• Ep 233 John Garcia: You’re In the Farming Now!
    Jun 28 2025

    Today, we meet up with John Garcia of Dancing Sun Farm. We were able to grab a moment of conversation with him at the lively meetup known as Texas Wool Week, held in the wild weather days of March at Sheepwalk Ranch in Bandera. Cold, wind, sun, warmth – we had it all. After all, this IS Texas.

    After 29 years in the U.S. Army, John began his second career in service, but this time to contribute to America’s food and fiber systems. He and his family raise sheep, goats and chickens in the lovely, lonely, beautiful area known as Texas Hill Country.

    We hope you enjoy our conversation about endings and beginnings, his second life, and the programs and support systems that helped him on his way.


    Links:

    www.TexasWoolWeek.com

    www.TheSheepwalkRanch.com

    https://www.facebook.com/Dancing.Sun.Farm.NM


    PodMatch
    PodMatch Automatically Matches Ideal Podcast Guests and Hosts For Interviews

    Support the show

    Show more Show less
    28 mins
  • Ep 232 California Agritourism Summit: It’s Not Just the Beach – It’s the Farm, Too
    May 27 2025

    Any time you put the word “summit” in something, it mentally becomes bigger than you previously thought. A conference on steroids, in most people’s minds. And when you do an ag-related summit in California, that notion of grandeur can be well deserved, even when you take away the size of the state itself. The sheer amount of agricultural exports that the producers in California send to other parts of the U.S. and the world is staggering.

    But there’s another aspect to agriculture that is a huge business opportunity: Agritourism. If you’ve ever been wine tasting, done a farm tour, seen the flower fields, gone horseback riding, or sampled local cheese while sitting in your B&B, you’re an agritourist.

    The 2025 California Agritourism Summit, put on by the UCNR (Department of Agriculture and Natural Resources), is meant to highlight the potential of agritourism for the producers in California. It’s another way for our food and fiber producers to maintain self-sufficiency in these changing times.

    The wave is here, and California farm producers are ready to ride it. And this one doesn’t have to be near the ocean.

    Links:

    https://ucanr.edu/site/communications-toolkit/acronym-directory

    https://www.usda.gov/glossary

    https://ucanr.edu/site/california-agritourism

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Got_Milk%3F

    https://class.ucanr.edu/statewide-program/uc-anr-small-farms-network/ramiro-lobo-sfp-advisor-san-diego-county

    https://www.cdfa.ca.gov/SecretaryBio.html

    www.cagrown.org

    PodMatch
    PodMatch Automatically Matches Ideal Podcast Guests and Hosts For Interviews

    Support the show

    Show more Show less
    37 mins
  • Ep 231 Dr. K: When You Garden, You Can Never Really Be Alone
    Apr 28 2025

    In what started out as a May Day date (that’s a truckload of compost in Rick and Elara’s world), a visit to San Pasqual Valley Soils struck black gold (again, compost).

    In one of the most fortuitous spontaneous Backyard Green Films conversations yet, an extremely knowledgeable dirt farmer by the name of Craig Kolodge, PhD (“Dr. K.” to pretty much everyone) gave an impromptu interview, surrounded by towers of amendment and beeping trucks full of manure, compost and wood chips. Elara was in heaven, with the conversation chock full of words such as “nematode,” ”sequestration,” “carbon cycle,” and other sciency stuff.

    Don’t ever say there’s no such thing as romance anymore, especially in Springtime.

    Links:

    https://spvsoils.com/

    https://spvsoils.com/craig-m-kolodge/

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/May_Day

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dionysus

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aphrodite

    https://clairemontonline.com/event-6080495

    PodMatch
    PodMatch Automatically Matches Ideal Podcast Guests and Hosts For Interviews

    Support the show

    Show more Show less
    37 mins
  • Ep 230 Catching H2O: There's Rain In Store
    Mar 26 2025

    On today's podcast we meet up with Brook Sarson from CatchingH2O. We followed Brook as she took a passel of learners and UCSD's Director of the Bioregional Center, Keith Pezzoli, PhD, on a tour of a greywater and rain catchment project that her company had recently installed.

    Water management is a favorite topic for us here at Backyard Green Films. With efforts like these, even if April brings few showers, we still have a chance at May flowers. Welcome to Spring!


    Links:

    https://catchingh2o.com/#0

    https://bioregionalcenter.ucsd.edu/

    PodMatch
    PodMatch Automatically Matches Ideal Podcast Guests and Hosts For Interviews

    Support the show

    Show more Show less
    36 mins
  • Ep 229 Kiko Guerra: The Artistry in the Ordinary
    Feb 26 2025

    We’ve been hunkering down for the last few months now on the traveling side of our Backyard Green Films universe. 2024 was a doozy of a year for us in many respects, so we had to take a few moments to catch our breath this winter.

    Enrique Guerra, also known as “Kiko,” is our guest today, and he’s pretty much royalty in Texas Longhorn Cattle circles. Kiko is the son of another Enrique Guerra – who was always known as Enrique, and he was the man who was responsible for saving a huge chunk of the pure genetics of the original Texas Longhorn, among other lifetime accomplishments. The senior of the two Enrique’s did that by running around the mountains of Mexico and collecting up what animals he could find that had not been diluted yet by the different breeds arriving on the shores of North America. He was quite a man to live up to, I think, and is still spoken of with reverence and admiration.

    But history can be preserved in many ways, and Kiko’s way of practicing preservation, yet keeping it relatable, is one of my favorites. He’s an artist.

    Aside from the accomplishments of his famous parent, and family, Kikko is royalty in his own right. He is a world-renowned artist, and his sculptures and paintings depict incredibly simple scenes of the basics of life, and yet they resonate with complexity. So yes, he paints a man leading a burro or farmers tilling their land. He sculpts scenes from the trails of old Texas and Mexico. And they resonate. The Brisco Western Art Museum thought so, and there you can see his famous piece, “The Vaquero.” It’s a sculpture of a man driving two Longhorn cattle along the trail, yoked by ropes and bobbins. Historically correct, of course. And you can also find one of his sculptures at the famous site known as the Alamo, in San Antonio. And his art is not just one thing. He very much believes in the importance of preserving the original Longhorn cattle breed at San Vicente Ranch. History, beauty and practicality all built into the genes of that one animal.

    Links:

    https://texashighways.com/culture/an-interwoven-legacy-guerra-family/

    https://sanvicenteranch.com/

    https://enriqueguerraart.com/?page_id=252

    https://banderafiberandarts.com/

    https://youtu.be/Ghekozq7lUE?si=T2lOqzlyZ04s5FQ3

    PodMatch
    PodMatch Automatically Matches Ideal Podcast Guests and Hosts For Interviews

    Support the show

    Show more Show less
    42 mins
  • Ep 228 Brent Zimmerman: This Dorpers For You
    Jan 27 2025

    Now, if you hear me talk about Rhinebeck, you might think today's guest is going to focus on wool. Nope! Not really. Sheep, yes, hair yes, but mostly wool, no. Our podcast guest today is a lovely man named Brent Zimmerman, and as I introduce him I'm kind of hard pressed to call him one thing, though you could definitely call him a sheep farmer.

    Links:
    https://www.facebook.com/limekilnfarmNY
    https://sheepandwool.com/
    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dorper
    https://dorpersheep.org/

    Support the show

    Show more Show less
    21 mins
  • Ep 227 Happy Holidays No Matter Which Song You Sing
    Jan 1 2025

    Music by Charlie Recksieck to usher us into the New Year.

    Support the show

    Show more Show less
    6 mins
  • Ep 226 Stephen Monroe: Withalacoochie. Okefenokke. Wampanoag. Caloosahatchee.
    Nov 28 2024

    Most people commemorate Thanksgiving today, and all things associated with this holiday. There will be some celebrating family, some marking the day with food, and some praying at the altar of football. Some will be remembering the Pilgrims, and the earliest arrival of Europeans bringing colonists and their livestock to North America. NOT!

    Stephen Monroe schools us on a common misconception about the domestic animals that were truly the first to be brought here to the Americas. Which livestock breeds beat the Mayflower across the Atlantic? What we currently call the “Spanish Colonial” horses were just one group, and the hardy and adaptable Florida Cracker Horse was a derivative breed of this impactful importation. Horses, cattle, chickens and goats - and they arrived 100 years before the big wooden boat we celebrate today.

    But don’t forget – the Spanish brought the pigs in then, too, so football is truly appropriate. Happy Thanksgiving, everyone.

    Links:
    https://themayflowersociety.org/
    https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0056085/?ref_=fn_al_tt_1
    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Florida_Cracker_Horse
    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carolina_Marsh_Tacky#History
    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Banker_horse#Breed_history
    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Juan_Ponce_de_Le%C3%B3n
    https://www.history.com/topics/exploration/juan-ponce-de-leon
    https://www.fdacs.gov/
    https://floridacrackerhorseassociation.com/

    PodMatch
    PodMatch Automatically Matches Ideal Podcast Guests and Hosts For Interviews

    Support the show

    Show more Show less
    25 mins