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Reversing Soil Degradation with Dwayne Beck

Regenerative Agriculture Podcast

Release Date: 11/03/2020

Episode 114: The State of the American Food System with Austin Frerick show art Episode 114: The State of the American Food System with Austin Frerick

Regenerative Agriculture Podcast

Austin Frerick is an expert on agricultural and antitrust policy. He is a 7th-generation Iowan whose passion for agriculture comes from the weekends working on his grandpa's farm. He is a Fellow at the Thurman Arnold Project at Yale University. In 2022, he worked with the U.S. Department of Agriculture to organize a conference at Yale Law School entitled “Reforming America’s Food Retail Markets,” which explored competition issues in the nation’s grocery industry. He is the author of Barons: Money, Power and the Corruption of America’s Food Industry, which illustrates the...

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Boe Clausen is a second-generation farmer in Eastern Washington. His parents immigrated from Denmark and established Stokrose Farm in 1981. Initially focused on vegetable seed production, the farm diversified into alfalfa, hay, corn, wheat, and cattle. Boe now manages Stokrose Farm alongside his siblings.  Boe's shift towards foliar applications, reduced nitrogen usage, and strategic nutrient management have improved crop health, reduced disease and insect pressure, and enhanced soil fertility. In 2022, he grew 250-bushel corn with only 20 lbs of nitrogen. In this episode, Boe and John...

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Zack Smith is a fifth-generation farmer from northern Iowa. He is the owner and operator of Smith Seed and Agronomy, LLC, and co-founder and CEO of Stock Cropper, Inc. Zack previously worked in seed production and chemical retail as a certified crop advisor and then as a seed rep while farming on the side. He eventually became interested in soil health and started experimenting with strip-tilling and using cover crops, which marked the beginning of his shift towards regenerative agricultural. Zack recently developed a system called “stock cropping,” a regenerative farming system that...

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Episode 105: Moving From Organic to Regenerative Management with Steven Cardoza show art Episode 105: Moving From Organic to Regenerative Management with Steven Cardoza

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Steven Cardoza is a second-generation organic raisin grape grower. His 400-acre farm is south of Fresno, California. His father transitioned from conventional to organic growing in 1998 after discovering some of the inputs he was using were making him ill. Steven took over the business in 2017 with a massive jumpstart on the pathway to regenerative agriculture. Since moving from an organic to a regenerative approach, Steven has changed his management methods to enact many exciting results such as increased soil organic matter, increased yields and quality, and the elimination of pesticide use....

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Dr. Dwayne Beck is well known for being one of the pioneers of no-till agriculture in central South Dakota and across the High Plains. For more than three decades, Dr. Beck has been creating comprehensive systems for both irrigated and dryland crop production throughout the region, educating growers on the power of crop rotation, diversity, and other regenerative practices. He currently serves as the Research Manager at the Dakota Lakes Research Farm, a non-profit made up of farmers committed to sustainable land practices.

On today’s episode, John and Dwayne discuss:

  • Dwayne’s background and his earlier work assisting local growers with their irrigation systems
  • The continuing decline of the Ogallala Aquifer and how water infiltration can be improved by implementing no-till agricultural practices.
  • Addressing the often-overlooked aspects of irrigation, such as percolation and water delivery, and how it affects soil health.
  • Dwayne’s observations on lake bottom soils, the power of macropores, and the prevalence of summer fallowing in the High Plains.
  •  Utilizing de-percolation strategies to maintain proper nutrient levels in your soil.
  • Using competition, sanitation, and rotation to control weeds, diseases and insects. 
  •  Dwayne’s historical research on nutrient cycling and fertilizer placement. 
  • Dwayne offers up a broader historical perspective on how agriculture, human nature, and mother nature  work together.
  • A discussion on why moving to no-till options for all crops including potatoes, carrots and sugar beets are engineering and genetics problems.
  • The shared vision, but much different methods, between regenerative agriculture vs. organic agriculture.