Sustainable Farming for Health

Guest Post by Dr. Robert Malone

Balancing the world is not as easy as it seems.

The family farm is a romantic notion – one grounded in the roots of the past. When writing an essay yesterday, I was pondering how we get back to sustainable lands and farm. Such farms fed and populated the world until the twentieth century.

Organic farming is not the entire answer – as it only solves part of the equitation. A sustainable farm is so much more than an organic product, whether it be fruit, nuts, veg or even dairy. A sustainable farm incorporates the land, the soil, trees, plants, livestock, fish and fowl into the mix. Organic farming absolutely has its place but in the end is primarily focused on the end product, healthy food production.

The “science and art” of the small farm is something that many strive to create. There is an organization and a movement called biodynamic farming that historically comes close to building a process to create a sustainable farm. Biodynamic farming is a method of mixed use farming that was originally conceived by Rudolf Steiner in 1924. The history behind the concept is that a group of farmers recognized early that the more modern farming methods were depleting the soil and land. They approached Steiner to ask him or his help. So, he developed a lecture series on a sustainable agriculture that increased soil fertility without the use of chemical fertilizers and pesticides. Unfortunately, as a spiritualist, he also wove in many ideas involving spiritualism and “elemental forces”.

“Biodynamic farming” combines the relationship between the plants, animals and soil to use a farm’s resources instead of importing materials. It includes using herbs, minerals and cow manure to fertilize crops and growing most of the feed and bedding for the livestock.

Because of the spiritual element of biodynamic farming, the term has taken on a whole political and spiritual aura all its own. In fact, it is very closely allied with the organic farming movement of the 1970s and 80s. The biodynamic literature becomes non-serious to read due to these influences. However, credit where credit is due – the process and concepts of integrating a farm into a healthy mini-biomass onto itself was first introduced to the western world by Rudolph Steiner.


I believe that we have to open our hearts to the idea that we can all “farm.” That farming is the act of growing and producing food. Urban co-ops, indoor hydroponic systems and backyard chickens are all methods of farming. We should strive to make every child a farmer. The act and responsibility of creation is one of the most rewarding jobs we can give children. My own experience is that give a child two chickens and he or she will be hooked for life.


These days, there are other people leading the movement of sustainable farming. One of the most interesting leaders in this field is Joel Salatin and his family, owners of Polyfaces farm.

“DEVELOPING ENVIRONMENTALLY, ECONOMICALLY, AND EMOTIONALLY ENHANCING AGRICULTURAL PROTOTYPES AND FACILITATING THEIR DUPLICATION THROUGHOUT THE WORLD.” (Polyfaces Farms)

Another technique now used to create generationally healthy farms is no till agriculture.

A no-till garden is a method of gardening that does away with the traditional use of tilling to prepare the soil. In no-till gardens, the soil is not dug up and turned to prepare for planting. Instead, organic components like compost and animal fertilizers are layered over the soil to create a rich, nutrient-heavy base in which to plant seeds and starters.

This method is often combined with animal use.

But it is also a technique that can work well in a backyard “farm.” The little compost pile that feeds a kitchen garden, recycled cardboard being used as a weed barrier, the free mulch from the recycling center – production is about using what is available. This is a good website on no-till methods for the small farmer


Permaculture is an agricultural system that integrates human activity with natural surroundings, which can create highly efficient self-sustaining ecosystems. It takes many forms and therefore, can be hard to define.

Something as simple as planting a pecan tree, instead of a maple in the backyard or as complex as seeding a forest with plants that will live naturally in that environment, while producing food – such as planting hickory, persimmons or paw-paw. Permaculture could take the form of using guinea fowl to reduce Japanese beetle infestations or a hedgerow grown of blackberries. Permaculture might include using edible landscaping. The possibilities are endless.

The truth is that a small, sustainable farm is hard work. It is relentless. It is not glamorous. But it is incredibly rewarding. It is also a way of life that is so ingrained into the souls of Americans, that this gestalt of the family farm is part of one’s identity. I believe that many Americans, growing up in the suburbs and cities through out this land still hunger for the farms of their ancestors. They grew up with parents who had one foot in the city and one in the farmlands. Cultural norms that included traditional farming values of frugality, ingenuity and responsibility.

Individual sovereignty, in the freedom to live independently -without government intervention is key to our country. The great reawakening is beginning. So let’s get to it.

 

All over our county, there are people caring for the land, the animals, the crops, the forests and their own yards. These are not some romantic visions of the past, these resources represent our livelihoods, our passions and generational hopes. We can make a reality that both uses modern technologies and creates a sustainable future. It need not involve a command economy, socialism, engineered cities, smart cities or a society based on digital IDs and passports.


Lately, I have had to read page after page of hate filled, vile comments about myself and Jill. People demanding answers, making up stories, falsehoods. They get their little sick dopamine hit by attacking me. It is sickening. The bad jacketing just doesn’t end. The fact that some are being paid to do it is so frustrating.

I read a comment today on another essay that struck home:

If you read Rene Girard, or about how in primitive societies, a literal scapegoat is chosen to carry all the tensions and hatreds and be sacrificed or driven into the desert to create something approximating unity in a community, you might see that this ritual is perhaps at work here. Thousands of people are horrifyingly injured and the shots are still being pushed into the young and elderly when they are deadly, the WHO is taking national sovereignty, the forces of techno feudalism are advancing like trojan horses being pulsed through media ecosystems, and since all of that feels out of our control, as we are in shock and rage and deep terrible grief and bereavement or horrifyingly injured or dying, what we worry about is who can carry that out into the desert so we can be free of the burden. Don’t think for a second that those behind the global op don’t know how to manipulate that.

I heard the term today: “Support group family. ” It almost brought me to tears. Jill and I both value and appreciate the people who comment on this Substack. We both read just about every single comment, usually early in the morning. You guys give me hope. We also appreciate all the people who have taken the time to write us, send cards of hope and caring. Sometimes I get overwhelmed by the volume of emails, texts, DMs that I get. I literally can’t even respond to a tenth of what I receive, but know that I do read and I so appreciate the support, comments and thoughts.


A quick note: Congress is blowing up right now with the gain of function testimony. I am too busy taking it all in and will write on it soon, and I also have been doing a deep dive into the WHO IHRs. Stay tuned.

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19 Comments
Anonymous
Anonymous
March 11, 2023 12:11 pm

It’s SAAAAANNNND!!!!!

Leah
Leah
  Anonymous
March 11, 2023 10:31 pm

Kinison and Dangerfield are two of the late greats

anon a moos
anon a moos
March 11, 2023 12:29 pm

A guy that has grown up and worked in a city has farming advice. Some of that advice is good, some of it is BS. Its the advent of corporate farming that has destroyed small beneficial farming and soils, and imo, some of the guru’s of farming that crop up here and there, like weeds, should be ignored.

Farming is by experience and a gamble at times, it is hard and its a lifestyle that most don’t want. Because it is hard work. I agree that giving kids a few chickens, rabbits or a lamb is a great thing. Theres an old adage, you can take the boy out of the farm but can’t take the farm outta the boy. I find that even kids leaving the farm have a yearning to return.

While I have respect for Malone, hes doing what hes always done, researching from books written by ‘experts’ of what farming should/could be. Farming is best learned by turning soil, not pages.

Anonymous
Anonymous
  anon a moos
March 11, 2023 1:18 pm

That’s why I don’t call anything I do farming. It carries certain expectations. Turning soil is one of them (not a criticism, just observation.)

If you start small, have some animals and a garden and plant productive perennials, the worst that can happen is nothing, so while each individual part may be a gamble (everything is) on the whole at least you should get something out of it that you can’t get anywhere else. The gamble of farming is much more lopsided because you are investing in equipment, generally one or two cash crops, and are basing your success or failure on money, not on food or useful product.

I ignore most people talking about permaculture because it’s about techniques that they just heard about or hippy ethics. No different then the people hooked on woodchips or biodynamics. But some of the permaculture books are pretty good, for giving you new ideas if nothing else. Bill Mollison’s main book is interesting and there are tons of videos of old lectures he gave. He was wrong about some things but I was pretty amazed at some of the wild shit he talked about that later I learned was true.

TN Patriot
TN Patriot
  anon a moos
March 11, 2023 2:32 pm

My neighbor, who had a very nice garden pre cancer, has a saying –

Gardening is an annual experiment with more variables than you can keep track of.

Small farming is even more of of a gamble.

hardscrabble farmer
hardscrabble farmer
  TN Patriot
March 11, 2023 7:14 pm

Best job I ever had.

anon a moos
anon a moos
  hardscrabble farmer
March 11, 2023 7:30 pm

I would agree

TN Patriot
TN Patriot
  hardscrabble farmer
March 11, 2023 7:38 pm

And it appears you and your family have done a remarkable job with your family farm.

rhs jr
rhs jr
March 11, 2023 8:20 pm

Anybody that thinks they are going to turn weeds into a productive garden in a year is going to get an agricultural education. Any city guy converting to a rancher that thinks he’s going to raise animals for meat and profit will probably discover they cost about 10 times what he thinks. But it’s worth it, esp the fruit and nut trees. The farm animals are selfish and filthy but at least they appreciate the rancher that feeds them but I don’t get any respect from most of the animals in town; I even heard a women tell her friend in the grocery store check-out line (so I could hear) that Florida needs a State Income Tax to keep the riff-raff out . If this was a Just Country, I could have told her my life story and then knocked her on her NYC fat ass.

Anonymous
Anonymous
  rhs jr
March 11, 2023 9:48 pm

It’s not just fat old Karens, everyone will disparage you for doing anything different. Raising the wrong animal, raising the wrong breed, having tree crops, having the wrong crops, having old equipment, etc. Everything you do will make you a pariah. The only solution is to go into debt, do what the Extension agency says, and lie about your yields.

Billy the Kid
Billy the Kid
  rhs jr
March 12, 2023 4:36 am

People like that lady in the store are the Americans that need to be rooted out.

Leah
Leah
March 11, 2023 8:30 pm

Love this guy. What are anyone’s thoughts on this? Do farmers really have to go through this bullshit even if they can make their own repairs?

rhs jr
rhs jr
  Leah
March 12, 2023 12:11 am

Florida Farm Bureau sent a guy from Tampa to Tallahassee to inspect my farm and then I got a letter that said if I didn’t clean up some (minor) trash by my barn, they would cancel my property insurance. I said fuck Farm Bureau and stopped paying; I’m now self insured. The guy is right. New John Deere equipment has this problem; don’t buy J.D. & don’t live in Blue states; I love my Kubota and dealer, my Red sunshine state and Conservative Governor DeSantis, and no state income tax. Y’all come, Ya hear.

Leah
Leah
  rhs jr
March 12, 2023 7:43 am

Thanks rhs. What fucking bullshit.

Billy the Kid
Billy the Kid
  Leah
March 12, 2023 4:39 am

I think he’s absolutely right!

Leah
Leah
  Billy the Kid
March 12, 2023 7:45 am

Sucks that he is right.

Guest
Guest
March 11, 2023 9:28 pm

He’s suing that 86 yo ‘meany’ for 25 million, plus alt news people.

Leah
Leah
  Guest
March 11, 2023 10:25 pm

Louis is?

Billy the Kid
Billy the Kid
March 12, 2023 4:31 am

Well,you won’t find any attacks from me. I think what you and wife are doing is a great thing. Keep on keeping on,and trying.