PRESS


I connected with the folks at Good Ancestor to chat about my composting journey, my work in education, and more.

REGENERATIVE AGRICULTURE with STACY PULICE

GOOD ANCESTOR


PODCAST: SIGNAL with MELISSA AND MORY

SOUL and SOIL: Regenerative Farming and More with Stacy Pulice

On the "Signal" podcast, I talk to Mory and Melissa about my spiritual and professional path to regenerative farming, how a near-death experience transformed my awareness, and more.


THE MONTECITO JOURNAL

“Lotusland invites us to come and connect with community around these subjects…They’re creating a gathering space. These people are extremely knowledgable, fascinating in presentation, and diverse in the ways they’ve come to sustainable horticulture.”

LOTUSLAND’S SUSTAINABILITY SYMPOSIUM PART 2: Dishes the Dirt


“On the way to see the berms — long, mounded rows of earth on which 6,000 new avocadoes will be planted — [Stacy] talks enthusiastically of grasses with deep roots to break up the soil and sink more water; cover crops planted for nitrogen fixing; mulch made from their own fallen trees, used instead of poison or hand weeding; and the 400 sheep brought in by Cuyama Lamb to graze on weeds. I had the impression she’d love to get a few — or many — sheep of her own. ‘All these steps,’ she tells me, ‘encourage and enhance fungus and bacteria growth, all the little invisible guys under the surface. That’s what determines the health of what happens above ground

STACY PULICE ON REGENERATIVE FARMING

BLUE DOT LIVING


THE MONTECITO JOURNAL

LOTUSLAND’S SUSTAINABILITY SYMPOSIUM: Goes to Ground

“Pulice likewise sees a generation awkwardly navigating the usual fog of expectations, societal demands, and ill-fitting templates. Her advice? Strip away the noise and go to ground. ‘This symposium, and a compelling message around sustainability itself, can only help give us a generation of young people who will push us forward into a healthier environment, and a healthier planet.’”


INTERVIEW with STACY PULICE

PODCAST: ABOUT EDUCATION

On this episode, I chat with Neil Kreisel of the "About Education" podcast about how my background in psychology informs my perspectives on education, what I've learned from my education research, and how we might apply the principles of decolonization to classrooms. 

Listen to the Interview