25/11/2025
Logbook o’ the Pirate Farmer
Chapter One — How It All Began
The first page of this logbook was never meant to be written.
Not because the story lacked weight, but because in those early years I never imagined anyone would care about the wanderings of a stubborn soul with dirt under his nails. Back then, I was just a traveler trying to understand why the land cried in silence while people walked past without hearing a thing.
But the truth is simple:
This journey began long before I planted my first tree.
It began with a restlessness that followed me through countries, across islands, and into the heart of forgotten farmlands.
The Pull of the Earth
I wasn’t born on a farm, nor raised by old masters of the soil. Yet from the moment I stepped onto tropical earth, something familiar stirred in me—something older than memory. When the rains came and the scent of wet soil rose, I felt it like a pulse, as if the land itself was calling:
“Listen. Learn. Restore.”
That call led me to my first teachers—not people, not books, but ecosystems themselves. Forests, rivers, abandoned fields, and crumbling hillsides became my classrooms long before I understood the language they spoke.
Before the Studies — Lessons from the Land
I remember standing in places where the soil was so exhausted it turned to dust between my fingers. No birds. No insects. Not even the stubborn weeds that usually refuse to surrender. It was in those moments that I realized something essential:
The real crisis isn’t lack of food.
It’s lack of understanding.
Those landscapes set me on the path that would shape my life—toward permaculture and later syntropic farming. But at the time, I didn’t know those words. I only knew the land was sick, and I needed to understand why.
The First Encounters with Permaculture
My “official” studies began later, but the spark was born the day I discovered that permaculture was not a technique—it was a philosophy. A way of thinking.
When I finally opened my first permaculture book, it felt like someone had translated the whispers of the forest into human language. The principles resonated deeply:
Observe first; act only after you understand.
Every element should serve more than one purpose.
Nature wastes nothing—so why should we?
A well-designed system grows stronger over time.
It wasn’t romantic. It wasn’t mystical. It was simply logical, built on patterns that had existed long before humans started plowing soil and burning fields.
Permaculture taught me to see connections where others saw chaos.
It trained my eyes to read landscapes like a story with chapters, characters, and conflicts. It gave me tools—not machines or chemicals, but principles that could be applied anywhere on Earth.
Yet as powerful as it was, something inside me still searched for a deeper, more dynamic understanding.
The Turning Point — Discovering Syntropics
The day I found syntropic farming felt like stepping through a doorway into an older world. Here was a system that didn’t just respect nature—it accelerated nature’s own processes. It didn’t ask, “How do we grow crops?” It asked:
“How do we bring back the forest?”
That question changed everything for me.
Syntropics explained the living architecture of ecosystems—how plants cooperate, succeed, grow, die, and feed the next generation. It taught me about energy flows, biomass, pruning, and succession.
It showed me:
Forests are engines of life, not accidents.
Disturbance is not destruction when done in rhythm with nature.
Pruning feeds the soil better than fertilizer.
Light management is the true steering wheel of regeneration.
Diversity isn’t decoration—it’s the backbone of resilience.
And perhaps most importantly:
We are not “managing land.”
We are choreographing life.
Syntropics didn’t give me a map.
It gave me a compass.
And once I held that compass, the direction of my life changed for good.
The Birth of the Pirate Farmer
The name “Pirate Farmer” came later. It wasn’t chosen; it grew out of the way I worked. I moved across landscapes like an old pirate searching for buried treasure—but the treasure was living soil, spring water returning after years, or the first sprout breaking through dead earth.
People saw the way I cut back weeds with a machete only to protect them later as pioneers of succession. They saw how I planted bananas beside teak, cassava beside papaya, tomatoes beneath the shade of moringa—all following the logic of the forest, not the logic of the market.
They said I farmed like a pirate, breaking rules and tossing old farming traditions overboard.
But I wasn’t breaking the laws of nature.
I was following them more closely than most.
The First Seed of Purpose
As I traveled—from islands to jungles, from farms to forgotten land—the purpose became clearer:
To rebuild soils, restore ecosystems, and help people remember that the earth is alive.
It wasn’t just about growing food.
It was about helping a landscape breathe again.
The Pirate Farmer was born not from rebellion, but from responsibility—responsibility to the soil, to the forest, and to the generations who will one day walk where I planted.
And So the Journey Begins
This first chapter ends where the real work begins:
with tools worn smooth by use, with notebooks filled with observations, with mistakes that taught more than any course, and with the understanding that healing land means healing people too.
But the full tale—Cambodia, Thailand, Vietnam, the Food Forests, the Spain chapter, the rise of Ark Organic Farm, and Phnom Tob Cheang 2 Sister Family Garden—those stories come in the chapters ahead.
This was only the beginning.
The ground was calling.
I simply chose to answer.