Friendly Farming

In 1972, Dean and Dudley Evenson were called to Stockholm, Sweden to videotape the United Nations Conference on the Human Environment. It was the first ever international gathering focusing on the ecological impact of humans on the planet. After a week of learning and videotaping, the conference and gatherings wound down and Dean and Dudley decided to travel to northwestern Sweden to visit a community they had heard about that grew organic food.

They packed up their video gear and hitchhiked north, landing among a gentle group of young people who had formed a commune and were working with an old Finnish farmer named Andres Bjornson, who practiced a technique called ‘friendly farming.’ With camera turned on and the tape rolling, they learned about his simple, but very effective means of working with nature, of putting the weeds which he called ‘helpful cultures’ right back next to the growing plants for fertilizer, and generally of producing abundant crops of food without artificial fertilizers or pesticides by keeping the soil gently cultivated with a fork-like tool.

Welcomed by these people who lived communally in the land of the midnight sun and practiced Bjornsen’s farming techniques, the Evensons spent a meaningful Midsummer’s Eve, watching the sun roll like a ball across the distant hills, and never quite set. This podcast is a synopsis of what they learned.

UN Earth Summits In Our Hands Rio De Janeiro part 4

In this podcast you will hear the final part from our video called 2 U.N. Earth Summits: 1972 & 1992.  This section is In Our Hands, Beyond the Earth Summit from the second United Nations Earth Summit held in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil in 1992. It’s part 4 in our podcast series.  In our video documentary we focused on indigenous people, women and youth. Here you will hear from luminaries including then Senator Al Gore, Helen Caldecott, and the Dalai Lama to name a few. What they say is more relevant today than ever.

UN Earth Summits In Our Hands Rio De Janeiro part 3

In this podcast you will hear part of the soundtrack from our video called 2 U.N. Earth Summits: 1972 & 1992.  This section is In Our Hands, Beyond the Earth Summit from the second United Nations Earth Summit held in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil in 1992. This is part 3 in our podcast series.  In our documentary we focused on indigenous people, women and youth. Here you will hear from luminaries including Bianca Jagger, then Senator Al Gore, and Dr. Helen Caldecott  to name a few. What they say is more relevant today than ever

UN Earth Summits In Our Hands Rio De Janeiro part 2

In this podcast you will hear part of the soundtrack from our video called 2 U.N. Earth Summits: 1972 & 1992.  This section is In Our Hands, Beyond the Earth Summit from the second United Nations Earth Summit held in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil in 1992. In our documentary we focused on indigenous people, women and youth. Here you will hear from luminaries including Al Gore, Sarah James, David Suzuki, Maurice Strong, Gerry Sikorski, Bella Abzug, and James Scheuer to name a few. What they say is more relevant today than ever.

UN Earth Summits In Our Hands Rio De Janeiro part 1

In this podcast you will hear part of the soundtrack from our video called 2 U.N. Earth Summits: 1972 & 1992.  This section is In Our Hands, Beyond the Earth Summit from the second United Nations Earth Summit held in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil in 1992. In our documentary we focused on indigenous people, women and youth. Here you will hear from luminaries including Bianca Jagger, Lummi tribal member Jewell James, then Senator Al Gore, Edward James Olmos, Seneca Chief Oren Lyons, Dr. Helen Caldecott, and Wangari Maathai to name a few. What they say is more relevant today than ever.

United Nations First Earth Summit 1972 Part 3

In this podcast you will be hearing part of the soundtrack from our video called 2 UN Earth Summits: 1972 & 1992. This section is from the first United Nations Conference on the Human Environment held in Stockholm, Sweden in ’72. Voices include Indira Gandhi, Native Americans, Maurice Strong, Arthur Godfrey, and voices at the Long Life Life rally.