What Your Weeds Are Saying | Part 2 Podcast Por  arte de portada

What Your Weeds Are Saying | Part 2

What Your Weeds Are Saying | Part 2

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What Your Weeds Are Saying | Part 2


The EcoFarm Aotearoa Podcast (Ep. 8)


When weeds explode across a paddock, most farmers reach straight for the sprayer. But as Ewan Campbell explains, every thistle, buttercup, dock, and gorse plant is actually doing a job and sending a message. From California thistles taking over dairy farms to ragwort covering entire hillsides, weeds aren’t the enemy… they’re indicators of deeper soil problems waiting to be fixed.


In this episode, Ewan and Stephen explore how weeds reveal the true condition of the land. Instead of fighting nature with chemicals, they show why the real solution lies in soil fertility, mineral balance, aeration, biology, and smarter grazing. What looks like a weed outbreak is usually a soil cry for help and once the limiting factors are corrected, the weeds simply disappear on their own.


We discuss:

• Why weeds don’t compete with healthy pasture once soil is corrected• How gorse, thistles, ragwort, buttercup, willow weed, and bristle grass each signal different mineral or drainage issues• Why chemical sprays create long-term soil damage and even more weeds• The role of biology, aeration, and cyanobacteria in fixing compacted or anaerobic soils• How livestock can be used strategically to control weeds without chemicals• Real on-farm before-and-after examples of weed-infested blocks turning into lush, productive pasture• The difference between constructive money and destructive money in farm management


With humour, clarity, and decades of hands-on experience, Ewan and Stephen reveal how regenerative farming turns weeds into teachers and how listening to them can transform your land far faster than spraying it.


Hosted by: Stephen Brunton & Ewan CampbellPowered by: EcoFarm Aotearoa – ⁠⁠www.efa.nz⁠⁠


Subscribe for weekly conversations exploring soil health, biology, and regenerative farming solutions that are transforming the way we farm in New Zealand.

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