What it is
Charles Massy, an Australian farmer and scholar, tells the story of landscape-scale regeneration across the Australian continent. The book weaves together stories of farmers, ecologists, and indigenous land managers who have restored degraded land through regenerative practices. It covers grazing management, soil biology, water cycles, biodiversity, and the human relationship with land.
Why we picked this
Massy brings something most regenerative agriculture books lack: the philosophical depth to explain why conventional farming failed and what worldview shift regenerative practice requires. Written from the perspective of a lifelong farmer who also holds a PhD, it bridges the gap between indigenous ecological knowledge and modern agricultural science.
Key takeaways
- Australian regenerative graziers have restored landscapes considered permanently degraded, rebuilding soil depth, water retention, and native species populations.
- Massy identifies five 'landscape functions' (solar energy, water, soil, biodiversity, human) that regenerative management must address simultaneously.
- The book documents how regenerative practices restore rainfall infiltration rates from under 30% to over 80%, fundamentally changing landscape hydrology.