Most degraded farms don’t need more inputs — they need a better starting point.
This is how you actually begin rebuilding soil, water, and productivity.
On a 3,000-acre property near Avenel, Victoria, we walk through what degraded country really looks like — compacted soil, low pH, poor infiltration — and more importantly, what to do about it.
With practical insights from Stuart Andrews of Tarwin Park Training and Phil Mulvey of Environmental Earth Sciences, this video breaks down the first steps to reversing land degradation:
How to diagnose soil issues without lab tests
Why water infiltration is the real limiting factor
Simple contour interventions to slow and spread water
What changes after 2 years vs 4 years
Why plant diversity and grazing management unlock real recovery
This isn’t theory — it’s a paddock-level system that shows measurable improvement in soil depth, aggregation, and water holding capacity in just a few years.
If you’re dealing with tired country, low production, or rising input costs, this is where you start.
Key concepts covered:
soil degradation, water infiltration, contour farming, regenerative grazing, soil pH, aluminium toxicity, pasture diversity, soil aggregation, water holding capacity, land rehabilitation, Australian grazing systems
Who this is for:
Farmers, graziers, land managers, and anyone trying to improve productivity without increasing input costs.
Discover more insightful conversations on Farm Learning with Tim Thompson
#RegenerativeAgriculture #SoilHealth #GrazingManagement #FarmLearning #LandRestoration
Phil Mulvey joins Tim Thompson in the debut episode of Digging Deeper to discuss how can we restore fragile, sandy soils and stop erosion in its tracks.
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