chelsea Flower Show, and the romance that surrounded it. The film, DARE TO BE WILD, is set for release in the US sometime this year. We also talk about Mary's own property in Ireland, for which she is seeking funding to build a living version of the book to educate children by connecting them with nature and to teach people how to turn their garden plots into massive opportunities for the land, nature's health and our own health. Learn all about Mary's work and follow her here: http://marymary.ie/

    FARM ON #19 - Chasing the honeybee with HEATHER SWAN

    Play Episode Listen Later Nov 1, 2017 60:08


    My good friend and New Zealander nomad VANESSA BECK takes the controls of this episode of FARM ON, and interviews poet and author HEATHER SWAN. Vanessa was the natural choice for this conversation since she and Swan share many traits in common: a keen sensibility for the natural world, deep compassion for the work of restoration, and first-hand experience with the art of BEEKEEPING. They spend the hour chatting about Swan's new book WHERE HONEYBEES THRIVE: STORIES FROM THE FIELD (Penn State University Press), which is "part love song, part lament, and part quest", and all love. Love for the honeybee, love for the people who spend their lives studying it, and love for endless pursuit of understanding through research. In this talk, Swan explains how her journey in the field led her all over the world to learn from beekeepers, farmers and scientists. She also explores the inner life of a handful of artists whose shared muse is the archetype of the honeybee, and whose artwork shuffles the book's chapters in a kind of lyrical poem that straddles the intellect and the creative mind. Get the book WHERE HONEYBEES THRIVE here: http://www.psupress.org/books/titles/978-0-271-07741-3.html

    FARM ON #18 - Getting in tune with ANDREA HAZZARD

    Play Episode Listen Later Oct 17, 2017 62:43


    Driving past corn fields in the Midwest can seem like a trip through a pastoral, idyllic farmscape, but in reality the corn commodity realm is a dystopian industrial wasteland that is genetically engineered and chemically supported. However, agriactivists like ANDY HAZZARD are proving that it is not only possible to cultivate ancient, heirloom grains, but it is also vital to our health and the health of the environment as we know it. HAZZARD FREE FARM is the latest in a family tradition that dates back to 1847, and with Andy at the helm it is getting attention from folks who want to taste bread before it became the gluten-heavy substance we know, and who want their food source to live in harmony with the land. Before starting her own farm, Andy was "...suffering from cognitive dissonance, like an out of tune song my worldly work and actions were out of line with my beliefs. " She has found her tune through meticulously-sourced, stone-ground grains that hearken back to pre-industrial revolution era farming practices. Learn more about Andy and her passion, and purchase her product directly at http://hazzardfreefarm.com

    FARM ON #17 - Cultivating essentialism with LINDSAY STEELE

    Play Episode Listen Later Oct 4, 2017 64:30


    Every time I check in with my good friend LINDSAY STEELE, it's like watching a slow-motion flip book come to life. Each conversation is like a snapshot into the unfolding of his family farm called GARDEN FORT in rural Michigan. Over the years Lindsay has honed a "lean farm" approach that continues to produce more food, increase profits, while at the same time expending less energy. If it's true that small, organic farms will be the thing that saves our species from imminent doom, then GARDEN FORT is showing us the way. Lindsay is always on to a new book, and in this talk he references Greg McKeon's bestseller ESSENTIALISM: THE DISCIPLINED PURSUIT OF LESS. As you will hear, loss and instability on the farm, with the right perspective, are transformed into opportunities for distinguishing "the vital few from the trivial many", and finding "our highest point of contribution". Follow Lindsay and Garden Fort's adventures: https://www.instagram.com/garden_fort https://www.facebook.com/gardenfort

    FARM ON #16 - Flying the one-straw revolutionary flag with LARRY KORN

    Play Episode Listen Later Sep 18, 2017 66:38


    MASANOBU FUKUOKA'S manifesto for natural farming ONE-STRAW REVOLUTION (1975) was as much a revelation to me as it has been for millions of readers worldwide. It has been translated into more languages than can be accounted for, and is regarded as one of the essential titles for PERMACULTURE practitioners. Its blending of straight-forward instruction, hard-won life examples, and Zen-like wisdom has captivated audiences in the way that no other book on sustainable agriculture can touch. "The One-Straw Revolution is one of the founding documents of the alternative food movement, and indispensable to anyone hoping to understand the future of food and agriculture." — Michael Pollan Subsequent books THE NATURAL WAY OF FARMING and my personal favorite SOWING SEEDS IN THE DESERT continued Fukuoka's energetic command of his craft: allowing nature to do what it does best with little or no effort for control by human beings. For this episode of FARM ON, I am lucky enough to speak with the man who lived on Fukuoka's farm in the '70's and then translated his book for English-speakers, LARRY KORN. Larry talks about getting assistance from WENDELL BERRY, his life as a young farm-wanderer in rural japan, and his continued work spreading the good word of natural farming as well as his other projects conducting workshops and helping contemporary authors of the same ilk. Larry's story is told in his book ONE-STRAW REVOLUTIONARY, which serves as a valuable companion to its literary namesake, and decodes Fukuoka's eastern spiritualistic way for the Western reader. Learn more at http://www.onestrawrevolution.net FARM ON is accepting sponsorship to pay for hosting the show and for an embarrassingly excessive coffee habit. Contact me on Twitter @FarmOnDharma or good old email dharmaonthefarm@gmail.com

    FARM ON #15 - Uncovering radical routes with RYAN GRIFFIS & SARAH ROSS

    Play Episode Listen Later Sep 2, 2017 60:44


    RYAN GRIFFIS and SARAH ROSS make art that combines academic research, wide-eyed curiosity and a commitment to radical activism. Joe visited their home studio in Chicago to talk about their multi-media projects including books, videos and gallery installations. Ryan and Sarah also empower other artists, activists and scholars through their organization REGIONAL RELATIONSHIPS, a "a platform to re-imagine the spaces and cultural histories around us. An invitation to join in seeing what we can learn—and learning what we can see—by juxtaposing spaces and narratives that are usually kept apart." Check out their recent series of videos here: http://regionalrelationships.org/bottomlands

    FARM ON #14 - Riffing on Wendell Berry with LAUREN MAPLES

    Play Episode Listen Later Aug 17, 2017 57:44


    LAUREN MAPLES is the co-founder and executive director of PEAS (Partners for Education, Agriculture, and Sustainability), a nonprofit operating in Austin, TX.  PEAS provides educators to local schools to lead outdoor lessons and works with teachers to help them better utilize the outdoor spaces on their campuses with their own classes.   She has been awarded 2 Fullbright grants that allowed her to travel to New Zealand and all over the US researching best practices in outdoor education. In this episode we peruse Berry quotes on the Twitter feed @WendellDaily and riff on 'em. Learn more about Lauren's nonprofit PEAS here. http://www.peascommunity.org

    FARM ON #13 - Coming full circle with MANNY LAHOZ

    Play Episode Listen Later Aug 2, 2017 59:44


    Joe had the pleasure of sitting down with Filipino farmer MANNY LAHOZ while he visited family in Chicago. Manny is featured in an upcoming documentary called RICE: A FILIPINO LOVE STORY, which highlights his 24 acre farm and the many other local growers that he has helped to create organic, sustainable practices that nourish both people and land. In this emotional conversation, Manny tells his story of being ordained a Catholic priest, to organizing grassroots farmers' unions under the dictatorship of president Marcos, to eventually helping indigenous mountain tribal groups defeat a brutal government attack on their land. After being imprisoned and surveilled during marshall law, he eventually started a new life in the US, only to return to the Philippines to take over his family's farm with no previous agriculture experience. Manny's harrowing tale of blood, sweat and tears will soon be available in an upcoming book from University of Philippines Press titled OF TYRANTS AND MARTYRS: A POLITICAL MEMOIR. Watch the trailer for the documentary film here: http://fiscal.ifp.org/project.cfm/725/Rice-A-Filipino-Love-Story/

    FARM ON #12 - Choosing your own adventure with NAAMAN GAMBILL

    Play Episode Listen Later Jul 20, 2017 57:02


    Co-hosted by VANESSA BECK. For this episode of Farm On, Joe and Vanessa have a nice chat with NAAMAN GAMBILL, co-owner of Chicago's first and only retail store dedicated solely to beekeeping equipment, services, and education. Naaman's rural Indiana work ethic shines through in this talk, as does his dedication to improving the lives of people who live in the city's most under-appreciated neighborhoods. Find out more about his projects here: https://www.thehivesupply.com/

    FARM ON #11 - Celebrating Independence Day with GOATS

    Play Episode Listen Later Jul 3, 2017 18:59


    Co-hosted by VANESSA BECK. For this 4th of July special, Joe and Vanessa kick things off with the question "What does it mean to be independent?". Then Joe reads his essay "How I explained American Independence to My Goats", over the sound of actual fireworks recorded from his backyard. Read the essay here: https://dharmaonthefarm.com/2016/07/08/how-i-explained-american-independence-to-my-goats/

    FARM ON #10 - Nerding out with LINDSAY STEELE

    Play Episode Listen Later Jun 8, 2017 60:16


    Summer seemed like the perfect time to catch up with my old friend, graphic designer-turned farmer LINDSAY STEELE. The last time we talked it was the dead of winter and he was dreaming big about getting lean and farming smarter, and as you will hear on today's episode he is delivering on both at his family's farm GARDEN FORT in rural Michigan. Lindsay and I nerd out on all his latest innovations and gadgets, including a the "coolbot" and a tool known ominously as the "flame weeder". Tune in, geek out, and farm on folks. Check out the beautiful progress at https://www.instagram.com/garden_fort To kick things off I also read an excerpt from my original essay entitled "Your 200,000 Year Old Armpit". You can check out the the entire piece here: https://dharmaonthefarm.com/2016/07/22/your-200000-year-old-arm-pit/

    FARM ON #9 - Channeling the urban wild with GAVIN VAN HORN

    Play Episode Listen Later May 21, 2017 65:37


    Co-hosted by VANESSA BECK. For this episode, we sit down with my friend and fellow Oklahoma native GAVIN VAN HORN to talk about his forthcoming book Channel Coyotes and his deeply nuanced interest in place-based values concerning the natural world in an urban context. We also discuss what it means to live in "a city full of eyes", as well as his experience commuting to work in an inflatable kayak. Gavin has co-edited the collections Wildness and City Creatures, and has written numerous essays for the blog at Chicago's Center for Humans and Nature where he is the Director of Cultures of Conservation. Check out his work at http://www.storyforager.com.

    FARM ON #8 - Finding Right Livelihood with BILL WILSON

    Play Episode Listen Later May 5, 2017 43:05


    Bill Wilson is co-founder of Midwest Permaculture with his wife & partner Becky. I was fortunate enough to attend one of their week-long Permaculture Design Certification trainings, and found it to be the paradigm-shifting kick in the pants that I needed to gain a new perspective on what is possible with sustainable everything: food cultivation, water conservation, social organization, and finding Right Livelihood. I caught Bill on the phone after the training to learn more about the path that led him 35 years ago to Stelle, IL - an intentional community oasis sandwiched between endless fields of industrial agriculture, and into his formative role as the region's passionate champion of the life practice that is Permaculture. Midwest Permaculture: https://midwestpermaculture.com

    FARM ON #7 - Riffing on Thoreau with DEBORAH NIEMANN

    Play Episode Listen Later Apr 18, 2017 64:18


    Deborah Niemann is the author of EcoThrifty, Raising Goats Naturally, Homegrown & Handmade, and the ebook Just Kidding: Stories and Reflections on Goats Giving Birth. That last topic comes up a lot in our conversation since Deborah has hundreds of goat births under her belt, and her trust in nature to do what it does best is refreshing. For this episode I try something a little different: blurting out random quotes by the turn-of-century mystic naturalist Henry David Thoreau and letting Deborah free-associate whatever comes to mind. Thoreau is one of her biggest influences in life and work, and his soundbites provide a nice spark for a multidimensional conversation on finding one's purpose, homeschooling, midwiffery, and stationary bikes. Check out Deborah's beautiful homestead Antiquity Oaks here: http://antiquityoaks.com, and more about her work here: http://thriftyhomesteader.com.

    FARM ON #6 - Deep listening with NANCE KLEHM

    Play Episode Listen Later Apr 2, 2017 62:39


    Co-hosted by VANESSA BECK. For this episode we were fortunate to share an hour with a true renaissance woman of the earth: NANCE KLEHM. Nance has been an ecological systems designer, landscaper, horticultural consultant, and permacultural grower for more than two decades. Her approach is centered on instigating change by activating already existent communities, and her work demonstrates her lifelong commitment to redefining the way human populations coexist with plant and animal systems on this planet. Vanessa and I discovered Nance's world through a new documentary film called WEEDEATER, which is a beautifully-produced slice of Nance and her universe. Learn more about Nance's film WEEDEATER, her summer camp PACHAMANKA, her social ecology project THE GROUND RULES, and much, much more here: spontaneousvegetation.net P.S. Farm On is currently seeking sponsors to help cover the cost of our web hosting and coffee intake. Message @FarmOnDharma to learn more.

    FARM ON #5 - Tasting the good life with LAVERN PHILLIPS

    Play Episode Listen Later Mar 23, 2017 52:42


    Lavern Phillips was born and raised in Canton, Oklahoma - current population 615. He loves to tell stories about his Grandpa Andy, a hardscrabble second generation German immigrant who settled near the epicenter of the dust bowl to stake his claim as a farmer. Now 72, Lavern was the first person in his family to go to college. He went on to become a successful businessman and family man, but his heart remained on the farm. In this conversation, Lavern remembers what he calls the "good life": tasting home-brewed beer, waking with the summer breeze...and he even explains an oddity of telephone history called the Party Line. Oh, and did I mention that he's my dad? P.S. Farm On is currently seeking sponsors to help cover the cost of our web hosting and coffee intake. Message @FarmOnDharma to learn more.

    FARM ON #4 - Dissolving Separation With BARBARA STONE

    Play Episode Listen Later Mar 4, 2017 56:07


    Since 1979, Barbara Stone has used images of polar bears as a personal symbol in her art. She's done research in the Northwest Territories (not in the Yukon as I incorrectly stated in the podcast), has artwork included in the collection of the White House & Smithsonian, and has traveled the world collecting inspiration for new work. She's also a talented storyteller. For our conversation, I wanted to hear Barbra's personal stories about her current life: living in the remote grasslands of Northern Colorado raising sheep, llama, geese, turkeys and chickens, and becoming well versed in what she calls "non verbal communication" with the natural world. Learn more about Barbara work at her website: http://www.polarbeargallery.com/ P.S. Farm On is currently seeking sponsors to help cover the cost of our web hosting and coffee intake. Message @FarmOnDharma to learn more.

    FARM ON #3 - Leaping into the void with MATT WILLEY

    Play Episode Listen Later Feb 12, 2017 57:50


    I caught up with the multifaceted artist Matt Willey to talk about his globetrotting initiative The Good of The Hive, which is raising awareness about the current struggle and population decline of honeybees while celebrating their incredible behaviors. How is he doing this, you ask? By painting murals around the world featuring no less than 50,000 bees of course! We geek out on Greek mythology, art as a true catalyst for social progress, and skateboarding. Catch the vibe of The Good of The Hive at thegoodofthehive.com

    FARM ON #2: Leaning in with LINDSAY STEELE

    Play Episode Listen Later Jan 30, 2017 58:33


    Joe speaks with his old friend Lindsay Steele about his Michigan homestead farm called Garden Fort. This talk covers a lot of ground including (but not limited to) "lean" farming, unschooling, and saving the world through empathy. Photos and video of Lindsay, his family and their beautiful farm @gardenfort.

    FARM ON #1: Acting directly with KEN DUNN

    Play Episode Listen Later Jan 16, 2017 52:39


    Joe interviews the godfather of urban farming in Chicago: agriculture activist and philosopher Ken Dunn of City Farm and the Resource Center. They crammed into the front seat of a delivery truck to discuss Ken's Mennonite roots, his stint in the Brazilian Amazon, and his PhD studies at the University of Chicago that all led to his own radical action in food justice.

    Claim Farm On

    In order to claim this podcast we'll send an email to with a verification link. Simply click the link and you will be able to edit tags, request a refresh, and other features to take control of your podcast page!

    Claim Cancel