Fireside Chat with Dr. Christine Jones and Ray Archuleta

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  • Опубліковано 5 жов 2024
  • Eavesdrop on a conversation between two of the most prominent soil health experts in the world.
    Dr. Christine Jones and Ray Archuleta are regenerative soil health consultants for aspiring farmers, ranchers and growers across the globe, representing thousands of acres of agricultural land in food production and carbon capture. During this fireside chat, Christine and Ray will discuss the current state of our soils, regenerative farming practices that really work, and where a widespread adoption of these practices could take us.
    Guided by prompts and questions developed by NOFA/Mass’s Soil Tech Team, this 90-minute conversation will cover topics such as:
    The role of fungi in nutrient transfer
    Ways to rapidly improve compacted or chemically saturated soils
    The Techniques for keeping a fungal presence in row crops and intensive mixed vegetable production
    and more
    About the Speakers:
    Dr. Christine Jones. In addition to having a long list of credentials, Dr. Christine Jones is a member of Arizona State University’s ‘Carbon Nation Team’ and sits on the advisory board of ‘The Carbon Underground’. These organizations recognize that farming and grazing practices designed to improve levels of soil biological activity through the active management of diverse yearlong green groundcover are key to the restoration of soil function, clean water and nutrient dense food.
    Ray Archuleta. After his retirement from the NRCS in 2017, Ray helped to found Understanding Ag, LLC, and Soil Health Academy, LLC, to teach Biomimicry strategies and Agroecology principles for improving soil function on a national scale. Ray also owns and operates a 150-acre farm near Seymour, Missouri that he operates along with his wife and family.
    This workshop comes from the 2021 NOFA Summer Conference. Learn more at nofasummerconf...

КОМЕНТАРІ • 18

  • @w.j.habbenjansen5395
    @w.j.habbenjansen5395 2 роки тому +10

    Great interaction between Christine and Ray. Good to hear Christine speak without looking on her watch to see how much time she has to say wat she wants to share with us! Great information how to react to climate change. Also solves the problems we have with Nitrogen in Holland. A shame that not many people are smart enough to understand this. And to practice this!
    Kind regards from a Dutch dairyfarmer.

    • @WS-yq4ns
      @WS-yq4ns Рік тому

      In Germany it's similar....

    • @JamesOBrien2253
      @JamesOBrien2253 Рік тому

      @@WS-yq4ns same in Ireland

    • @denniskemnitz1381
      @denniskemnitz1381 3 місяці тому

      Do macro aggregates expand from micro aggregates....my bet is sometimes it will occur....do I want macroaggregates anyway...

  • @stephanealegoria7016
    @stephanealegoria7016 Рік тому +2

    No arm in being academic, in Dr Jones mouth it becomes poetry and practical meaning. Thank you.

  • @leelindsay5618
    @leelindsay5618 2 роки тому +2

    Perhaps. The. Host. Can. Um. Stop. Um. Pausing. After. Um. Every. Um. Word. And perhaps organize his thoughts when introducing the speakers, or get someone who can form a real question without all the ums.
    Dr. Christine Jones and Ray Archuleta are some of my favorite speakers. Its quite a treat to have both on the same webinar.

  • @RickLarsonPermacultureDesigner
    @RickLarsonPermacultureDesigner 2 роки тому +2

    Lots of interesting ideas!

  • @chrismcdonald9844
    @chrismcdonald9844 Рік тому +1

    Just to say thankyou for sharing this information its the future lets have more fire side chats

  • @homesteadspringsfarmforge5151
    @homesteadspringsfarmforge5151 2 роки тому +2

    This was a wonderful discussion. So many great points come out in an informal interaction. Love this format and all the information.

  • @Cam_two
    @Cam_two Рік тому

    So grateful my path and background is permaculture versus going to school for soil. Ray just needed to come across permaculture to understand holistic design and patterns in nature.

  • @jayne-oxtons8285
    @jayne-oxtons8285 2 роки тому

    Such a great conversation. So much information and encouragement here. Great explanation about role of legumes, and why we should not have a high percentage in a mix. My intuition has been not to have too many legumes, Ray and Christine explain why that is so simply.
    Thanks so much to all involved in bringing this to us. 👏 👏
    One question- as legumes do not fix nitrogen in cold soils is it ok to have more in winter cover crop mixes that will be terminated for early crops before the soil warms up?

  • @lenayeagle9650
    @lenayeagle9650 Рік тому

    I'm so excited about all of this information! Thank you for having it available to the public. There was something said at the end about human's carbon emissions being compared as minuscule to a volcano 'burp'. That isn't really the case. Human Activities release much more CO2 into the atmosphere on a regular basic than any known, singular, volcanic eruption. While there is currently debate in the scientific community that powerful eruptions in the past may have caused mass extinction events, current volcanic activity doesn’t even come close to adding up to CO2 emissions in the atmosphere because of humans. Every 2.5 hours, humans release approx. 10 million tons of carbon dioxide into the atmosphere. While it’s true that one large volcanic event could do the same amount of damage in a relatively short time (9 hrs. for Mount St. Helens in 1980), eruptions like this are rare, while human emissions are happening 24/7 and consistently on the rise. In 2010, projected anthropogenic emissions were at 35-gigatons. This projection is about 80-270 times the amount more than the annual minimum and maximum global volcanic CO2 emissions. Earth and it's systems have been in equilibrium for a good long time, and there is no doubt at all, that even though carbon contributions from our actions may look small, it has thrown the systems off balance in an alarming way. But it's absolutely more complex than just carbon by itself, as was stated in the video. Perhaps they were only referring to emissions related to agriculture, in that case I apologize for the irrelevant outpouring of information above :)
    But great work and I am SOO excited for spring to arrive so I can begin utilizing diversity in the little corner of land I get to tend to.

  • @chucklowry1622
    @chucklowry1622 Рік тому

    ray is spot on about compactions between the ears

  • @yvonnehyatt8353
    @yvonnehyatt8353 Рік тому

    Study -Kristen Dirksen please thanks

  • @DocSiders
    @DocSiders 2 роки тому +1

    An "ORGANIC" Ag Production certification *must* include Soil Regeneration.
    Many Organic practices damage soil (primarily Tillage used for weed control and aeration).

  • @saveaplanet669
    @saveaplanet669 Рік тому

    fungi supports individual plants to preserve the whole!!!!

  • @saveaplanet669
    @saveaplanet669 2 роки тому

    Definitely the chemical, machine, fossil fuel companies didn't like Kiss the Ground , the movie

  • @saveaplanet669
    @saveaplanet669 2 роки тому

    t didn't like regeneratve farming. As early as the 1930s, even a picture of a dung beetle was banned. Wonder why.