September 15th 2020 Comrades In Farms Epsiode 5 Regenerative Agriculture Water Quality Greenhouses Bees episode artwork

EPISODE · Nov 9, 2020 · 1H 41M

September 15th 2020 Comrades In Farms Epsiode 5 Regenerative Agriculture Water Quality Greenhouses Bees

from Comrades In Farms - A Regenerative Agriculture Podcast · host The Farmacy Seeds Network

This episode we covered regenerative agriculture  practices regarding cover cropping and distribution of food systems.  Tied in to that discussion we talked a little bit about water quality as  it relates to foliar feeds and their efficacy as well as irrigation  and even how water quality can GREATLY reduce the amount of pesticides  and herbicides required to achieve the same goal even in conventional  chemical agriculture systems. We also talked about bees and their life  cycle a bit as it pertains to fall nest building and sustaining through  the winter. In the scope of the bee discussion we talked about how YOU  can help the bees in your own way without having to have a bee colony or  understand them on a more intimate level. Finally, we talked about my  greenhouse here in Tivoli, NY and it’s evolution from when I first built  it as a thermal mass in-ground furnace heated system to it’s current  rendition today where I used a wood stove and water tanks as well as a  Raspberry Pi (small single-board inexpensive computer) to monitor and  control all the functions required to manage the greenhouse environment. See the live stream on You-Tube Wednesday 12 AM Eastern Tuesday 9 PM Pacific here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=A6HVdu-1cOg&list=PL837tk-T71LjTQb1sXVtVWZlgnplv-Wor

This episode we covered regenerative agriculture  practices regarding cover cropping and distribution of food systems.  Tied in to that discussion we talked a little bit about water quality as  it relates to foliar feeds and their efficacy as well as irrigation  and even how water quality can GREATLY reduce the amount of pesticides  and herbicides required to achieve the same goal even in conventional  chemical agriculture systems. We also talked about bees and their life  cycle a bit as it pertains to fall nest building and sustaining through  the winter. In the scope of the bee discussion we talked about how YOU  can help the bees in your own way without having to have a bee colony or  understand them on a more intimate level. Finally, we talked about my  greenhouse here in Tivoli, NY and it’s evolution from when I first built  it as a thermal mass in-ground furnace heated system to it’s current  rendition today where I used a wood stove and water tanks as well as a  Raspberry Pi (small single-board inexpensive computer) to monitor and  control all the functions required to manage the greenhouse environment. See the live stream on You-Tube Wednesday 12 AM Eastern Tuesday 9 PM Pacific here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=A6HVdu-1cOg&list=PL837tk-T71LjTQb1sXVtVWZlgnplv-Wor

NOW PLAYING

September 15th 2020 Comrades In Farms Epsiode 5 Regenerative Agriculture Water Quality Greenhouses Bees

0:00 1:41:45

No transcript for this episode yet

We transcribe on demand. Request one and we'll notify you when it's ready — usually under 10 minutes.

No similar episodes found.

No similar podcasts found.

Frequently Asked Questions

How long is this episode of Comrades In Farms - A Regenerative Agriculture Podcast?

This episode is 1 hour and 41 minutes long.

When was this Comrades In Farms - A Regenerative Agriculture Podcast episode published?

This episode was published on November 9, 2020.

What is this episode about?

This episode we covered regenerative agriculture  practices regarding cover cropping and distribution of food systems.  Tied in to that discussion we talked a little bit about water quality as  it relates to foliar feeds and their efficacy as well...

Can I download this Comrades In Farms - A Regenerative Agriculture Podcast episode?

Yes, you can download this episode by clicking the download button on the episode player, or subscribe to the podcast in your preferred podcast app for automatic downloads.
URL copied to clipboard!