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#regenerativeag

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We got our first 2 handcrafted 'animal tractors' (aka field pods) out on pasture over the last couple of weeks. @winduptoy welded the base and walls and we wrapped them in a combination of chicken wire and hardware cloth. They're each 8' x 8'. One is currently for our rabbit and the other for quail. They're working beautifully to provide the animals with fresh forage in a natural environment while being protected from the many predators in the area. Both tractors are equipped with foldable dig guards and contained within a portable electric netting to added additional layers of predator protection. They are easy to move as they glide nicely over the field and they have held up surprisingly well to unseasonably high 50+ mph winds which as of late have felt near endless.

So far we are extremely happy with the design on these. I am sure as time goes on we will have ideas for improvements.

Our first newsletter was sent to subscribers today, with many more to come, including technical guides on greywater reuse, earthworks, preparation for climate shifts, and many other musings from our arid land.

Quarterly Updates: The Rebirth of Spring

Greetings from the Holy Mojave in its period of yearly renewal: as heat returns to us with the return of the Sun to the Northern hemisphere, so, too, does life begin its frantic rush to living before the heat slows it temporarily. We experienced the Spring Equinox on March 20th, and so return and rebirth are on our minds.
We believe that humans are a keystone species, and that our role is the careful stewardship of the ecosystems we a a part of. This belief underpins our philosophy and intention, and serves as the basis for the work of sowing seeds and routing water, allocating resources to plants and animals that serve the land as we do.
This is our first release of a continuous series of quarterly updates aligning with our Wheel of the Year observances and so we will, just this once, start from the beginning. We hope each quarterly update reminds you how capable you are to make the changes you wish to see in your own community, your own landbase.

rancholibertad.com/quarterly-u

Rancho de la Libertad · Quarterly Updates: The Rebirth of SpringGreetings from the Holy Mojave in its period of yearly renewal: as heat returns to us with the return of the Sun to the Northern hemisphere, so, too, does life begin its frantic rush to living before the heat slows it temporarily. We experienced the Spring Equinox on March 20th,

Hello from post-Equinox heat wave here in the sacred Mojave.

We see with the return of the sun also the return of young tree leaves, bees, dragonflies, and so much more. The cover crops I failed to grow last year are sprouting en masse in newly finished infiltration basins, irrigated with greywater from the communal house, and I've even seen mushrooms that I've inoculated into straw beds fruit after rains. So much of this feels like hope. Our young chickens are enjoying their first unsupervised forays into their little fenced run (until they're big enough to trust foraging), and we saw our first Great Horned Owl a few weeks ago.

Our website is live, and I hope you'll join us if you haven't already. We're releasing our first newsletter Monday, trying to put to digital paper Equinox contemplations, and bring you along on this journey with us.

rancholibertad.com

It's free, and we appreciate your support.

We are also trying to get a few trees in the ground before it gets too hot. If you feel up to monetary support to help us with purchasing saplings, we don't have our own ko-fi or paid tiers of the newsletter offering, yet, but we can accept donations (or purchases that support the ranch) through Siin's ko-fi:

ko-fi.com/sigillosacro

We appreciate & love you all, being to being. Stay safe out there.

Siin & Star

Rancho de la LibertadRancho de la LibertadA pioneering desert and community regeneration project located in Wonder Valley, California.

#garlic planted at the very last possible moment last fall is starting to break ground.

This is on some new property we've not really started on yet and the pH is in the low 5s. This bed got heavily amended with rabbit manure and we'll do foliar fish fertilizer as well to give them a boost as they grow out. I was obviously advised to Lime but it's way too expensive and I am more interested in working with the biology to buffer the pH instead. It's a slower solution but I believe the right one for us.

Pastoral Song by James Rebanks is one of the best books I've read this year. It is beautiful and honest and is a perspective I have longed to hear on how and why farmers went from farming small, in small rural communities, to operating at commercial/industrial scale, and back to small again.

A must-read for any farmer or homesteader, and anyone who cares one ounce about the realities of feeding this world.

We've just returned from a wonderful trip to see friends in Southeastern Arizona. The trip was full of tours of various local microclimates and properties, the local co-op they're helping to facilitate the growth of in the midst of a severe food desert, and meeting community members engaged in regenerative living to varying degrees.

There are many lessons, musings, and things I've learned that I may share in a more cohesive way soon, after I catch up on things back at the ranch.

It's been such an active season, which feels really wonderful.

We've finished cleaning up the West side of the house, allocating last year's compost. We also built framing for, sewed, and hung custom shade sails that make the house cooler -- summer is officially here in the high desert -- as well as which make that previously underutilized space another communal/hosting/patio type area just by virtue of being there and creating spacial separation.

My gardens are doing okay, something keeps eating my potato plants' leaves. I thought the birds that nest in the honey mesquite tree at first, but it keeps happening despite the chicken wire I've hung over the infiltration basin. My hunch is some insect, though I've yet to see the culprit in action. My white, black, and violet sages I replanted into the infiltration basin are doing great, though, as are the green onions and garlic I planted. Our nopales are slowly coming back, also, now that we've dug them infiltration basins and moved them to the shade of one of our mesquite trees.

We now have a water storage tank, a critical step in enabling us to get bigger livestock. It creates water resilience if the power goes down and our well pump doesn't work, and enables us to take some pressure off of our aquifers for minor irrigation projects.

A straw bale and adobe bunk house for guests and guest bathrooms are in the works, which will add to our capacity for hosting. A good thing, since we're grateful to be booked with visitors and loved ones from now until January.

We're planting five new trees to attract pollinators, some of our date palms are fruiting (despite being too immature to eat this year), and the infiltration basins on the North side of the property that were on hold are in progress again.

Our broody hen got confused when I moved her to her own coop the first time and abandoned her first clutch (that was my fault) but has successfully been sitting in the broody coop on a fresh clutch for a week now, so we're expecting teeny cluckers soon!

There are other projects that are set to begin soon, as well, but I'll have to update on those later on!

A reminder that if you ever want to support what we're doing here at the ranch, my Kofi directly funds projects like these and contains some sustainable goodies and unique art in return 🤍

The mistakes we have been making in agriculture EXACTLY mirror the mistakes we've been making in society.

This may sound trite, but it's a VERY simple and blunt truth: the more diversity, the better. Whether we're talking about plants in the ground or people in your community. Without diversity, we will die.

The harder we try to exert control, the worse the consequences come back around to bite us in the ass. Whether this is about forcing crops to grow in straight lines and killing everything that isn't the desired product, or forcing people to behave in a certain manner-- it works the same way.

Hubris leads to unforseen consequences-- and keeps us repeating the same mistakes over and over and over again long past the time we should've learned better. The arrogance of insisting we know better than nature, the obsession with manipulation, keeps us from admitting conventional wisdom is flawed. Even when it is killing us.

We can do better.

The results sound too good to be true, and yet... The measurements are right there. Better than most of us would have ever imagined. Even with the proof RIGHT THERE on the farm next door, neighbors will still insist on sticking to the doomed methods we've been taught are the "best" way (indeed, entrenched obsolete agricultural policies will actually penalize doing anything differently).

This farmer got a kick start, when 4 years of total disasters kept him from harvesting anything from his ranch-- inadvertently resting and replenishing the depleted soil. He took a big risk, switching to no-till; he actually sold his tilling equipment in order to afford the no-till drill seeder.

His land is now 5x as fertile as that of his neighbors, and sits pretty while they flood in the rain.

No pesticides. No herbicides. No synthetic fertilizer. No ploughing.

Throughout this video, he keeps emphasizing how crucial it is to incorporate carbon into the soil-- for production, for profit. He's not even talking about atmospheric CO2-- it just so happens that sequestering carbon in living ecosystems is the best way to produce food.

Even though he's still probably a pretty conservative guy, still treating animals like walking coin purses, even he has been learning how to work WITH the land.

Why isn't this sort of thing all over the news? Why isn't it taught in every ag school? This video and others like it have been increasingly making the rounds, but...

When it DOES show up in the news, what do we see?

...Frightened, struggling, impoverished farmers protesting in horror because the government is restricting their fertilizer use.

Remember that poem about washing the dishes? And how if you drop one on the floor, maybe they won't tell you to wash the dishes anymore...?

When environmental policies are enacted, it works in much the same way as many policies for social justice-- if it's implemented in the worst ways, guaranteed to piss people off, it compromises the results. Then people can claim "See?? We tried! And it doesn't work!"

Command farmers to use less fertilizer without explaining WHY, without massive educational campaigns showing how regenerating the soil actually works, leading with punishment instead of excitement-- and the environmental effort is shot in the foot. Stirring up resentment against the whole idea. Protecting the companies that profit off the doomed status quo.

Same thing when drugs are decriminalized in some half-assed way WITHOUT implementing sufficient treatment programs. Same thing with some Affirmative Action over here but not touching the mass incarceration or poverty or other systemic drivers over there.

We can't halfass things anymore. We can't settle for the performative and poisoned false "reforms" that won't actually get the job done.

Real solutions take big changes. It takes thinking profoundly differently. Tear apart every unexamined assumption.

#Agriculture
#RegenerativeAg
#Soil
#Topsoil
#Farming
#Grazing
#Pasture
#ClimateChange
#SolutionsExist

youtu.be/uUmIdq0D6-A