Farms
Will Regenerative Agriculture Change How We Grocery Shop?
Learn the history behind the bountiful buzzword making its way onto food labels.
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8 Comments
/anne...
April 10, 2021
Certainly in Australia organic agriculture has always included the idea that the land must be improved as part of the process. I don't know if this is because so much of the landmass of Australia is so old, and many of the nutrients have been leached out over millennia - some of our mountain ranges used to be taller than Mt Everest - or if this is the result of canny marketing by yet another organisation who want a slice of the US certification pie, and they haven't spread to Australia.
To see this from an Australian perspective, Charles Massy's Call of the Reed Warbler https://www.goodreads.com/en/book/show/34951739 is an excellent book.
To see this from an Australian perspective, Charles Massy's Call of the Reed Warbler https://www.goodreads.com/en/book/show/34951739 is an excellent book.
Steve G.
February 27, 2021
As a farmer, I'm glad to see regenerative agriculture being explained in a consumer magazine. I've been working on it for over 25 years. It's been a journey, one that the destination is unknown albeit always trying to improve!
Jesse F.
February 26, 2021
Most discussion of regenerative ag, including this one, acts like it's been invented in the past few decades, while the reality is that for much of the history of humanity it's been the default. I'd appreciate it if future articles could acknowledge, and even speak with, the indigenous peoples who carry millennia of knowledge.
Bridget S.
February 26, 2021
Regenerative ag is definitely not a new practice (just a somewhat new term) and I mentioned that in the piece. You're right that so many Indigenous peoples, as well as people of color and others, have always practiced it. That's why I think it's also so important (although not always possible) to talk to the people you buy your food from about their growing practices. So many small farmers practice regenerative ag without calling it that.
Jesse F.
February 26, 2021
Thanks for the response. Maybe I didn't make my point clearly enough. Articles on this topic that don't include indigenous voices perpetuate the conception that the consciousness around regenerative agriculture is a new thing. It's not just that some farmers have accidentally done it for a long time, it's that many have been very purposeful without using the exact words that have now become popular. I would encourage you to seek diverse voices for future articles and am happy to point you to some if they would be helpful.
Heifer
March 7, 2021
Hi Jesse!
I agree with you and if you can point me to the articles with diverse voices I would tremendously appreciate it.
I agree with you and if you can point me to the articles with diverse voices I would tremendously appreciate it.
Genevieve Y.
March 7, 2021
Braiding Sweetgrass by Robin Wall Kimmerer is an excellent book on Indigenous wisdom and knowledge on plants and the natural world. It's not necessarily about regenerative agriculture, but I think any approach towards regenerative agriculture would be incomplete without the ideas that Kimmerer talks about in her book. Kimmerer is runs the Center for Native Peoples and the Environment and her work is truly incredible. Braiding Sweetgrass is one of my favourite books - I highly recommend it!
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