Joe Rogan Podcast Hosts Savory Hub Leader Will Harris
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- Опубликовано: 5 окт 2024
- "Have you ever heard of the Savory Institute?" 💫
Georgia Savory Hub Leader, Will Harris of White Oak Pastures, was the guest on Joe Rogan Experience episode # 1893, where Harris took #joerogan on a deep dive into all things #holisticmanagement, #regenerativeagriculture, and the differences between "complex" and "complicated."
In this clip, #WillHarris gives a breakdown of complicated vs. complex, the different cycles of nature, and how holistically managing our resources restores #soilhealth.
To watch/listen to the full episode: open.spotify.c...
Gotta get Allan on that podcast, the message will get across to millions more
Will Harris, you are a guiding light to me. We farm 40 acres under regenerative management including a growing flock of pastured East Friesian dairy sheep. Thank you for your courage, wisdom and leadership!
Will Harris is a brilliant man . Congratulations to Joe Rogan for getting him on 👏
Congrats Joe for showing this👍
Savory Hub Leader Will Harris 👍👍⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐
Love it!
Thank you Joe R for highlighting this.
The biggest problems i have caring for our small cattle farm in Australia are currently coming from non farm neighbours and council uses.
I see no hope until this becomes mainstream understanding.
Also maintaining business as usual has to be too expensive.
Until this happens, a small voice in the wilderness is not listened to.
Thank you for the report.
More Jim, more regenerative agriculture teachers! Our health, our planet, and your children depend on it!
We have overgrazed the world for thousands of years. We have the technology and understanding to fix it. Let’s make it happen before it’s too late
According to Savory, we have not so much overgrazed, as we have failed to give our pasturelands ample time to recover between grazings.
@@movinon1242 is that not the definition of overgrazing?
@@JasonLockwood87
Overgrazing and under-resting are distinct yet related concepts.
Overgrazing occurs when livestock are allowed to remain at a site, often called a paddock, longer than 3 days. If livestock are allowed to graze a paddock longer than 3 days, new growth leaves - critical to the plant’s development - are eaten, and flies hatch while the animals are still present. Successful regenerative graziers typically subdivide their farm into between 30 to 45 paddocks, meaning that on any given day, livestock occupy only 2% or 3% of the farm with 97-98% of it available for exclusive use by wildlife.
By contrast, “under-rest” occurs when livestock are returned to a paddock to graze before the plants there are fully regrown.
Soil Carbon Cowboys
(2013, 12 mins.)
ruclips.net/video/MDoUDLbg8tg/видео.html
More videos on regenerative grazing at ...
Carbon Cowboys Film Paddocks
carboncowboys.org/films
Getting the message out on big platforms is great, but I wish there were better options of platforms for Will Harris and others. (The more I learn about JR, the less I like the guy. And I keep hearing about new bad actions which fact-check as true.) Will Harris is brilliant as always.
What date did this episode air? Cheers
It's episode #1893. Not sure the air date, but in the last week or so.
Weird the full episode is missing on Spotify. Skips #1892 #1894
Glad Joe finally got his ear to the ground.
Thinking during the 5 min talk: ‘when does he get to the point, what is different about regenerative farming?’
That stuff never came. I didn’t learn anything.
Favoring the 'cycles', not breaking them...
4:48
He told JR you take steroids 😂, but I really wanted to see the look on JR's face before the guy said someone else takes steroids
Teaser 😆
Apes are not herbivores. They can't live on plants alone. Currently, they a very unhealthy, just like us.