PRIME MEMBER EXCLUSIVE | 3 Months Free Trial

Auto-renews at INR 199/mo after 3 months. Cancel anytime. Offer ends 15 July, 2026.
Regenerative Wine Growing Builds Better Soil And Wine cover art

Regenerative Wine Growing Builds Better Soil And Wine

Regenerative Wine Growing Builds Better Soil And Wine

Listen for free

View show details
If vineyard rows that look “clean” can actually be biologically depleted, what should growers and wine drinkers look for instead? This episode reframes winegrowing around the payoff of healthier soil, more resilient vines, better fruit, and a deeper sense of hope about working with nature rather than against it.The conversation explores regenerative agriculture as a living, adaptive approach rather than a checklist. Conventional farming is described as an intervention-heavy model built around killing pests, weeds, and disease. Organic agriculture is framed mostly as a list of prohibited inputs. Biodynamic farming adds an energetic and lunar-calendar perspective influenced by Rudolf Steiner. Regenerative agriculture goes further by asking whether each decision increases ecosystem complexity, density, diversity, and self-regulation.A major theme is learning to read the vineyard as a communication system. “Weeds” are reframed as medicinal indicator species: plants that reveal compaction, mineral imbalances, salt pressure, low nitrogen, or poor calcium availability. Instead of simply removing them, the regenerative approach uses those signals to choose cover crops that move the soil toward the next stage of health. Messiness becomes a sign of life, not neglect.The episode also explains the underground biology that makes regenerative farming so powerful. Mycorrhizal networks, rhizophagy, endophytic microbes, and quorum sensing all point to a vineyard ecosystem where plants, fungi, bacteria, insects, owls, and even gophers participate in balance. A teaspoon of healthy soil can contain over a mile of fungal filaments, and those networks can distribute resources, support plant health, and create resilience.The practical results show up in the glass, especially through wines like Block Nine Cabernet Sauvignon from the regenerative agriculture project. But the larger benefit is not only better wine. The work offers a model for responding to “polycrisis” with observation, humility, and action. New tools like AI, handheld plant sap analysis, and genomic profiling may help growers see in real time what the vineyard has been saying all along.The closing reflection connects this ecological intelligence to the divine through ruach, the Hebrew word for breath, wind, and spirit. The episode invites listeners to taste regenerative wine, observe living systems more carefully, and consider what kind of force holds such complexity together.HighlightsSee why “clean” vineyards may signal depleted biological life.Learn how weeds can diagnose soil problems before lab tests.Understand regenerative agriculture beyond organic certification limits.Discover how fungi, microbes, and roots exchange nutrients underground.Rethink gophers, owls, and pests as part of ecological balance.Connect better wine quality with healthier vineyard ecosystems.Important Concepts and FrameworksRegenerative agriculture — farming that increases ecosystem complexity, density, diversity, and self-regulation.Organic agriculture — defined mainly by what inputs cannot be used.Biodynamic agriculture — Rudolf Steiner-influenced farming using preparations, energetics, and lunar timing.Medicinal indicator species — “weeds” interpreted as signals of soil conditions and recovery needs.Mycorrhizal network — fungal networks that connect plants and help move nutrients and signals.Rhizophagy — plant-microbe nutrient cycling through roots and internal plant tissues.Quorum sensing — microbial communication that emerges once soil biology reaches sufficient density.Radical reality — observing nature as it is, not as humans assume it should be.Ruach — Hebrew concept of breath, wind, or spirit sustaining creation.Panentheism — view that God is present within creation without being identical to creation.Tools & Resources MentionedCoravin — wine preservation tool used to pour aged wine without opening the bottle.Kiss the Ground — documentary that inspired students to start a regenerative school farm.Common Ground — documentary mentioned as a regenerative agriculture film.The Biggest Little Farm — documentary used to illustrate ecosystem interdependence.Why Weeds Grow — book used to interpret weeds as soil-condition indicators.Black Elk Speaks — book influencing observation of nature and spiritual reality.The Mother Tree — book discussed in connection with forest communication.Roundup / glyphosate— herbicide discussed as something avoided in the vineyard.Rodenator / Varmint Getter — gopher-control tool discussed and rejected for vineyard use.Handheld plant sap meter — emerging tool for real-time plant health analysis.Wilson Creek Regen Ag Tour — vineyard tour showing regenerative practices in action.Calls to ActionWatch *Kiss the Ground*, *Common Ground*, or *The Biggest Little Farm* to understand regenerative systems visually.Look at vineyard “weeds” as possible soil indicators before assuming they are ...
adbl_web_anon_alc_button_suppression_t1
No reviews yet