Regenerative Agriculture

Agroforestry Documentary

The oldest farming systems in the world had trees. The film is about the farmers bringing them back.

Agroforestry — the intentional integration of trees and shrubs into crop and livestock systems — is one of the most ecologically productive and visually compelling forms of regenerative agriculture. A documentary captures the full system: the silvopasture with cattle grazing beneath nut trees, the alley cropping with vegetables between rows of fruit trees, the windbreak that has been protecting crops for four decades. Each agroforestry form has its own visual logic and its own story.

We work with agroforestry researchers, USDA demonstration sites, farms implementing silvopasture for the first time, and established multi-decade agroforestry operations that are now producing the yields the trees were planted to create. The long timeline of tree establishment is itself a story — one that requires a different kind of patience than annual crop farming and a different relationship to the land.

Agroforestry documentaries are used by the Savanna Institute, USDA NRCS, university extension programs, and farm organizations demonstrating the economic and ecological case for tree integration. They're also used by individual farms building direct market relationships with buyers who specifically value the agroforestry dimension of their production system.


One production day.
Four deployable assets.

Primary Film
8–20 minutes

The complete land story — for donors, conservation partners, policy advocates, and aligned investors.

Fundraising Cut
3–5 minutes

Built for grant applications, investor meetings, and major donor presentations. Evidence-forward, mission-led.

Consumer Short
60–90 seconds

Optimized for social and direct market customer engagement. Emotional, specific, shareable.

Full Archive
Activated Vision

Every production frame AI-tagged and searchable in your private client portal. Yours to use indefinitely.


Common questions

Yes. Early establishment tells the story of intention and investment — which is often more compelling for donor and policy audiences than a mature system that looks like it's always been there.

Through the economic analysis that shows the trajectory, the early income streams from intercrops and livestock, and the testimony of farmers who made the investment and are now in the productive phase. The patient capital story requires a patient storytelling approach.

Yes. Multi-site productions that show the range of agroforestry practice are among the most effective for educational and policy audiences — they demonstrate that the approach is applicable across many contexts, not just one special case.

Free resource

The Regenerative Storytelling Playbook

A framework for land-based enterprises that need their story to travel — across consumers, investors, and community audiences, from a single film strategy.

No spam. Unsubscribe any time.

On its way — check your inbox. Or read it now →

Our Work

Work made to be watched.