202. Soil Is the CRADLE of Life: A Better Way to Remember Soil Health Principles
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À propos de cet audio
In this Field Notes episode, Cal slows things down to share a simple way to think about soil health principles that actually sticks when you’re in the pasture. Instead of another list to memorize, this episode introduces CRADLE, a practical framework that organizes well-known soil health principles into something easier to remember and apply in real-world conditions.
In this episode, we explore:
- Why soil health principles are easy to understand but hard to recall in real-world decision moments
- How context shapes the way soil health principles are applied on different operations
- How the core soil health ideas fit together through the CRADLE framework
- Where disturbance, soil cover, diversity, living roots, and livestock fit within that bigger picture
- A simple way to step back and diagnose what might be missing when things aren’t working as expected
What CRADLE stands for:
- C — Context
- R — Reduce Disturbance
- A — Armor on the Soil
- D — Diversity
- L — Living Roots
- E — Embrace Livestock
Why listen to this episode?
If you understand soil health principles but struggle to recall or apply them under real-world pressure, this episode gives you a mental model you can actually use. CRADLE helps move soil health from theory into day-to-day decision-making — without adding complexity.
Looking ahead
Next week’s Field Notes tackles a listener question on low-cost corral options, focusing on what actually matters, what you can skip, and practical ways to work animals safely without overspending on infrastructure.
Thanks to our partners
Field Notes is made possible by the continued support of Noble Research Institute and Redmond Agriculture. Their commitment to soil health education and stewardship helps make these conversations possible.
More grass. Better soil. Happier livestock.
Keep on grazing, and we’ll see you next week.
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Original Music by Louis Palfrey