Not Your Average Garden Club Podcast

Ecoversity

Not a wellness show, a club. Stephen Brooks and Seraphina Capranos of Ecoversity and Not Your Average Garden Club host highly curated, weekly expert sessions featuring Indigenous elders, renowned herbalists, and regenerative pioneers. Life-changing and tangible medicine, wisdom and resources.

Episodes

  1. Jul 7

    Zach Galifianakis on Why Growing Old in a Garden Beats Growing Up in Hollywood

    Zach Galifianakis doesn't live in Hollywood. He works there, and he believes there's an important difference. Known for The Hangover, Between Two Ferns, and as an Emmy-winning comedian, actor, and writer, Zach is now exploring a different passion through his Netflix series, This Is A Gardening Show, where he combines humor with gardening, sustainability, and the people preserving the art of growing food. In this episode, Zach shares why he believes a garden might be the simplest remedy for the human condition. He talks about the importance of growing food, preserving elder knowledge, finding hope in small cultural shifts, and why he has more respect for gardeners than actors. This conversation is a reminder that some of the biggest solutions to modern life might begin with something as simple as getting your hands in the dirt. Key Timestamps:  [00:00:00] Introduction [00:01:18] Why Zach visits gardens everywhere [00:01:57] What the Dust Bowl taught us [00:05:08] Can gardens change the world? [00:05:42] Is gardening political?[00:06:23] One seed for a deserted island [00:07:45] The apocalypse and the cardoon [00:09:09] Finding peace in the garden [00:12:13] What "64 harvests" really means [00:13:32] Why the garden show resonates [00:14:01] Walmart and the organic shift [00:15:52] How COVID inspired the show [00:17:04] Wedding garlic and new beginnings [00:18:16] Preserving lost gardening wisdom [00:19:15] Making gardening cool again [00:20:26] How we've lost touch with nature Memorable Quotes: "To me, we can even up the world. We can make a beautiful thing that we're supposed to be doing. But for some reason, humans go in this other negative direction of war." [00:05:21] – Zach Galifianakis "I hope people from different philosophies can pull a carrot out of the ground and agree that it tastes good. And that's a bonding thing." [00:05:46] – Zach Galifianakis If this conversation inspired you to reconnect with nature and learn practical skills for growing your own food, flowers, and medicine, join the free Not Your Average Garden Club Summit and learn from world-class gardeners, herbalists, and regenerative living experts: https://www.ecoversity.org/garden-club-summit?utm_source=spotify_for_creators&utm_medium=video&utm_campaign=nyagc_podcast&utm_content=ep002_soil Connect with us: Website: https://www.ecoversity.org/ Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/ecoversity Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/EcoversityOrg/ YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@ecoversityorg Produced by Evolved Podcasting: www.evolvedpodcasting.com

  2. Jun 30

    Sixty Harvests Left: The Soil Crisis No One Wants to Admit

    Most people think they’re growing plants, but Evan Buckman, a scientist and regenerative systems thinker focused on soil health and food systems, would argue that the real story begins underground. Before anything breaks the surface, a living network beneath the soil is already determining whether your garden will thrive or struggle. In this episode, we explore the soil food web and why soil is not just dirt, but a dynamic, living system. We unpack how modern practices have disrupted that system, and why adding more products often fails to fix the problem. If your garden feels like guesswork or your food lacks flavor, this conversation offers a more grounded way to understand what’s going on. Evan breaks down the organisms and relationships that drive plant health, along with regenerative principles that help restore balance. When you understand the system, growing food becomes simpler, more consistent, and far more rewarding. If you have been trying to fix your garden from the surface, this episode will show you where real change begins. Key Timestamps: [00:00:00] Introduction [00:08:19] Myth #1: Soil microbes don't matter [00:08:38] The three components of soil [00:09:57] How long it takes to build organic matter [00:13:05] Understanding the soil food web [00:21:24] Extractive vs. regenerative agriculture [00:26:02] Five benefits of living soil [00:27:34] How microbes break down toxins [00:33:35] Tripling cassava root growth [00:39:12] Soil health and human health Memorable Quotes: "The math shows that if we were to adopt this sort of genuine regenerative agriculture principles, we could sequester all of the carbon that humans put up into the atmosphere every year." [00:27:11] – Evan Buckman "Human health is rooted in soil health, and so is planetary health." [00:32:39] – Evan Buckman If this conversation inspired you to reconnect with nature and learn practical skills for growing your own food, flowers, and medicine, join the free Not Your Average Garden Club Summit and learn from world-class gardeners, herbalists, and regenerative living experts: https://www.ecoversity.org/garden-club-summit?utm_source=spotify_for_creators&utm_medium=video&utm_campaign=nyagc_podcast&utm_content=ep002_soil Connect with Evan Buckman: Website: https://soilfoodweb.com/ LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/evan-buckman/ Connect with us: Website: https://www.ecoversity.org/ Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/ecoversity Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/EcoversityOrg/ YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@ecoversityorg Produced by Evolved Podcasting: www.evolvedpodcasting.com

  3. Jun 23

    From 225 Students to Thousands of Acres: What Commitment Over Certainty Actually Looks Like

    What if happiness isn’t something you think your way into, but something your body already knows? While lying under the stars on an off-grid permaculture farm in Costa Rica, Alexa Rosenthal felt a quiet, embodied sense of connection, as if the earth itself was meeting her with love. That land had been cared for over 27 years by Stephen Brooks, who built more than a farm. He built a living community rooted in presence, food, and connection. When COVID forced their in-person launch to collapse, they had three weeks to pivot. They moved online, and what followed was unexpected. 225 people signed up, momentum built quickly, Netflix got involved, and eventually 400,000 people tuned in. Ecoversity wasn’t built from a traditional plan but emerged from a desire to respond to a system that felt disconnected and to create something more alive. In this conversation, Alexa shares her three-month commitment rule and her focus on only what feels genuinely fun. Stephen speaks about karmic bank accounts, long-term impact, and creating experiences that shift people so deeply they can’t easily go back to who they were before. Together, they explore fear, faith, and what it takes to bring something meaningful into existence. Key Timestamps: [00:00:00] Introduction [00:40:00] Ecoversity began with a question [01:39:00] Meet Stephen and Alexa [02:25:00] Alexa's decision to join Ecoversity [02:58:00] The Punta Mona turning point [05:51:00] The risk of joining forces [08:20:00] Stephen's 23-year jungle journey [10:48:00] Creating truly impactful time [15:23:00] The COVID pivot: from uncertainty to global impact [21:29:00] Designing thousands of acres with permaculture [22:28:00] Healing depression and anxiety [23:46:00] The power of the three-month rule [26:29:00] When it became more than an online business [30:06:00] Remembering how to be well [31:43:00] Finding your people [33:35:00] Water it, nurture it, commit [34:53:00] Trust yourself and take action Memorable Quotes: "I was like, oh my God, wait, I finally get it. This is what it feels like when the earth loves you back. I was like, there's actually a reciprocal relationship when you're with land, and you're with the spirit of land that you can feel in your body." [00:04:08] – Alexa Rosenthal "Avoid the paralysis by analysis. Sometimes we're just overanalyzed, and we don't think we're ready, and we don't think that it's baked enough, the idea. And I'm from the school of thought where like, just do it and improve it along the way." [00:34:53] – Stephen Brooks If this conversation inspired you to reconnect with nature and learn practical skills for growing your own food, flowers, and medicine, join the free Not Your Average Garden Club Summit and learn from world-class gardeners, herbalists, and regenerative living experts: ⁠https://www.ecoversity.org/garden-club-summit?utm_source=spotify_for_creators&utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=nyagc_podcast&utm_content=ep001_founders⁠ Connect with us: Website: https://www.ecoversity.org/ Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/ecoversity Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/EcoversityOrg/ YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@ecoversityorg Produced by Evolved Podcasting: www.evolvedpodcasting.com

About

Not a wellness show, a club. Stephen Brooks and Seraphina Capranos of Ecoversity and Not Your Average Garden Club host highly curated, weekly expert sessions featuring Indigenous elders, renowned herbalists, and regenerative pioneers. Life-changing and tangible medicine, wisdom and resources.