Search

'Kiss the Ground:' Netflix movie features soil health pioneers - Farm Progress

rindusare.blogspot.com

The movie features a lineup of some of Hollywood’s most recognizable names and faces, but two of its stars fly a little closer to the ground. 

In fact, Ray Archuleta and Gabe Brown make their living from the ground, teaching other farmers how to successfully transition to regenerative agriculture in order to restore healthy food, soil, farms and profits.

According to Kiss the Ground’s directors Josh and Rebecca Tickell, Archuleta and Brown’s leadership and pioneering roles in the soil health and regenerative agriculture movement are among the reasons they were selected to appear in the new, feature-length movie, scheduled to stream on Netflix Sept. 22. Archuleta and Brown are co-founders of the regenerative agriculture consulting firm, Understanding Ag, LLC, and the non-profit Soil Health Academy.

Seven years in the making, the new film features Woody Harrelson, Gisele Bundchen, Jason Mraz, Ian Somerhalder and others.

Something special

In Archuleta and Brown, the husband-wife directing team knew they had something special.

“From the moment we met Ray and Gabe we knew that they had the right stuff to teach millions and hopefully billions of people about a new way to think about food, farming and ranching,” Josh Tickell says. “Their knowledge doesn’t come from textbooks, it comes from real-world experience and their ability to teach comes through on camera.” 

Rebecca Tickell agrees. “Ray and Gabe are two of the real heroes of this movement. No movie about regenerative agriculture would be worth its weight in dirt without them.”

For his part, Brown hopes the movie will be a catalyst for positive change. 

“I hope the movie increases awareness as to how and why all society should come together to work on the 80% of the things we can agree on such as loss of biodiversity, water quality and quantity issues, poor farm profitability, the decline of rural America, climate change and human health,” Brown says. “All of these issues and more can be addressed, at least partially, by regenerative ag.”

The 85-minute movie explores key soil health and regenerative agricultural principles, featuring interviews with a wide range of authors, researchers and scientists including Kristine Nichols, Ph.D., who also serves as a consultant with Understanding Ag.

Photo courtesy “Kiss the Ground”Gabe Brown (left) and Ray Archuleta are prominently featured in “Kiss the Ground.”

Gabe Brown (left) and Ray Archuleta are prominently featured in “Kiss the Ground,” a feature-length movie which focuses on regenerative agriculture as a solution to ecosystem, health and climate problems. The movie’s filmmakers followed the pair from their farms to the Soil Health Academies, where they instruct their fellow farmers on the principles and practices of regenerative agriculture

Stabilizing earth’s climate

The movie’s thesis proposes that by regenerating the world's soils, humans can rapidly stabilize Earth’s climate, restore lost ecosystems and create abundant food supplies. The film uses creative graphics and visuals, along with NASA and NOAA footage, and illustrates how, by drawing down atmospheric carbon, many of humankind’s most pressing climate and environmental problems can be solved. Until recently, however, the role of soil and of grazing animals have been the two missing pieces of the climate puzzle.

“I believe this movie will help counterbalance the “cowspiracy” crowd’s incorrect understanding of cows,” says Ray Archuleta. “Cows are needed to help heal the earth. The fix is simple: Mimic nature, cover the soil and understand how soil is intended to function.”

See a preview of the movie at kissthegroundmovie.com.

Let's block ads! (Why?)



"kiss" - Google News
September 02, 2020 at 01:30AM
https://ift.tt/3gQPaYq

'Kiss the Ground:' Netflix movie features soil health pioneers - Farm Progress
"kiss" - Google News
https://ift.tt/2ZQDhec
https://ift.tt/2SoDRgQ

Bagikan Berita Ini

0 Response to "'Kiss the Ground:' Netflix movie features soil health pioneers - Farm Progress"

Post a Comment

Powered by Blogger.