Land Stewardship Project's Ear to the Ground podcast features in-the-field interviews related to the Land Stewardship Project's work on regenerative agriculture, local food systems, rural communities, beginning farmers, social/economic justice, and agricultural/environmental policy.
A young farmer's evolving view of livestock allows him to make a direct connection between profitability and soil health.
Birds and other biological indicators provide evidence that an Iowa farm is a "working ecosystem."
Farm Beginnings helps the Schwagerls do the kind of enterprise analysis needed to transfer their passions into profits.
For one beginning organic dairy farmer, the path to affordable land leads through some trees, up a few hills, and over a brook.
A row-cropped field is converted back to prairie, benefiting the environment and livestock.
A farmer and a soil health expert talk about how livestock, cover crops and pastures are the "rock stars" of building soil health.
Farmer Tom Frantzen describes how he is using diversity to make his farm more resilient in the face of extreme weather.
Gardening space in the heart of the city brings people together over food, farming and fellowship.
A farmer's wish to not have his land become just one more cornfield provides an opportunity for beginning farmers.
A dairy farmer finds more microbes in the soil means more money in the bank.
LSP's George Boody describes what he learned at an international conference on how agriculture can sequester greenhouse gases
Dr. Kristine Nichols describes how we can build agronomic, economic and environmental resiliency in our agricultural soils.
Rick Bieber describes how building soil health saved his farm from financial ruin.
Autumn Brown talks about how we can counter the myths that lead to racial injustice in rural America and elsewhere.
Allen Williams on soil health, livestock and "compounding, cascading effects."
George Boody and Mark Schultz discuss their personal passions and how LSP brings about positive change as the organization prepares for a leadership transition.
An artist uses her work to introduce people to the wonders of the soil universe.
LSP members see firsthand how rural Mexicans are using their connections to the land to fight the corporate takeover of ag.
Seeing is believing: a rain simulator shows the value of continuous living cover on farm fields.
How rotational grazing on one farm is improving profits, wildlife habitat and community relations.