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What is one of the highway industry's toughest challenges that is very difficult to solve and hardly talked about?This week on Highways Voices we delve into the issue of road runoff pollution with Keyline.Subscribe to Highways Voices free on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Amazon Music, Google Podcasts or Pocket Casts and never miss an episode!Did you know, road runoff is pollution caused when vehicles deposit debris containing over 300 chemicals on the road surface? Then, rainfall pushes the pollutants from roads into rivers and as a result water quality becomes unsustainable, collapsing ecosystems and killing wildlife.According to Keyline, 18% of water body failures in England are due to road runoff pollution. Also, the water framework directive sets an objective to restore all rivers to good ecological status by December 2027, but only 14% of rivers in England have a good ecological statusIt is clear then, that the conversation still needs to go further and more action is needed to eradicate road runoff pollution.In this podcast with Technical Director at Keyline Civils Specialist, George Woollard, you will learn:*What is road runoff pollution?* What impact does it have and why the industry should care.* How much visibility do we have on road runoff pollution?* What are the main challenges with tackling road runoff pollution?* How can we solve the issue?* Why SuDS has an important role to play* How can the highways industry support to help solve the challenge?Keyline Civils Specialist is one of the UK's leading civils partners to the highways and construction sectors. It supports the implementation of infrastructure projects, working alongside major contractors and leading manufacturers to deliver innovative solutions, with its wide range of civils and drainage products, expert technical team and national support network.You can download Keyline's white paper on the subject here.Highways Voices is brought to you with our partners the Transport Technology Forum, LCRIG, ADEPT and ITS UK.
Mark Krawczyk is an applied ecologist, educator, and grower with a background in permaculture design, agroforestry, natural building, traditional woodworking, and small-scale forestry. He co-owns and operates Keyline Vermont LLC, teaching, designing, and consulting for farmers, homeowners, and homesteaders. Since 2008, Mark has taught over 30 Permaculture Design Courses and been a specialist guest instructor in dozens more. He holds Diplomas in Permaculture Design and Education from the Permaculture Institute of North America. He and his wife also co-manage Valley Clayplain Forest Farm - 52 acres of field and forest in New Haven, Vermont, USA. Ā --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/plantatrilliontrees/message Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/plantatrilliontrees/support
In questo podcast, Valeria Ferrero, Responsabile ESG Strategy Ersel, e Maria Cristina Gribaudi, Amministratrice Delegata di Keyline, ci parlano di responsabilità sociale di impresa. La Keyline di Conegliano è un'azienda innovativa leader nel contesto globale della progettazione e produzione di chiavi e di macchine duplicatrici meccaniche ed elettroniche, nella tecnologia delle chiavi auto con transponder. Per Keyline la fabbrica è un ambiente vitale, dove la qualità del lavoro diventa qualità di vita, e dove la qualificazione della componente femminile, la valorizzazione del ruolo dei giovani e l'attenzione alle dinamiche sociali e del territorio sono al centro della cultura e dell'identità della fabbrica da più di 250 anni.#comunicazionedimarketingIl presente podcast non intende in alcun modo promuovere la sottoscrizione di servizi e prodotti finanziari che può essere effettuata solo dopo aver preso visione dell'informativa precontrattuale e previa valutazione dell'adeguatezza del servizio o dello strumento finanziario rispetto al profilo individuato con il questionario MiFID. Il presente podcast non è un documento contrattualmente vincolante né un documento informativo necessario ai sensi di una disposizione legislativa e non è sufficiente per prendere una decisione di investimento.Ersel ha verificato con la massima attenzione tutte le informazioni rappresentate nella presente registrazione, ma non garantisce della loro esattezza e completezza, e non risponde dell'uso che terzi potrebbero fare di tali informazioni, né di eventuali perdite o danni che possano verificarsi in seguito a tale uso. Le indicazioni e i dati relativi agli strumenti finanziari, forniti dalla Società nel presente video, non costituiscono necessariamente un indicatore delle future prospettive dell'investimento o disinvestimento: i rendimenti passati non sono indicativi di quelli futuri. à vietata la riproduzione e/o la distribuzione, in tutto o in parte, direttamente o indirettamente, del presente podcast, non espressamente autorizzata.
In todays episode Jo Youle meets Zach Bush MD of Farmers Footprint to talk about the food systems of Ibiza and how Glyphosate has infiltrated our soil globally and what effect that is having on the food we eat and the way our bodies react. Zach Bush MD is a physician specializing in internal medicine, endocrinology and hospice care. He is an internationally recognised educator and thought leader on the microbiome as it relates to health, disease, and food systems.Ā Our second guest is David Gonzales, Coordinador of Sustraiak Habitat Design in the Basque country who talks us through Keyline Design techniques and how we can conserve water through the way we work with the land and allow it to infiltrate the structure of the soil. We finish with a trip to JuntosĀ farm to chat to Transformational chef, Erikah Tangari and discuss the way we can use every part of the food we produce to maximise the way we experience it and work with it so as not to create extra waste in her zero food workshop.Ā Ā Ā
An extra special round table discussion between Mr Keyline, Mr Export, Mr Westline and Mr TD. Many subjects are discussed including mental health; staying active as a productive member of society; people who the show hosts are noticing getting up in various parts of Australia; and a weird bunch of puns related to chodes (aka a penis that is wide as it is tall). This will be the last episode until September 2024, so grab a tea, coffee or something else; and get ready for some mega fresh Toy Division podcast gibberish. As always Toy Division's goal is to normalise and de stigmatise mental health issues. We are often providing as much guidance as possible to use certain lifestyle habits to buffer physical/mental heath difficulties. Toy Division Buy Me A Coffee: https://www.buymeacoffee.com/toydivision Toy Division Instagram - @toydivision2 MusicĀ by Frenic Ā from This One Records: ā http://www.thisonerecords.com/ā @djfrenicĀ (IG) PodcastĀ logo photograph by Alex Bartsch: ā http://www.alexbartsch.com/ā @alex.bartschĀ (IG) ThisĀ podcast is not the usual Banksy book reading fan, it's about letter based graffiti writing. But if you like street art, then you'll probably want to learn more about graffiti culture, because that's where street art began. JoinĀ us for a conversation about writing on things; addressing mental health issues; and using lifestyle to improve our overall physical health at any age. MENTIONED IN THIS EPISODE Unalive Mini Book (Suicide): https://artilleryworldwide.com/product/unalive-mini-book/ Sufer MTA - Store Credit Podcast: https://youtu.be/RQ5DWhgSvTo?feature=shared The Graffiti Machine Podcast: https://graffitimachine.com/ Sly Artistic City - Philly Graffiti History: https://youtu.be/xIVuaS08C3c?feature=shared The Illside of Town: Auckland Graffiti 2004-2011: https://aotearoabooks.co.nz/the-illside-of-town-auckland-graffiti-2004-2011/ Pirate Mafia Runnin With The GH: https://youtu.be/bYgpit_CUZ4?feature=shared 3000 Podcast with Maloney: https://www.youtube.com/@3000podcast
En el episodio de hoy conversamos con el Dr. JosĆ© Dumas, lĆder del proyecto, āThe Soil health improvement of arid zone lands with Keyline biochar-Necromass biopolymersā .Ā Ā Este proyecto tiene como objetivo principal mejorar la calidad de los suelos agrĆcolas a travĆ©s del biocarbón (biochar).Ā Ā La salud de los suelos es un factor determinante para la productividadā¦
Join me this week as we look at the basic types of water storage elements used in designing a functional broadacre water system. Nearly all broadacre water systems include some form of water storage, either as groundwater (aquifer storage), retained soil moisture (accessible by living plant roots), or bulk water (ponds, lakes, tanks, cisterns). Water storage elements function to: cover peaks in demand (production from the water source cannot meet peak demand) smooth out variations in supply (seasonal changes in availability and ease of obtaining water) provide water security in case of supply interruption or disaster (supply buffers) save structures from wild fire meet legal requirements (firefighting, fire suppression sprinklers etc.) improve water quality (clarification, filtration, settling etc.) provide thermal storage and freeze protection (thermal mass of water modifies local microclimate) enable a smaller pipe to serve for a distant source (cost savings on water infrastructure) In this show, we're going to talk about the four main types of water storage elements that you might encounter while optimizing your homestead hydrology! Soil Storage - we always start here - soil storage is the cheapest form of storage, especially if you're trying to grow something. Ponds & Dams Tanks & Cisterns Aquifer Storage Getting started designing your homestead? START HERE: Enroll in the Minimum Holistic Goal Creation Mini-Course today for free. This is the ONE THING that will make everything else easier or unnecessary on your homesteading journey! 100% Free Upon completing this course you will have a crystal clear idea of who and what resources you have to work with, your desired Quality of Life that your homestead has to provide for, and what you will need to produce and the conditions required to sustain that production to meet your Quality of Life needs. Ā Music by Alex Grohl
Hay un conjunto de tecnologĆas que pueden ayudar a hacer el cambio en la agricultura: lĆnea clave o Ā«keylineĀ». Este conjunto de soluciones ha cambiado drĆ”sticamente la forma en que se ve la ganaderĆa y la agricultura, porque los beneficios son inmediatos y hace mĆ”s eficiente el proceso. Raquel Gómez nos dice los principios de una solución que si la vemos detalladamente, resulta ser lo mejor que puede hacer un productor agroalimentario. Keyline ha tenido un impacto positivo en todos los que lo han implementado. Se puede decir que: produzcamos con la naturaleza a nuestro favor. Contacto: https://www.mashumus.com/ #agricultura #agronegocios #biotecnologia #sostenibilidad #ganaderiaregenerativa #ganaderia --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/agronauta/message
Campbell Mercer owns 40ha outside Melbourne, Australia where he has set up a world class olive farm - producing award winning organic olive oil. Campbell uses a variety of fascinating agroforestry practices, from windbreaks to farm forestry and silvopastural systems. We have an in-depth conversation on small scale farm forestry, from design considerations to harvest and selling. We also discussed the Keyline cultivation pattern and its implications for tree planting, finishing off with the various functions of his windbreaks and their interaction with neighbouring olive trees. Overall, Campbell has not been shy to make use of tree systems to align his production with the ecology he works in. He has managed to harness the ecosystem services provided by trees whilst ensuring they remain economically productive.TABLE OF CONTENTS02:42 Story and context of the farm11:09 Why go organic? 13:28 Use of black wattle19:52 Selling small quantities of timber 23:16 Main objectives of agroforestry on the farm27:56 Design of the systems39:04 Sawing material 40:56 Drying the wood43:37 Pruning46:35 Profitability of timber plantations57:22 Interactions between grass and trees01:01:24 Planting along the keyline pattern01:05:17 Feedback on deep ripping and swales01:10:46 Would you do keyline again? 01:19:41 Windbreaks01:28:34 Choice of species in windbreak01:38:17 Production from them01:40:28 Interactions between windbreak and olive trees01:45:00 Improved overall productivity ⢠RESOURCEShttps://mannahillestate.com.au/https://www.instagram.com/mannahill.estate/⢠GET IN TOUCH www.regenerativeagroforestry.org⢠SUPPORT US www.gumroad.com/regenagroforestry⢠FOLLOW US on Twitter, Facebook, LinkedIn and Instagram See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Jason Hayward-Jones, founder and managing director of REGENFARM Ltd, joins us to discuss how altering the behaviour of water and utilising AI can contribute to designing revolutionary landscape designs.---------------------------------------------------Join our Gumroad community, discover the tiers and benefits on www.gumroad.com/investinginregenag. Other ways to support our work:- Share the podcast - Give a 5-star rating- Or buy us a coffee⦠or a meal! www.Ko-fi.com/regenerativeagriculture. ----------------------------------------------------THIS EPISODE IS PART OF THE LANDSCAPE TECH SERIES. More about this episode on https://investinginregenerativeagriculture.com/jason-hayward-jones.Find our video course here:https://investinginregenerativeagriculture.com/course/----------------------------------------------------For feedback, ideas, suggestions please contact us through Twitter @KoenvanSeijen, or get in touch through the website www.investinginregenerativeagriculture.com. Join our newsletter on www.eepurl.com/cxU33P. The above references an opinion and is for information and educational purposes only. It is not intended to be investment advice. Seek a duly licensed professional for investment advice.Support the showSupport the show (https://www.gumroad.com/investinginregenag)
Keyline is surely one of the most historic brands in the lock and key industry. But who are they? What do their employees think? This is answered in the interview with two employees the have some of the brightest minds at Keyline.CONNECT WITH CLK SUPPLIESWebsite: https://www.clksupplies.com/CONNECT ON SOCIALYoutube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCvfJKuV9VIKtDeZjaSWGprwFacebook: https://www.facebook.com/clksuppliesInstagram: https://www.instagram.com/clk_supplies/ABOUT CLK SUPPLIESCLK SUPPLIES provides Lock and Key supplies to the Locksmithing industry.Ā Since 2004, providing Key Products for Key People has been our mission,Ā it's what has allowed us to build trust and relationships with our customers (we call them friends) and only offer the best products and solutions available
-Cloud nets Chile South America 10,000 L. A day. Award winning beer. 875 square feet average 22 liters per square meter per day -Keyline plow/broad fork -Huglekulture/wood core gardening -Zep Holzers terraced spring -Your mindset change to positivityĀ Ā https://www.nytimes.com/1992/07/14/science/chilean-engineers-find-water-for-desert-by-harvesting-fog-in-nets.html Ā Ā Thank you for being here today.Ā If you like this sort of thing check us out onĀ Facebook https://www.facebook.com/groups/565360640644752/ Instagram https://www.instagram.com/upandinit/ YouTube https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCgxQFBYhxvea6sQ8JWLBFeg?view_as=subscriber TikToc SpotifyĀ Apple podcast ContactĀ Www.upandinitshow@gmail.com Adrian Babashoff Ā Ā Biodegradable Container GardeningĀ https://www.youtube.com/account Ā Facebook Biodegradable Container GardeningĀ https://www.facebook.com/groups/195952678473613 Ā Instagram bcgardeningguy Ā Link to BCG youtube Ā https://youtu.be/jGv3UiMUqj4
Back for the new year with a listener Q&A episode with Mr Export and Mr Keyline. We talk about quality or quantity; overuse of social media; what paint we prefer; and a ton of other graffiti stuff. Mentioned in this episode: @kubeizm_dome37 (Instagram); @f24podcast (Instagram). --------- Toy Division Instagram: @toydivision_podcast Music by Frenic from This One Records: http://www.thisonerecords.com/ @djfrenic (IG) Podcast logo photograph by Alex Bartsch: http://www.alexbartsch.com/ @alex.bartsch (IG) This podcast is not the usual Banksy book reading fan, it's about letter based graffiti writing. But if you like street art, then you'll probably want to learn more about graffiti culture, because that's where street art began. Join us for a conversation about writing on things and other related subjects.
Arguably the most complicated and challenging subject in modern permaculture projects, water management through Yeomans keyline design theory is the subject of this episode. We try to break down this complex, dense subject in an accessible way to provide a framework you can use on your plot of land. Ā Sources: Yeomans, PA 1993, Water for Every Farm: Yeomans Keyline Plan "What we learned from the Dust Bowl: Lessons in Science, Policy, and Adaptation" https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4015056/ Ā
KEYLINE Con el ING Jhon Prieto; Empresa agrĆcola con una propuesta sustentable para nuestro ecosistema. y metal col, PROFAN RITES, APHANGAK Y RĆGIMEN. --- This episode is sponsored by Ā· Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app
L'ospite di questa puntata ĆØ Mariacristina Gribaudi, amministratrice unica di Keyline e Presidente della Fondazione Musei Civici di Venezia. A Tra le righe parla dell'importanza dell'educazione che le ha trasmesso suo padre, detenuto in un campo di concentramento durante la Seconda guerra mondiale, e dei testi che l'hanno ispirata nel suo percorso professionale degli ultimi anni
P.A. Yeomans work had a very strong influence on the concepts of Permaculture design...One of his main approaches, referred to as Keyline design, details the principles, techniques and systems for ecological development of rural and urban landscapes. Keyline methods enable the rapid development of deep biologically fertile soil by converting subsoil into living topsoil. Keyline pattern cultivation enables the rapid flood irrigation of undulating land without terracing. Incidental results are the healing of soil erosion, bio-adsorption of salinity and the long term storage of atmospheric carbon in the soil as humus. The Keyline Scale of Permanence provides a priority guide to planning the various factors of broad scale development. I hope you enjoy some of these classic documentary videos & interviews about this regenerative approach to land management.
"Perfectionism is the death of creativity" An amazing, up close and personal discussion with Richard Perkins of Ridgedale Permaculture. Richard Perkins is the author of the highly acclaimed and comprehensive Regenerative Agriculture manual, and, along with his wife Yohanna, is the founder and leader at the hugely diverse and productive Ridgedale Permaculture in Sweden. Ridgedale teaches upcoming farmers the understanding needed to develop profitable and knowledgeable farms. With almost 70k subscribers and youtube views of over 5.5M, Ridgedale is fast becoming a highly influential platform and force in the space of farming and a deeper approach to agriculture. Richard has a very unique and special style of education, and emphasises the importance of learning to learn. Both viscerally and intellectually, Richard is a very sharp and wise thinker, and his learning is very extremely eclectic. Something I think is an important element in farming today and for farmers themselves is the necessary development of character. Richard really personifies this approach and the resulting conversation is both wide and deep. This talk was a very deep interview for me personally and I learnt of new connections and many areas of needed improvement for myself. My favourite learning is right here, personal, engaging and healthily challenging, and all born and expanded from immersion in ecological harmony and successful farming. Focus in and collect the lessons. Trust you will enjoy it as much as i did. Keep in touch with Richard, Yohanna and Ridgedale at: http://www.ridgedalepermaculture.com/ pick up the book at: https://www.regenerativeagriculture.co/ 03:00 Changing tack, evolving a new direction 16:55 Thoughts on market gardens 21:52 Passion for life, entrepreneurship and evolving pathways dedication, responsibility and hard work are the foundations of good people. 30:55 Keyline, permaculture, holistic management. refinement and the need for an empowered creative process. 35:15 Perfectionism is the death of creativity-the need for systems thinking 42:45 The culture and spirit of Ridgedale Permaculture - Hard work, flow and joy. 48:00 The upcoming 'Hero' tour and a new development for Ridgedale 1:02:40 Planting the seed and sharing in the process of growing harmony in production systems 1:09:43 Dynamics and chaos 1:11:05 Get up early and start observing! 1:12:12 Get structured 1:13:20 Getting momentum from social networks and dynamics 1:15:35 structure and stop thinking 1:16:58 who is spearheading new farms and steep learning curves 1:23:23 Holistic training 1:28:00 Good advice: Learning to learn
A very open conversation with the master of process and productive, integrative land planning, Darren Doherty. Darren Doherty and his family are the masterminds behind The online learning resource The Regrarians platform, along with The REX farm planning course, The Rap and the ROC international conventions. Darren is also the originator of carbon farming as a course, and is credited with popularising the international movement RegenAg, he is also the author of the comprehensive and developing Regrarians Handbook. Darren's portfolio includes over 15000 graduates, and active involvement in the design and development of over 3000 broad acre projects over 6 continents (Their platform is especially popular in Latin America). But more than Darren's numbers and achievements I realized that Darren brings something very unique and all his own into the space of ecological connection, intelligence, regeneration and farming. A truly openminded yet highly pragmatic approach. Darren's not afraid to be an active critic of the weaknesses behind any system, and is equally respectful of the strengths of the same systems. Darren is an active supporter, and somewhat of a spotlight, for a host of true heroes, and their work, in this space globally. Darren heralds the growing acceptance of a pluralistic view towards ecologically harmonious production systems. We delve into a more personal side with Darren Doherty and his journey so far. Covering his core values and beliefs behind the drive to serve more people more effectively with their own land. Keyline, holistic management, the mental climate and grandmas hands. It was really exciting to dive in to see what makes the man tick and have a laugh or two. I cant recommend Darren Doherty's work enough and there is a reason why he is the master of process. check out the Regrarians platform here If your not part of the EcoIQ Tribe then jump in here 06:30 Hosting, teaching and managing 120+ REX students online 14:35 Purpose 17:04 The Why 23:43 Helping people miss the first shot- innovation is chaos.. 25:25 Designing vs planning 28:00 Design, process and Permaculture 30:20 Personal Bias- attacking the idea and not the person 35:17 A Holistic context and happiness 44:10 Not everyone needs a garden 49:20 The importance of family 59:05 Keyline Planning and Holistic Management 1:04:00 Permaculture and Keyline 1:09:30 Process vs principles, planning vs design 1:13:58 Joel Salatin and harmonising with each other 1:19:40 The influence of Latin America, and taking lessons from Roundup 1:30:35 The core issue behind shifting mental climate 1:38:50 A message for healing - the world wants to live.
Darren J. Doherty in a misty paddock with some cows In this episode you get to be a fly on the wall during a farm consultancy conducted by renowned farm planner and Regrarian Darren J. Doherty. I'm sure I don't need to spell out the resonance between Darren's comments about why he no longer does master plans and the current Making Permaculture Stronger inquiry (where I refer to master planning as fabricating). Thanks to Darren for his support on jobs like this as well as his kind permission to share his words here.
Nature is our teacher Darren as a child was influenced very much by his grandfather who had a wide ranging understanding of farming in the rural sector of sun affected Australia, where water was a major priority as well as the need for trees and the protection they offered. So this early education, became critical in his connection to nature and recognising what this hardy land produced. Especially his relationship to the Australian flora and fauna, and with the added factor that he was quite well read - Ā played a large part in his life when growing up. He now sees his life learnings and that of the āRegrarianā revolution as becoming the broad church of āregenerative agricultureā - that focuses a wealth of attention on forestry (trees) and water. Added to this was that central Victoria, the region that he lived in happened to be the epicentre of organic farming. Becoming Knowledgeable During his calling, he has over the years given about 250 Regrarian courses around the world - in about 50 countries Ā - he calls himself as basically āa sinkā having been able to take in a huge amount of information as well as glean knowledge from the many people he has rubbed shoulders with. He says that this has been his intention as he feels that he has very good observational skills, which are very important - in that when we look at what a farmer is - they have to be very good at working the land, engaging in drainage, creating swales, tree visioning, fencing, crop rotation. Plus the need to observe the weather, wind direction, the movement of birds flying - aware of temperatures, barometric pressure, sniff the air, and feel the texture of the soil in oneās hands etc. Itās grokking every nuance of the natural world. Internet a Critical Component of Rural Communication Darren says that the internet now is becoming a very critical component in sharing not only ideas but connecting farmers over a huge distance and can constantly keep them in the loop as to very current happenings as they occur, especially sharing critical information be it drought resistant methods, or establishing innovative ways of feeding plants, including making compost or and humus in critical weather events and other untimely occurrences that may quickly appear. He also says that the most successful pathways will be from farmer to farmer - sharing tips etc as opposed to going through a consultant or a Govt official - and the costs that are involved, can be heavily reduced. He emoted that he and others in the movement are very excited that they can facilitate the rapid movement of information to assist farmers. Ā Especially producer to producer Holistic Perspectives are Important. Being involved in the āholistic land management movementā and the methods of integrating with the ākey lineā plan and design Ā - by the late PA Yoemanās and by extension Allan Savory - has extended his observation and understanding of grazing cattle and ruminants. He also talks about the holistic way of being able to self determine what you want out of your future and what to do with your land in relationship to the whole. He said you have to recognise where you are at, (and not at) how resourced you are internally and where your land is at. Is it broken in land, or is it ,say bush and scrub, with no fences, cattle races, drainage etc. Restructuring Oneās Life He talks about debt and ratio that can lead to serfdom, if you are not aware as to how to handle this. Like, itās about restructuring ones life. These are practical matters that he sees and that farmers to be have to get a handle on - they need to be talked about and talked out. 10% of Australian farmers are now doing ecological agriculture but a good percentage are still waiting on the evidence as well as the market to change. This other 90% group find it difficult due to their debt to equity ratio as well as their inability to finance the transition - and if your soil is lifeless - this can be quite a challenge. Same for the availability of water. In the US the biggest movement that has been identified is that there are 3 different strands of Regenerative Agriculture. These are the Regrarians and Permaculture practices. Then the Savory Institute https://www.savory.global with its holistic management system and then there is the cover cropping and soil knowledge - led by Gabe Brown - http://brownsranch.us. The third still focuses on wheat, so the change is not as great as they can still use the tech that they uses - ie. harvesters and seed sowers etc. For grazers the change too is not a big change - fencing being a important component - electric fence developed in 1936ā1937 by New Zealand inventor Bill Gallagher. But, for a cereal grower to go from non organic to organic that is a huge change and very challenging. Darren emphasises that we have to be very honest with yourself around being self determined and have all the available information - to make all of your decisions from being very well informed. He does not want people to diss-enable themselves by making decisions that have not been fully understood and researched. Ā That the following generation on that land need to have the best possible start in this new land management system. Keyline Method. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Keyline_design There are 10 points of Regrarian agriculture of which two have been added to P. A. Yeomans One to 8 as the scale of permanence. Yoemans work not really holistic, but definitely broke into new territory that excuse the pun. was groundbreaking. Other Topics Covered. Ā Greg & Rachel Hart in there Southern Hawkes Bay Farm - that they are brave going outside the box - and doing a deal with Air NZ to plant trees and sequester aircraft carbon dioxide. Ā Ā https://www.ourplanet.org/greenplanetfm/greg-hart-new-zealand-pioneer-of-the-family-farm-on-regenerative-agriculture-restoring-ecosystems Darren maintains that NZ agriculture is very innovative by world standards. European Farmers are Heavily Subsidised Within the OECD - The Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development Ā NZ farmers receive the least subsidies. Where as the EU farmers get 50% of their farm income from Government subsidies. This is why Darren is impressed with the resiliency of the kiwi farmer. He also mentions that farming has entered a new phase of rural resettlement and it is happening globally. Far more people are doing degrees and diplomas and as a result farming is increasing. With 7.7 billion people and 5 5 billion hectares of agricultural land = about 7,000 square meters for each person. However, one figure is going up and the is other going down, yet he says we need more people in the production of food, fibre and energy crops. He mentions Harry Weir of KiwiTech International in Bulls, NZ as very capable - a genius in productivity - based around land, family, and society Ā sales@kiwitech.co.nz Ā Nutrient dense foods Jairo Estrepo from Columbia and his use of Chromatography to give you a soil/element read out http://www.ragmans.co.uk/learn_with_us/courses/regenerative_agriculture_and_chromatography_id_65/ Cost is about $1.00 a sample - Ā It gives you a read out about the minerals and living organism in the soil and can assess the mineral availability that comes from our food. Darren says this tech bridges both chemistry and biology and itās an important tech to assist us. Ā That humans and their needs are more complex - and Darren talks to that. That new fertilisers are now being put together to address all sorts of soil conditions . Darren talks with clients about honesty - itās a big question - especially that we donāt use claims of others - unless you can verify by testing these claims yourself. Key line plan - is a farm planning method that in Yoemans words - controls water which is to control a greater part of your agricultural destiny ⦠listen Even if you only get 8 inches of rainfall, Yoeman reckoned that you could survive on a farm - thatās a lot of acreage of water - what are you doing with it? Dr Rattan Lal, who is known as the soil god from University of Ohio in the USA Ā - If we increase the soil carbon content by about one and half % in all of the worldās arable soils where we basically have the greatest influence - then that would draw down and sequester about 100 parts per million of Co2 which would bring us down to pre industrial levels - but have we the will? https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mTb63CDJ5sA In finishing Darren said that humans must start behaving like perennial species - not annuals - and look further ahead in time. That we also can take agriculture into more innovative areas by doing novel seed coatings and adding mycorrhiza fungi mixtures to soils etc - plus compost teas ⦠My final question to Darren, was that seeing he is constantly on the land, does he get a sense of our planet as a greater being - like indigenous peoples do? And he said that yes - there is a far greater presence than is acknowledged by the so called Western understanding of the world - or words to this affect - have a listen - his answer will delight you. http://www.regrarians.org/about/darren-j-doherty-cv
If you add a boarder to your photographs as part of your process before sharing your work with the world, then you need to make sure it is consistent throughout all of your images. In this episode I explain how you can achieve this in just a few clicks.
Since it was incepted in 2012 the Regrarians Platform (āRPā) has provided 1000's of people with a planning process that is holistic, inclusive and thorough.Its 10 layers are based on the 8 factor āKeylineĀ® Scale of Permanenceā that the renowned P.A. Yeomans outlined in 1958 and forms the basis to all of Regrarians Ltd. trainings, farm planning consultancies and media outreach.A RP farm plan is not just a design on a map ā its a detailed and holistic process that brings together the contexts of an individual, their family, their team and their community with that of the climate and the landscape and region theyāre operating in.This webinar is a recording from the REX 13 Week Online Farm Planning Program running from April:July 2018.
Ron Watkins has been practicing regenerative-style farming for so long that he is practically in a class of his own. Why the hell isn't he Australian of this Year in this, or any other year? He is exactly the kind of mentor we need when we are looking at ways of restoring and healing our agricultural land.Ron started changing direction in the 1970s when he saw that what was being taught as essential Agricultural practice was not based on observable or practical truth.He met and worked with P.A. Yeoman, legendary creator of the Keyline method, restoring water systems on his property, and over the decades has received International recognition for his work on Payneham Vale Organic , his 500 ha farm in the south-west of Western Australia.Ron and his wife's main income is from Free-Range eggs and meat sold to retailers in Perth and at the Albany Farmers' market.Now nearing retirement age, the Watkins are looking for a way to hand on what they have developed. Ron should be a decorated and revered Elder in the Regenerative zone, to walk with him on his land is to receive a wonderful lesson in integrated holistic farm planning and thinking....but you know what they say about prophets in their own land...
Learn more at permaculturevoices.com/16 Support the show at permaculturevoices.com/support THIS EPISODE IS A REPLAY OF PREVIOUS PUBLISHED EPISODE. Darren Doherty of Heenan Doherty and Regrarians joins me from Australia to fill in some of the gaps surrounding Keyline design. While the whole Keyline design system is complex and way beyond the scope of this podcast.This episode should give you a brief introduction into what Keyline is, where it can be used, and what it can accomplish. Like all other design systems Keyline isn't the be all, end all, it is another tool in the tool box help design a regenerative landscape. For those that want to learn more check out Darren's work, some of it below, and P.A. Yeomans books. Darren recommends The Keyline Plan and The Challenge of Landscape. Keyline design is a foundation of technique and planning using a scale of permanence. It's focus is on reacting to a climate of an environment, a site, and then using the landscape's shape to maximize the possibility of a sustainable, regenerative environment. Learn more at permaculturevoices.com/16 Support the show at permaculturevoices.com/support THIS EPISODE IS A REPLAY OF PREVIOUS PUBLISHED EPISODE. Ā
Grant Schultz joins me to talk about developing a perennial polyculture in the middle of row-crop corn and soy country Iowa. He discusses a lot of the innovation and developments taking place on his farm, including some really innovative ways of doing GPS keyline design. We spend a lot of time talking about the business of farming. The importance of monitoring cash flows and being cash flow positive. And how Grant is using USDA funds to help pay for pieces of his system and getting moving in the right direction. Key Takeaways: Importance of making your operation cashflow the whole time. Expenses will pile up so start getting cashflow and a customer base early. Consider buying rootstock and graft it over later. It is much cheaper to go that route and grafting isn't that hard. Get plant systems going early on. It is fairly inexpensive and gets the system starting to advance. Have a plan but evolve as you go. Having an end in mind gives you a goal and a direction to head in, but things will change along the way as you learn the intricacies of the system. Plant the earliest maturing fruit trees downslope. That way when you are browsing them the manure runs downhill. How do you want your system to look at maturity and what are the action items to get you there? Then the thing to do is the one with the most impact. What has the earliest yield to get you to the move to the next impact item. Do not underestimate the importance of monitoring and planing out cashflows. When you are farming on broad acres you have the same advantages that conventional farmers have. Crop insurance. Consider using a nurse crop that also cash flows. Grant's example of raising oats for cover crop seed. Consider the balance of high value versus high labor. Is the value worth the labor? There is a huge need for more local genetic permaculture plant material. Recognize the importance of planting dense. Buy trees in mass. It gets cheap and doesn't cost you more to plant at high density. You take advantage of genetic selection and protect yourself against losses. Irrigate your trees if possible - think keyline, swales. Growth rates of trees that are irrigated versus those that aren't is huge when the trees have consistent water availability. Consider the economic impact of the yield with water versus no water. The work now can make you a lot more money down the line. Take advantage of all available resources: USDA, NRCS, EQIP. When starting out pre-sell as much as you can. Build a local customer base from Day 1. Show Notes: www.permaculturevoices.com/34
Owen Hablutzel is a consultant, educator, and group-facilitator performing international work with a range of clientele to radically amplify practical whole systems design, thinking, and management for increasing land health, at multiple scales. Living, working, and learning across multi-cultural contexts (North Africa, Australia, Mexico, Middle-East, Canada, Zimbabwe, and most of the western United States), Owen brings a diverse constellation of experiences and training to his work with broad-acre and regional systems. This work integrates bio-physical applications (Keyline, Permaculture, and Holistic Management) with Social technologies (participatory process facilitation), and with a wider spectrum of practical, flexible, leading-edge solutions (social-ecological systems science) beyond sustainability. Whether with farms, ranches, classrooms, non-profits, NGOs, government agencies/ministries, or other land-managing/policy groups, the core work remains empowering people and communities to enact transformations toward robust land health, adaptive capacity, and resilience through stewardship. Owen is a Certified Educator with Holistic Management International, holds a Masters in Eastern Philosophy (the original systems thinking & Ć¢ā¬Ėscience of the wholeā) from St. Johnās College in New Mexico, and serves passionately as a director of the Permaculture Research Institute, USA. This program has been sponsored by Heritage Foods USA. āYou donāt really understand a system until you understand whatās going on at at least 3 different scales and how those things are interacting.ā [20:00] āOwen Hablutzel on Greenhorns Radio
Darren Doherty of Heenan Doherty and Regrarians joins me from Australia to fill in some of the gaps surrounding Keyline design.While the whole Keyline design system is complex and way beyond the scope of this podcast.This episode should give you a brief introduction into what Keyline is, where it can be used, and what it can accomplish. Like all other design systems Keyline isn't the be all, end all, it is another tool in the tool box help design a regenerative landscape.For those that want to learn more check out Darren's work, some of it below, and P.A. Yeomans books. Darren recommends The Keyline Plan and The Challenge of Landscape.Keyline design is a foundation of technique and planning using a scale of permanence. It's focus is on reacting to a climate of an environment, a site, and then using the landscape's shape to maximize the possibility of a sustainable, regenerative environment.Show Notes: www.permaculturevoices.com/16
Interview with Darren Doherty, Australian Permaculture designer and teacher, and Guner Tautrim, owner of Orella Ranch on the Gaviota Coast. Doherty and Tautrim discuss Keyline and how it can reduce global warming, and rebuild topsoil.
Permaculture designer and teacher DarrenĀ Doherty, introduces Keyline Design and outlines the many ways that it can serve as a solution to global warming.