Regenerating from the inside out
Realising the answers are not all outside of ourselves opens the door to the path less travelled, the journey inward.
Revitalising Agriculture
Watching the life force drain out of the rural communities and the landscapes around me has fuelled my curiosity about how we can bring a new vision of agriculture to life.
Slowing down can be the fastest way to make regenerative progress
One of the most common ways I see people limit their progress towards achieving their regenerative agriculture goals is through the belief that they must achieve results quickly. I am not saying that regenerative outcomes always happen slowly. How fast you will see results is always an “it depends” answer.
Make friends with time
Reinventing our relationship with time.
What if time management is not a solution, and it is part of our problem?
Getting off the fence of indecision
Sitting on the fence of indecision happens when we are stuck in our heads and ignoring our other decision-making capacities.
Cultivating change
We readily focus our attention on aspects of the system we can most easily see and tend to ignore the unseen aspects. Yet the most powerful aspects of complex systems are the least visible. When you think that there are billions of micro-organisms in just one teaspoon of healthy soil and we are only just beginning to learn about their invisible, crucial role in ecosystem and human health, what else are we not seeing?
Information is not transformation
Coaching conversations nurture our inner landscape so that the seeds of potential within us can germinate and grow. Removing internal barriers and accessing new perspectives so we can bring our vision to life in our lives, relationships and landscapes and BE the change we wish to see.
We only fail when we fail to learn
If we had viewed our experiences here at The Oasis in terms of failure, we would have given up and never grown a thing. By taking the perspective of using these experiences as feedback we curiously tried more ways to restore our soil naturally so we could successfully grow a garden, an abundance of food and pastures for our livestock that have improved the carrying capacity by 4 times what it was when we came here 18 years ago.
Reconnecting with land
In 2019 Angus & I travelled to Montana to attend a Land Listening event. It was here, immersed in this vast landscape where I came to realise how disconnected I had become from the land at our home The Oasis. We had been impacted by a bushfire six months previously and at the time of our trip the land was brown, parched and apocalyptic in the grips of what became the worst drought in recorded history here.
What does success look like?
When we don’t define what success looks like for us how will we know when we have succeeded? It is vital that we have a vision of what success looks like for us or we can end up creating success on someone else’s terms other than our own.
How do we get out of overwhelm?
For our business to be regenerative it must be building our own internal human capacity rather than destroying it with stress and overwhelm. With all these factors outside of our control at play how we manage our stress and navigate periods of overwhelm plays a crucial role in regenerating agriculture. Regenerating agriculture starts and ends with regenerating ourselves.
Cultivating patience and resisting the temptation of the quick fix
When we step off the high input, industrial farming treadmill and take a regenerative path that restores nature’s capital and creates conditions for all of life to thrive we inadvertently bump headfirst into our impatience.
Experiments in regeneration
If we aren’t experimenting, we aren’t learning. If we aren’t learning, we aren’t growing. If we aren’t growing, we cease to improve and move forwards towards regeneration.
How can this be easy?
So many of us have adopted the belief that success can only come from struggle, sacrifice, exhaustion, long hours and hard work. What if there could be another way? What if this could be easier?
Enough is a decision, not an amount.
When we are operating from a belief that there is not enough we get caught on a treadmill of constantly seeking and consuming more. More land. More money. More time. More yield. More livestock. More work to do. More fertiliser. More inputs. More consumption. More knowledge. More education. More books. More courses. More experts to tells us what to do. A never ending desire for more, no matter what it is you are consuming becomes more-on farming.
Reinvention starts from within
To effectively change from conventional agriculture to a more regenerative style of farming requires us to reinvent how we think about ourselves, and our connection to the land we have stewardship over.
Demystifying Coaching
There are large variations in the types of approach coaches use and the outcomes you can expect. This article explains what coaching can offer your business and how to find the right coach for you. We will also explore what coaching means to us and what you can expect if you choose to work with us.
The knowledge trap…
Believing we don’t know enough keeps us procrastinating, stuck in a loop of searching for and consuming endless information. It also leads us towards guru worshipping others we see as experts who we believe know more than we do and who have all the answers. When we focus outside of ourselves for answers the many options available can lead to paralysis by analysis or we can end up following someone else’s path instead of forging our own.
The transformative role of the feminine in agriculture
Integration of the feminine is the next step for agriculture and a role I see being fulfilled by the regenerative agriculture movement with many women and men being drawn to a regenerative path. This next step is about agriculture valuing, respecting and using both masculine and feminine energy in an integrated way.
10 keys to a profitable transition to regenerative agriculture
Concerns about farm profitability can be a barrier for those contemplating the transition to a more resilient, regenerative farming system. This is understandable as there are plenty of challenges to navigate in agriculture beyond our control as land managers without creating more ourselves. Grow your confidence for taking the next steps by addressing these key components of a profitable transition to a regenerative system.