Season 3 – Deprecated
Restoring Soil Vitality
Episode 1:
Joe Scrimger –
Bio-Systems II



Part 1 Listen
Nitrogen, Water, and the Farm | Length: 6:44
“…nitrogen’s not the issue. It’s putting on too much at one time… even organically, we have to have nitrogen from someplace.” – Joe Scrimger
Joe Scrimger connects the dots between nitrogen use on the farm, soil health and water quality.
Part 2 Listen
Nitrogen Management for Soil Biology | Length: 8:26
“What we try to do in the conventional world is get those farmers to use at least three different sources of nitrogen that release at three different times.” – Joe Scrimger
Joe Scrimger shares how nitrogen applications affect soil biology, including ways to better harness soil life to strengthen your crops.
Part 3 Listen
The Risks of Damaging Soil Life | Length: 8:48
“…it still comes back to the lack of biology in the soil. And once you put the fungicide on to kill the fungal in the plant, most of that goes to the soil and you got less biology and you got more of a problem next year.” – Joe Scrimger
Anything that damages soil biology can stress crop plants and put farms at risk. Joe Scrimger explains.
Part 4 Listen
Low-Till, Biologically-Informed Erosion Control | Length: 12:45
“…there’s a lot of people in the Soil Conservation, and USDA, and some of the new regenerative farmers are suggesting that tillage is the problem. Tillage can be a problem. And we do want to till less. But tillage is not the problem.” – Joe Scrimger
Soil life holds the soil together. Joe Scrimger gives examples of how well functioning soils can produce good crops, resist erosion and runoff, and withstand adverse weather events.
Part 5 Listen
Balancing Soil Biology for Crop Health | Length: 13:41
“…as your soil improves, you actually want to move more to broadleafs. And that brings that fungal balance out. That starts to have a multiplier effect on your building of organic matter, and your water moves better.” – Joe Scrimger
Joe Scrimger on how strategic crop rotation and cover-cropping can enhance the bacterial/fungal balance in the soil and jumpstart the phosphorous system, which improves uptake of many needed minerals.
Part 6 Listen
Soil Building for Hydration, Crops and Nutrition | Length: 16:01
“…there’s all different forms of composting. But if we’re gonna have disease suppression, and if we’re gonna get that high-carbon compost to work in the soil, it has to be composted properly. And if it is, it’s pretty valuable stuff.” – Joe Scrimger
Joe Scrimger describes how introducing and maintaining healthy soil life can help farmers improve hydration and strengthen crop plants, then reminds us it’s all about producing healthy feed and food.
About Joe Scrimger
Joe Scrimger is a longtime farmer and Ag consultant with decades of experience helping farmers strengthen their operations through organic and biologically informed practices. Joe and his wife Kay Scrimger purchased a 160-acre farm in 1972 and began transitioning to organic the following year, eventually expanding to 198 acres and renting another 300 acres. A few years later, Joe launched Bio-Systems, an agricultural consulting and soil testing business that served farms across Michigan and Southwest Ontario for 38 years. more
Organic Apples – Mindset and Methods
Episode 2:
Jim Koan –
Almar
Orchards



Part 1 Listen
Reasons for Going Organic | Length: 7:42
“When I first started growin’ organic, it was not because it was safer for my customers. It was the safety of my children, and having to be exposed to this all the time. That was it. But right behind that followed the idea of me proud that I was growing food that was safer for my customers.”
Why go organic? For Michigan apple producer Jim Koan, it’s about the health of his family and customers, and ultimately the vitality of the environment that supports the entire operation.
Part 2 Listen
The Organic Apple Learning Curve | Length: 9:29
“And so when you’re puttin’ fungicide out there, you just destroyed the food chain. And herbicide, you just destroyed the food chain there. And that tree’s basically starving to death. Then you gotta feed it all this stuff all the time because the food chain down there that’s breaking all the organic material down into its simplest elements is dead.”
Almar Orchards’ Jim Koan describes how observation and trial and error helped him support natural systems in his organic apple operation.
Part 3 Listen
Principles of Integrated Pest Management (IPM) | Length: 9:34
“…you have to feed Mother Nature first in order to keep the food system balanced. And then you get what’s left after that. So you have to accept a certain amount of damage here. And it shouldn’t bother you because it’s valuable in the sense that it’s feeding the food system.”
Jim Koan describes the early days of Integrated Pest Management and how IPM became a key framework for pest control in his Michigan-based organic apple orchard.
Part 4 Listen
Long-Range Thinking: Plans A, B and C | Length: 4:20
“…we’re a creature that wants security and predictability. And so what happens is, if it worked last year, they’re gonna do it again this year, even though it may not work… that takes energy, to plan far ahead. And you need a plan A, a plan B, and a plan C.”
Organic grower Jim Koan reflects on the mindset needed to succeed with perennial crops like apples that require longer-term investments of labor and capital.
Part 5 Listen
Observations on Going Organic | Length: 1:54
“You can nudge Mother Nature a little bit, but you can’t dominate her. You gotta respect her. So if you don’t know what you’re doin’, don’t do anything.”
Grower Jim Koan shares what it takes to succeed with organic apples and some of the changes he saw during his farm’s transition to organic.
Part 6 Listen
Snow Apples – Evaluating an Apple Variety | Length: 8:25
“Every farm had Snow Apples on it, that had apple trees. And I never could figure out why. In the beginning it kind of intrigued me because I always like to connect dots to try to make sense of stuff.”
Jim Koan discusses how the Snow Apple was introduced by early French settlers, and provides an example of how he evaluates an apple variety for his organic orchard.
Part 7 Listen
Peaches and Brown Rot | Length: 1:53
“I fooled around with ’em for three or four years, and I was able to control all the different insects, but not the brown rot.”
Jim Koan describes the problems he encountered with brown rot in peaches when transitioning from conventional to organic production in the 1980s – part of the reason he went with apples.
Part 8 Listen
First Generation: the Pioneering Mindset | Length: 4:25
“I see the younger people are gonna be more successful than other generations in doin’ this because they’re choosing to do it. Not because they had to do it. They had given this some thought and they’re makin’ the choice.”
Jim Koan emphasizes the importance of maintaining a first-generation attitude for successful farming: Make a choice, see the risks, persevere, and be willing to learn.
Part 9 Listen
Hungarian Bacon Fry | Length: 1:26
“…really, really bacony…”
Jim Koan shares the basics of his mother’s Hungarian bacon fry, a traditional outdoor experience where people gather around an open fire.
About Jim Koan
Jim Koan was born into a family that had been growing apples in Michigan’s Genesee County since the mid-1800s. After completing degree programs in psychology and education at The University of Michigan and beginning a career teaching, Jim and his wife Karen – also an educator – continued working on the farm during their off hours to supplement their income.
In 1978, Jim and Karen left their teaching careers to help run the orchard, with Jim ultimately becoming a full partner and then owner of the family’s conventionally managed operation, Almar Orchards. more