Hey there Reader, There’s a saying I love: “If you’re the smartest person in the room, you’re in the wrong room.” This past weekend, Benjamin and I packed up and headed west to Rapid City, South Dakota, for the British White Cattle Association’s annual meeting. We raise this ancient breed — calm, beautifully marked, and largely unchanged through the centuries. British Whites have a rare gift: they thrive on grass alone yet still produce the kind of natural marbling that makes every bite tender and full of flavor. The annual meeting is one of my favorite times of year — a gathering of people who care deeply about preserving heritage genetics and stewarding the land well. We swap stories, share ideas, and leave with notebooks full and hearts fuller still. The highlight of the trip was touring Dry Creek Ranch (visit them atdrycreek.com). Shawn’s property is a sea of green in a region that’s usually brown and brittle by midsummer. He’s transformed his conventional fields into living, breathing pastures — starting with cover crops and growing into native prairie grasses that hum with life and grazing cattle, sheep, and pigs. He even had a real dung beetle ball to show off (we regenerative farmers get excited about biodiversity, even in manure!). What moved me most was not just the regeneration happening in the land, but in Shawn’s family. He told us that farming this way brought them back together — that the health of the soil seemed to ripple through their lives. Healthy soil. Healthy animals. Healthy food. Healthy families. I came home brimming with ideas and renewed excitement for the work ahead — continuing to improve how we care for our own land and livestock, and exploring new opportunities to grow in ways that serve more families. God has a way of placing the right people in our path, especially when we stay humble enough to keep learning. Lord, thank You for wise mentors and faithful stewards who teach by example. Keep our hearts teachable and our minds eager to grow, so we may honor You in how we care for Your creation. Amen. Your farmer, The 5 Principals of Healthy Soil1. Keep the soil covered
A “soil armor” that protects life underneath. 2. Minimize soil disturbance
Let the soil ecosystem stay intact — it’s already beautifully designed. 3. Maintain living roots as long as possible
Think of roots as the soil’s lifeline — they keep the underground world fed and active. 4. Grow a diversity of plants
A buffet for microbes and insects — everyone gets the nutrients they need. 5. Integrate livestock
Hooves, manure, and grazing — nature’s original soil builders. Together, these principles create what you might call a “living loop” — soil feeding plants, plants feeding animals, and animals feeding the soil again. |
Hi, I'm Leah! Wife to Benjamin, mother of 5, and full-time farmer.