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:


Healthy Communities

Agroforestry farming can contribute to a food system that works much better than the one we live with today.


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":