Welcome!
We are farmers Gail Fuller & Lynnette Miller:
We bring people together to heal the earth.
Registration is open for Fuller Field School 2024
”Soil To Soul”
Optimizing Our Terrain
October 3-4 in Severy Ks
Price is $250/Person, $400/Couple
Camping available
Let us know if you are able to sponsor a scholarship for a farmer.
Keynote speaker Dr. Nasha Winters
“Dr. Nasha Winters is a global healthcare authority and best-selling author in integrative cancer care and research consulting with physicians around the world. She has educated hundreds of professionals in the clinical use of mistletoe and has created robust educational programs for both healthcare institutions and the public on incorporating vetted integrative therapies in cancer care to enhance outcomes. Dr. Winters is currently focused on opening a comprehensive metabolic oncology hospital and research institute in the US where the best that standard of care has to offer and the most advanced integrative therapies will be offered. This facility will be in a residential setting on a gorgeous campus against a backdrop of regenerative farming, EMF mitigation and retreat, as well as state of the art medical technology and data collection and evaluation to improve patient outcomes.”
Keynote speakers Lynnette Miller and Gail Fuller
“Gail and Lynnette will share their personal journey of healing. Their story of physical, mental and spiritual healing parallels the healing of the land on which they reside. Lifestyle changes include diet, sleep and pesticide detox, among others. In 2022, the couple put more of a focus on mindset and spiritual healing. This focus has not only had a profound impact on their health, but also on the healing of their landscape.”
Fuller Field School 2024
Registration form
Space is extremely limited.
Once you register you will receive a confirmation email along with payment instructions.
“Fuller Field School was started as a way to push the envelope of soil health, so to speak. The first year (2012) was a cover crop workshop with a twist. We served locally sourced food and Dr. Jill Clapperton did a presentation on food and nutrient density. It was the first time I had ever heard food mentioned at an ag workshop, at least in this context. After that, the school became a deep dive into the water, carbon, and mineral cycles, energy flow, and how they relate with soil and animal (human) health.
— Gail Fuller, Co-Founder, Fuller Field School
Fuller Field Schools are life-changing. After hearing Don Huber’s presentation about the effects of glyphosate, I couldn’t in good conscience continue regular no-till practices. The sprayer has been parked ever since.”
- Daniel Deepe, Farmer
What do they say…
about Fuller Field School?
“The tiny town of Emporia, Kansas has become my favorite gathering place to eat good food and meet like-minded people. Gail Fuller and his partner Lynnette Miller are innovative farmers who challenged federal crop insurance rules in order to farm in a way that can regenerate land. Every year they round up an odd mix of 100 or more local farmers and ranchers, agronomists, policymakers, a few investors, and an assortment of other passionate folks from Australia, South Africa, Canada, and the US for a two-day field school in Emporia.
We all get together in a Catholic parish hall where a bunch of church women serve up incredible organic, regenerative, and grass-fed meals (imagine thick grass-fed raw cream spooned into your coffee….) while we listen to some of the most revolutionary talks you could ever find at an ag conference. It is a great place to go to see grown men cry—this year I saw many tears shed both by speakers and those listening to them. When everyone is done crying, we all go outside and play at the farm, sit on hay bales, and eat more amazing food.
I love seeing conservative Christian farmers in cowboy hats stand next to permaculture folks in rainbow bandanas, and investors who made it big in the dot-com boom in California next to Mennonite women, all brought together by a shared passion for soil microbes, human health, photosynthesis, and grazing animals.”
- Didi Pershouse, speaker, author, and attendee, Fuller Field School ‘2017
It's hard to explain just how and why Fuller Field School is life-changing, but ask anyone who has attended and you'll hear it again and again…A combination of the highest quality of inspiring and yet practical information, a chance to connect with a tremendous community of supportive people, delicious and nutritious farm-grown food, and a chance to see great practices and principles in action on the farm, the Field School is a highlight of any year. The lessons learned extend far beyond farming into all areas of life, and although I'm always sad to see the Field School come to a close, I can never wait to get home so I can put into practice all the amazing things I've learned.
- Joanna Will
Explore our Farm Stays
From a spacious home on Airbnb to campsites on Hipcamp and HarvestHost, come visit us!