

A Regenerative Future with Matt Powers
Matt Powers
A Regenerative Future with Matt Powers is a podcast focused on ushering in a syntropic future of abundance and regeneration using permaculture. Join Matt Powers, author, educator, seed saver, entrepreneur, gardener, and family guy as he interviews experts from all over the world who are actively working to reverse the damage we've done to our ecosystems and ourselves. Learn how to apply these lessons to your own life and help bring about the abundant future we all desire!
Episodes
Mentioned books

Jan 15, 2018 • 47min
Episode 82 Erik Ohlsen on Building Businesses & Community
Erik Ohlsen co-founder of Permaculture Artisans and the Permaculture Skills Center has a wealth of knowledge and experience that he shares with us in an incredible podcast on building businesses and community to spread regeneration.
Check out the Ecological Landscape Mastery course - start on your landscaping dreams today!! http://erikohlsen.com/eco-landscape-mastery-school/

Jan 6, 2018 • 14min
Permaculture = Freedom
Permaculture = Freedom
Off the Grid - DIY Energy, Water, Food, Fiber & Medicine
Save $, Spend Less, & Get Taxed Less
Work less for $, Work more for Holistic Worth
Independence => Freedom: US Independence led to Revolution & Freedom
Permaculture Relocalizes, Decentralizes Control, & Empowers Individuals, Families, & Communities to be more ethical & FREE
Liberate yourself with Permaculture; Find Freedom in Working with Nature.
Grow Abundantly, Learn Daily, & Live Regeneratively,
Matt Powers

Jan 6, 2018 • 38min
Episode 82 Bruce Blumberg Of UC Irvine On Toxins & Prof Rattan Lal On Carbon Sequestration
Get some critical insights from university professors Bruce Blumberg of UC Irvine & NonToxic Irvine and Dr. Rattan Lal of OSU. With Bruce Blumberg learn how you can protect yourself and your loved ones while keeping a keen eye out for distractions and misinformation. With Dr. Lal, get introduced to the numbers and science behind carbon sequestration the soils, and how exactly we can accomplish a real draw down.

Jan 4, 2018 • 22min
Why Bother Gardening? (or The Top 6 Reasons to Garden This Year)
Why Bother Gardening?
Isn’t it going to be hard to even approach the cost efficiency and quality of store bought products? How can amateurs even compete?
Actually, Amateurs lead in terms of growing. Those farmers have to tend acres and acres of food in most instances, so their products don’t get the same amount of individual attention and care. We can improve our soil, plants, and our products much easier because of the size of our systems and the fact that we aren’t making picture perfect foods for a store scenario. A lot of what those farmers grow never makes it to sale - most of their work gets thrown out, not even properly composted and returned to their fields. We always hear about food waste, but think about it from the farmer’s perspective: all that work just to be thrown out? It’s a hard situation and makes it harder for them to care specifically about their crops and plants like home gardeners readily do. You know what I’m talking about: how many times has a gardening friend of yours begged you to come and check out this amazing tree - you’ll never believe the fruit on it this year or you HAVE to taste this! Gardeners have more enthusiasm on average because they know why Gardening is so special.
The Top 6 Reasons to Garden this Year
Save $$$ on Seed & Food: Grow, Preserve, Seed Save, & Barter
Best Taste - Nothing like it in stores
Nutrient Density - Eat Less & Stay Full Longer for better digestive health & a longer lifespan
Selection Diversity - Grow the rarest foods that stores can’t even hope to carry
Light Exercise - may start out with digging but ends with daily walks with a basket
Self-Reliance - Confidence, Freedom, Security, & Community Stability
Make this the Year you start that Garden or take your Garden to the Next Level!

Jan 3, 2018 • 15min
Do Patterns Even Matter?
Why do Patterns even Matter?
Why is Permaculture Focused on Pattern Literacy?
What is a Pattern?
Patterns are things that repeat in a predictable way.
My Story: Pattern literacy is both basic and foundational, so if you don’t recognize it readily, you can make grievous errors. For example, in my first garden I placed the rows pointed downhill which in a dry hot climate promotes run off, erosion, drying of the land and overall stress in the garden - I didn’t see the overall pattern and how to interact with it so I couldn’t setup my garden properly. As soon as I began studying Permaculture with Geoff Lawton, I quickly recognized my issue and literally tore up my entire spring garden, reset it, and replanted it. How else could I have shown images of the garden to my classmates in Geoff’s course? I had to do it the right way!
What other patterns are they?
Pests are part of a Pattern - just wait a few days and see if something comes to remove them. If your soil, plants, and system are healthy, something will come to rescue your plants. Whenever a plant is stressed they are either calling for an attack on themselves or a rescue from an attack. Recognizing the signs and patterns of each is vital to managing a garden wisely.
There are MANY Patterns - some just seem like Organized Shapes, but even these have purpose.
WAVE example - Sound, Light, Vibration. off/on, night/day, winter/summer, heart beats, breathing (chest rises and falls), the rise and fall of land, the meander of streams and rivers (slows the water and increases the life capacity and cycling), waves on the ocean (starting with a hurricane spiral and ending in a spiral), waves of sound, vibration, pleasure pain are all on a spectrum of waves - all viruses and tumors have unique frequencies they resonate at - the Pulse of On Off that makes a wave defines EVERYTHING on this Planet. Day Night. Summer Winter. Male Female. Predator Prey. Good Evil. Tides. Life. Plot/Story.
Maybe getting carried away here, BUT You See the Point or the Pattern that is ;)
Grow Abundantly, Learn Daily, & Live Regeneratively,
Matt Powers

Jan 2, 2018 • 14min
Think Gardening Is Expensive?
Think Gardening is Too Expensive?
Seed Save, Swap, & Forage - You can take 1 packet and turn it into a gallon of seeds in only a few seasons.
Use Free Resources - Craigslist, FreeCycle, NextDoor, etc. Pallets, Fencing, Firewood, Manure, Old/Wet Straw, Plants
Use Natural Farming Techniques - Hand tools, Throw Sow, Self Seeders, Simple, Easy, Cheap, & Rhobust
Get Connected to your Local Community - Locals help, teach, & share
If you think Gardening is expensive, you should see what cancer’s costs are. Our health has no price. Growing a vibrant and diverse garden and food forest are the best defense against sickness, aging, disease, cancer, inflammation, and deficiency that we have. Grow a garden for your Future Care and the care of the earth and all those who rely upon it.
Grow Abundantly, Learn Daily, & Live Regeneratively,
Matt Powers

Jan 2, 2018 • 33min
10 Keys To A Regenerative 2018 Pt 1
10 Keys To A Regenerative 2018 Pt 1 by Matt Powers

Jan 2, 2018 • 22min
10 Keys To A Regenerative 2018 Pt 2
10 Keys To A Regenerative 2018 Pt 2 by Matt Powers

Dec 31, 2017 • 18min
The 6 Keys To Winter Gardening
The 6 Keys to Winter Gardening
Are you intimidated by Winter Gardening?
I was, and it held my gardening in the spring and summer back for years. I let the weeds take over every winter thinking I couldn’t garden despite their abundance and growth, and I rationalized that I was letting the land “rest” which is an old paradigm that doesn’t work as it used to because the world has changed. The fallow periods in European fields of the middle ages allowed wild elements from bordering forest and wild pastures to reinoculate their fields and reset them. With our wild systems in stress, distant from most human populations, and in severe decline, we cannot hope for the rest periods to be ones of large regeneration in our fields and gardens. Instead we need to intentionally ramp up the regeneration by wisely choosing to take correct steps to align our systems to nature’s patterns and cycles using permaculture.
Once I started using these keys, winter gardening became possible and in many ways EASIER than spring and summer gardening because:
- things moved slower it was easier to adapt and respond
- there are limited options so decisions are easier
- there’s nothing else growing on in winter it’s easy to be excited about your garden success!
The 6 Keys to Winter Gardening
Start Earlier than you think
Choose Plants Wisely: Brassicas & Legumes mostly: Siberian, winter, hiver, shortest, fall, hunger gap
Orientation & Placement
Mulch Blankets
Water when it’s Warm & Water minimally
Cloche/Hoop House/Greenhouse/Old Windows (Maybe)
Even if it’s too late to start early for you this year, consider an early spring garden to prep your soil and grow in that pesky hunger gap. You can garden in many places year round but it takes some planning and strategy! Good Luck & Keep Growing!
Grow Abundantly, Learn Daily, & Live Regeneratively,
Matt Powers

Dec 30, 2017 • 16min
The 6 Keys To Time - Wise Gardening
The 6 Keys to Time-Wise Gardening
Don’t have time to garden?
9-5 Job + Family + Staying Fit?
Can’t be Consistent: Things always come up?
Don’t want to spend all that time only to see it all go to waste?
My Story: 2 acres mostly managed with a knife
My wife, my job, homeschooling, & the kitchen
The 6 Keys to Time-Wise Gardening
Weed with a Knife or Scythe
Throw Sow Planting between Perennials
Automate Watering
Zonal Planting
Soil Prep: Winter cover crop & Compost: A Stitch in Time Saves 9
Calendar Approximate Harvest Times
Don’t have time? Get Organized & Make Time this Year! Grow an AMAZING Garden without Wasting Time!