Traditional farming treats symptoms — low yield, depleted soil, pest pressure. Systems thinking reveals the feedback loops underneath. Build intuition for how soil health, biodiversity, and yield reinforce each other — or collapse together.
Low yield? Add fertilizer. Pest pressure? Spray pesticide. Soil depleting? Apply amendments. This is linear problem-solving applied to a deeply nonlinear system — and it works until it doesn't.
Regenerative agriculture practitioners know the soil is a system: organic matter feeds microbes, microbes support biodiversity, biodiversity controls pests, healthy soil grows more. Break any link and the whole loop degrades. But most farmers never see these loops drawn out, let alone get to simulate them.
The scenario models 9 variables across three interlocking loops. You'll feel each one directly.
More organic matter feeds more microbial life, which builds more soil structure, which retains more moisture, which supports more biomass. A virtuous cycle — and a vicious one when it reverses.
Composting inputs don't pay off for months. This balancing loop with a delay is where most newcomers fail: they see no immediate result and stop, just before the payoff arrives.
Biodiversity loss is non-linear. A farm above threshold self-regulates pest pressure. Below threshold, pest populations explode. Learn where the tipping point is before you cross it.
The biodynamic agriculture scenario is a playable causal loop diagram with 9 interconnected variables, seasonal dynamics, tipping points, and win/fail conditions. You experience — not read about — what happens when you optimize for yield over soil health, or let biodiversity fall below threshold.
See how microbial health, organic matter, and plant root systems form self-reinforcing or self-defeating loops — and what it takes to shift between them.
Experience the maddening lag between compost application and visible benefit. Learn why short-sighted growers abandon practices just before they pay off.
Discover why biodiversity loss is non-linear — and how a farm can appear stable right up until it isn't. Identify the early warning signals before collapse.
Spring interventions have different leverage than autumn ones. Learn to read and act within seasonal rhythms rather than against them.
Systems thinking is the missing language in regenerative agriculture education. Practitioners understand it intuitively — they just lack the tools to make the loops visible, teachable, and memorable.
Join the waitlist — be first to know when the full scenario pack launches, and get a free preview of the simulation when it's ready.