The Homeopath Farmer

The Homeopath Farmer Irish ambassador for Whole Health Agriculture.

We at WHAg aim to provide the highest standard of homeopathic education to farmers by farmers and homeopathic vets. Our aim is to provide the best of care to your soil & animals with the use of Homeopathy.

In the last few years I have gotten  very reluctant to just use chemicals to solve a w**d problem, but if I need to use ...
27/05/2026

In the last few years I have gotten very reluctant to just use chemicals to solve a w**d problem, but if I need to use a chemical it will be used as a last resort.
This year I went about using my petrol strimmers, that broke down, then I used my hedge clippers and that also broke down. so I was left to choose between chemical spray or a slash hook…..I chose the latter and I must say it is very relaxing and satisfying, hearing the birds singing and finding a . As my late father said to me one day “you are taking one step backwards so as to continue going forward. **ds Whole Health Agriculture

27/05/2026

A damning published today by Greenpeace provides a damning indictment of our intensive food production systems…

IT’s SILAGE TIME AND Miss pink wellies says don’t forget to purchase your pink silage warp in aid of cancer.            ...
24/05/2026

IT’s SILAGE TIME AND
Miss pink wellies says don’t forget to purchase your pink silage warp in aid of cancer.

22/05/2026

🐷 What a fantastic webinar!

Our “Raising Resilient Pigs” session was an inspiring and insightful conversation packed with practical takeaways for farmers and everyone passionate about improving pig health and welfare. From building resilience naturally to sharing real on-farm experiences, the discussion highlighted just how important proactive, whole-health approaches are for the future of pig farming.

A huge thank you to our brilliant speakers for sharing their expertise so openly, and to everyone who joined us live, asked thoughtful questions, and contributed to such an engaging session. The level of discussion and enthusiasm from the community was incredible to see.

If you missed it — or would like to revisit the webinar — you can watch the replay here 👇

https://learning.wholehealthag.org/webinar-raising-resilient-pigs

We’d love to hear your biggest takeaway from the session! 🐖💬

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Good Evening All I would like to take this opportunity to welcome the 1600 new followers on my page in just 5 days. I ha...
21/05/2026

Good Evening All
I would like to take this opportunity to welcome the 1600 new followers on my page in just 5 days. I have been taken aback by the level of interest in my last post and in particular the amount of shares of both posts.
This is a very busy time on Irish farms. So I will not be able to answer all of your questions directly , BUT I will do a video post and to try and answer as many of your queries as possible in the next couple of weeks. As for an update on the birds attacking my wholecrop, well the pigeons have departed but the crows arrived in hugh numbers. The falcon per remedy has no effect on crows as this is not its prey. What is its prey is the stoat and the owl. I have now applied these two remedies and hopefully will have a response. . .

19/05/2026

IF YOU WANT TO LEAVE HEALTH SOILS FOR THE NEXT GENERATION……CHANGE DOES NOT HAPPEN OVERNIGHT - BUT MEANINGFUL FIRST STEPS MATTER !!

18/05/2026

More growers are starting to ask whether homeopathy has a place in crop and pasture management, particularly as weather patterns become less predictable and input costs continue to rise.

What’s interesting is that many of these conversations are beginning in paddocks, glasshouses and fields where farmers are closely observing how plants respond under various natural conditions.

We’ve been hearing from growers who are exploring agrohomeopathy as part of a broader approach to resilience — looking at how crops and pasture recover after stress events, how root systems develop, how plants respond during dry periods, and whether overall vitality changes over time.

This work is still developing, and there’s plenty more to learn.

For some farmers, the biggest shift has been paying closer attention to observation. Watching how plants respond. Noticing changes in soil biology, pasture diversity and recovery rates. Asking different questions about what’s happening beneath the surface.

The conversation around crop and pasture health is changing, and more people are becoming curious about approaches that work with biology rather than constantly pushing against it.

Have you explored natural approaches for improving crop or pasture resilience on your farm?

We’d love to hear what you’ve observed.

17/05/2026

Part 1
Explaining how I will apply a homeopathic remedy to deter birds from my wholecrop. Whole Health Agriculture Leonardo Faedo Camilla Sherr

I planted wholecrop (peas, barley, oats and multi species grasses) 7 days ago, at first the bird did not show any intere...
17/05/2026

I planted wholecrop (peas, barley, oats and multi species grasses) 7 days ago, at first the bird did not show any interest, well now they have. so I will apply a remedy that will give of signal of a bird of prey in field. I will do this by walking the headland and crisscrossing the field. Whole Health Agriculture Leonardo Faedo Camilla Sherr

As part of this 5 year Regenitive agriculture   with 20 other   across   we are all on a steep learning curve. Thankfull...
16/05/2026

As part of this 5 year Regenitive agriculture with 20 other across we are all on a steep learning curve. Thankfully we have international regenerative experts advising us. So going by these picture could with methods be the way forward. Only time can tell.

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