by Lynne Whitbeck | Oct 6, 2020 | Down to Earth, Farming, Racial Equity, Rural Communities, Working with Nature
Part of the experience of colonization for Native people has been the denial of their long-standing practices of agriculture. Now indigenous voices are becoming part of the conversation about how to think in a healthy and holistic manner about food.
by Lynne Whitbeck | Sep 22, 2020 | Down to Earth, Economics, Grazing, Policy, Ranching
Many food producers spend so much on interest to banks that they can’t pay for improvements to make their farms more resilient and regenerative. Zach Ducheneaux talks about an alternative that’s already having some success in Indian country.
by Lynne Whitbeck | Sep 8, 2020 | Down to Earth, Grazing, Ranching, Rangeland Science, Working with Nature
In her new book, Judith Schwartz takes us to five continents and tell us stories of people restoring devastated landscapes–and overcoming deep conflicts that stem from degraded ecosystems. The results are phenomenal.
by Lynne Whitbeck | Aug 25, 2020 | Down to Earth, Grazing, Radical Center, Ranching, Rangeland Science, Rural Communities, Working with Nature
“What’s good for the bird is good for the herd”–that’s the basis of a win-win initiative to preserve bird habitat on ranches and grasslands. We speak with Audubon Society VP Marshall Johnson about grassland ecology and their successful conservation collaborations.
by Lynne Whitbeck | Aug 11, 2020 | Down to Earth, Economics, Policy, Racial Equity, Rural Communities
Vanessa García Polanco is from a farming family that emigrated to the US when she was a teenager. She explores the challenges that young and beginning farmers, and farmers of color, are dealing with–especially during the global pandemic.
by Lynne Whitbeck | Jul 28, 2020 | Bison, Down to Earth, Faith, Racial Equity, Rangeland Science, Rural Communities, Working with Nature
The Eastern Shoshone people traditionally survived with the buffalo, and their way of life suffered when tens of millions of buffalo were killed by the US government. But now they’re returning to the land–and starting to renew a culture.