![]() Now, with the assent of their extended family, the two have become the third generation of Chamberlin land managers, which now includes exploring how carbon ranching would work on their cattle ranch’s 8,000 acres. ![]() Heyden - whose mother, Helen, was born on the ranch - grew up in Chicago but spent long summers on the ranch. So as I learned more about grazing, I got interested in making the ranch a learning site for these practices.” “Work in Marin on compost on rangeland had generated a lot of excitement and attention. “When I came back to the ranch in 2008, after going to college and working in Northern California, I was interested in how to improve the rangeland, in forage production,” he said. In the test acre's first growing season - which had 24 inches of rain - Russell Chamberlin shows the grasses on the composted section at right, which grew taller by February 2017, and absorbed more carbon, than the non-composted grasses at left.įor Russell Chamberlin - who wears a white Stetson as did his father, Willy Chamberlin, the popular, no-nonsense county supervisor who died in 2015 - it’s a way to improve the pasturelands, which he manages with his cousin Mary Heyden. Wright and an alphabet soup of agencies have been working together with the Chamberlin Ranch on a 60-acre demonstration project through California’s Healthy Soils Initiative. “We don’t have to wait for Elon Musk to geo-engineer something from space,” laughed Sigrid Wright, who heads Santa Barbara’s Community Environmental Council (CEC). What really got people excited about this simple layer of compost is that it sequesters carbon now. Add cattle to the mix, and voilà! Carbon ranching. At a number of test acres across California, including at the Ted Chamberlin Ranch near Los Olivos, adding a thin layer of compost has created more topsoil, which feeds the microbes below ground, which enrich the grasses, which draw more carbon dioxide out of the atmosphere and hold it in their roots deep in the soil. ![]() The theory goes like this: Native grasses send roots as deep as six feet underground, breathing in carbon dioxide as they breathe out oxygen. It’s not about producing carbon, as it might sound, but about putting more carbon back into the ground, naturally, through grasses. Paul WellmanĪ buzz has been generating in California agriculture circles over the possibilities of carbon ranching. A new type of pasture management is taking place at the Ted Chamberlin Ranch in Los Olivos, where third-generation ranch managers Russell Chamberlin and his cousin Mary Heyden are using compost to enrich the soil, produce increased forage, hold more water in the land, and also sequester more carbon underground. ![]()
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