Regenerative Skills

Oliver Goshey

Helping you learn the skills and solutions to create an abundant and connected future

  1. Jun 15

    Undervalued biodiversity: Fostering overlooked lifeforms

    After the biodiversity panel from the last episode, I got to thinking about how protecting biodiversity is so often reduced to the life forms that humans value. The ones we find beautiful, friendly, or otherwise useful to us directly. Cuddly mammals, majestic birds, colorful butterflies and flowers, etc.    In many ways though, these living beings are only able to survive and thrive if the critters that we dislike are abundant in the same spaces. Many flowers are pollinated by bugs most would find annoying. A lot of cuddly mammals feed on weed species or our own crops. Eagles and owls need an abundance of rodents and reptiles if their populations are to grow. Many invasive exotic species are working tirelessly to restore damaged and imbalanced ecosystems.    It’s kinda like trying to lose body fat in just one area of your body. You can’t just pick the parts that are desirable to you and expect the whole interconnected system to accept that. Collectively we need to embrace the restoration and stewardship, especially of the lower trophic levels of the food web that support all the higher levels above.    In the last panel we touched a little on the tolerance and adaptation required to share space with predators and birds that threaten livestock and crops, recognizing their role despite the challenges that come from having them around.    Today I’ll be revisiting some of my favorite interviews from previous seasons in which we talked about three specific categories of overlooked and undervalued wildlife.    My hope is that we can welcome these into a broader conversation about biodiversity, and maybe even convince you to work to promote greater diversity and open pollination of your crops and livestock, the full range of insects, and even rethink your management of invasive species in your land or on your farm.

    1h 19m
  2. Apr 17

    Academia and Farming: The disconnect and potential

    In today’s deep dive episode we’re taking on the behemoth of a topic that is the broken system and relationship between academic institutions and farmers on the ground. For a long time there was traditional and experiential knowledge that helped to guide farming practices and cultures based on eons of experience and place based relationships. As agriculture became more technologically driven, traditional practices began to be replaced with mechanized and chemical centered management. Traditional knowledge was supplanted by academic knowledge which was guarded by universities and research centers as scientific trials and studies offered roadmaps of how to integrate these new products into farming. For the most part these institutions guarded their information and disseminated it through research papers, formal agronomists, and extension services. Since much of the research on specific products and the practices of using them was, and still is, funded by the industries that sold them, much of the knowledge has a severe bias in favor of the efficacy of those products and studies helped to push them onto farms. Most of the research done on farms happens on specific research farms run by universities themselves, which isn’t to say that they don’t create valuable learnings and insights, but the studies there are often done in highly controlled environments that working farms can almost never recreate, and the research then gets published in journals that farmers either don’t read or can’t access. For their part, farmers are constantly running experiments and trying new things to stay ahead of the endless variables and challenges of trying to get consistent yields out of a dynamic and living landscape while operating in shifting markets. The ones I know are endlessly tinkering and experimenting and looking for new knowledge. In theory these would be the ideal collaborators for researchers, but for a number of reasons that we’ll explore in this episode, the communication and collaboration just doesn't happen.  So here’s where we come in. Climate Farmers started more than 6 years ago, and while we used to be best known for our carbon credit program, which we closed back in 2025, we now operate entirely as a non-profit dedicated to advancing a regenerative food system in Europe by helping farmers to successfully transition to regenerative management of their land and businesses. Yet one of the core aspects of our work here still goes largely unnoticed by the farmers in our community, and that’s the projects we’re involved in through our research and innovation labs. This is where we’re working to connect academia and research institutes with real farmers. The idea is to bridge the gap that many of us have observed between the institutional research that churns out papers and studies that few farmers ever read, and instead get farmers involved so that they can help guide these studies and perform trials on their own land that can create validated information that’s relevant to them and their operations. The research and innovations labs at Climate Farmers are run by my colleagues Fabio Volkman and Alexander Berlin who are guiding us through today’s Deep Dive into both the challenges and the potential of better connecting scientists and farmers. They’ll also give us a look into some of the many projects we’re involved in that illustrate how we help make these connections happen as well as the valuable outputs that have already been created as a result. But just telling this story from our own perspective from within Climate Farmers hardly meets my standards for a Deep Dive, so you’ll also hear from a researcher who’s broken the mold for on-farm studies by conducting holistic and relationship focused research. You’ll hear from an agronomist helping to manage over 20k hectares of arable land and pastures who’s become a bridge between local universities and farmers in Estonia, and we’ll speak to a farmer with a long established track record of collaborating with researchers to create useful learnings on his own farm while helping push forward innovative knowledge in the institutions as well. If you’re a farmer listening to this, you’ll want to stick around till the end where we’ll also talk about how you can get involved in these European projects and research studies as well. You can learn more and reach out to us directly through our website at this link.  https://www.climatefarmers.org/research-and-innovation/

    1h 21m
  3. Mar 20

    Measuring Regeneration: Beyond data and metrics

    Welcome back everyone to the second of the Deep Dive episodes. In this new format the intention is to bring complexity back into the conversations around regenerative agriculture. Myself and many of my peers have been observing the discourse online, and especially on social media devolve into catch phrases and buzz words with little meaning and I want to embrace the complexity and many perspectives around many of the topics that get debated online. We’ll be testing out a mix of investigative journalism, key interview snippets, and narrative weaving, not to assert a single stance on any issue, but rather to guide listeners through the fact that there are rarely any easy answers and that there’s so much more to these conversations than the over-simplified arguments that we gloss over on click-bait titles and polarizing debates. You may remember in the last Deep Dive, we looked into the question of WHO has the authority and credentials to say what Regeneration is. As a continuation to this question, today we’ll be exploring HOW to measure the journey of regeneration. One thing is to establish standards and validity, but as we’ll see in these discussions, this is much harder to do than to talk about. This is a subject that is very relevant to my own work here with Climate Farmers because I helped to work on the creation of our our Monitoring, Reporting, and Verification program (MRV for short) and I continue to think about how such a complex and nuanced journey can be measured and communicated as I build and refine the educational programs in the Climate Farmer’s Academy.  The question of HOW to measure regeneration also contains many sub-questions, such as what is the end goal? When does the timeline for measurement start and stop? What tools and resources are available for measuring? Where do we set the parameters for observation? I mean, is it just the ecology of the farm that needs improvement, or do we need to look at the economy of the farm business and the state of health of the people involved and the community around them? It’s also very important to ask why we’re bothering to measure this at all. Who gets the data? What are they going to do with it, and how will this information affect the relationship between farmers, policy makers, and the end customer?

    1h 2m
  4. Mar 6

    Overcoming natural disasters on the farm: Recovery, prevention and adaptation

    Welcome back everyone to another panel session. In light of all the stories of extreme weather and emergencies around the Iberian peninsula and other parts of Europe in the past months, we’re going to take a closer look at the realities on the ground for our farmers. These storms and floods are becoming more and more common and frequent, and though we’ve talked in the past about the need to adapt to an increasingly erratic climate, these points of catastrophe are an essential part of the conversation. In this session we’ll hear from three farmers in Iberia and their experiences of enduring the constant storms and service interruptions of the past months. We’ll also explore how they are recovering from the disasters, how they plan to mitigate these events in the future, as well as a longer term view towards adaptation in the face of increasing frequency of events like this. In order to get a deeper sense of the impacts and challenges brought by the storms, flooding and erosion that our panelists experienced on their farms, I encouraged them to share pictures and videos of their land in the aftermath. Obviously these images can’t be conveyed over audio, so if you want to see what we were looking at in the introductions, you can see the video version of the panel session on the Climate Farmer’s YouTube channel or through the links in the resources page on our website at ClimateFarmers.org. So with all that out of the way, let’s jump into this month’s session.

    56 min
4.7
out of 5
100 Ratings

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Helping you learn the skills and solutions to create an abundant and connected future

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