home.social

#homesteaders — Public Fediverse posts

Live and recent posts from across the Fediverse tagged #homesteaders, aggregated by home.social.

  1. #Agroforestry may be just what #Maine needs for agricultural growth

    By Marina Schauffler
    Published on: January 24, 2021

    Excerpt: "Agroforestry, an age-old concept, could provide a path to Maine’s future. Part of the #RegenerativeAgriculture movement, it involves an integrated approach to cultivating #trees with #crops and – sometimes – #livestock. These diversified farm systems nourish #SoilHealth and #wildlife while offering more resilience in a warming world — locking up atmospheric carbon, absorbing floodwaters, and sheltering crops and animals from high winds and #ExtremeHeat.

    " 'Diversity is really key to sustainability for small farms and the ecology of farms,' said vegetable farmer Max Boudreau of Winslow Farm in Falmouth. He sees many landowners and #homesteaders 'putting these principles into practice,' but said agroforestry is still 'a foreign concept' in farm service agencies.

    "Being interdisciplinary, agroforestry challenges the siloed world of natural resource management. It is routinely ignored in college curricula and by technical service providers, said Meghan Giroux, an agroforestry researcher, technical service provider and practitioner in Vermont. Her nonprofit, #InterlaceCommons, seeks to fill that void by training farmers – including Boudreau – how to implement and maintain agroforestry practices.

    "Boudreau was one of the 20 farmers selected among 92 applicants from around the Northeast for a free, agroforestry 'field consultancy' this year. Farmers are eager to learn about agroforestry’s potential to diversify income, and there’s growing consumer demand for its products – from nuts and uncommon fruits (like #honeyberry and #PawPaw) to #mushrooms and #MedicinalHerbs.

    "Yet policymakers routinely tell Giroux there’s 'no interest in agroforestry,' she says. 'There’s no institutional will to move these practices forward primarily because people don’t understand them.'

    "The U.S. Department of Agriculture has supported agroforestry since the 1990 Farm Bill and does exceptional research, Giroux feels, but “a knowledge-exchange issue” prevents guidance from reaching most landowners. A network of trained farmers could help support and train peers – a process that happens informally, Boudreau says, in the permaculture community, a related landscape design approach modeled after natural systems.

    "Research has already demonstrated that #NoTill agriculture improves crop yields, reduces costs and improves soil health. Even more economic and environmental benefits could flow from cultivating crops in a layered, integrated mix of annuals and perennials more reminiscent of natural plant communities."

    Full article:
    themainemonitor.org/sea-change

    #SolarPunkSunday #NoMonoculture #Polyculture #AgroEcology #FoodForests

  2. #Agroforestry may be just what #Maine needs for agricultural growth

    By Marina Schauffler
    Published on: January 24, 2021

    Excerpt: "Agroforestry, an age-old concept, could provide a path to Maine’s future. Part of the #RegenerativeAgriculture movement, it involves an integrated approach to cultivating #trees with #crops and – sometimes – #livestock. These diversified farm systems nourish #SoilHealth and #wildlife while offering more resilience in a warming world — locking up atmospheric carbon, absorbing floodwaters, and sheltering crops and animals from high winds and #ExtremeHeat.

    " 'Diversity is really key to sustainability for small farms and the ecology of farms,' said vegetable farmer Max Boudreau of Winslow Farm in Falmouth. He sees many landowners and #homesteaders 'putting these principles into practice,' but said agroforestry is still 'a foreign concept' in farm service agencies.

    "Being interdisciplinary, agroforestry challenges the siloed world of natural resource management. It is routinely ignored in college curricula and by technical service providers, said Meghan Giroux, an agroforestry researcher, technical service provider and practitioner in Vermont. Her nonprofit, #InterlaceCommons, seeks to fill that void by training farmers – including Boudreau – how to implement and maintain agroforestry practices.

    "Boudreau was one of the 20 farmers selected among 92 applicants from around the Northeast for a free, agroforestry 'field consultancy' this year. Farmers are eager to learn about agroforestry’s potential to diversify income, and there’s growing consumer demand for its products – from nuts and uncommon fruits (like #honeyberry and #PawPaw) to #mushrooms and #MedicinalHerbs.

    "Yet policymakers routinely tell Giroux there’s 'no interest in agroforestry,' she says. 'There’s no institutional will to move these practices forward primarily because people don’t understand them.'

    "The U.S. Department of Agriculture has supported agroforestry since the 1990 Farm Bill and does exceptional research, Giroux feels, but “a knowledge-exchange issue” prevents guidance from reaching most landowners. A network of trained farmers could help support and train peers – a process that happens informally, Boudreau says, in the permaculture community, a related landscape design approach modeled after natural systems.

    "Research has already demonstrated that #NoTill agriculture improves crop yields, reduces costs and improves soil health. Even more economic and environmental benefits could flow from cultivating crops in a layered, integrated mix of annuals and perennials more reminiscent of natural plant communities."

    Full article:
    themainemonitor.org/sea-change

    #SolarPunkSunday #NoMonoculture #Polyculture #AgroEcology #FoodForests

  3. #Agroforestry may be just what #Maine needs for agricultural growth

    By Marina Schauffler
    Published on: January 24, 2021

    Excerpt: "Agroforestry, an age-old concept, could provide a path to Maine’s future. Part of the #RegenerativeAgriculture movement, it involves an integrated approach to cultivating #trees with #crops and – sometimes – #livestock. These diversified farm systems nourish #SoilHealth and #wildlife while offering more resilience in a warming world — locking up atmospheric carbon, absorbing floodwaters, and sheltering crops and animals from high winds and #ExtremeHeat.

    " 'Diversity is really key to sustainability for small farms and the ecology of farms,' said vegetable farmer Max Boudreau of Winslow Farm in Falmouth. He sees many landowners and #homesteaders 'putting these principles into practice,' but said agroforestry is still 'a foreign concept' in farm service agencies.

    "Being interdisciplinary, agroforestry challenges the siloed world of natural resource management. It is routinely ignored in college curricula and by technical service providers, said Meghan Giroux, an agroforestry researcher, technical service provider and practitioner in Vermont. Her nonprofit, #InterlaceCommons, seeks to fill that void by training farmers – including Boudreau – how to implement and maintain agroforestry practices.

    "Boudreau was one of the 20 farmers selected among 92 applicants from around the Northeast for a free, agroforestry 'field consultancy' this year. Farmers are eager to learn about agroforestry’s potential to diversify income, and there’s growing consumer demand for its products – from nuts and uncommon fruits (like #honeyberry and #PawPaw) to #mushrooms and #MedicinalHerbs.

    "Yet policymakers routinely tell Giroux there’s 'no interest in agroforestry,' she says. 'There’s no institutional will to move these practices forward primarily because people don’t understand them.'

    "The U.S. Department of Agriculture has supported agroforestry since the 1990 Farm Bill and does exceptional research, Giroux feels, but “a knowledge-exchange issue” prevents guidance from reaching most landowners. A network of trained farmers could help support and train peers – a process that happens informally, Boudreau says, in the permaculture community, a related landscape design approach modeled after natural systems.

    "Research has already demonstrated that #NoTill agriculture improves crop yields, reduces costs and improves soil health. Even more economic and environmental benefits could flow from cultivating crops in a layered, integrated mix of annuals and perennials more reminiscent of natural plant communities."

    Full article:
    themainemonitor.org/sea-change

    #SolarPunkSunday #NoMonoculture #Polyculture #AgroEcology #FoodForests

  4. #Agroforestry may be just what #Maine needs for agricultural growth

    By Marina Schauffler
    Published on: January 24, 2021

    Excerpt: "Agroforestry, an age-old concept, could provide a path to Maine’s future. Part of the #RegenerativeAgriculture movement, it involves an integrated approach to cultivating #trees with #crops and – sometimes – #livestock. These diversified farm systems nourish #SoilHealth and #wildlife while offering more resilience in a warming world — locking up atmospheric carbon, absorbing floodwaters, and sheltering crops and animals from high winds and #ExtremeHeat.

    " 'Diversity is really key to sustainability for small farms and the ecology of farms,' said vegetable farmer Max Boudreau of Winslow Farm in Falmouth. He sees many landowners and #homesteaders 'putting these principles into practice,' but said agroforestry is still 'a foreign concept' in farm service agencies.

    "Being interdisciplinary, agroforestry challenges the siloed world of natural resource management. It is routinely ignored in college curricula and by technical service providers, said Meghan Giroux, an agroforestry researcher, technical service provider and practitioner in Vermont. Her nonprofit, #InterlaceCommons, seeks to fill that void by training farmers – including Boudreau – how to implement and maintain agroforestry practices.

    "Boudreau was one of the 20 farmers selected among 92 applicants from around the Northeast for a free, agroforestry 'field consultancy' this year. Farmers are eager to learn about agroforestry’s potential to diversify income, and there’s growing consumer demand for its products – from nuts and uncommon fruits (like #honeyberry and #PawPaw) to #mushrooms and #MedicinalHerbs.

    "Yet policymakers routinely tell Giroux there’s 'no interest in agroforestry,' she says. 'There’s no institutional will to move these practices forward primarily because people don’t understand them.'

    "The U.S. Department of Agriculture has supported agroforestry since the 1990 Farm Bill and does exceptional research, Giroux feels, but “a knowledge-exchange issue” prevents guidance from reaching most landowners. A network of trained farmers could help support and train peers – a process that happens informally, Boudreau says, in the permaculture community, a related landscape design approach modeled after natural systems.

    "Research has already demonstrated that #NoTill agriculture improves crop yields, reduces costs and improves soil health. Even more economic and environmental benefits could flow from cultivating crops in a layered, integrated mix of annuals and perennials more reminiscent of natural plant communities."

    Full article:
    themainemonitor.org/sea-change

    #SolarPunkSunday #NoMonoculture #Polyculture #AgroEcology #FoodForests

  5. #Agroforestry may be just what #Maine needs for agricultural growth

    By Marina Schauffler
    Published on: January 24, 2021

    Excerpt: "Agroforestry, an age-old concept, could provide a path to Maine’s future. Part of the #RegenerativeAgriculture movement, it involves an integrated approach to cultivating #trees with #crops and – sometimes – #livestock. These diversified farm systems nourish #SoilHealth and #wildlife while offering more resilience in a warming world — locking up atmospheric carbon, absorbing floodwaters, and sheltering crops and animals from high winds and #ExtremeHeat.

    " 'Diversity is really key to sustainability for small farms and the ecology of farms,' said vegetable farmer Max Boudreau of Winslow Farm in Falmouth. He sees many landowners and #homesteaders 'putting these principles into practice,' but said agroforestry is still 'a foreign concept' in farm service agencies.

    "Being interdisciplinary, agroforestry challenges the siloed world of natural resource management. It is routinely ignored in college curricula and by technical service providers, said Meghan Giroux, an agroforestry researcher, technical service provider and practitioner in Vermont. Her nonprofit, #InterlaceCommons, seeks to fill that void by training farmers – including Boudreau – how to implement and maintain agroforestry practices.

    "Boudreau was one of the 20 farmers selected among 92 applicants from around the Northeast for a free, agroforestry 'field consultancy' this year. Farmers are eager to learn about agroforestry’s potential to diversify income, and there’s growing consumer demand for its products – from nuts and uncommon fruits (like #honeyberry and #PawPaw) to #mushrooms and #MedicinalHerbs.

    "Yet policymakers routinely tell Giroux there’s 'no interest in agroforestry,' she says. 'There’s no institutional will to move these practices forward primarily because people don’t understand them.'

    "The U.S. Department of Agriculture has supported agroforestry since the 1990 Farm Bill and does exceptional research, Giroux feels, but “a knowledge-exchange issue” prevents guidance from reaching most landowners. A network of trained farmers could help support and train peers – a process that happens informally, Boudreau says, in the permaculture community, a related landscape design approach modeled after natural systems.

    "Research has already demonstrated that #NoTill agriculture improves crop yields, reduces costs and improves soil health. Even more economic and environmental benefits could flow from cultivating crops in a layered, integrated mix of annuals and perennials more reminiscent of natural plant communities."

    Full article:
    themainemonitor.org/sea-change

    #SolarPunkSunday #NoMonoculture #Polyculture #AgroEcology #FoodForests

  6. More photographs by Charles Van Schaick from Black River Falls, Wisconsin

    The Ho-Chunk or Winnabego lived in the region for centuries, but in the 1870s were forcibly removed to Nebraska. Many returned + by 1881, most were settled on homesteads, with the administrative center of the Ho-Chunk Nation now located in Black River Falls.

    #charlesvanschaick #photography #vintagephotography #nativeamericans #hochunk #winnebago #blackriverfalls #hochunknation
    #Indigenouspeoples #indigenouspeople #nativeamericans #wisconsin #homesteaders #wisconsinhistory

  7. More photographs by Charles Van Schaick from Black River Falls, Wisconsin

    The Ho-Chunk or Winnabego lived in the region for centuries, but in the 1870s were forcibly removed to Nebraska. Many returned + by 1881, most were settled on homesteads, with the administrative center of the Ho-Chunk Nation now located in Black River Falls.

    #charlesvanschaick #photography #vintagephotography #nativeamericans #hochunk #winnebago #blackriverfalls #hochunknation
    #Indigenouspeoples #indigenouspeople #nativeamericans #wisconsin #homesteaders #wisconsinhistory

  8. More photographs by Charles Van Schaick from Black River Falls, Wisconsin

    The Ho-Chunk or Winnabego lived in the region for centuries, but in the 1870s were forcibly removed to Nebraska. Many returned + by 1881, most were settled on homesteads, with the administrative center of the Ho-Chunk Nation now located in Black River Falls.

    #charlesvanschaick #photography #vintagephotography #nativeamericans #hochunk #winnebago #blackriverfalls #hochunknation
    #Indigenouspeoples #indigenouspeople #nativeamericans #wisconsin #homesteaders #wisconsinhistory

  9. More photographs by Charles Van Schaick from Black River Falls, Wisconsin

    The Ho-Chunk or Winnabego lived in the region for centuries, but in the 1870s were forcibly removed to Nebraska. Many returned + by 1881, most were settled on homesteads, with the administrative center of the Ho-Chunk Nation now located in Black River Falls.

    #charlesvanschaick #photography #vintagephotography #nativeamericans #hochunk #winnebago #blackriverfalls #hochunknation
    #Indigenouspeoples #indigenouspeople #nativeamericans #wisconsin #homesteaders #wisconsinhistory

  10. More photographs by Charles Van Schaick from Black River Falls, Wisconsin

    The Ho-Chunk or Winnabego lived in the region for centuries, but in the 1870s were forcibly removed to Nebraska. Many returned + by 1881, most were settled on homesteads, with the administrative center of the Ho-Chunk Nation now located in Black River Falls.

    #charlesvanschaick #photography #vintagephotography #nativeamericans #hochunk #winnebago #blackriverfalls #hochunknation
    #Indigenouspeoples #indigenouspeople #nativeamericans #wisconsin #homesteaders #wisconsinhistory

  11. More Charles Van Schaick Photography

    Working in Black River Falls, Wisconsin from 1880s to 1940s.

    The Ho-Chunk or Winnabego lived in the region for centuries, but in the 1870s were forcibly removed to Nebraska. Many returned + by 1881 most were settled on homesteads, with the administrative center of the Ho-Chunk Nation now located in Black River Falls.

    #charlesvanschaick #photography #vintagephotography #hochunk #winnebago #blackriverfalls #nativeamericans #hochunknation #Indigenouspeoples #indigenouspeople #nativeamericans #wisconsin #homesteaders #wisconsinhistory

  12. More Charles Van Schaick Photography

    Working in Black River Falls, Wisconsin from 1880s to 1940s.

    The Ho-Chunk or Winnabego lived in the region for centuries, but in the 1870s were forcibly removed to Nebraska. Many returned + by 1881 most were settled on homesteads, with the administrative center of the Ho-Chunk Nation now located in Black River Falls.

    #charlesvanschaick #photography #vintagephotography #hochunk #winnebago #blackriverfalls #nativeamericans #hochunknation #Indigenouspeoples #indigenouspeople #nativeamericans #wisconsin #homesteaders #wisconsinhistory

  13. More Charles Van Schaick Photography

    Working in Black River Falls, Wisconsin from 1880s to 1940s.

    The Ho-Chunk or Winnabego lived in the region for centuries, but in the 1870s were forcibly removed to Nebraska. Many returned + by 1881 most were settled on homesteads, with the administrative center of the Ho-Chunk Nation now located in Black River Falls.

    #charlesvanschaick #photography #vintagephotography #hochunk #winnebago #blackriverfalls #nativeamericans #hochunknation #Indigenouspeoples #indigenouspeople #nativeamericans #wisconsin #homesteaders #wisconsinhistory

  14. More Charles Van Schaick Photography

    Working in Black River Falls, Wisconsin from 1880s to 1940s.

    The Ho-Chunk or Winnabego lived in the region for centuries, but in the 1870s were forcibly removed to Nebraska. Many returned + by 1881 most were settled on homesteads, with the administrative center of the Ho-Chunk Nation now located in Black River Falls.

    #charlesvanschaick #photography #vintagephotography #hochunk #winnebago #blackriverfalls #nativeamericans #hochunknation #Indigenouspeoples #indigenouspeople #nativeamericans #wisconsin #homesteaders #wisconsinhistory

  15. More Charles Van Schaick Photography

    Working in Black River Falls, Wisconsin from 1880s to 1940s.

    The Ho-Chunk or Winnabego lived in the region for centuries, but in the 1870s were forcibly removed to Nebraska. Many returned + by 1881 most were settled on homesteads, with the administrative center of the Ho-Chunk Nation now located in Black River Falls.

    #charlesvanschaick #photography #vintagephotography #hochunk #winnebago #blackriverfalls #nativeamericans #hochunknation #Indigenouspeoples #indigenouspeople #nativeamericans #wisconsin #homesteaders #wisconsinhistory

  16. More Charles Van Schaick Photography

    Working in Black River Falls, Wisconsin from 1880s to 1940s.

    The Ho-Chunk or Winnabego lived in the region for centuries, but in the 1870s were forcibly removed to Nebraska. Many returned + by 1881 most were settled on homesteads, with the administrative center of the Ho-Chunk Nation now located in Black River Falls.

    #charlesvanschaick #photography #vintagephotography #hochunk #winnebago #blackriverfalls #nativeamericans #hochunknation #Indigenouspeoples #indigenouspeople #nativeamericans #wisconsin #homesteaders #wisconsinhistory

  17. More Charles Van Schaick Photography

    Working in Black River Falls, Wisconsin from 1880s to 1940s.

    The Ho-Chunk or Winnabego lived in the region for centuries, but in the 1870s were forcibly removed to Nebraska. Many returned + by 1881 most were settled on homesteads, with the administrative center of the Ho-Chunk Nation now located in Black River Falls.

    #charlesvanschaick #photography #vintagephotography #hochunk #winnebago #blackriverfalls #nativeamericans #hochunknation #Indigenouspeoples #indigenouspeople #nativeamericans #wisconsin #homesteaders #wisconsinhistory

  18. More Charles Van Schaick Photography

    Working in Black River Falls, Wisconsin from 1880s to 1940s.

    The Ho-Chunk or Winnabego lived in the region for centuries, but in the 1870s were forcibly removed to Nebraska. Many returned + by 1881 most were settled on homesteads, with the administrative center of the Ho-Chunk Nation now located in Black River Falls.

    #charlesvanschaick #photography #vintagephotography #hochunk #winnebago #blackriverfalls #nativeamericans #hochunknation #Indigenouspeoples #indigenouspeople #nativeamericans #wisconsin #homesteaders #wisconsinhistory

  19. More Charles Van Schaick Photography

    Working in Black River Falls, Wisconsin from 1880s to 1940s.

    The Ho-Chunk or Winnabego lived in the region for centuries, but in the 1870s were forcibly removed to Nebraska. Many returned + by 1881 most were settled on homesteads, with the administrative center of the Ho-Chunk Nation now located in Black River Falls.

    #charlesvanschaick #photography #vintagephotography #hochunk #winnebago #blackriverfalls #nativeamericans #hochunknation #Indigenouspeoples #indigenouspeople #nativeamericans #wisconsin #homesteaders #wisconsinhistory

  20. More Charles Van Schaick Photography

    Working in Black River Falls, Wisconsin from 1880s to 1940s.

    The Ho-Chunk or Winnabego lived in the region for centuries, but in the 1870s were forcibly removed to Nebraska. Many returned + by 1881 most were settled on homesteads, with the administrative center of the Ho-Chunk Nation now located in Black River Falls.

    #charlesvanschaick #photography #vintagephotography #hochunk #winnebago #blackriverfalls #nativeamericans #hochunknation #Indigenouspeoples #indigenouspeople #nativeamericans #wisconsin #homesteaders #wisconsinhistory

  21. More Charles Van Schaick Photography

    Working in Black River Falls, Wisconsin from 1880s to 1940s.

    The Ho-Chunk or Winnabego lived in the region for centuries, but in the 1870s were forcibly removed to Nebraska. Many returned + by 1881 most were settled on homesteads, with the administrative center of the Ho-Chunk Nation now located in Black River Falls.

    #charlesvanschaick #photography #vintagephotography #hochunk #winnebago #blackriverfalls #nativeamericans #hochunknation #Indigenouspeoples #indigenouspeople #nativeamericans #wisconsin #homesteaders #wisconsinhistory

  22. More Charles Van Schaick Photography

    Working in Black River Falls, Wisconsin from 1880s to 1940s.

    The Ho-Chunk or Winnabego lived in the region for centuries, but in the 1870s were forcibly removed to Nebraska. Many returned + by 1881 most were settled on homesteads, with the administrative center of the Ho-Chunk Nation now located in Black River Falls.

    #charlesvanschaick #photography #vintagephotography #hochunk #winnebago #blackriverfalls #nativeamericans #hochunknation #Indigenouspeoples #indigenouspeople #nativeamericans #wisconsin #homesteaders #wisconsinhistory

  23. More Charles Van Schaick Photography

    Working in Black River Falls, Wisconsin from 1880s to 1940s.

    The Ho-Chunk or Winnabego lived in the region for centuries, but in the 1870s were forcibly removed to Nebraska. Many returned + by 1881 most were settled on homesteads, with the administrative center of the Ho-Chunk Nation now located in Black River Falls.

    #charlesvanschaick #photography #vintagephotography #hochunk #winnebago #blackriverfalls #nativeamericans #hochunknation #Indigenouspeoples #indigenouspeople #nativeamericans #wisconsin #homesteaders #wisconsinhistory

  24. More Charles Van Schaick Photography

    Working in Black River Falls, Wisconsin from 1880s to 1940s.

    The Ho-Chunk or Winnabego lived in the region for centuries, but in the 1870s were forcibly removed to Nebraska. Many returned + by 1881 most were settled on homesteads, with the administrative center of the Ho-Chunk Nation now located in Black River Falls.

    #charlesvanschaick #photography #vintagephotography #hochunk #winnebago #blackriverfalls #nativeamericans #hochunknation #Indigenouspeoples #indigenouspeople #nativeamericans #wisconsin #homesteaders #wisconsinhistory

  25. Let's see your dogs! This is Demi (brown eyes) and Mason (blue eyes), who are littermates. Their dad is a Siberian Husky, and their mom is a GSD/Lab mix. They just turned a year old last year, and they absolutely love living on 40 acres. Everyday is an adventure for these two #dog #dogs #dogsofmastodon #DogLover #pet #pets #thursday #animal #animals #showme #pup #pups #puppy #social #follow #homestead #rural #country #rural_life #homesteading #Homesteaders #farm #farmer #love