A fruit tree alone is half a fruit tree

Fruit Tree Guild

Most people plant a fruit tree, mulch the base, feed it occasionally and wonder why it never quite reaches its potential. The tree survives. It produces. But it never thrives the way old orchards do the ones where trees live for a hundred years and yield more as they age rather than less.

The difference is almost never the tree variety. It is almost always what grows around it.

Traditional orchardists planted guilds communities of specific companion plants around each tree that collectively do every maintenance job the tree needs. Pest suppression. Soil feeding. Moisture retention. Pollinator attraction. Mineral accumulation. All handled by the guild. No human intervention required.

A guild is not random companion planting. Every plant in a guild has a specific function. Every function serves the tree.
The classic fruit tree guild three essential plants:

Comfrey (Symphytum officinale)
The most important guild plant on earth. Deep tap roots up to 1.8 metres mine subsoil minerals that fruit tree roots cannot reach, pulling up calcium, potassium, phosphorus and magnesium from below the tree’s root zone and depositing them in its leaves. Chop the leaves and drop them around the tree base instant mineral-rich mulch that breaks down within weeks and feeds the tree from above simultaneously. Chop six times a year. The tree gets a mineral feeding six times a year for free. One comfrey plant lives for decades and never needs replanting.

Also comfrey flowers are one of the most important early-season bee forage plants available. Bumblebees specifically seek them out. More bees at comfrey means more bees at your fruit tree flowers means more fruit.

Plant three to five comfrey plants in a ring around the tree drip line not touching the trunk, at the outer canopy edge where the feeder roots are.

Garlic
Planted around the tree base in autumn, garlic does three things simultaneously. Its sulfur compounds deter aphids the primary pest on most fruit trees in spring through volatile emissions that the insects find overwhelming. It suppresses certain soil fungal pathogens that affect fruit tree roots, particularly those causing collar rot. And when the garlic tops die back in early summer they add organic matter directly to the root zone.

Scatter plant garlic cloves between the comfrey plants 15 to 20cm apart, informal, no need for rows. Harvest the bulbs in summer. Replant a portion in autumn. The guild renews itself.

White Clover
The ground cover layer of the guild. Spreads naturally to cover all bare soil under the tree canopy suppressing weeds completely without any human intervention. Fixes atmospheric nitrogen directly into the soil through root nodules feeding the tree’s feeder roots at exactly the depth they need it. Flowers continuously from spring through autumn providing one of the longest and most consistent pollinator food sources available. Low enough to never compete with the tree canopy. Self-seeding so it never needs replanting.

White clover is the perfect ground cover for one specific reason it grows vigorously enough to suppress weeds but not so vigorously it ever threatens the tree or the comfrey. It knows its layer.

Additional guild plants worth adding:

Yarrow
Mineral accumulator, beneficial insect attractor, particularly attracts predatory wasps that control aphid populations

Nasturtium
Aphid trap crop – aphids prefer nasturtium to your tree and colonize it instead. The plant sacrifices itself so the tree doesn’t have to.

Borage
Bee magnet, self-seeds prolifically, trace mineral accumulator, decomposes fast when chopped

Chamomile
Calcium accumulator, antifungal properties in root exudates benefit neighboring plants, attracts hoverflies

The principle:
Every guild plant occupies a different ecological niche different root depth, different canopy height, different seasonal peak, different functional contribution. Together they create a self-maintaining system that improves every year as the plants establish and the soil biology builds.

Year one the guild looks sparse and deliberate
Year three it looks intentional and productive
Year seven it looks like it was always there

And your fruit tree is producing more than it ever did when it stood alone.

Start guild planting at tree installation establishes together
Comfrey must be planted from root cuttings not seed Bocking 14 variety is sterile and non-invasive

White clover seed is cheap broadcast by hand, water once, it takes care of itself

Garlic planted in autumn harvested in summer perfect seasonal rhythm

Guild works for apples, pears, plums, cherries, figs, citrus all fruit trees

Stop maintaining your fruit tree.
Build its community instead.
Save this and plant a guild this season.

How WHOLE Turmeric Regenerates the Damaged Brain

Brain Turmeric Connection

The Science of Neural Stem Cell Activation and the Profound Regenerative Potential of Ar-Turmerone

Brain regeneration — long dismissed as biologically impossible — is now emerging as one of the most extraordinary frontiers in modern neuroscience. At the center of this revolution sits an ancient golden spice whose regenerative power extends far beyond what even its most ardent proponents imagined: the capacity to awaken the brain’s own dormant stem cells and stimulate the birth of new neurons.

For the better part of a century, the medical establishment held an unshakeable conviction: the adult human brain cannot regenerate. Once neurons were lost — to injury, aging, toxic exposure, or disease — they were gone forever. This dogma, codified in textbooks and reinforced in clinical training, shaped everything from how we treated traumatic brain injury to how we counseled patients receiving a diagnosis of Alzheimer’s or Parkinson’s disease. It was considered settled science, a fixed boundary of biological possibility.

It was also profoundly wrong.

The discovery of endogenous neural stem cells (NSCs) — a subpopulation of cells residing in the adult brain, capable of continuous self-renewal and differentiation into new, functional neurons — shattered this paradigm irreversibly. We now know the brain harbors within its own architecture the seeds of its repair. The regenerative potential of these cells has been demonstrated in the subventricular zone (SVZ) lining the brain’s lateral ventricles and in the dentate gyrus of the hippocampus, a region central to memory consolidation and emotional processing. Neural stem cells in these “neurogenic niches” exist in a state of quiet readiness, waiting for the right biochemical signals to awaken them.

The question that should now occupy us is no longer whether the brain can regenerate, but what activates that process — and what suppresses it. And here is where turmeric (Curcuma longa) enters the story with a power that borders on the revelatory.

Finish reading:

https://sayerji.substack.com/p/how-whole-turmeric-regenerates-the

Study Detects Mycotoxins in 100 Percent of Analyzed Plant-Based Products

Plant Meat

“Mycotoxins—formed by fungi in foods like wheat, corn, and barley—pose significant health risks to humans, affecting the endocrine and immune systems, damaging the liver and kidneys, contributing to cancer, and affecting fetal development. Recent estimates suggest that approximately 25 percent of crops exceed EU regulatory limits for mycotoxins, with contamination occurring at levels above detectable limits in up to 60–80 percent of crops.

Plant-based meat alternatives contained a high prevalence of emerging Fusarium toxins, ranging from 93–99 percent for enniatins (ENNs) and beauvericin (BEA). The prevalence of Alternaria toxins was also significant, ranging from 75–86 percent for alternariol (AOH), alternariol monomethyl ether (AME), and tentoxin (TEN).

Among meat alternatives, legume-based and mixed cereal–legume products were the most affected, with frequent detection of aflatoxins, high occurrence of Fusarium toxins, and the presence of deoxynivalenol (DON). Notably, aflatoxins—classified as Group 1 carcinogens by the World Health Organization (WHO)—were found in up to 82.6 percent of the meat alternatives analyzed, with a higher prevalence (up to 66.7 percent) in legume-based products.”

Finish reading: https://organicconsumers.org/uk-study-detects-mycotoxins-in-100-percent-of-analyzed-plant-based-products/

Nigel Richards

Nigel Richards

In July 2015, a quiet man from New Zealand walked into a Scrabble tournament in Belgium. He sat down across from the best French-speaking Scrabble players on Earth. He could not ask them how their day was going. He could not read a French menu. By his own friends’ account, he could barely count to ten and say “bonjour.”

Nine weeks earlier, Nigel Richards had decided to do something that no one in the history of competitive Scrabble believed was possible. He would enter the French-language Scrabble World Championship — without speaking a single word of French.

His method was as audacious as it was simple. The French Scrabble dictionary contains roughly 386,000 words — more than double the 187,000 in the North American English version. Richards did not learn what any of them meant. He sat with the dictionary and absorbed the words as pure visual patterns — sequences of letters arranged on a page. He didn’t need to know that “miauler” means “to meow.” He just needed to know it existed and where its letters could land on a board.

How was this possible? People who have known Richards for decades say his brain simply works differently than most. The secretary of his first Scrabble club in Christchurch explained that Richards can look at a page and retain the whole thing, like a photograph. Richards himself once described it more precisely: he can recall images very easily, but only if he’s seen them. If he’s only heard a word, it doesn’t stick. But if he sees it once on a page, he can bring it back.

He won 14 of 17 preliminary games. Then he defeated the previous year’s runner-up in the final. The French Scrabble Federation’s official announcement switched to English just to say: “Congratulations Nigel, you’re amazing!”

But Richards wasn’t finished.

He won the French championship again in 2018, proving the first time was no fluke.

Then he turned his attention to Spanish.

He spent about a year memorizing the Spanish Scrabble word list. When he arrived at the 2024 Spanish World Championship in Granada, native speakers doubted whether a non-Spanish speaker could seriously compete at the highest level. Richards answered by winning 23 of his 24 games. The defending champion, who finished second with 18 wins, called it a humiliation for every native speaker in the competition. The tournament organizer said Richards had simply shut their mouths completely.

One competitor captured what it feels like to face him. He said that when Nigel Richards sits down at a table, everyone loses their nerves — even the biggest champions. That playing against him is like playing against a computer.

What makes Richards truly extraordinary isn’t just the memorization. It’s everything surrounding it. He already held five English-language World Scrabble Championships when he decided to conquer French. He has won nearly 200 tournaments across his career. He once simultaneously held the World, American, and British titles. In competitive Scrabble, there is Nigel Richards, and then there is everyone else.

Yet he does not give interviews. He does not seek attention. He reportedly lives simply in Malaysia, without television or radio, spending hours cycling and studying word lists. When journalists request interviews through his friends, he declines because he doesn’t understand what all the fuss is about. When asked after one tournament what he planned to do next, he mentioned there was a very good library nearby.

His mother once told a New Zealand newspaper something that says everything about how his mind works: she didn’t think her son had ever read a book, apart from the dictionary.

He was introduced to Scrabble at twenty-eight because his mother was tired of him counting cards when they played the card game 500. She thought Scrabble would be harder for him because he’d never been good at English in school. She was wrong. He joined a local club in Christchurch and was very soon beating everyone there. For his first national championship in 1997, he cycled 220 miles to the tournament — and won.

Nigel Richards doesn’t see words the way you and I do. He doesn’t see meaning. He sees structure. He sees possibility. He sees patterns where others see a foreign language, and solutions where others see an impossible wall.

He reminds us of something we too easily forget: that the boundaries we accept are often the boundaries we build. He didn’t speak French. He didn’t speak Spanish. He didn’t need to. He found another path — one built on discipline, memory, and the quiet certainty that what everyone else called impossible was simply a problem he hadn’t solved yet.

The next time you tell yourself something can’t be done, remember the man who memorized hundreds of thousands of words he couldn’t understand and defeated every native speaker in the room.

Then ask yourself what you might accomplish if you stopped believing in the wall.

How To MAHA When The World Isn’t

Today I said something that I wish was not true. The MAHA agenda felt like a distant memory in the State of the Union. Instead of a serious national conversation about chronic disease, food toxicity, metabolic collapse, and medical transparency, we are talking about expanding immunity for glyphosate manufacturers and continuing development of mRNA platforms. If we are honest, health was not just sidelined. It was ignored.

We walked through the contradiction. You cannot claim to care about public health while shielding chemical manufacturers from liability and accelerating novel genetic technologies without long term safety data. That is not reform. That is business as usual. And if MAHA is going to mean anything, it has to show up in policy, not just campaign rhetoric.

That is why I brought on my good friend Jonathan Group from Global Healing. At the end of the day, government policy matters, but our health is still our responsibility. We talked about what it means to live well in an unhealthy world, how to think critically about what you put into your body, and why resilience starts at the individual level. If the institutions are not going to protect your health, you must.

Finish reading: https://open.substack.com/pub/tomrenz/p/how-to-maha-when-the-world-isnt

500X Increase In Rate Of Heart Attacks

500X Increase In Rate Of Heart Attacks

FOIA information from Israel shows over a 500X increase in the rate of heart attacks in young people only on the day they got their COVID shot. Furthermore, Clalit Health Services, who provided the data for the FOIA request, deleted the records irrecoverably after supplying the data and then said nothing to the public about the deletion. The Israeli authorities don’t want to talk about it, no government official wants an investigation, and mainstream media worldwide refuses to investigate as well.

In fact, if you do the math with conservative estimates, the heart attack rate is over 100,000 times higher than baseline! The 500x is a very conservative estimate; in making my 500X assessment, I’m making the conservative assumptions that doctors reporting a heart attack (which required extensive reporting to justify) got it wrong more than 99% of the time.

https://kirschsubstack.com/p/israel-foia-data-shows-over-a-500x