Why Agroforestry?
Our approach to farming is an example of what is often called agroforestry — a modern name for ancient farming practices that bring together forest, pasture, livestock, annual crops, and food-producing trees in farms that produce multiple yields.
Our farms transform land from conventional, annual monocultures (fields with a single crop species that needs to be replanted every year, and either tilled or sprayed with pesticides) to organic, perennial polycultures (fields with hundreds of species, producing food yields from plants that live for decades or centuries without toxic inputs).
Though these approaches to farming are not well-known in the U.S. today, agroforestry has deep roots in North America and all over the world — and in fact a track record of sustainable success much longer than the “conventional” industrial practices that have become common in North America in the last 75 years.
Fields of the Future
Over the coming century, agroforestry farming has the potential to meet many critical food and material needs in the eastern U.S:
Orchard Silvopasture:
Long-lived trees producing perennial flour, oil, fruit, sugar, and vinegar crops in organic orchards grazed by livestock and foraged by honeybees and native pollinators.
Intensive / Fodder Silvopasture:
Multi-strata silvopastures producing meat, dairy, eggs, & fiber from cattle, sheep, birds, rabbits, & hogs who feed on grasses, fruits, nuts, seeds, beans, & leaves. (Photo credit: Regenerative Design Group)
Alley Cropping:
Vegetables, herbs, flowers, grains, and small fruits alley cropped between larger trees and pasture.
Forest Farming:
Managed woodlands producing maple sugar, hickory oil, edible mushrooms, medicinals, firewood, and timber. (Photo credit: Erik Burkhart, Penn State)
Healthy Landscapes
Agroforestry farming can help make our landscapes and shared natural resources healthier, cleaner, and more abundant:
+ Build Soil & Improve Soil Health
Soil is the basis for human life. It takes a long time for mother nature to make new soil, but not very long for her children to wash it away. Today, agriculture costs the U.S. billions of tons of topsoil annually. We take a different approach.
We seed perennial pasture and plant trees on steep hillsides that have been used for decades to grow corn, soy, and hay. Trees build soil: their roots stabilize the soil and restore soil biodiversity; their canopies cool the surface of the soil and improve the health of soil microbes; and they produce leaf litter that decomposes each winter.
We then graze animals in rotation on diverse, deep-rooted pasture plants, which helps reverse compaction and pumps air, water, and microbiotic life back into the soil.
+ Reduce Agricultural Pollution & Resource Extraction
Conventional farming systems depend on toxic pesticides, herbicides, and fungicides, which stick around in the soil, rivers and oceans, the food we eat, and our bodies. They also kill beneficial wildlife like pollinators, a heavily threatened population that is very important for ecosystem health and human food security.
Conventional farming also tends to require regular application of energy-intensive synthetic fertilizers, literally mining fertility to compensate for the fertility being annually extracted from the soil. Meanwhile, runoff from synthetic fertilizers and livestock manure is causing ocean acidification and dead zones, killing fish while accelerating global warming.
Organic agroforestry farming can produce food yields while naturally increasing soil health. We manage our farms “beyond organic”, using no synthetic pesticides, herbicides, fungicides, or fertilizers. When we integrate animals into the orchard, our management practices keep manure on-site (where it can fertilize plants) and out of the watershed.
+ Improve Water Cycling & Watershed Health
Trees naturally release moisture that feeds the water cycle and creates more rain. By increasing carbon and organic matter in the soil, trees greatly increase water retention, which recharges aquifers and increases resiliency to flooding (a growing threat in the Northeast). And tree roots stabilize soil, reducing erosion and sedimentation in waterways.
Adding trees to agricultural landscapes is one of the most cost-effective practices for reducing water pollution — improving habitat for regional fisheries and benefitting public health and budgets. Local governments and utilities are increasingly adopting tree planting programs to reduce costs for water treatment facilities (e.g. New York City has saved billions of dollars by investing in land-use practices surrounding its reservoirs).
+ Increase Biodiversity & Wildlife Habitat
Agriculture is the single greatest cause of wildlife extinction worldwide. Loss of biodiversity threatens us all, undermining human food and water security and increasing the presence of infectious human diseases.
Organic agroforestry farming mimics forest and "forest edge" landscapes, creating diverse wildlife habitat and corridors between fragmented ecosystems. Incorporating polycultures of other plants and animals into the orchard magnifies this effect. We manage our farms for a biodiverse understory, and (where possible) pursue site-specific designs to create additional wildlife habitat.
Healthy Communities
Agroforestry farming can contribute to a food system that works much better than the one we live with today.
+ Enhance Food Security & Onshore Our Food Supply
Conventional farming systems are often fragile and vulnerable to disruption by drought, flood, or extreme weather events. In the Northeast, almost all of the food we eat comes from California, the Midwest, or overseas — identified by the New England Food Vision study as a major challenge to regional food security.
Growing food on trees in organic systems is naturally much more resilient than "conventional" annual production, which often depends on toxic chemicals and energy-intensive inputs. Staple tree crops (like chestnuts) can help “onshore” the region's staple food supply, while also making that food supply much more resilient to extreme weather and changes in the climate.
+ Improve Livestock Health
Compared with most meat animals in the U.S. (generally raised on grains in captivity), animals raised on pasture are much healthier and produce much healthier meat. Agroforestry farming offers the potential for livestock systems that work much better than even common pastured grazing systems. The introduction of trees to a pasture gives animals access to shade, which creates a number of additional positive health effects, including improved weight gain, conception rates, and overall pregnancy rates. Adding perennial forage and fodder crops adds nutritional diversity, makes animals less susceptible to infections, and increases forage availability during midsummer and droughts. Livestock “return the favor” by fertilizing the trees. Healthier animals = healthier meat = healthier people.
+ Build Prosperity In Rural Communities
In recent years, the economics of annual agriculture have tended to put farmers in debt and beholden to large agribusiness, while the land being “worked” tends to decline. Even if you live in the city or the suburbs, all of the stuff you depend on (clothing, food, building materials) comes from the country, so your prosperity is connected to the prosperity of rural communities.
Perennial agriculture tends to increase the economic value of landscapes year-over-year, building intergenerational equity in rural communities while aligning people's livelihoods with the long-term health of the land.
To ensure that the economic rewards of our projects are shared, everyone on our full-time team has a path to partnership and a share of profit.
+ Enable Land Access For Other Farmers
Agroforestry farming lends itself naturally to collaborative land management, creating the potential for many farmers to gain long-term land tenure. For example, one farmer might graze cattle on pasture between orchard trees, while another manages bees for honey, and a third produces maple syrup in surrounding woodlands.
If you’re a farmer seeking long-term land tenure, and are interested in managing regenerative agriculture operations within an orchard agroforestry system, please get in touch.
Healthy Climate
Conventional agriculture pollutes the air and atmosphere that all of us share — including an estimated 10-30% of global greenhouse gas emissions. Climate science continues to show that agroforestry practices are among the most effective strategies to maintain a healthy climate. In fact, our farms combine agroforestry practices (silvopasture, perennial staple crops, multistrata agroforestry, and tree intercropping) identified by Project Drawdown as 4 of the top 20 climate change solutions in the world. Agroforestry farming can sequester 5-6x more carbon than even practices commonly described as "regenerative":