Our Living Pathways are walkable paths between our crops—soft underfoot and teeming with life. Acting as natural habitat filled with wildflowers and grasses, they support beneficial insects and soil-enriching organisms.
The plants in our living paths slow water. Their roots bind soil together, preventing erosion and stopping nutrients from being rinsed away.
The plants in our living paths shed organic matter over time, improving our soil’s structure by feeding beneficial soil microbes. Reducing the need for fertilizers.
Living pathways provide habitat for beneficial bugs and cover for amphibians to hunt pests, reducing the need for our intervention. When we let wildflowers grow in these paths outside of main crop bloom times, we provide food for pollinators. Helping keep pollinators diverse increases biodiversity across the whole farm