MarkDarvin
Well-Known Member
I've been wondering this for a while. Everyone that is interested in implementing regen growing is likely at their own unique spot in the evolution to doing things a different way. I would assume that is also driven by a person's understanding of the cause and effect of regen principles. But where is the leading edge of knowledge?
I think the movement and science has gotten to the point where growers have figured out how to beat weeds, bugs, floods, drought, economics, labor, equipment, low nutrition, erosion, the fertilizer bill, etc. I don't know that there is any frontier left to solve problems of old. I think the frontier is now in the complex task of discovering the best combinations of plants, the timing, and management tactics of each unique blend to achieve a specific outcome in a specific situation.
The system I'm working in has unique challenges. I've got a shorter growing season than just about anyone on here. I have a need for durable food that stands up in the snow, is bear and coon resistant, and can produce the tonnage necessary to carry a small herd from October 1st to some distance into winter. I haven't figured that out yet. I've made it through November, or the first heavy snow and that's where I'm stuck.
That's where I think we're at. I think the principles of regen growing are in and done. The advanced stuff likely won't ever be delivered to us given how unique the next set of challenges are. We're gonna have to use what we know to create our own solution for our own circumstances.
I think the movement and science has gotten to the point where growers have figured out how to beat weeds, bugs, floods, drought, economics, labor, equipment, low nutrition, erosion, the fertilizer bill, etc. I don't know that there is any frontier left to solve problems of old. I think the frontier is now in the complex task of discovering the best combinations of plants, the timing, and management tactics of each unique blend to achieve a specific outcome in a specific situation.
The system I'm working in has unique challenges. I've got a shorter growing season than just about anyone on here. I have a need for durable food that stands up in the snow, is bear and coon resistant, and can produce the tonnage necessary to carry a small herd from October 1st to some distance into winter. I haven't figured that out yet. I've made it through November, or the first heavy snow and that's where I'm stuck.
That's where I think we're at. I think the principles of regen growing are in and done. The advanced stuff likely won't ever be delivered to us given how unique the next set of challenges are. We're gonna have to use what we know to create our own solution for our own circumstances.