Peace, Love, and Pollinators 🐝

Trevor Smith

Welcome to Peace, Love & Pollinators — a podcast by ReEarth Solutions This is the show for anyone who wants a more beautiful yard and a healthier planet. Whether you’ve got a backyard, a balcony, or you just care about the green spaces in your neighborhood, we’ll help you see what’s possible when you work with nature instead of against it. Each episode blends practical, feel-good advice with the bigger “why it matters.” We’re talking native plants, pollinators, soil life, compost, climate-resilient gardening, and the small changes that create outsized impact — for your landscape, your community, and the living world around you. With expert guests from across the country, we break down what actually works, bust common myths, and give you simple next steps you can use right away. Think of us as your friendly guide from “I just want my plants to live” to “I’m building a thriving ecosystem.” Welcome to Peace, Love & Pollinators. Let’s grow something better.

  1. May 19

    Episode 13 The Unfiltered Truth About Erosion Control

    John Engwar is the owner and president of Groundscapes Express, Inc., he has been providing innovative, environmentally responsible erosion control, stormwater management, and ecological landscape solutions since 1998. His work is rooted in stewardship, clean water protection, soil health, and the belief that construction and land care can work with nature rather than against it. A pioneer in the use of biodegradable compost-based erosion control products, he patented the FilterMitt system and helped introduce compost tubes as a sustainable alternative to synthetic erosion control materials. His company was among the first in New England to use compost products extensively for erosion control and stormwater management, helping reduce runoff, stabilize slopes, protect soils, and improve water quality without leaving plastic waste behind. Groundscapes Express has worked across highways, railroads, parks, athletic fields, golf courses, residential and commercial developments, municipal projects, and sensitive environmental sites throughout New England. The company’s work includes erosion control, stormwater treatment, invasive plant management, native planting, soil restoration, compost applications, ecological landscape design, and sustainable construction installations. He has collaborated with MassDOT, engineers, developers, regulators, inspectors, and municipalities to create practical solutions that meet environmental standards while improving long-term site performance. His approach combines field experience, compost science, native plant knowledge, invasive species management, and a deep commitment to protecting natural resources. With decades of project experience, he is recognized as a leader in biodegradable erosion control, sustainable site work, water conservation, and ecological land management. His mission is simple: build better landscapes, protect cleaner water, restore soil biology, and leave the land healthier than he found it

    36 min
  2. Feb 8

    Episode 9 Demystifying Biochar

    Mark Highland, The Organic Mechanic As a young kid, Mark made his connection to the natural world early, digging around in his grandmother’s vegetable garden, pulling weeds, picking caterpillars off plants, and harvesting ripe fruit. The work was hard (but fun!) and he knew he was hooked from the moment he turned over that first forkful of rich Illinois soil. Academic studies and work experiences After high school, Mark earned a BS degree in Environmental Horticulture at the University of Florida. It was in Florida that Mark received the nickname, “The Organic Mechanic”. Employment ventures after graduating took him to the west coast, working for a landscape construction company and a certified organic farm. Deciding to return to graduate school, Mark focused his MS degree studies on compost and potting soil. His academic work helped Longwood Gardens in southeastern Pennsylvania develop composts to use in their own potting soil. After the Longwood Graduate Program, Mark worked as a Compost & Soil Specialist at Longwood Gardens before starting The Organic Mechanic Soil Company, LLC, where he launched the first peat-free, compost-based potting soil in the United States! Where in the world is Mark these days? When he’s not out in the greenhouse or warehouse, Mark spends much of his time traveling to garden centers, trade shows similar venues to promote, educate and inspire others to the many rewards of organic gardening. He has taught classes at Longwood Gardens, The Tyler Arboretum, Mt. Cuba Center, The Scott Arboretum, Callaway Gardens, and speaks regularly at public events like The Philadelphia Flower Show, as well as to numerous garden clubs. At Organic Mechanics, “We work on your soil!” ®

    50 min
  3. Jan 24

    Episode 7 Nutrient Density: Soil Health=Human Health

    Todays episode is all about the connection between soil health, human health and the health of the planet. Dan has been an organic farmer for more than 30 years. He grew up on Many Hands Organic Farm in central Massachusetts with his parents, Julie Rawson, NOFA-MA Executive Director, and Jack Kittredge, publisher of Natural Farmer. After working globally in the late 90s and early 2000s with farmers, NGOs, and researchers across India, Russia, and Central America, Dan returned to the U.S. and in 2010 launched the BFA in order to ignite a movement around food quality. Dan has become one of the leading proponents of “nutrient density,” and works to demonstrate the connections between soil health, plant health, and human health through workshops and speaking engagements around the world, the annual Soil and Nutrition Conference, and an increased presence online through social media, a YouTube channel, and numerous webinars and podcasts. Dan launched the Real Food Campaign, now the Bionutrient Institute, that, with open-source science partners Our-Sci and FarmOS, are leading the effort to identify and increase nutrition in the food supply. The Bionutrient Institute has engineered and released a hand-held consumer spectrometer, the Bionutrient Meter, designed to test nutrient density at the point of purchase and bring transparency to the marketplace. Via the Bionutrient Meter, the goal is to empower consumers to choose their foods based on nutrient quality and thereby leverage economic incentives to drive full system regeneration.

    52 min

About

Welcome to Peace, Love & Pollinators — a podcast by ReEarth Solutions This is the show for anyone who wants a more beautiful yard and a healthier planet. Whether you’ve got a backyard, a balcony, or you just care about the green spaces in your neighborhood, we’ll help you see what’s possible when you work with nature instead of against it. Each episode blends practical, feel-good advice with the bigger “why it matters.” We’re talking native plants, pollinators, soil life, compost, climate-resilient gardening, and the small changes that create outsized impact — for your landscape, your community, and the living world around you. With expert guests from across the country, we break down what actually works, bust common myths, and give you simple next steps you can use right away. Think of us as your friendly guide from “I just want my plants to live” to “I’m building a thriving ecosystem.” Welcome to Peace, Love & Pollinators. Let’s grow something better.

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