·S6 E146
What Happens When You Put Nature First on a 20,000 Acre Cattle Property? with Carly Baker-Burnham
Episode Description
What happens when you put nature first in a cattle business?
In this episode of Humans of Agriculture, Oli sits down with Carly Baker-Burnham from Bonnie Doone Beef in Queensland’s North Burnett. Together with her husband Grant, Carly has helped reshape their grazing operation by focusing on landscape health, intensive rotational grazing and long-term stewardship.
That shift eventually led them to take part in one of Australia’s early soil carbon projects, resulting in one of the country’s largest issuances of Australian Carbon Credit Units (ACCUs). But beyond the headlines, Carly shares what actually matters: improving soil, increasing biodiversity and building a business that works with nature.
This conversation explores the realities behind soil carbon, the importance of measurement and scientific rigor, and why observation of the land remains one of a farmer’s most powerful tools.
Key insights from the conversation
- Why shifting to a nature-first approach transformed productivity and nearly tripled production on the same land base
- The practical changes behind their grazing system: more paddocks, rest for pastures and better data
- Inside one of Australia’s early soil carbon projects, including the measurement, audits and long timelines involved
- Why Carly welcomes scepticism around carbon claims and the importance of science-backed results
- The role farmers can play in removing carbon from the atmosphere through healthy soils
- Why observation and connection to the land remain critical for better decision making
Chapters:
00:00 Introduction and life at Bonnie Doone
03:58 Family history and finding their path in agriculture
08:19 Succession, family business and hard decisions
13:22 Moving from reactive farming to strategic business thinking
16:13 Practical grazing changes and adopting a nature-first approach
21:26 Inside Bonnie Doone’s soil carbon project
29:02 Carbon claims, scepticism, and scientific rigour
33:08 Involving the next generation in environmental stewardship
35:05 Where farmers can start with soil carbon thinking
37:57 What Carly is most proud of today
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