Farm Change with Romey podcast artwork

PODCAST · education

Farm Change with Romey

Farm change is a documentary style interview series sitting down with the people who left the old world behind and built something real on the land. Every episode is an honest conversation with a working regenerative farmer – what it actually took, what it costs, and what it's worth. If you've ever thought about stepping off the treadmill and building a life around land and food, these are the people who already did it.

  1. 1

    From Lawyer and Podcaster to Regenerative Farmer: Matt Wong's Unplanned Journey

    Matt Wong did not plan to be a farmer. He planned to hire one. Three years later, he is the one fixing pumps in 40-degree heat, moving cattle, and running a 150-acre regenerative property outside Melbourne with a co-ownership model he built from scratch.In this conversation with Romey, Matt shares the full arc of how a successful lawyer, business owner, and host of the Discernible podcast ended up with mud on his boots and a water problem he cannot stop thinking about. COVID was the catalyst, but the pull toward something more real, more physical, and more purposeful had been building long before that.Matt and Romey cover the Dunning-Kruger curve as an honest map of the farming journey, the valley of despair that hits when your plans collide with what the land actually wants to do, the case for intelligent outsiders making better regenerative farmers than multi-generational operators in some instances, and why the network effect is worth more than any single piece of machinery.Matt also talks about Joel Salatin and Polyface Farms, the autodidact farmer, the physical transformation that comes from 14-hour days outdoors, and what he would say to any lawyer, doctor or office worker who has ever wondered whether this kind of life is actually for them.Subscribe to Farm Change for more farmer journeys, on-farm visits, and regenerative farming conversations from across Australia.https://farmchange.substack.com#RegenerativeFarming #FarmChange #MattWong #Discernible #LeavingTheCity #FarmLife

  2. 0

    How One Farmer Rebuilt Soil Health and Tripled Lamb Revenue in Victoria

    What happens when a sixth-generation farmer inherits degraded land with a soil pH of 4.5 - and decides to fix it without a single bag of synthetic fertiliser? John Stewart of Macedon Ranges Lamb shares the full story: from a superphosphate addiction that was slowly bankrupting the land, to a thriving regenerative lamb business selling 900 animals a year at three times commodity value, direct to consumers at farmers markets across Victoria.In this conversation, John unpacks the science behind soil recovery, the economics of vertical integration, and the very practical decisions - rotational grazing, multi-species pasture mixes, biological inputs, low-stress animal handling - that transformed a struggling 202-hectare property in the Macedon Ranges into one of the most compelling regenerative lamb businesses in Australia.This isn't theory. John talks about real numbers: what going backwards looked like ($100K+ in extra feed costs during the worst drought in 150 years), what recovery looked like (soil pH from 4.5 to 6.5–7 without lime applications in recent years), and how the direct-to-consumer model changes everything about farm economics.Whether you're a farmer considering a regenerative transition, someone dreaming about leaving the city for a rural property, or simply a curious eater who wants to understand where premium lamb actually comes from - this episode is full of hard-won, practical wisdom.Key topics covered include: why superphosphate is like a drug for soil; how biological inputs (fish, kelp, worm juice, bacteria) unlock dormant nutrients; rotational grazing with smaller paddocks; Coopworth composite breeding for fertility and meat quality; the White Suffolk and Charolais terminal cross system; lamb survival rates of 95-96% vs an industry average in the 70s; pricing lamb at $700-$750 per animal vs $250-$300 at the livestock market; and why the Macedon Ranges is one of Victoria's best-kept secrets for anyone wanting a working farm close to Melbourne.John's farm: https://www.mrlamb.com.au/Farm Change Substack: https://farmchange.substack.comSubscribe to Farm Change for more conversations with farmers, growers, and land stewards doing things differently across Australia.#RegenerativeFarming #LambFarming #MacedonRanges #FarmChange

  3. -1

    From Food Company CEO to Regenerative Farmer: Stuart Granger's Story

    Stuart Granger spent 35 years at the top of the food industry - including as CEO of George Weston Foods, one of Australasia's largest food manufacturers. Then he walked away to move cattle three to five times a day on a regenerative property in Victoria's Macedon Ranges. This is why he did it, and what he's learned.In this episode, we sit down with Stuart at Lemah Park, a 150-acre regenerative farm nestled between the Macedon and Cobaw Ranges, about an hour northeast of Melbourne. Stuart runs Red Angus cattle and Ryeland sheep using adaptive multi-paddock grazing - no pesticides, no artificial fertilisers. The results are measurable: thriving insect diversity, healthy soils, and cattle with coats that, as our host puts it, simply glow.Stuart talks candidly about what a career feeding millions of Australians taught him about the food system - and what it didn't prepare him for when he arrived on the land. He reflects on why profitability is the wrong first metric for a regenerative farm, what five-year average cash flow actually means in practice, and why soil carbon is the number he watches most closely.We also explore the research happening at Lemah Park: a completed Deakin University biodiversity study comparing regenerative versus conventional grazing across the fence, plus two long-term projects with Melbourne Water/RMIT and the federal government's national farm soil health assessment.For those dreaming of making a similar move, Stuart offers a clear-eyed take: know what you're getting into, start with humility, don't copy someone else's system, and - crucially - you don't need to own a farm to get started.🌱 Lemah Park: https://www.lemahpark.com.au🌱 GROW Regenerative Farming Festival: https://growfestival.au🌱 Farm Change on Substack: https://farmchange.substack.com Subscribe to Farm Change for more conversations with the people growing, raising, and reimagining food in Australia and beyond. #RegenerativeFarming #FarmChange #MacadonRanges

  4. -2

    From Brunswick Painter to Permaculture Farmer - Matt Daniele's 30-Year Journey to Peace Farm

    How does a working-class kid from Brunswick become a permaculture farmer in the Yarra Valley, with no farming background, no land, and no plan? Matt Daniele's answer spans 30 years, a shiatsu vision in Melbourne, solo hiking in Tasmania, WWOOFing on organic farms across England and Costa Rica, and co-founding Australia's first certified organic heirloom seedling nursery at CERES.This is one of the most honest, grounded conversations we've had on Farm Change. Matt doesn't romanticise the journey. He traces it step by step - the Italian family values that shaped his relationship with land and food, the trades career that funded his freedom, the moment a mountain ash tree hit him like a bolt of energy in a dark Tasmanian auditorium, and how a soccer game led to a career at CERES Brunswick that changed everything.If you're thinking about a tree change, a career pivot into farming, or just wondering whether it's possible to build a life around permaculture without a trust fund or a farming family - this one's for you.🌱 Topics covered:→ Growing up Italian in Melbourne -  backyard gardens, big families, Brunswick→ Leaving school at 16, buying property at 25, the Italian family way→ How CERES Brunswick sparked a life-changing interest in organic food→ Solo hiking in Tasmania and the moment permaculture clicked→ How The Alchemist by Paulo Coelho shaped his thinking→ Completing a Permaculture Design Certificate at Southern Cross Permaculture Institute→ WWOOFing in Devon, Wales and Costa Rica - learning by doing→ Co-founding Australia's first certified organic heirloom seedling nursery→ Teaching horticulture to people with disabilities at CERES→ Finding Peace Farm in the Yarra Valley through a letterbox drop🔗 LinksPeace Farm (Yarra Junction): https://peacefarm.com.auCERES Community Environment Park: https://ceres.org.auYarra Valley ECOSS: https://ecoss.org.auFarm Change Substack: https://farmchange.substack.com📬 Subscribe to the Farm Change newsletter for stories, ideas and resources from people rebuilding Australia's food systems → https://farmchange.substack.com

  5. -3

    From Chicken Factory to Community Hub: Regenerative Living in the Yarra Valley

    Chelsea has been running ECOSS, a 17-acre community environment hub in Wesburn, Victoria, for over a decade. She also lives at Moora Moora Co-operative Community, one of Australia's oldest intentional communities. In this conversation, she shares what it actually takes to build regenerative community infrastructure: the failures, the grants, the asbestos, and the $50,000 nursery order that never got paid.This is one of the most honest conversations we've had about the business side of not-for-profit social enterprise, and what it means to build a life centred on ecological and social sustainability.🌱 In this episode you'll learn:How ECOSS transformed a former industrial chicken farm into a thriving permaculture community hubWhy the $50,000 nursery order was a classic not-for-profit business mistake, and what the "Madagascar lesson" means for any purpose-driven organisationHow the ECOSS disability inclusion garden (funded through NDIS packages) creates a two-way model of community careWhat 50 years of Moora Moora Co-operative Community teaches us about intentional living that lastsWhy farm resilience depends on diversification from Jean-Martin Fortier's intensive model to Joel Salatin's Polyface approachChelsea's take on why everyone in the city is quietly on a journey out of it👤 About Chelsea & ECOSSChelsea is the Executive Officer of ECOSS (Ecological & Social Sustainability), a community environment hub at 711 Old Warburton Rd, Wesburn VIC. ECOSS runs food relief programs, disability inclusion gardens, First Nations cultural events, a weekly produce market, and much more.🔗 ECOSS website: https://www.ecoss.org.au📬 Subscribe to Farm Change on Substack for weekly posts:https://farmchange.substack.com

  6. -4

    Micro Abattoirs - Ethical Meat, Pastured Pigs | Tammi Jonas

    Micro abattoirs are a missing link in the global push for ethical meat, animal welfare, and resilient local food systems. In this long-form interview, Tammi Jonas of Jonai Farm (near Daylesford, Victoria, Australia) explains why access to slaughter and processing is the real bottleneck - and how farmer-led models like “community-supported slaughter” can change the game.This episode connects the dots between:Micro abattoirs, mobile slaughter units, and on-farm slaughter (what they are and why they matter)The meat processing bottleneck facing small farmsPasture-raised pork, heritage pigs, and farming for animal welfare“Enoughness” - building a viable farm without chasing infinite growthCommunity resilience, fair labour, and shared infrastructureResources:Jonai Meatsmith Collective / community-supported slaughter: https://jonaifarms.com.au/blog/help-u...Subscribe for more real conversations on regenerative farming, ethical meat, and the systems that make small farms viable.Farm Change (newsletter): https://farmchange.substack.com/Cultured Estates (waitlist): https://www.culturedestates.com/#wait...

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ABOUT THIS SHOW

Farm change is a documentary style interview series sitting down with the people who left the old world behind and built something real on the land. Every episode is an honest conversation with a working regenerative farmer – what it actually took, what it costs, and what it's worth. If you've ever thought about stepping off the treadmill and building a life around land and food, these are the people who already did it.

HOSTED BY

Jerome 'Romey' Rault

CATEGORIES

Frequently Asked Questions

How many episodes does Farm Change with Romey have?

Farm Change with Romey currently has 6 episodes available on PodParley. New episodes are automatically indexed when they're published to the podcast feed.

What is Farm Change with Romey about?

Farm change is a documentary style interview series sitting down with the people who left the old world behind and built something real on the land. Every episode is an honest conversation with a working regenerative farmer – what it actually took, what it costs, and what it's worth. If you've ever...

How often does Farm Change with Romey release new episodes?

Farm Change with Romey has 6 episodes. Check the episode list to see recent publication dates and frequency.

Where can I listen to Farm Change with Romey?

You can listen to Farm Change with Romey on PodParley by clicking any episode. We provide an embedded audio player for direct listening, and you can also subscribe via your preferred podcast app using the RSS feed.

Who hosts Farm Change with Romey?

Farm Change with Romey is created and hosted by Jerome 'Romey' Rault.
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