
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


Join our host Dan Fox in Part 2 of an indepth conversation with Phil Peterson about rebuilding soil carbon on farms.
Dan has talked numerous times with Phil in the paddock, and wanted to capture some of these conversations in a podcast. He spoke to him earlier in the year but still had so many questions that he has recorded a follow up.
If you haven’t listened to Part 1, we suggest you go back to Episode 6 of Farmers Helping Farmers first. In Part 2 Phil discusses the importance of sap tests for identifying your risk to plant disease, how to rebuild your soil structure, the importance of context when you’re making farming system changes, and what some of Loam Bio’s paddock trials of simplifying the seed dressing process are finding.
Phil has been at the grassroots of agriculture for many years, asking questions about the environment and how farmers can improve both the yield and quality of the crops and pastures they grow.
This has led to a role with Loam Bio, which researches how farmers can build more carbon in their soils and improve their bottom line.
By VicNoTill5
11 ratings
Join our host Dan Fox in Part 2 of an indepth conversation with Phil Peterson about rebuilding soil carbon on farms.
Dan has talked numerous times with Phil in the paddock, and wanted to capture some of these conversations in a podcast. He spoke to him earlier in the year but still had so many questions that he has recorded a follow up.
If you haven’t listened to Part 1, we suggest you go back to Episode 6 of Farmers Helping Farmers first. In Part 2 Phil discusses the importance of sap tests for identifying your risk to plant disease, how to rebuild your soil structure, the importance of context when you’re making farming system changes, and what some of Loam Bio’s paddock trials of simplifying the seed dressing process are finding.
Phil has been at the grassroots of agriculture for many years, asking questions about the environment and how farmers can improve both the yield and quality of the crops and pastures they grow.
This has led to a role with Loam Bio, which researches how farmers can build more carbon in their soils and improve their bottom line.

861 Listeners

481 Listeners

8,855 Listeners

441 Listeners

12 Listeners

315 Listeners

516 Listeners

64 Listeners

63 Listeners

47 Listeners

13 Listeners

86 Listeners

234 Listeners

200 Listeners

5 Listeners