Collaboration, Spirit and Change, Perspectives from Ray Archuleta
Regenerative Agriculture Podcast
AEA Marketing
4.7 • 546 Ratings
🗓️ 28 April 2020
⏱️ 52 minutes
🧾️ Download transcript
Summary
In this episode of the Regenerative Agriculture Podcast, John Kempf interviews Ray Archuleta, an outspoken proponent of healthy soil systems and the founder of Understanding Ag and the Soil Health Academy. Ray has spent decades working in conservation agriculture and, in this episode, he describes his journey from seeing nature as a competitive entity, in which all else should be killed in order for the desired crop to survive, to his understanding today that nature thrives on diversity and collaboration.
Ray describes how new science and technology have identified many examples of collaboration in agroecology, like arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi, which share water resources and transport energy and nutrients from organism to organism. Even under stress conditions, these microbes provide water to the plant, an example of nature sharing resources rather than competing. He provides examples of research that illustrate fields with a diversity of species showing greater resilience and yields than monoculture plantings.
Ray attended graduate school at New Mexico State University, after which he served as a livestock specialist in the Peace Corps and then as a conservation agronomist with the NRCS. During Ray's early years working in conservation agriculture, he started asking difficult questions: "Why is sediment the number one water quality problem in the nation? Why does it take so many acres to make a living?" Through these questions and more, reading books such as Allan Savory's Holistic Management, and coming to Gabe Brown's ranch in 2007, Ray had revelatory moments, realizing that robust soil ecology is the key to solving many of the challenges plaguing farms today.
On Gabe's farm, Ray observed an ideal example of a thriving ecology. When he realized the crops had received no support from nitrogen or chemical fertility applications, he began to dig deep, looking for research that would explain how this ecosystem was working. What he found was that nature thrives when collaborations between compatible organisms are fostered, illustrated not only in agronomic studies such as Brown University's paper on Stress Gradient Hypothesis but also in the real-world operations of early-adopting farmers.
John and Ray describe the collaboration taking place between plants, microbes, and bacteria in a healthy ecosystem as descriptive of a larger collaboration between farmers who are practicing these methods and sharing their information with other growers. Ray describes his own journey from viewing farming as drudgery to learning how the relationship between the living organisms works and feeling like he was a part of that relationship.
The conversation takes a deep dive into this farmer-soil-plant relationship, providing growers with the history of the soil health movement, the roles that policy, society, and agriculture play in the broader global health context, and the encouraging view on the vast gains that have been made in the field of soil health since the beginning of Ray's career as a soil conservationist thirty years ago.
Resources:
- Understanding Ag
- The Soil Health Academy
- The Stress Gradient Hypothesis
- Holistic Management by Allan Savory
- Gabe Brown's Ranch
Support For This Show
This show is brought to you by AEA, helping professional growers make more money using regenerative agriculture since 2006.
If you grow on a large scale and are looking to increase crop revenue and quality, email hello@advancingecoag.com or call 800-495-6603 to be connected with a dedicated AEA crop consultant.
Transcript
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| 0:00.0 | Hi, friends. This is John, and this is the Regenerative Agriculture podcast. Welcome back. I know you find our conversations enjoyable. I do as well. You're going to find the conversation today particularly enjoyable. I'm here with one of the leading evangelists of the Regenerative Agriculture message, Ray Archeletta. Ray, I'm delighted to have you here. |
| 0:20.6 | Thank you, John, for your gracious opening. I'm delighted to be with you also. So I'm excited |
| 0:26.6 | to have a good dialogue. Ray, you've been preaching the message, so to speak, and become |
| 0:32.6 | quite widely known, particularly in the last few years, for our listeners who aren't familiar with |
| 0:38.0 | your background and your story, can you tell us about what brought you to this point today |
| 0:42.1 | and the pathway that has brought you to the work that you're doing right now? |
| 0:45.9 | Thank you, John. |
| 0:46.9 | Yeah, I've had a real interesting journey. |
| 0:49.4 | My journey started years ago. |
| 0:52.4 | As you know, John, I worked with 32 years with Natural Resource Conservation |
| 0:57.0 | Service. I just retired about three years ago. And it was, it was my journey really started, |
| 1:04.8 | I think, consciously, and I notice how I use the word consciously, because I think the majority of my career was unconscious about the current industrial ag model. |
| 1:16.3 | I kind of imbibed and was raised under it. |
| 1:20.5 | And I thought everything was fine because, you know, I went to, I went to college for about eight years, two years in livestock science, and six years |
| 1:29.1 | and got my degree in agricultural biology and then soils and went to graduate school for a while. |
| 1:36.9 | And coming out of there and then I started my career with NRCS, working in New Mexico, |
| 1:42.9 | working in Missouri, and then Oregon and Idaho, |
| 1:48.0 | lived in Idaho, and worked in Oregon, and finished my career in North Carolina and putting two |
| 1:54.4 | more years in Missouri. But that whole journey, it was really, I guess what happened to me was |
| 2:00.4 | about in 95 to 2001. |
| 2:05.0 | Really interesting things started to happen. |
| 2:07.5 | I got to hear Ellen Sayre speak one time, and I'll never forget the first time I heard him speak. |
... |
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