Relatively Stable

The Nutrients of Disruption


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The Nutrients of Disruption

When we arrived at the new farm, I thought my first responsibility would be to maintain the tidy lawns and pastures that had been carefully tended for generations. My plan was simple: mow early, manage the weeds, and keep the landscape looking orderly.

But spring had other ideas.

Before I could get the mower started, the fields erupted with plants most people would call weeds—henbit, chickweed, dandelion, wild onion, violets, shepherd’s purse. As I paused long enough to identify them, I discovered that nearly every one of these early plants is edible and nutrient-dense, arriving at the exact moment when bodies—both human and equine—are depleted after winter.

The horses noticed long before I did.

Watching them move through the pasture like quiet herbalists began to change the way I thought about disruption, not just in the field but in life itself.

In this essay, I explore how the natural world uses disturbance to restore balance: fire opening the seeds of pine forests, floodwaters replenishing soil across valleys, wind scattering life across landscapes, and grazing animals renewing grasslands through movement and pressure.

What we often experience as destruction can also be part of a much longer cycle of renewal.

This piece reflects on the strange wisdom of weeds, the forces of the elements, and the way disruption has shaped both the land and my own life here at the farm.

Listen if you’re interested in:

- how weeds restore nutrients to depleted soil

- the ecological role of fire, flooding, wind, and grazing

- what horses can teach us about seasonal nourishment

- why disruption is often the beginning of renewal

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Relatively StableBy Kimberly Carter