211 episodes

Agroecology in a world where everything seems to be getting worse.

The Poor Prole’s Almanac The Poor Prole’s Alamanac

    • Leisure
    • 5.0 • 6 Ratings

Agroecology in a world where everything seems to be getting worse.

    The Odum Brothers and a New Permanent Agriculture

    The Odum Brothers and a New Permanent Agriculture

    To understand the development of the post-World War permanent agriculture movement and the movements that followed, we need to follow the trajectory of the movement of the field of ecology, and we cannot trace this evolution without talking about the Odum brothers. Eugene and Howard T. Odum were the sons of sociologist Howard Washington Odum & Anna Louise Kranz and would go on to change the trajectory of agroecology, for better or worse.
     
    In 1954, both were hired by the Atomic Energy Commission to study a coral reef at the Eniwetok Atoll atomic test bomb site.3 Just the year before, Eugene had published the first edition of Fundamentals of Ecology, the first textbook focused on the concept of the ‘ecosystem’. As they had refined their beliefs on ecology and systems thinking (while Eugene had been the primary author in the book, Howard T had contributed chapters to it), their time working at this test bomb site provided the foundation for both brothers and their belief around ecosystem energy. The coral reefs were described by the brothers as a steady-state system; it was their assessment that the coral reef system used most of the energy it consumed through photosynthesis to regulate the system. It would be the example that the brothers would point to of what a mature ecosystem looked like— self-regulating, self-maintaining, and a steady-state system. Both brothers would go on to study different ecosystems and each provided new data that the condition of stability was characteristic of all mature ecosystems.
     
    To read about The Odum Brothers' contributions to history, check out the following substack for sources and further details: https://poorprolesalmanac.substack.com/p/the-odum-brothers
     
    To support this podcast, join our patreon for early episode access at https://www.patreon.com/poorprolesalmanac
    For PPA Writing Content, visit: www.agroecologies.org
    For PPA Restoration Content, visit: www.restorationagroecology.com
    For PPA Merch, visit: www.poorproles.com
    For PPA Native Plants, visit: www.nativenurseries.org
    To hear Tomorrow, Today, our sister podcast, visit: www.tomorrowtodaypodcast.org/

    • 53 min
    Reflections on 60 Years of Tree Crops with Robert Seip

    Reflections on 60 Years of Tree Crops with Robert Seip

    Through a confluence of events I was connected with one of the elders of the tree crops world, Bob Seip, and was invited to his farm, buried in rural Pennsylvania. Bob, or Robert, depending on how you know him, has seen a lot at 94, and after walking around the property buried in a foot of snow, it became clear he didn’t feel remotely finished yet.
     
    We gathered around his kitchen table, surrounded by recording equipment and dogs and bowls of cracked hickories and butternuts, outside of cell phone services, talking about 70 years of farming and memories of his contemporaries and the trees that covered his landscape. Upon arriving, Zach Elfers, a prior guest on the podcast, shared his own stories of Bob. Robert’s daughter, Emilie Swackhammer and her husband Scott joined us under the cocktail tree, a tree next to the home with countless grafts, some of which may be cultivars thought to have been lost. For everything Robert has forgotten, his wife Cindy remembers and candidly chimes in between making sure everyone is fed.
    There’s nothing quite like a conversation around a kitchen table about the things we are passionate about. This was a joy to share and I am incredibly indebted to the Seip family, as well as Zach & Carissa for sharing the moment with me. Of course, no good deed can go unpunished, as it goes, and after trekking offroad as the sun set to view some of the oldest planted trees on the property, my phone went missing and was only found by flashlight. Further, despite bringing backup recording gear, because of course when it’s the worst possible time for something to go wrong, it will, we still managed to have some audio issues. The most prominent issues are at the beginning of the episode, so please make it through the first few moments and it gets better.
    Read more about his farm here:
    https://www.lancasterfarming.com/farming-news/every-tree-tells-a-story-arborist-shares-the-history-behind-10-of-his-favorites/article_9fb7fb16-e238-11ed-8de0-4bc5a36bb310.html
     
    To support this podcast, join our patreon for early episode access at https://www.patreon.com/poorprolesalmanac
    For PPA Writing Content, visit: www.agroecologies.org
    For PPA Restoration Content, visit: www.restorationagroecology.com
    For PPA Merch, visit: www.poorproles.com
    For PPA Native Plants, visit: www.nativenurseries.org
    To hear Tomorrow, Today, our sister podcast, visit: www.tomorrowtodaypodcast.org/

    • 1 hr 24 min
    Reclaiming our Cemeteries!

    Reclaiming our Cemeteries!

     
    This episode is a callback to an earlier episode on Tomorrow, Today, with Dr. Scott Cave. We chat about cemeteries, their unique place as third spaces, how they can be sources of community and radical ecology work, and more!
     
    This is one of my favorites so if you didn't listen before, listen now!
    Check out Citizens Cemetery (now Citizen Botany) on Instagram at @CtznBotany
    To support this podcast, join our patreon for early episode access at https://www.patreon.com/poorprolesalmanac
    For PPA Writing Content, visit: www.agroecologies.org
    For PPA Restoration Content, visit: www.restorationagroecology.com
    For PPA Merch, visit: www.poorproles.com
    For PPA Native Plants, visit: www.nativenurseries.org
    To hear Tomorrow, Today, our sister podcast, visit: www.tomorrowtodaypodcast.org/

    • 49 min
    Agroecology in Rojava

    Agroecology in Rojava

    In this episode, we’re joined by Berivan & Anya from Defend Rojava. Berivan Omar is a Kurdish feminist activist and social ecologist who lives in Northeast Syria, and Anya Rebrii is an activist and author who is involved with the Emergency Committee for Rojava. They will be authoring a chapter in a book next year with AK Press titled “Rojava in Focus: Critical Dialogues” highlighting the successes and struggles the region has face since its autonomy.
     
    We chat about the role agroecology has played so far in Rojava and the role it will continue to play as the region continues to grapple with the unique challenges it faces in the region. To learn more about the history and role of ecology in the region, check out the following links:
    Upcoming book chapter co-authored by Berivan and Anna: https://greenbeanbookspdx.indielite.org/book/9781849355728
    Useful article on the movement’s philosophy and challenges on the ecological front: https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fpos.2021.815338
    A recent article with the general overview of developments in Rojava: https://www.truthdig.com/articles/rojavas-improvised-revolution/ 
    Book Make Rojava Green Again: https://files.libcom.org/files/make-rojava-green-again.pdf 
    Brochure Commitment to an ecological society in Rojava:  https://7f2d1cef-1300-4fc6-ac1a-9615070f599d.filesusr.com/ugd/7b1b38_b2a83cdecd4740ceaaabbc753d592e34.pdf 
    Emergency Committee for Rojava’s website: https://www.defendrojava.org/
    Social media: @defendrojava
    Contact: info@defendrojava.org
     
     
    To support this podcast, join our patreon for early episode access at https://www.patreon.com/poorprolesalmanac
    For PPA Writing Content, visit: www.agroecologies.org
    For PPA Restoration Content, visit: www.restorationagroecology.com
    For PPA Merch, visit: www.poorproles.com
    For PPA Native Plants, visit: www.nativenurseries.org
    To hear Tomorrow, Today, our sister podcast, visit: www.tomorrowtodaypodcast.org/

    • 40 min
    Russell Lord, J. Edgar Hoover & the Permanent Agriculture Movement

    Russell Lord, J. Edgar Hoover & the Permanent Agriculture Movement

    Part 2 of the Russell Lord story. Before Murray Bookchin, another man paired ecological health with societal health, Russell Lord. In this episode, we dive into Lord's early years and his exposure to sustainable agriculture. Heavily influenced by Liberty Hyde Bailey, Lord worked as a journalist and extension program educator to advocate for the needs of farmers across the country in the early 20th century. During this time, he made a number of crucial connections which would later catapult him to becoming a forgotten but incredibly important conduit for the permanent agriculture movement's success over a number of decades.
     
    To read about Russell Lord's contributions to history, check out the following substack for sources and further details: hhttps://poorprolesalmanac.substack.com/p/russell-lord
     
    To support this podcast, join our patreon for early episode access at https://www.patreon.com/poorprolesalmanac
    For PPA Writing Content, visit: www.agroecologies.org
    For PPA Restoration Content, visit: www.restorationagroecology.com
    For PPA Merch, visit: www.poorproles.com
    For PPA Native Plants, visit: www.nativenurseries.org
    To hear Tomorrow, Today, our sister podcast, visit: www.tomorrowtodaypodcast.org/

    • 1 hr 10 min
    Russell Lord: Ecological Problems Are Agricultural Problems

    Russell Lord: Ecological Problems Are Agricultural Problems

    Before Murray Bookchin, another man paired ecological health with societal health, Russell Lord. In this episode, we dive into Lord's early years and his exposure to sustainable agriculture. Heavily influenced by Liberty Hyde Bailey, Lord worked as a journalist and extension program educator to advocate for the needs of farmers across the country in the early 20th century. During this time, he made a number of crucial connections which would later catapult him to becoming a forgotten but incredibly important conduit for the permanent agriculture movement's success over a number of decades.
     
    To read about Russell Lord's contributions to history, check out the following substack for sources and further details: hhttps://poorprolesalmanac.substack.com/p/russell-lord
     
    To support this podcast, join our patreon for early episode access at https://www.patreon.com/poorprolesalmanac
    For PPA Writing Content, visit: www.agroecologies.org
    For PPA Restoration Content, visit: www.restorationagroecology.com
    For PPA Merch, visit: www.poorproles.com
    For PPA Native Plants, visit: www.nativenurseries.org
    To hear Tomorrow, Today, our sister podcast, visit: www.tomorrowtodaypodcast.org/

    • 50 min

Customer Reviews

5.0 out of 5
6 Ratings

6 Ratings

Dinnottu ,

Lifechanging podcast

Such in depth knowledge and incredible research goes into this podcast. If only the creators could be our politicians the world would be a better place

laochq ,

All you need to know to survive collapse

Poor paroles Almanac is all you need to understand climate breakdown and our place in the ecosystem.

It provides a much needed resource for anyone interested in the most essential of human activities, the production of food

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