Ground Cover cover art

Ground Cover

By: Regenerative Ag Alliance and Southern Cross University
  • Summary

  • Welcome to Ground Cover. A podcast created for farmers, by farmers. Ground Cover is a uniquely Australian podcast series exploring real life stories of land managers who have undertaken the transition from conventional farming to regenerative agriculture. In this series, we share unique and honest conversations about the challenges and opportunities of regenerative agriculture, so you can make informed decisions about how to best manage your land. Proudly brought to you by The Regenerative Agriculture Alliance and Southern Cross University.
    Copyright 2024 Regenerative Ag Alliance and Southern Cross University
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Episodes
  • An introduction to Ground Cover - a series exploring the trials and tribulation of the regenerative agriculture revolution
    Sep 17 2019
    Welcome to the introductory episode of Ground Cover – a podcast for farmers by farmers.This podcast is brought you by the Regenerative Agriculture Alliance, in partnership with Southern Cross University.
    Ground Cover is a uniquely Australian series exploring real-life stories of land managers who have undertaken the transition from conventional farming to regenerative agriculture.
    Each week the Regenerative Agriculture Alliance will bring you a unique and honest conversation about the challenges and opportunities of regenerative agriculture so you can make informed decisions about how best to manage your land.
    The Regenerative Agriculture Alliance was founded to address the urgent need to transition from conventional farming to regenerative farming practices.
    As the Regenerative Agriculture Alliance’s director Lorraine Gordon often says: “The Sustainability ship has sailed”. We need to start fixing what is fundamentally broken and start regenerating landscapes.Enter the regenerative agriculture movement.
    Regenerative Agriculture is a system of farming principles and practices that increases biodiversity, enriches soils, improves watersheds, and enhances ecosystem services.
    It is a practice which aims to capture carbon in soil, reversing current global trends of atmospheric accumulation.
    At the same time, it offers increased yields, resilience to climate instability, and higher health and vitality for farming and livestock communities.
    Regenerative agriculture draws from decades of scientific and applied research by the global communities of organic farming, agroecology, Holistic Management, and agroforestry – many of these experts can be found at Southern Cross University, world-renowned for its plant and soil labs and environmental science research.
    Southern Cross University has a track record in driving collaboration on an unprecedented scale. The regional University has the proven capability to deliver national and global results across all primary industry sectors.
    Each episode of Ground Cover will be introduced by Lorraine Gordon, director of strategic projects at Southern Cross University and founder of the Regenerative Agricultural Alliance.
    Named Rural Community Leader in the 2018 Farmer of the Year awards and a former NSW ABC Rural Woman of the Year, Lorraine, an Ebor grazier, is the driving force for the alliance.
    Lorraine is also the director of the Farming Together Program, which delivered a multi-award winning knowledge mobilisation model to 28,500 primary producers nationwide, unlocking the power of collaboration and empowering a generation of primary producers.
    Lorraine’s story and her mission to transition Australia for a resilient farming future, will feature in our eighth and final episode of this season along with a very exciting announcement which is set to be a game-changer for agricultural education in this country, so be sure to subscribe to Ground Cover and catch the big reveal at the end.
    In the meantime Ground Cover will feature seven of the leading practitioners in the regenerative agriculture space and is hosted by the veteran voice of Australian ag, Kerry Cochrane.
    Kerry is a leader in ag education as well as a seasoned rural reporter. As President of the Australian Institute of Ecological Agriculture Cooperative, his passion is one of promoting an ecological approach to life as a key strategy in mitigating against...
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    5 mins
  • The regenerative agriculture revolution with Dr Charles Massy
    Sep 17 2019
    Today, on Ground Cover, Kerry Cochrane speaks to renown author and regenerative farming revolutionary, Dr Charles Massy; a well known grazier from Cooma in the southern Snowies of NSW. A man, who through a paradigm shift in a very tough drought, realised his ignorance as a conventional and industrial farmer, to go on and become a famous author and academic.
    In this episode Charlie talks about:
    • the time for change being ripe and farmers being intimate with their own landscape and environment
    • challenging powerful paradigms and how we have de-stabilised the planet, due to: capitalism, economic rationalism, endless growth and, of course, industrialisation
    • the anthropocene: the greatest challenge our species has ever confronted and regenerative practices as the solution
    • the importance of regenerative agriculture in capturing carbon
    • the five basic functions of healthy landscapes: solar energy, water, soil, mineral cycles and biodiversity, and humans
    • the importance of ecological literacy within the education system


    Charlie goes on to refer to regenerative agriculture as a revolution. One that can only happen from the bottom up.
    A little more about Dr Charles Massy:
    Dr Massy gained a Bachelor of Science (Zoology, Human Ecology) at ANU (1976), before going farming for 35 years, developing the prominent Merino sheep stud 'Severn Park'. Concern at ongoing land degradation and humanity's sustainability challenge led him to return to ANU in 2009 to undertake a PhD in Human Ecology. He was awarded an Order of Australia Medal for his service as Chair and Director of a number of research organisations and statutory wool boards. He has also served on national and international review panels in sheep and wool research and development and genomics.
    Charles has authored serval books, including Breaking the Sheeps Back and the best selling Call of the Reed Warbler.
    Charles has managed an almost 2000ha sheep and cattle property; running an average of 8000 - 10000 stock units, for over 40 years. In addition he has managed other properties totally 7000ha for city business interests. In the course of this he has led various local rural organisations plus was a regional bushfire captain.
    Charles has conducted public speaking, lecturing and education over many years, initially in the fields of transformation and innovation in the Merino sheep and wool industries, and more recently in regenerative landscape management, grazing systems for healthy landscape function and addressing climate change and the current global ecological challenges for our species - including for such organisations as Greening Australia, Regional Landcare groups, and the Federal Governments Carbon Farming Initiative; plus lecture to Human Ecology students at ANU.
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    35 mins
  • From bare paddock to diverse landscape with Bruce Maynard: No Kill Cropping, Self Herding and grazing management
    Sep 24 2019
    Today, Kerry Cochrane talks with Bruce Maynard, a mixed farmer from Narromine, NSW, who was a conventional farmer, direct drilling for a decade or so, before making the switch to regenerative practices.
    From bare paddocks to diversity, from nature to nurture, this is a conversation exploring the journey that has seen Bruce affectionately known as 'the King of no kill cropping'. This the story of a man who was not happy with the notion of taking everything, other than what you were trying to grow, to ground zero. He wasn't happy with the monocultural approach and the simplification of the system. So he went out in search of another way.
    In this episode we explore:
    • examine the need for diversity in order to flourish, including economically
    • how Bruce changed his grazing management
    • their move to no till cropping to encourage diversity in the landscape
    • the 5 principles of no till cropping
    • the use of medicinal shrubs to help supplement animal diets
    • mineral licks
    • self herding and livestock adaptation and choice
    • stress free stock handling
    • grass free grains


    A broad thinker, a perfectionist in seeking the truth, and a true practicing scientist is today's guest, Bruce Maynard.
    More about Bruce Maynard:
    Bruce is a farmer and grazier from the Central West of NSW. He has been at the forefront of a number of innovations in Australian agriculture including: grazing management, stress free Stockmanship, self herding and the use of forage shrubs in grazing landscapes. He developed the No Kill Cropping method. As well as running the farm with his family. Bruce currently conducts extension projects around Australia on No Kill Cropping, Self Herding and grazing management.
    Bruce Maynard, The Lazy Farmer, is the inventor of the Regenerative Agricultural practice of No Kill Cropping.
    His farming operations reflect a desire to demonstrate true Triple Bottom Line principles, where a balance between profit, soil and landscape function. biodiversity and a healthy social life is continually striven for.
    What he has achieved with limited resources is truly remarkable and an example for other land managers to draw from in these changing times.
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    36 mins

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Good series - informative and interesting

Interviews with people actually working in the field (actually farming) and heading their experiences make this easy to listen to.

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