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Making Cover Crops “Work” at Wild Type Ranch
When the combine leaves the field in the fall, most farms shift into neutral. The crop is off, the soil sits bare, and biological activity begins to slow. At Wild Type Ranch, we have chosen a different approach. Instead of letting the soil sit idle, we planted a fall cover crop with the intention of grazing it in the spring of 2026. A mix of cereal rye, winter triticale, winter wheat, hairy vetch, winter camelina, yellow blossom sweet clover and rapeseed planted October 3rd f
Feb 253 min read


Teamwork Makes the Dream Work
Farming is easier with good partners. Meet the team at Wild Type Ranch!
Feb 25, 20253 min read


SHA Day 2-Adaptive Grazing
Q: What should I plant to improve my pasture? A: Fenceposts! Adaptive grazing can do more to improve a pasture than almost anything else.
Jun 22, 20242 min read


Soil Health Academy-Day 1
We’ve been trained to be technicians; applying canned protocols, usually involving purchased external inputs. Instead, we need to be manager
Jun 18, 20241 min read
Ten Regen Ag Case Studies
A common response is “Well, that might work in (insert different geography or commodity) but it won’t work on my operation”.
Jun 17, 20242 min read


Principles Before Practices
State-level Grazing Lands Coalitions are a practical resource for regenerative pasture-based livestock production.
May 28, 20242 min read


6 Principles of Soil Health
Context and adaptability are foundational to being truly regenerative.
May 17, 20243 min read


Low Hanging Regenerative Fruit
Some juicy food for thought about things you can do to get started down the road, whether you’re a crop or livestock producer.
May 10, 20243 min read
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