Living Earth Systems

Living Earth Systems Nature-Based Systems that grow food & build soil. We design closed-loop farm systems & educate how to live off-grid and be a better steward of the earth.

Walking back to Nature, with technology. We design closed-loop farm systems & education programs that teach you how to live off-grid and be a better steward of the earth. A holistic approach to our children’s future. We are stewards to their dirt; their earth. We live in a time when many things are on the brink of extinction. We’re losing our precious dirt by bad management. We grow food with chem

ical fertilizers but we cannot grow dirt with chemical fertilizers. In order to have healthy dirt we need to have life in the soil. When the dirt is alive so is our food. Observation and patience. If we observe Mother Nature, all the answers are already there. We walked away from nature towards technology. And in the process many have lost their connection to the earth. It is time to walk back to nature with the right technology. Solar panels; cars that run on spring power, compressed air, fuel cells and magnetic bearings; cooking and heating off of methane biodigesters, wind generators, and electromagnetic energy, which is all around us. We have everything we need, it is only a matter of harnessing it. Farming it should be the same. We have everything we need already present, it’s just a matter of management. We can grow and target plants for Potassium, Phosphorus and Nitrogen (NPK), eliminating the need for pesticides by keeping a healthy balance. We can allow the predator insects and pray insects (such as ladybugs and aphids) to exist together in balance. Biodiversity is key. It takes a whole forest to raise a tree. Aquaponics: Using fish to grow food, and food to filter the water for the fish. By feeding our fish organically grown plants that we grow on site, their waste becomes our fertilizer. Water that would normally only be used to water the plants in the field is now being used to create electricity and biomass for worms which in turn creates soil and other key fertilizers, micronutrients, and humic acid. The water can then head to the orchards and fields, nutrient rich and full of life. Now the worms follow oxygen-rich, nutrient-rich water and become our tillers. By working together we can help set the stage for a healthy environment in which all the pieces of Nature’s puzzle have a place and are symbiotic to each other. Solar lights on our ponds attracts some of the insects from our crops into the fish diet. The extra protein and calcium from the exoskeleton make for heathy naturally raised fish. If you feed fish dog food, they are dog food, which would also mean their waste would be dog food. If we feed veggies with that, it translates into us eating dog food. Biomass is anything that we can naturally grow and use to make living soil. That includes for us banana, sugar cane, moringa oliferia, glaricidia, vetiver grass, and many localized legumes thought to be only pests. We also grow water hyisaths, and a floating fern known as azola, which is eaten by the fish, worms, ducks, and farm crew. Biomass is used for thermophalic composting, which uses and creates heat from nitrogen. We also use it to feed earth worms – three different types. One type of worm travels through tunnels as deep as 15ft. One resides on the top two feet, and another that lives in the top 2 inches of leaf litter. They all ingest each other’s waste and recycle and create superfood for the earth. Not to mention drainage, mycorhyza, rhizobia, and humic acid, the essential building blocks of heathy living soil. This cold compost, which is made by living creatures, is often referred to as vermiculture. We use some of the biomass to make food for the fish and ducks and other animals on the farm. It can also be used to create methane gas for cooking, heating and generating electricity. The oil can be extracted to create biofuel. We are raising fish in large ponds that are using bog filtration, allowing the water to flow through gravel beds filled with three different types of worms. The water flows through the gravel leaving the solids behind for the worms. The worms eat and process the solids into worm castings which can be harvested with living worms and eggs and then deposited in garden beds to create living soil. There are also plants growing within the gravel bed that send out root systems that filter the nitrate and nitrites out of the water returning the water clean to the fish. We use efficient aeration systems to dissolve as much oxygen into the water, as a healthy ecosystem would, so there’s no need for chemical inputs of any sort. We seek a natural balance like Mother Nature does it. We are able to irrigate fruit trees and vegetables below the ponds, with the water from the ponds. It has oxygen, nitrogen and other microbiological creatures, as well as calcium and minerals, all that we’re able to bring down to the fruit trees using gravity, like Mother Nature would from the stream.

06/11/2026

Finally opening up the Farm Stand again🤗
Everything is grown on my Farms with regenerative strategies way beyond organic
Some of the things we have now several different types of the best mangoes 🥭in the world
Amazing strawberry papayas, native Hawaiian bananas some of my own squash blends like buttabochas 😮
Kalo, amazing uhaloa Honey, dehydrated, Hawaiian chili, peppers, and fresh purple pea flowers, starfruit ,Lilikoi,
There are also seeds and plants available from our nursery as well as community supported weekly mixed boxes of produce, which also includes some of our other crops like carrots and beets mixed with all the other things we’ve mentioned, including several different herbs, as well as herbal tea as well my 📕 “how to build a cubic yard of living soil”
also our global warming T-shirts !
oh and did I say homemade sea salt from ocean 💦
we will be expanding soon to be able to sell shave ice, sugarcane juice and smoothies. It’s gonna be a game changer. Hope to see everybody there. Oh also there is, kamaaina price locals! and luxury destination price meaning people on a luxury vacation that can afford to pay $30 for a hamburger in a hotel
with this strategy, it is allows us to get a lot of what we grow to local families and some of it to visitors that helps supplement the lower prices for locals.

06/08/2026

Spread the awareness of just one more challenges we face as farmers trying to focus on Native and voyaging plants.

06/05/2026

These guys are terrible, but somehow they seem to have fallen through the cracks and are not classified as a priority invasive species yet they do tens of thousands of dollars of crop damage on our farms every year🥴
since we do not use pesticides or any chemicals we have to be creative hand, picking them feeding them to the chickens and fish…

05/27/2026

One of those things we ever love it or you’ll hate it🥴😊

05/23/2026

It’s that time 😊if you want mangoes DM me

05/21/2026

Flood recovery update It’s amazing what social media can do. We were able to help. Healii recover some of his tools, clean the water and mud out of his cars and get him into More permanent shelter out of the flood zone! that we’re still in the process of building together we raised about $9000 in total. I have posted all of this for transparency so that people can see that every cent of what we raised went straight to Healii Thanks again everyone I’ll update this again probably with some pictures of what we’ve done.

05/11/2026

he doesn’t have to worry about the electricity going out because he owns his electric company! Thanks everyone who helped healii out with our fundraising after the Kona storms
well, give an update here real soon.
small system like this for a few thousand dollars complete last for years and years and can power most of your needs

05/07/2026

About three weeks ago, the two Kona low storms buried us in in debris on all three of our farm sites! We have been diligently working digging ourselves out😮🤗
mother nature is constantly handing out lessons. It’s not what happens, but how you deal with it that counts. Lots of folks are picking this stuff up and throwing it away calling it green waste. The truth is it it’s only green waste if we waste it by strategically utilizing the organic material along with the salt building swales for the future one of the best parts of regenerative farming. It’s like that old saying one person‘s trash is another person‘s treasure.😳 sometimes

05/02/2026

These larva are found on many different plants from sweet potatoes, tomatoes, and other vines That grow around here! There are many different species maybe about four or five different species. We see here in Hawaii, but one of them is our native Phoenix moth and it’s hard to tell the difference when they’re larva because there are so many different patterns sometimes green, and sometimes brown these moths are known to have the fastest wing beat of anything in the moth and butterfly families. They’re also awesome pollinators for certain big flowers like dragon fruit. It’s just something that’s good to know because you might be killing them thinking they’re one thing and they could be the last of small populations of our endemic species so it’s just something to be aware of.

05/01/2026

A lot of attention has been put on the Coconut rhinoceros, beetle, it’s very important, but there is also a whole group of invaders that are virtually unnoticed by most and they are bore beetles There are several different species that have showed up in the last few years and because I know what they are. I see massive damage everywhere on , kou, Milo, Kukui nut and several other native trees and voyaging plants that are being decimated by these creatures. I’m posting this so that there can be a little bit more awareness of what’s happening with these things! As a farmer just one more of the challenges we face

Address

814 HI-30
Olowalu, HI
96761

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