Harvesting Wisdom Podcast with Mike McMahon
Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2307588/fan_mail/new] Episode Summary In this episode of Harvesting Wisdom, Mike McMahon visits a hillside farm overlooking Florence, Italy, run by a farmer practicing what he calls "ultra bioattivo" — an intensely biological, small-scale approach to growing over 40 varieties of vegetables and olives without any fertilizers, pesticides, fungicides, or herbicides for more than 12 years. The conversation, translated live from Italian, covers his unique composting process (a thermophilic phase followed by months resting in a forest windrow), his use of biochar, zeolite, and Korean natural farming principles, and how cypress trees and mulched water basins help recharge the aquifer instead of letting runoff carry chemicals downhill. Remarkably, the farm has partnered with the University of Florence on clinical trials showing measurable improvements in customers' gut microbiomes, and Mike connects this to his own water-saving trials with the University of Arizona using the same radicchio variety in the Yuma desert. The episode closes with a look at community: 200 subscribing families, dozens of partner restaurants, and a shared vision between Mike and his host — brothers from different mothers — to prove this kind of farming can work anywhere on the planet, including through education and a possible documentary collaboration. Why Listen Listen if you want to see regenerative, chemical-free farming in action — not as theory, but as a working business feeding hundreds of families and dozens of restaurants without a dollar spent on advertising. This episode is great for anyone interested in soil biology, biochar and mineral amendments, water conservation, the food-health connection (gut microbiome research!), or the idea that sustainable farming can be both ecologically sound and genuinely profitable. 00:00 – Intro: visiting a farmer above Florence growing 40+ vegetable varieties 00:00 – "Ultra bioattivo": small-scale, biology-driven farming without chemicals for 12+ years 00:00 – The composting process: a month of thermophilic heat, then months resting in a forest windrow 00:00 – Community impact: farmers market embraces, restaurant partners, and local goodwill 00:00 – The tradeoff of going chemical-free: less input cost, more labor, more loyal customers 06:03 – Clinical trials with the University of Florence show real gut microbiome improvements in customers 06:10 – 200 families and multiple acquired farms — scaling entirely through word of mouth 08:40 – Parallel water-saving trials with the University of Arizona using the same radicchio variety 09:15 – "We are not luddites" — using LoRa network sensors and real data alongside natural methods 09:46 – Biochar as a microbial "condominium" and its role in drainage and carbon 10:39 – Zeolite and Tuscany's volcanic soil — natural mineral amendments 11:24 – Water basins, mulch, and soil armor: preventing runoff and recharging the aquifer 11:57 – Italian cypress trees and their deep taproots that funnel water into the aquifer 14:52 – Korean natural farming philosophy: "no good, no bad — only what the soil needs" 15:31 – Worm composting and a liquid injector system for direct feeding 17:18 – Turning olive leaves into a micronized powder to feed the trees, mimicking a forest cycle 17:21 – The farmer's book and "five pillars" of the bioactive method 19:52 – Mike's own nonprofit: Urban Farming Education, the Harvesting Wisdom podcast, and an environmental film festival 20:00 – A shared mission: proving regenerative farming can work anywhere, and a possible documentary partnership
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