Here's one farmer's way of reducing carbon in the air and combating climate change, and he's doing it using two simple resources β cattle and soil.
Category
π
NewsTranscript
00:00Industrial agriculture breaks the cycles of nature, and what we do reinvigorates those
00:15cycles of nature.
00:30We take large herds of ruminants, we move them every day through the landscape, a lot
00:38of urine, a lot of feces, a lot of hooves pushing into the ground.
00:43Animal impact is essential to restarting the cycles of nature.
01:00We are really, really good at pulling carbon out of the air where it's harmful, and put
01:21it in the earth with beneficial.
01:36They're at the gate.
01:38They're pretty trained.
01:39It's like a dog.
01:40Once they know they're going to get a reward for moving, which is new grass, fresh grass,
01:44they're ready to move.
01:51The land just does a lot better when you've got birds in the mix.
02:19When the consumer buys our products, they are getting the food, obviously.
02:29They're also supporting a system that provides a lot of eco-services.
02:38You can bet, in 1995, a 40-year-old Will Harris did not walk outside and say, you know, I
02:47believe our climate is changing, and I think I can probably help mitigate it by sequestering
02:51carbon in the soil.
02:52That's not the way it happened.
02:53I was very focused on industrial production, agriculture, on how to squeeze the most pounds
03:02of beef out of this farm at the lowest cost, and I simply became less and less pleased
03:11with that model, and the land got better and better.
03:27Growing up, all I ever wanted to do was run this farm.
03:30I've got two daughters here helping run the farm, and between the two of them, they've
03:36got three of my grandbabies who are the sixth generation on the farm.
03:41It's the epitome of all the eggs in one basket, but it's a mighty nice basket.