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🌱 Join us at ORFC in the Field 🌱

2010 - 2025

ORFC Archives

It is important that everyone can have access to the knowledge sharing that takes place at the conference.  Therefore, livestreamed video sessions and audio recordings from all past conferences are available to watch from this page.

By default, the archive below will show content from the latest conference (ORFC25). To view previous years, in the ‘Filters’ section below and to the left, click on the year you want to access and click ‘Apply’ to display sessions from that year.

You can also explore past session recordings on the ORFC YouTube Channel. The ORFC archives are in development and all session recordings from early years are coming soon! Archival material from ORFC 2016 – 2019 can be found on the old ORFC website.

Please note many of the recordings are made by volunteers, using non-professional equipment. If you have any questions about the content, or would like to add anything to the archive, please contact francesca@orfc.org.uk.

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Lunchtime Talk

Speakers

Mark Lea

Chair

Matt Smee

Languages

English

Format

Audio

13:00 - 13:45 GMT
Friday, 10th January 2025

Living with Living Mulches

Living mulches offer an alternative approach for growing arable crops, with research showing the practice can improve nitrogen availability, reduce runoff, increase biodiversity, promote soil health and improve ecosystem services. However, adopting the practice comes with many challenges and considerations. Join this deep dive session to hear from Mark Lea of Green Acres Farm as he looks back at four years of living mulches work on his farm in Shropshire. Hear about the challenges Mark…

Lunchtime Talk

Speakers

Sonia Lee

Languages

English

Format

Audio

13:00 - 13:45 GMT
Friday, 10th January 2025

Research in No-Till Vegetable Production

Learn from fully-replicated no-till field trials at Newcastle University and East Durham College. Vegetables were grown in mulched cover crops (crimp rolled or mowed) or transferred mulches of silage or compost and compared with tillage-based controls. The trials include different scales, using both 4-wheel and 2-wheel tractors. Differences in yield and weed pressure have been marked, and monitoring investigates underlying causes, including weeds, soil moisture, earthworms, soil penetration resistance, and the release of nutrients from…

Lunchtime Talk

Speakers

Marthe Kiley-Worthington
Joanna Kudryńska

Languages

English

Format

Audio

13:00 - 13:45 GMT
Friday, 10th January 2025

Conversation About Taboos Related to Slaughter in Animal Agriculture

Join us for a lunchtime conversation between butcher Joanna Kudryńska and Marthe Kiley-Worthington, an experienced ethologist and ecologist focused on animal welfare. Marthe has spent several decades studying the epistemology of cattle, horses, elephants, and rhinos, and now runs an ecological farm on Exmoor. Marthe and Joanna will be discussing taboos related to slaughter and directing their attention towards areas that are usually omitted with the aim of improving both animal and human welfare.

Workshop

Speakers

Jane Hull
Jade Hemsley
David Hooton
Kevin Miskella
Tim Field

Languages

English

Format

Audio

13:00 - 13:45 GMT
Friday, 10th January 2025

WORKSHOP: Deer Are Food for the Future

Wild deer management is an essential part of woodland management and supports a sustainable approach to meat production. Within properly functioning ecosystems, deer play an important role for biodiversity and habitat quality. However, without any predators, large deer populations can have a devastating effect on their environment. The Forestry Commission supports land managers and farmers to manage woodland sustainably and ensure standards and traceability for a reliable and ethical outlet for the meat as a…

Lunchtime Talk

Speakers

Mick McEvoy

Languages

English

Format

Audio

13:00 - 13:45 GMT
Friday, 10th January 2025

The Interbeing of Agroecology

Plum Village is a Zen Buddhist Monastery and Mindfulness Practice Centre in the South of France. Within our Agroecology farm which we call The Happy Farm we centre the interbeing or interconnectedness of food production, sacred ecology and the wellbeing of the farmers. This is expressed as a sacred trilogy of food, ecology and farmer. Our farm exists not just to cultivate seasonal, organic and nutrient-dense food for our community, but to help all those…

Lunchtime Talk

Speakers

Benedict John Pollard

Languages

English

Format

Audio

13:00 - 13:45 GMT
Friday, 10th January 2025

The Soul of the Oak — Consciousness and Ecology

Oaks display many fine qualities: appreciation, generosity, stability, resilience, connection, strength, presence, knowledge, wisdom, family, protection, care, meaning and wonder. Benedict welcomes us to envision a bright future, a land of plenty, a vibrant world of loving connection. He invites this by planting oak saplings of known provenance, grown from acorns of some of the oldest powerful veteran and ancient oaks of England. This talk explores Benedict’s oak journey, as he weaves a story of…

Panel Discussion

Speakers

Andrew Crump
Vicki Hird
Cristina Amaro da Costa

Chair

Natacha Rossi
Beth Nicholls

Languages

English

Format

Audio

14:00 - 15:30 GMT
Friday, 10th January 2025

What Might Insect Sentience Mean for Agroecology?

What does the latest research on insect sentience mean for our view of the ecosystem services they provide, such as pollination and nutrient cycling? Biodiversity is often valued by society in terms of benefits to humans, however, as we learn more about how insects experience the world, should this reframe our valuation and understanding of the role of biodiversity in agroecological systems? This discussion between those researching, working alongside and conserving insects will be an…

Panel Discussion

Speakers

Iain Tolhurst
Richard Gantlett
Dominic Amos

Chair

Mark Measures

Languages

English

Format

Audio

14:00 - 15:30 GMT
Friday, 10th January 2025

The Role of Tillage: Science and Best Practice

Ploughing and cultivations are coming under increasing criticism, and yet field-scale organic and agroecological farmers are dependent on tillage for crop establishment and nutrient supply, weed control and crop yield. Research shows that far from being damaging, cultivation and plough-based organic systems can maintain or increase soil organic matter levels, ensure good soil structure and increase biological activity. No-till methods have not proved to be commercially viable in the UK. We will hear from farmers…

Panel Discussion

Speakers

Andrea Parry Jones
Johnny Wake

Chair

Christopher Price

Languages

English

Format

Audio

14:00 - 15:30 GMT
Friday, 10th January 2025

Pigs, Environmental Engineers or Architects of Destruction?

Ask not what you can do for your pig but what your pig can do for you. Contrary to popular belief, pigs do not uproot everything. This session aims to promote the wide range of behaviours and potential benefits of pigs in nature conservation and regenerative farming systems. Exploring the versatility, adaptability and conservation opportunities of native pigs. A pig will graze, browse and consume berries and fungi, maintain a mosaic of bare ground, and…