Generational Farming with Will Harris of White Oak Pastures cover art

Generational Farming with Will Harris of White Oak Pastures

Generational Farming with Will Harris of White Oak Pastures

Listen for free

View show details

About this listen

In this episode of Return to Nature, Melissa interviews Will Harris, the owner of White Oak Pastures, a holistically managed regenerative ranch and farm in Bluffton, Georgia.


Will is a fourth-generation cattleman, who tends the same land that his great-grandfather settled in 1866. Born and raised at White Oak Pastures, Will left home to attend the University of Georgia's School of Agriculture, where he was trained in the industrial farming methods that had taken hold after World War II. Will graduated in 1976 and returned to Bluffton, where he and his father continued to raise cattle using pesticides, herbicides, hormones, and antibiotics. They also fed their herd a high-carbohydrate diet of corn and soy.


These tools did a fantastic job of taking the cost out of the system, but in the mid-1990s, Will became disenchanted with the excesses of these industrialized methods. In 1995, Will made the audacious decision to return to the farming methods his great-grandfather had used 130 years before. Since Will has successfully implemented these changes, he has been recognized all over the world as a leader in humane animal husbandry and environmental sustainability.


Will is the immediate past President of the Board of Directors of Georgia Organics. He is the Beef Director of the American Grassfed Association and was selected 2011 Business Person of the year for Georgia by the Small Business Administration. He is also the author of A Bold Return to Giving A Damn, a memoir-meets-manifesto on betting the farm on a better future for our food, animals, land, local communities and our planet.


Will Shares:

  • How his great grandfather and grandfather ran the farm and how his father transitioned to industrial practices
  • How he was raised and educated to believe that there was nothing wrong with industrial farming practices
  • His observation of the quality of his farm’s dirt versus the untouched soil in the woods
  • The reason his daughters have chosen to come back to the farm and work at White Oak Pastures
  • The unintended consequences of industrial agriculture and taking cost out of production
  • How transferring from industrial to regenerative is a long term process
  • The importance of allowing animals to express their instinctive behaviors
  • The resiliency of regenerative agriculture versus the efficiency of industrial agriculture
  • How label regulations can affect farmer’s profitability
  • The pandemic’s role in their creation of White Oak Pasture’s new distribution avenue: online orders
  • The right amount of growth for a regenerative farming operation to make sure short term profitability is not the main focus, but rather generational profitability
  • White Oak Pasture’s non-profit, which helps educate people on their regenerative practices
  • How the government could be instrumental in making a national shift to regenerative agriculture
  • Why the shift to regenerative will most likely happen outside of the existing industrial model


You can connect with Will through White Oak Pastures:

Website: www.whiteoakpastures.com

Instagram: @whiteoakpastures

Facebook: @whiteoakpastures


Intro/Outro music by Ken Belcher

Sound Mixing by Andrew Pals

No reviews yet
In the spirit of reconciliation, Audible acknowledges the Traditional Custodians of country throughout Australia and their connections to land, sea and community. We pay our respect to their elders past and present and extend that respect to all Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples today.