Insights
Bucks Farm: Meet your hosts for our Soil Health Workshop in Lancashire
Due to high demand we are organising an additional Soil Health Workshop in Lancashire, which will be kindly hosted by Nat and Roger Marsden at Bucks Farm, near Clitheroe, from Wednesday 11th June - Thursday 12th June.
Nat and Roger breed Luing cattle and Easydam and Cheviot sheep near the Forest of Bowland National Park.
The brothers farm in partnership and have been transitioning into regenerative agriculture for the last five years.
Adam Henson: Meet your hosts for our Soil Health Workshop in the Cotswolds
Our Soil Health Workshop in the Cotswolds will be kindly hosted by Adam Henson and Duncan Andrews at Cotswold Farm Park, Wiltshire, from June 9th to June 10th.
Adam is perhaps the best-known farmer in the UK, presenting his own section on BBC’s Countryfile to millions of viewers each Sunday evening.
Adam and his business partner Duncan now jointly run the 650-hectare estate, together with the Cotswold Farm Park, home to over 50 breeding flocks and herds of British rare breed farm animals.
Alex Brewster: Meet your hosts for our Soil Health Workshop in Perthshire
Regenerate Outcomes are excited to be bringing together some leading names in regenerative farming for our Soil Health Workshops this summer.
Each Soil Health Workshop will feature two days of practical insights into growing profits and cutting costs by improving soil health.
Our Soil Health Workshop in Scotland will be kindly hosted by Alex and Jane Brewster at Rotmell Farm, Perthshire, from 5th June - 6th June.
Analysis shows regenerative agriculture cuts costs and grows profits
A study by our mentoring partners, Understanding Ag, has shown significant reductions in the cost of inputs on farms which have adopted regenerative practices.
At the same time, the 362 farms involved in this US study showed substantial increases in soil organic matter and forage production.
Understanding Ag tracked the progress of the farms over one, three and five years.
Webinar: Balancing animal performance and soil health
In the latest in our Winter Webinar Series we discussed what trade offs there are in balancing improved soil health with animal performance.
We were also joined by Dr Allen Williams, from our mentoring partners Understanding Ag, as well as James Daniel, of Precision Grazing, based in Cornwall, and Nottinghamshire farmer Joe Howard.
Joe manages a mixed farming business growing and finishing approximately 1500 dairy beef on a grazing and forage system integrated with root crops and cereals.
Join leading names in regenerative farming at our Soil Health Workshops
Regenerate Outcomes is bringing together leading names in regenerative farming for our Soil Health Workshops this summer.
Join us in England, Scotland and Wales for two days of practical insights into building healthy soil to grow profits and improve crop and livestock performance.
The events will also feature discussions with our host farmers, including BBC presenter Adam Henson at Cotswold Farm Park, in Gloucestershire.
Webinar: Herbal leys for long-term soil health gains
In the latest in our Winter Webinar series, we were joined by Paul Totterdell, Director of Cotswold Seeds, and Ian Wilkinson, Cotswold Seeds owner, to discuss the benefits of herbal leys for soil health.
"Diversity really is key when we look at herbal ley mixtures,” says Paul.
“If we're really going to tap into all the benefits that we have on offer from all the wonderful species available to us we need to make sure that we include as many as possible.”
How can soil health increase resilience to heavy rain?
“The fundamental goal of using regenerative farming practices is to improve soil health, which in turn enhances business resilience.
“Building a healthy soil is the foundation for many other benefits, whether that is cutting costs, improving livestock and crop performance or increasing resilience to extreme weather.
“One of the key improvements in soil health is building soil aggregates which provide the conditions for life and nutrient soil cycling whilst also providing more infiltration capacity.
Webinar: Gabe Brown’s strategies for starting out in regenerative agriculture
In the December installment of our winter webinar series, we heard from regenerative farming pioneer Gabe Brown on some of his advice for farmers who want to begin adopting practices to improve soil health and grow profits.
Gabe is one of the leading voices in regenerative farming worldwide and best known as author of the book Dirt to Soil.
He is also one of the founders of our mentoring partners Understanding Ag, alongside Dr Allen Williams.
Webinar: Regen for dairy farmers - Is a milk yield penalty inevitable when focusing on soil health?
In the latest in our winter webinar series, we heard from award-winning dairy farmers Kent Solberg and Doug Voss about the benefits of using a regenerative approach.
We were also joined by Dorset dairy farmer Stuart Rogers, who discussed how he has adopted some regenerative practices on his farm.
“There is low hanging fruit that fits very well with developing soil health and which has huge potential for helping the bottom line in a dairy operation,” says Kent.
Strategies for controlling blackgrass
In the first of our winter webinar series we take a deep dive into blackgrass and some of the strategies we can use for controlling it by focusing on soil health.
As Kyle Richardville, from our mentoring team, explains, conventional farming practices have created circumstances which can actually benefit many weeds, including blackgrass.
In the webinar Kyle explains how adopting the Six Principles of Soil Health on your farm will build soils where water and air can cycle freely, reduce compaction and increase organic matter levels to feed beneficial microbes and fungi.
Join our special webinar with regen pioneer Gabe Brown
As part of our free winter webinar series we are excited to offer people the chance to hear directly from one of the pioneers of regenerative farming, Gabe Brown who heads up our mentoring team.
Gabe is a founding member of our mentoring partners Understanding Ag and is world-renowned as one of the leading voices in the movement.
Gabe will share his advice on transitioning to a more holistic approach to farm management and overcoming some of the economic, educational and cultural barriers which can stand in the way.
Combatting blackgrass: Do we need a different approach?
“Farmers that make the most regenerative progress begin to view ‘weeds’, ‘pathogens’ and ‘pests’, as simply organisms doing a job for everyone else.
“In the case of weeds, plants like blackgrass are photosynthesizing and feeding a compacted soil so that the system can support a diversity of life one day.
“Does this mean we should let blackgrass or brome or wild oats overrun a field? Of course not. We’ve still got a business to run. But the fact is that they are doing a job, and we can learn a lot from them if we pay attention."
Supporting the transition to regenerative farming in the Cotswolds
Regenerate Outcomes is excited to be working with a group of 25 farmers and advisers to grow their understanding of regenerative farming practices in the Cotswolds.
The Regenerative Agriculture Accelerator Programme (RAAP) is being hosted and administered by the Cotswold National Landscape team, with core funding from the Farming in Protected Landscapes grant.
It involves a 12-month intensive programme of workshops, farm walks, agronomy clinics, facilitation training and other events.
Agroforestry in regenerative farming
In the second of our series on agroforestry, we hear from Edd Colbert of Agroforestry Design.
Edd has lived and worked in the UK, Europe, sub-Saharan Africa and Latin America, in a variety of roles to support agroecological transitions.
He specialises in working with farmers, foresters and funders to design effective agroforestry systems.
Edd is also a key actor in the UK's agroforestry movement having organised the first Agroforestry Show, hosted by the Soil Association and Woodland Trust for the first time in Wiltshire last year.
An introduction to agroforestry: How trees and hedgerows can build farm resilience
In the first in our series on agroforestry, Peter Leeson, Woodland Creation Adviser for the Woodland Trust, explains how trees and hedgerows can help create resilient farms.
"I'm a real advocate for trees, but they have to add value to our farm systems and when we put a tree somewhere, we need to make sure it's in the right place,” says Peter.
“It's not just about trees being pretty, it's not just about biodiversity, although that's important. It's about how a farm can take a tree, or hedge or whatever it is and add value to the farm.”
Diversity, diversity, diversity
"I fundamentally believe that the only thing that creates soil structure is biology.
“The more biology that we have of different sorts, the more organic compounds that will come to help create that aggregate structure.”
In the latest in our Autumn and Winter Webinar Series, we were joined by Ian Gould, a director of Oakbank Game and Conservation, to focus on how increasing diversity of all living organisms can improve soil health.
Oakbank has built a great reputation working with farmers and landowners to make the best use of agri-environment schemes to improve wildlife habitats.
Understanding carbon: The essentials of carbon credits for UK farmers
In the last of our series explaining how carbon credits can create additional income as part of a resilient and profitable farm business, Bill Goldie - sales adviser at environmental risk management consultant Redshaw Advisers - talks about the fundamentals of the carbon market.
As Bill explains, there are two major markets for carbon credits: The compliance market and the voluntary market.
“Regenerative agriculture, if done properly, can remove huge volumes of carbon from the atmosphere and as such generate huge volumes of removal credits,” says Bill.
Understanding carbon: Explaining the carbon market for farmers
At Regenerate Outcomes we work with you to make your transition to regenerative food production as efficient, straightforward and profitable as possible.
We run regenerative farming training and online workshops, alongside carbon baselining and monitoring to generate high quality carbon credits with Verra, the world’s leading carbon credit registry.
In the second of our series of insights into the role of carbon in regenerative farming, our Chief Scientific Officer, Dr Matt Jordon, explains the basics of generating carbon credits and unpicks some of the jargon around the subject.
‘A process farmers can trust’: Meet Annie from Agricarbon
Regenerate Outcomes works with Agricarbon to generate internationally recognised carbon credits which can be sold to create additional revenue.
We caught up with co-founder Annie Leeson to find out more about Agricarbon’s approach and how it ensures the carbon credits we produce are of the highest value to both carbon buyers and our farmer members.
Agricarbon achieve this through the use of an industrial scale, robotic processing facility, which guarantees a high degree of accuracy in their soil sample analysis and a high sample throughput.