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A
Of
my
friends
were
really
interested
in
and
showed
me
the
website
and
from
that
point
on
I
just
couldn't
get
it
off
my
mind
really
and
then
I
felt
kind
of
like
leaving
to
go.
East
and
I
didn't
really
have
a
destination
in
mind,
but
then
I
realized
very
right
in
the
middle
of
the
country
with
factory
farms
night.
Oh
yeah,.
A
I
do
mostly
grazing
management
and
fruit
crop
production.
We
did
I've
done
grain
production
and
then
I'm
working
right
now
at
an
apology
for
the
vegetable
cup
mix
with
the
trees,
but
nothing
as
different
as
Missouri
is
going
to
be.
A
really
cool
challenge
is
all
of
my
thinking
to
the
new
climate,
yeah
and.
C
B
There
yeah
no
doubt
undoubtably
yeah
yeah.
It
looks
like
just
looking
at
the
soil
survey.
It
looks
like
you're
gonna,
be
doing
a
lot
of
clay
and
clearly
so,
which
probably
chunk
up
on
the
infamous
for
you,
but
definitely
yeah.
There's
definitely
one
one.
Whole
state
of
tactics
to
use
and
working
with
with
different
soils
in
different.
A
A
A
Well,
I
have
food
plan
with
with
the
props
that
we
would
like
to
grow,
also
things
that
we'd
like
to
build
the
root,
cellar
and
shrimp
on,
and
some
infrastructure
for,
a
cow,
we're
getting
more
chickens
to
start
free,
ranging
them
and
a
greater
capacity.
So
the
soil
is
churned
a
little
bit
more.
There's
a
lot
of
I
mean
from
what
I
read
on
the
soil
before
there's
a
lot
of
erosion
towards
the
south
end
of
the
property
and
stuff
I
guess
where
I
mean
way
so
I'm.
A
Somebody
is
where
food
concert
planted
right
now,
but
it
looks
like
there's
a
grade
with
I.
Don't
know
a
slight
slope
with
a
lot
of
erosion
and
I
was
just
wondering
if
you
can
grieve
that
area
or
if
it
would
I
mean
if
you
have
a
heavy
cow
on
it
and
it
gets
wet,
it
might
make
it
worse,
but
I
feel
like
everything
it
a
little
bit
at
a
time
and
managing
it
really
carefully.
So
it
doesn't.
I
wrote
the
soil
it'll
cut
the
grass
grow
a
little
bit
and
keep
everything
together.
A
A
B
Intercropping
over
I'ma,
say
I
was
looking
at
the
assault
map
so
intercropping
over
over
a
single
cop
and
mission
Agraria.
I
think
I
think
I
do
it
anytime.
You
can
increase
the
biodiversity
and,
like
you,
give
an
area.
A
B
C
A
A
Then
the
squash
will
spread
out
and
keep
the
water
in
the
soil
by
shading
all
the
third
around
the
corn
and
the
beans.
If
you
have
a
separately
as
easy
to
harvest
and
easier
to
weed
as
well
as
foot
so
I
guess
I'll
large
large
scale,
it
might
be
a
little
bit
too
big
to
clamp
on
one's
face.
But
I
would
like
to
place
it
all
in
one
place.
Just
because
that's
what
I'm
our
practice
that
I
had
a
lot
of
success.
Doing
that,
but.
A
We
don't
think
if
you've
done
it
before,
where
all
the
cops
are
separated
anything
to
have
success
with
that
on
and
they
grow
grain
during
winter.
I
think
we've
had
week
and
maybe
Carly
I
can't
remember
they
have
our
leaf.
It
seems
like
Greg,
hey
to
the
winter
winter
into
spring,
cutting
it
and
then
maybe
following
up
with
a
color
club
and
just
try
to
get
into
the
soil
and
getting
I
mean
with
clay.
B
In
basically
I
own,
you
know
over
time
with
more
more
organic
matter
that
you
have
to
the
soil
the
easier
it's
going
to
be
home
to
work
with,
and
you
know
that's
really
key.
Just
you
know
adding
as
much
organic
matter
as
you
can
to
the
soil
to
build
fertility
over
over
years.
No
for
I
guess
long-term
strategies
that
seemed
to
work
pretty
well
regardless,
where
you're
at
you
know,
whatever
you
can
have
organic
matter
to
recover
crop
or
manure
or
you
know
biochar.
Whatever
is
no.
A
A
B
A
A
And
I've
seen
a
lot
of
different
methods,
strategy
kind
of
gleams.
What
I?
What
I
like
and
I
want?
A
lot
of
gardeners,
just
I
managed
to
community
garden
were
a
lot
of
gardeners
to
do
their
own
thing
and
I
saw
what
works
so
it
didn't
work
I
really
like
to
do
like
pretty
long-term
strategies
for
me
just
to
kind
of
increase
impact
over
time,
but
you
have
to
make
on
the
land
just
setting
it
up
to
it.
A
B
A
B
Yeah,
you
know
I've,
never
managed
larger
animals
before
chickens
about
chickens.
Bees
are
about
the
extent
of
it
yeah,
but
you
know,
of
course,
like
you're
having
them.
If
you're
gonna
have
a
large
animal
in
a
wet
field,
you
know
you're
going
to
create
compaction.
Issues
for
yourself
will
drag
on
into
the
future.
So
just
be
very
mindful
of
you
know
where
that
large
animal
is
going
to
be
in
the
a
season
you
know,
so
you
don't
create
those
connection,
issues
for
your
soul,
mate.
A
B
B
Growing
for
market
magazine
/,
dieter
syndromes,
really
good,
like
Morgan
farmers,
market
gardener,
general
magazine
type
of
thing.
What
is
it
go?
It's
called
growing
for
market
very
good
yeah,
it's
a
great
resource
for
small-scale,
diverse
farm
farmers,
expiating
farmers,
work
burgers,
really
really
good,
really
really,
and
one
of
the
articles
that
they,
the
decrypted
recently,
was
talking
about
keeping
chickens
on
the
farm
novel
strategies
for
doing
that
in
this.
In
this
article,
this
guy
in
the
Midwest
would
keep
his
chickens
and
the
green
and
all
sober
went
through
hope.
B
So
huge
us
at
like
one
of
the
ends
designated
to
you
to
wire
it
off
with
chicken
wire
the
designated
as
being
how
sweet,
hey
guys,
the
people
that
sod
again
that
I'm
sorry
scrub
boys
to
are
calling
me
right
now.
I
need
to
take
a
cell
real,
quick,
okay
today.
Thank
you
guys
for
the
call
back.
If
you
yeah,
that's
just
yeah.
C
So
Gabby
you're
still
here
with
me
right,
yeah,
yeah,
okay,
I
guess
you
know
what
I
was
hoping
to
get
out
of.
This
was
just
any
kind
of
confirmation
or
clarification
if
you
had
any
uncertainty,
but
it
sounds
like
you
guys,
I
mean
it
sounds
like
you
you're,
pretty
clear
on
what
you
want
to
do
and
how
you
want
to
achieve
it.
C
I
was
also
hoping
that,
if
there's
anything
you
know
like
part
of
my
process
when
I
went
through
school
is
like
I
learned,
a
lot
that
was
new
to
me
and
then
I
assimilated
and
then
I
kind
of
just
assumed
that
I
kind
of
forgot
that
it
was
something
that
not
everybody
knew.
So
you
know
if
we're
trying
to
really
push
the
envelope
in
terms
of
what
we
can
achieve
with
agriculture
and
find
new
techniques.
You
know
maybe
there's
something
that
can
be
teased
out
of
this
conversation.
C
We're,
like
you
know,
I
know,
he's
huge
on
biochar
I
mean
and
that
didn't
come
out
much
in
the
conversation.
We
actually
have
a
pretty
cheap
design
for
making
a
bad
yeah
for
making
a
biochar
oven
or
whatever
a
pyrolysis
machine.
So
I
don't
know
if
you
want
to
take
a
look
at
that.
I
know:
there's
a
lot
of
rainfall
in
Missouri
and
you're
talking
about
erosion.
So
maybe
that,
because
I
know
that
biochar
helps
preserve
the
mineral
content
of
soil,
maybe
wanted
to
go.
Do
that.
A
Great
yeah
I've
been
really
interested
in
using
the
biochar
on
the
field,
and
I
have
friends
that
are
doing
research
on
it
right
now,
and
I'm
just
really
inspired
by
what
they
found
out
from
bioshock
is
really
effective
from
what
they've
been
doing,
and
we
could
even
see
you
a
compliant
one
side
of
field
and
some
rotation
and
then
applied
to
another
part
of
the
lamp
in
another
season,
see
see
how
it
changes
things
and
that
will
probably
keep
address
during
a
lot
better.
A
C
But
I'm
emailing
you
right
now
the
attachment
this
guy
and
Tennessee's
got
a
place
called
d
farm.
C
This
is
a
system
that
he's
forwarding
and
then
Jonathan
wants
to
build
that
locally.
We
got
a
guy
I
mean
we
can
make
it
you
just
there's
just
some
pipe
and
I
wonder
if
you
could
use
compressors
blocks.
Let
me
let
me
send
this
page,
no
just
for
the
oven.
Let
me
I
just
emailed
it
to
you.
A
A
B
B
A
That
end,
if
you
could
just
get
water
full
amount
of
water
transported
through
channels
in
the
third
we'll
just
keep
the
water
flowing
to
a
plate
instead
of
just
pulling.
Oh,
that's
awesome.
No
wow,
yeah.
C
Yes,
okay,
so
that's
it
stuff
like
that,
like
I'm,
looking
for
ok,
what
does
Jonathan
known
I
mean
you.
He
was
big
on
mushrooms,
so
we
should
I,
think
he's
being
kind
of
like
respectful
and
not
trying
to
be
domineering,
but
he
needs
to
get.
He
needs
to
shave
it
off.
If
there's
anything,
you
could
propose
yeah
at
least
just
propose
it.
You
can
do
take
it
or
leave
it,
but
if
you
know
something
she'd
say
so
when
he
gets
back
I'll
trying
coax
that
out
of
him,
but
all.
C
A
C
B
A
C
A
A
B
B
C
C
C
B
B
You
have
the
description
for
each
one
of
those
types
so,
for
instance,
the
soil
series
that
corresponds
to
number
3
60
50.
It's
called
this
is
called
as
soil
zouk,
silty
clay,
loam
and
then
it
is
like
the
photo
for
the
description
of
that
some
soil
and
I.
Don't
you
know
it's
at
the
bottom
of
page
16,
okay,.
B
B
A
B
A
B
A
B
Good
way,
yeah
yeah
I
mean
you
know
also
probably
getting
in
contact
with
different
areas
and
their
honor,
or
you
know,
stables
around
the
area.
See
it
see.
If
you
guys
could
maybe
posting
a
link
on
craigslist,
see,
you
know,
say,
hey
to
get
rid
of
some
manure.
You
can
bring
it
here.
You
know
bring
ya.
A
A
B
We
need
to
get
as
much
manures
as
you
can
get
and
you
know
and
then
do.
20
20
tons
makers,
honey
company
get
used
us
about
the
high
limit.
Of
course,
you
know
every
site
is
going
to
be
different,
and
you
know
your
know
with
when,
when
you're
doing,
when
you're
assessing
for
fertility
actually
the
very
first
thing
you
do
is
get
soil
types.
So
actually
before
you
do
anything
for
you
plan
before
you
Avenue
or
people
are
you
doing
it?
B
Did
it
take
a
soil,
get
a
soil
sample
and
then
mail
it
to
a
lab
to
get
the
soil
idealised
to
see
what
you're
working
with
I
think
just
you,
what
am
I
attentive
to
do
is
about
thirty
dollars.
I
think
you
just
like
there's,
like
you
just
may
be
asked
extension
agents
in
that
region
where
factory
factory
form
is
asked
Alexis
engine
Asian
ask
him
where's
a
good
place
to
get
a
soil
soil
test
done.
B
You
know,
though,
tell
yet
and
then
just
to
see
you'll
get
the
information
about
how
much
with
the
cation
exchange
capacity
of
the
soil.
What's
the
ph
of
the
sort
of
what
coming
coming,
how
much
nitrate
there
is
in
so
much
phosphate,
potassium
levels,
micronutrients,
actually
mega
nutrients
usually
aren't
added
in
the
three
dollar
soil
test.
That's
usually
another
another
test,
but
if
you're,
adding
manure
that
you're,
usually
adding
all
the
micronutrients
that
you
need
as
well.
If
you
do
a
good
job
of
adding
a
lot
of
manure
like
20
times
an
acre
wikia.
B
Bringing
manure
up
to
those
high
temperatures
like
150
degrees,
Fahrenheit
or
whatever
you
know,
you
kill
the
weed
seeds,
and
so
then,
when
you
ask
the
accomplice,
when
you
arrive
to
the
field
you're,
also
not
adding,
we
see
so
it's
beneficial
in
that
way.
So
I
guess,
if
there's
a
concern
that
manure
is
kind
of
Kentucky
with
some
invasive
I,
don't
know
what
kind
of
weeds
they
have
out
there.
It's
probably
different
from
what
we
have
here
in
Colorado
yeah.
A
B
This
is
a
pain
in
ass.
You
know
yeah
well,
I
mean
it
could
be
beneficial
to
compost
it.
Of
course,
you
know
that's
going
to
take
a
whole
nother
suit
of
equipment
night.
You
know
a
lot
of
farmers
when
they
do
compost
manure.
They
get
like
a
minuite,
an
easy
way
to
do
it
for
a
small
farm
for
composting
manures,
just
getting
a
manure
spreader
that
runs
off
of
power
take-off.
B
So
it's
not
an
aggression
on
a
ground
driven
manure,
spreader,
okay
and
you
just
load
the
manure
into
the
manure
spreader
and
run
the
power
take-off
to
you
know
kind
of
mix
up
the
manure
and
you
know
if
you
have
biochar,
you
can
add
the
biochar
during
the
mixing
process
to
make
biochar
with
manure
that'll
help
prevent
nitrogen
losses
from
the
composting
process
did
I
core
some
kind
of
auxiliary
Brandon
at
this
point,
I
suppose,
but
yeah
you
know
so
I
mean.
If
yes,
like
I,
said,
if
you
can,
we
turn
in
your
problem.
Compost.
C
Deal
with
it.
Well,
actually,
you
know
what
hey
guys
like
the
soil,
pulverizer
I'm
looking
at
manure
spreaders.
It
looks
like
a
trailer
with
the
salt
so
pulverizer
on
the
end
of
it.
So
I
mean
we
definitely
have
the
capacity
to
build
manure
piles
and
churn
them
what
it
probably
Jonathan.
What
is
the
point
of
that
you
take
you,
take
piles
of
manure
and
do
what
to
it
in
a
manure
spreader.
Yes,.
B
C
B
Stand
there
with
a
hose,
so
you're
watering
them
watering
the
manures
to
kind
of
like
you
know
the
internet.
If
it's
dirty
Drago
suit
compost
process
isn't
going
to
go
forward
less
unless
the
substrate
is
wet
and
then
and
then
also
you
know
what
the
mixing
does
is
air
raids,
the
substrate
as
well.
So
it
gets
rid
of
the
carbon
dioxide
and
introduces
oxygen
to
the
system
so
that
aerobic
respiration
go
forward.
So
the
composting
process
can
actually.
C
B
Just
comes
up
the
backside,
so
what
there
is
in
a
general
manure,
spreader,
there's
like
these
apples
that
are
run.
You
know
on
this
like
gearbox
to
the
baffles,
just
like
pull
the
moon
pulp,
the
manure
from
the
front
of
the
manure
spreader
to
the
back
of
the
manure
spreader,
and
then
there's
these
little
usually
like
mil
times
on
the
back.
That
kind
of
like
will
stick.
They
have
like
little
spikes
on
it
and
they
like
stick
them
manure
pieces
and
then
throw
them
around.
So
it's
just
like
a
good
just
functionality.
C
B
A
B
Don't
really
know
you
know,
the
pretty
much
all
I
know
is
like
social
is
like
a
cursory
understanding.
What
the
social
needs
are
of
the
people
that
are
at
factory
farm
and
then
also
this
visual
map.
So
that's
I,
guess
extent
of
evidence.
I
have
to
work
on,
but
I
guess
I,
don't
know,
I,
guess
what
you
said.
Gabrielle
like
in
terms
of
just
like
getting
a
getting
the
village
they're
fat,
so
doing
what
it
what
it
takes.
Good
people
fed
there
in
terms
of
healthy,
organic.
A
Just
want
to
see
improvement
and
increase
in
diversity
of
crops
and
a
more
well-rounded
diet
that
produced
by
the
property
and
to
still
have
extras
produce
enough
for
the
people
living
there
be
it's
for
people
or
20
people.
We
could
just
plant
as
much
as
we
need
and
plan
for
it
and
make
it
scalable
in
that
regard,
as
well
just
having
extra
to
fuel
the
market
and
have
something
to
sell
to
it.
I,
don't
a
successful
economic
picture
in
that
Thun.
Definitely.
A
A
I
just
want
to
take
that
and
hit
the
ground
running
with
it
and
just
see
what
can
be
made
better
by
increasing
the
diversity
of
the
plants
that
are,
there
may
be
taking
maybe
just
negating
some
weeds
and
also
adding
some
good
plants,
but
I've
beneficial,
maybe
not
as
a
clock,
but
to
be
there
as
part
of
the
ecosystem
as
be
forage
for
Cal
for
it
or
chicken
forage.
Even
but
I
just
want
to
see
I
just
really
want
to
learn.
A
What's
up
with
with
the
soil
there
and
see
the
whole
different
landscape
of
it.
I
searched
some
just
some
edible
weeds
in
Missouri
and
some
crops
maps
and
it's
completely
different
from
what
I've
been
working
with
Tom
yeah.
It's
just
a
new
experience
for
me
and
I'm
really
excited
for
the
clean
slate
it'll
just
be
kind
of
throughout
book.
That
I've
never
been
in
before
to
what
transfers
from
California.
C
I'm
feeling
inspired
to
say
a
few
proposals
for
action
like
okay,
so
you
Gabrielle-
you
talked
about
this
there's
already
a
lot
of
you
Rosen
happening
so
controlling
the
erosion
preventing
more
would
be
one
priority
right
aside
from
Branford,
so
we
also
know
what
you
want
to
have
a
pond
out
there.
So
is
there
a
way
to
build
swales
and
funnel
that
the
water
and
the
rain,
because
the
land
is
on
a
slope?
Can
you
funnel
it
into
a
pond
great.
C
A
So
if
we
could
get
a
pond
in
a
situation
where
all
of
the
water
kind
of
stays
in
that
area,
then
it
will
stay
wet
and
it
will
fill
up.
And
then,
if
we
have
water,
versatile
start
turning
the
soil
and
actually
turning
it
into
a
pond.
That's
going
to
maintain
itself
and
that
would
just
keep
the
water
off
the
topsoil.
Keep
it
from
running
over
the
soil,
just
kind
of
let
it
be
more
absorbed
into
the
soil
flowing
to
this
pond
area
and
hopefully
not
eroding
the
hillside.
C
A
Work
plan
I
just
wrote
with
cover
crops,
manure,
biochar,
soil
sample
analysis,
preventing
erosion.
I
was
thinkin
bout.
Also,
I'm
missing.
I
mean
I
don't
know
how
planting
these
things
version.
Initially,
it
must
kind
of
make
things
a
little
bit
unstable
just
because
of
the
change
for
planting
great
for
up
here.
I
do
olive
trees,
I,
think
olive
trees
when
I
see
in
a
routing
help
out
that
up
there.
It's
not
a
Mediterranean
climate
at
also
may
be
great.
Maybe
some
fairies.
A
But
if
we
could
have
some
contouring
from
that
and
then
maybe
big
swales
around
it
I
think
I
really
have
to
see
the
contours
of
the
property
see
what
I
envision,
because
looking
at
it,
two
dimensionally
is
really
difficult
to
judge
where
it
would
be
best
to
create
anything
new.
B
Foil,
oh
yeah,
definitely
I
mean
I,
guess
you
know
when
it
comes
to
like
large
Hill
size
that
have
a
tiny
hero,
civet
e
factories,
you
know
putting
in
perennials
is
usually
the
best
way
to
go
so
maybe
taking
some
strategies
from
food
forestry
like
the
certain
permaculture
food
forest
tree
stuff.
If
you
still
want
to
be
edible,
Ian,
productive,
but
this
hillside
is
as
a
large
slope.
You
know
maybe
working
with
that
rubric
and
implementing
the
plan
set
that
that,
like
putting
the
plans
that
work
work
of
that
word
right,
I.
A
B
B
There's
a
there's.
A
really
good
book
by
david
Jackie
called
edible
food
forests
and
he
has
a
good
indexer
of
plants
at
work.
Well
for
for
doing
for
doing
that,
food,
forestry
and
just
kind
of
runs
the
gamut,
as
well
as
like
a
stuffer
agro
ecology
for
different
purposes.
Different
functions
in
aggregate
system,
yes,
David
Jackie.
That
would
reckon
I
would
definitely
turn
me
on
to
that
book.
Thank
you.
B
A
C
So
yeah
there's
a
there's,
a
there's,
a
potential
I
mean
I,
don't
know
what
what
condition
the
soil
is
in,
but
as
a
model
for
others
to
replicate.
It
seems
like
I'm
kind
of
inspired
right
now
to
look
at
a
plan
for
the
rapid,
rehab
rehabilitation
of
the
soil
through
a
combination
of
manure
and
biochar,
and
then
maybe
type
of
cover
crops
like
you're
talking
about
or
nitrogen-fixing
plants,
Jonathan
like
it
I
mean.
Would
it
is
it?
C
A
So
the
first
is
not
going
to
be
a
huge
change,
but
after
a
year
everything
will
bounce
a
lot
more
and
even
close
yeah
I
see
just
adding
another
top
layer,
because
if
the
soil
baby
inches
deep,
we
can
just
throw
on
as
much
as
we
want
to
make
huge
a
huge
layer
of
biochar
and
manure
and
cover
crops
and
just
turning
it
off.
A
B
C
B
B
Dagus,
that's
feasible,
you
know
like
then
you
know
putting
probably
that
manure
in
the
biochar
out
like
a
month
in
the
disk
in
event,
immediately.
You
want
to
disc
in
what
a
discman
door
and
as
soon
as
you
possibly
can
disk
it
after
laying
it
out
otherwise,
because
what
what
happens
to
manure,
especially
freshman
air,
as
it
loses
most
of
its
nitrogen
within
the
first
24
hours
that
it's
exposed
to
air
because
I,
you
know
just
let
off
gassing
of
ammonia
angle.
A
B
B
B
B
One
life
of
it
again,
you
know
you
I
mean
get
a
soil
test.
You
can
have
to
get
a
little
test
in
by
getting
the
soil
test,
you're
going
to
know
exactly
how
much
manure
you're
going
to
put
on.
If
you
want
to
get
more
detailed
about
it.
Actually,
what
people
do
is
to
get
manure
tests
as
well
and,
if
they're
going
to
put
on
the
door
that
they
don't
really
know
what
the
composition
of
the
manure
is.
Then
they'll
gang
newer
test.
No,
that's
you
know,
but
you
know
I
guess
you.
B
B
B
B
University
doing
a
lot
of
studies
on
it,
CSU
Colorado,
State
University,
are
also
there
be
able
out
that's
dedicated
to
analyzing
the
stuff.
It's
very
novel,
it's
just
something
like
the
last
ten
years
that
the
stuff
is
really
kind
of
you
know,
hit
the
forefront.
Of
course
you
know
ancient
technology
in
terms
of
like.
C
Okay,
one
other
question:
I
had
just
want
to
tease
out
kind
of
rack
your
brain
is
there
any
kind
of
like
a
novel
other
novel
practice?
We
could
try
experiment
with
that.
That
is
promising
we're
trying
not
to
just
do
traditional
agriculture
we're
trying
to
try
to
build
a
really
innovative
model.
That's
the
best
of
the
best
that
we
can
really
glean
simply
forestry
culture.
Forestry
is.
B
B
Is
you
mimic
nature
I
you
by
strategically
place
implants
to
create
a
most
harmonious
ecosystem
arrangement
that
but
Taylor
it
and
push
it
in
the
way
that
not
only
is
it
serving
the
needs
of
the
aggregate
of
the
food
force
through
forestry
agrego
system
itself,
but
is
also
you
know,
fulfilling
tensions
of
food,
fiber,
fuel
farm,
Nicole's
and
enforced
etic
purposes
as
well.
Yeah.
A
Yeah,
those
are
often
the
most
beautiful
curtains,
oh
boy,
there's
so
much
more
dynamic.
They
really
needed
to
take
care
of
the
rooms.
B
You
know
like
yeah
when
you
have
when
you
have
like
a
that
all
it
takes
here
and
there
you
know,
is
looming
entering
there
where
you
just
like
prune.
Maybe
you
have
an
apple
tree
that
gets
low
widely
and
improve
it
or
you
have
you
know
some
Bermuda
grass
come
in
and
you'll
pull
it
out
and
you'll
reach
speak
with
some.
You
know
ground
cover,
but
yeah
I
mean
once
you
have
that
system
up
and
going
it
it
just
takes
off.
B
You
know:
there's
some
beautiful,
I
beautiful
permaculture
farm
sites
around
the
united
states
that
are
just
just
really
kicking
butt.
With
this
model,
like
you
know,
for
one
here
in
Colorado,
there's
zero
moscow
scheme,
central
Colorado,
permaculture
Institute,
and
you
know
out
Occidental
California,
there's
there's
a
really
free
at
the
name
of
the
farm,
but
there's
a
good
food
source
tree
farm
out
there
and
they're
all
over
the
place
yeah
in
any.
B
Oh
the
way
you're
going
to
find
out
about
those
type
farms
in
you
know
to
go
see
if
you
come
visit
and
what
they're
doing
that
that
you
can
then
kind
of
import
their
their
their
their
models
here
to
your
own
farm,
you
know
see
what
working
on
its
agreements
and
will
is.
You
know
just
go,
maybe
look
into
the
permaculture
activist
and
then
just
you
know,
seeing
if
you
can
go
visit
those
farms
in
SF
a
date
take
a
trip
and
go
business
visit.
These
places
see
what
they're
doing
pull
the
mouse
today.
B
A
A
B
A
B
A
B
A
Was
amazed
southwest
like
that
for
southwest
corner
great
north
of
Kansas
City?
Okay,
oh
yeah,.
C
I
appreciate
both
you
guys
being
willing
to
try
it
out.
I
didn't
know
what
would
come
of
it,
but
it's
always
good
to
you
know
I
admire
both.
You
guys
it's
good
to
bring
people
together
to
see
what
happens
so
right
on
yeah
I'm
excited
that's
my
final
thought.
This
is
exciting:
okay,
guys,
yeah!
Thank
you
both
and
we'll
talk
to
everybody
soon.
Okay
sounds.