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Regenerative Design Services

Want to Volunteer?

Come move, sweat, laugh and get your hands dirty! We invite you to join us for an afternoon of work and play on one of our two regenerative farm sites. 
If you plan to come with a group of five or more, please let us know on the registration form!

We’d love to show you around our farms and tell you the story of land regeneration at DAR. Please join us for one of our farm hop tours at Elk Run and Yellow Barn Farm. Registration is coming soon.

Grazing Management Planning

We offer two field trip packages for school groups hoping to join us on the land. 

1. Our two-hour field trip focuses on a seasonal theme or guiding principle of DAR’s regenerative farm work.  Students will spend the majority of their visit engaged in a hands-on farm activity. Cost is $10/ kid with a $150 minimum. 

2.
Our three-hour field trip provides an opportunity for students to receive a more comprehensive overview of DAR’s agroecological work. In addition to participating in hands-on farm tasks, the group will also receive a guided tour of our farm site. Cost is $13/kid with $195 minimum.

Site Analysis & Assessment

Our site analysis and assessment process helps land stewards make thoughtful decisions by tracking resource flows. We utilize the "Scale of Permanence" to track these resource pathways and identify solutions that meet your stewardship goals

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Effective Metrics That Help Accomplish Our Goals

Our research program tracks how effectively our landscapes sequester carbon, retain water, and support biodiversity. Click here to learn more.

Elk Run Farm

Pilot Research Project

In 2015, Nick DiDomenico set out to farm 14 deeply degraded acres in the foothills near Lyons, Colorado. There was only enough well water to irrigate less than an acre of de-vegetated property. When Nick reached out to the NRCS for advice on how to restore the land to a farmable state, they advised him to find another piece of land; without irrigation potential, there was no documented way to revitalize the land. From that moment, Elk Run Farm became a living experiment in how to restore deeply degraded land in a semi-arid climate without irrigation.

Today, through the dedication of Nick DiDomenico and Marissa Pulaski, Elk Run Farm is a thriving oasis in the high desert. Using passive water harvesting contour swales, 1000 trees and shrubs have been planted without irrigation, demonstrating a 79% survival rate across four years. What was a compact gravel parking lot is now five inches of rich topsoil that supports bioregional staple crops including blue corn, dry beans, amaranth, and grain sorghum.

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Yellow Barn Farm

Demonstration Site

Yellow Barn Farm's transformation from a horse event venue to a regeneratively managed ecosystem exemplifies patience, planning, and respect for nature. This shift began with an in-depth evaluation of the land, blending indigenous wisdom with contemporary scientific research to develop practices tailored to the Colorado high desert prairie. By mimicking natural patterns, the farm demonstrates how traditional knowledge and modern innovation can reverse desertification. Yellow Barn Farm faced severe desertification, losing topsoil to floods, fires, and wind, leading to a water cycle crisis that threatened the land's vitality. DAR's interventions aimed to halt these destructive processes by improving water, soil, and animal management strategies. Addressing these challenges required a comprehensive approach to restore ecological balance and resilience.

We started by "planting the water," using swales and Keyline Design to capture and retain water, allowing it to infiltrate and rejuvenate the soil. Next, we introduced nitrogen-fixing trees and drought-tolerant cover crops to enrich the soil. Rotational grazing with chickens, cattle, and pigs promoted nutrient cycling and soil health. As a result, the farm now shows improved soil structure, increased biodiversity, effective water management, and visible signs of desertification reversal.

Land Stewardship Process

Before a shovel ever touches soil, every project goes through a rigorous holistic land stewardship process. The outcome? A clear picture of where we’re going, how we’re going to get there, and why.

1. Goals Articulation

Clarifying goals is the beginning and arguably most important part of the land stewardship process. Together, we establish the vision of where we want to be and what we want to see in the years to come.

2. Analysis and Assessment

With our vision clear, we turn to the land.  Our site assessment process gives us - and you - a holistic understanding of the land; what elements and resources are present and how this relates to the goals. This process unearths the characteristics of the land, including the flow of resources, challenges, and opportunities.

3. Design

With a holistic understanding of how the characteristics of the land and the goals of the people intersect, we create a design that maximizes the regenerative potential of your site.  This design is complete, from master plan, to detailed systems diagrams, to implementation strategies and timelines.

4. Implementation

With an approved design in hand, we can move forward with implementation.  Using the latest equipment and a deep knowledge of ecology, our experienced team will shape the land and fortify the soil, preparing it to harbor new life. With this infrastructure in place we turn to planting.  For many clients, our tree planting events are a fun and popular way to invite community onto the land and share the important restoration work they’re doing!

5. Documentation and Research

For DAR, a project is never truly finished. Tracking the outcomes of our efforts takes years as ecosystems grow and evolve.  All along that way, we are there, collecting data to make sure every design turns out as intended and making the little shifts needed to keep systems thriving when nature makes her own plans.

Our Projects

Our research sites: Elk Run Farm
Elk Run Farm
Our Research Sites: Yello Barn Farm
Yellow Barn Farm (Allen's Farm)
Our Projects
49th St Production Orchard
Our research sites: Britton Goat Dairy
Britton Goat Dairy
Our research sites: Metacarbon Organic Farm
Metacarbon Farm
Our Research Sites: B
Boulder Housing Partners Solar Array - Agrivoltaics
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