Paul Saladino· MD
regenerative rotational grazing which are carbon negative and the lifecycle analyses they are increasing the organic matter in the soil
The evidence is convergent. Multiple independent sources reach the same conclusion, the underlying mechanism is well-characterized, and even the field's most cautious voices treat it as worth doing.
regenerative rotational grazing which are carbon negative and the lifecycle analyses they are increasing the organic matter in the soil
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the land that we started farming really in 2012 was effectively fairly impoverished land we with the farming operation rotational grazing and primarily cattle but you know untold about a dozen different types of livestock commercial livestock we've increased the carbon density of the soil in Orillia so the increased actual carry
we have effectively sequestered literally millions of pounds of carbon on our farm by farming it with livestock
in terms of the regenerative aspect of what we do so something I'm really proud of that our farm does is we are you know we're documented now by a third party as being carbon impact positive so we've did our baseline study in 2013 and we revisited in 2019 and 11 out of the 13 pastures that we had been actually tracking had a significant increase in soil carbon
they have been successful over the few years they've had it in raising the amount of carbon in the soil
once the land has more carbon in it once the soil is healthier once the mycorrhizal networks we're sure essentially the soil microbiome are healthier there could be ten thousand or a hundred thousand stocks of grass for any given square foot of land there's just more grass growing there