Rising atmospheric CO2 levels are also changing the Stomata levels in plants, thus making them more water efficient and drought resistant, while also causing the plants to grow bigger and faster.
@@SoloRenegade While it is true that rising CO2 will allow plants to use less water, it is also worth noting that the lower flux of water into the plant's roots from the soil is associated with a lower flux of soil nutrients into the plant. This means that plants will become more water efficient, but less nutritious over all. On the ecological scale, this means primary consumers need to eat more of a plant to extract the same amount of energy, which will have echoes up the food chain to secondary and tertiary consumers. On the agricultural scale, this means that we will either need to invest in more efficient farming methods, or (more likely) expand current farming operations.
@@sensitivedesensitivity7349 nice cherry pick. focusing on one aspect that doesn't matter. more green plants is still a net positive for higher CO2 due to shade, lowering surface temps, retaining water, creating more rainfall in desert regions, etc. And you still haven't addressed any of the other hundreds of lies the climate change crazies push.
This is what a true leader looks like. Working for the people, not just for themselves. Making lasting changes that improve lives for generations to come.
And within a few generations there's always some individual that wants it al for him/her selve. That starts a series of conflicts etc. etc. etc. How do we deal with that problem ?
@bobsandvegan8222 If it's not profitable then there would be no people in that area. Sustainable is the same as profitable. It's just not your get rich quick scheme (which in turn ultimately not sustainable).
India is facing a major water crisis in Bengaluru, Karnataka. These people, who have done such a magnificent work, should be the advisers for the Government to help solving problems with their own resources. I watch this type of content and my heart gets very happy to know that there are communities that still help each other to progress and live a life less difficult.
Actually the bjp helped them..and these people are doing great man.. Bjp is developing our India. The govt is making many technologies with the help of israel in agricultural sectors.. thats y modi is the most popular leader in the world.
One thing I have learned from Andrew's videos is how not to ask for help from the Government. Help may or may not come. Even if it comes, it's often too late, or there's some other vision involved. As they say, "Self-help is the best help", or "Charity begins at home", there's also a Hindi saying "Apna haath Jagannath" - roughly translated it means 'One's own effort is verily God', or 'Anything's possible if one puts in the effort'.
I often see videos about environmentalists showing off by planting tree saplings 1 by 1. These men build irrigation systems that turns the whole village green. I think these kind of informative videos deserve more attention in the media/internet
Very true. While tree planting is, in itself, a good thing to do, the trees very rarely get more aftercare beyond a tree guard and a one-time drink of water - hence the disturbing number of tree deaths. This project (far and wide may it's influence spread) ensures that no plant needs struggle, whether it be nature sown or hand planted.
Tree planting doesn't even work as carbon sink. To mitigate carbon emissions we need a continuous patch of greenery. Nature doesn't work like electric poles planted in series.
They planted trees here too. Characterising tree-planting as 'showing off' seems harsh. But here they also did the prior work so that those trees had a good chance of surviving. Trees need a lot of water, especially to get established, so tree-planting without a water plan often fails.
I was going to nominate Laxman Singh ji for padma award (one of the highest civilian honours of India announced annually on the eve of Republic Day) but was pleased to know that Laxman singh ji was awarded Padma award in 2023. These are based on public nominations and I am happy and proud to see that people recognized Laxman-jis work and am thankful to the government for conferring him with such an honor. Padma award is the top most award and being recognized in a country of 1.4B means a lot. May there be more Laxman-jis all over the world. Humbled. Thank you Andrew for bringing this gem of an episode. 🙏🙏
Ah, soyehuve bharatiya. Have you heard of #peoplespadma? I am sure you have not. If you know google search, type this and see how the nomination works. ANYONE can nominate - provide proof (including videos like the one above and the references quoted in the video) to make a case. You can follow up with public recommendations (which will help the case when it goes in front of the committee) and this includes verbal, written, online or other means of recognition, the more the merrier. We had one successful campaign where we supported a case with proofs. Still stuck in the "con"gress era of nominations from over a decade ago? Wake up.... LOL 🤣
Simply beautiful. I am from Spain and I cannot fathom why we are not doing the same here given our dire situation. Worst of all, many people here look over their shoulders to those areas thinking that we belong to the "developed world" and those areas are almost medieval, while being oblivious, or denying, the fact that Spain is desertifying rapidly. What a shame! We need help.
Share videos like this as much as possible. If you can't actively start something like this project, sharing the idea could begin something instead. Good luck!
I believe your problem is the export of water. Spain is one of the leading exporters of enormous amount of fruits and vegetables. And each piece of it takes 50-100 grams of fresh water out of Spain into other countries. Yes, at the end it is still finishes in the ocean, and spain is on the coast, but pumping fresh water out of boreholes for greenhouses, you drop your ground water level. You guys need to trade vegetables for money+water. Cheap, non purified water from rivers, not a fancy artesian one, but fresh, not salty! A tonne of water for a tonne of vegetables/fruits. Or forbid a groundwater usage for greenhouses and use only desalinated one from the ocean.
You have to know this exists. Talk to your representatives… you mayor, environment minister or whatever you call it. Send them an email. Call them… idk start with your village or town and maybe you can inspire a group action between villages
As an American it’s so weird to see a political leader who isn’t taking full advantage of exploiting the people. What beautiful respect he has from the people.
@@realself9599 Also perhaps from a family of feudal landlords, who have no legal powers but locals respect them. But yes, this community spirit is exceptional.
i am from India (Assam) for me people are not aware of this drought happening around the country,if people would understand the problem they would come up together and solve the problem but the thing is people don't care one the y suffer they will regret...i hope people understand this soon.and to meet people like you and work with you.
OK republican. You obviously don't want to admit trump is a problem, and biden has done great things like forgiving predatory student loans. Loaners were locking in kids to 30 year loans that had a %3000 return. That's disgusting
There are plenty of good leaders like that all over the US, they just don’t get much attention because good leadership doesn’t generate views and clicks.
Another great video. Rajasthan is a near desert, yet these people have turned the land green. And pumping irrigation water from the pond doesn't lower the level tells me the ground water is just below the surface. Your videos should be mandatory education for farmers in dry areas. I farmed, but where water wasn't an issue. But visiting other farmers in dry areas heard their ground water was dropping so they had to drill deeper every few years. I knew there had to be a way to recharge the ground water, but only recently have I seen US stories about recharging systems. Have lunch on me. Thanks!
Yes I would love to join your Patreon! I'm just an artist from Canada but amidst all the doomsaying online, your channel is a breath of fresh air and I want to support you directly!! I've gotten a few friends into your videos and they also say that your channel eases a lot of their environmental anxiety.
@@modoodles There are a few more channels that will give you more shots of hope, for anyone that's interested - Mossy Earth, Planet Wild, Leave Curious, Leaf of Life...
At the 6:54 mark--that little buffalo stealing a bite of hay! LOL. I am convinced that the success of this village is the underlying belief that they felt compelled to help their neighbors even after they were successful in their endeavors. They realized that we are one family and need to help each other out.
I live in northern Italy and in the southern region of Sicily they are currently suffering a major drought. They are extremely worried water will completely run out by summer. What is being done in India is truly inspirational and I just can't believe how poor water management is in certain parts of the so called "West".
@Ni-dk7ni not so much westerners who hate old solutions, but rather the capitalist agricultural market/extensive farming that has been promoted for over a century. It is not only a western problem, all parts of the world are also experiencing it now. It is difficult to change when you have only known one type of practice, and when so called "old practices" have become nearly impossible in western countries due to aging populations and depletion of rural areas (as this video shows, it requires a lot of manpower to keep this type of agriculture unfortunately).
@@jagorsimp7020 excavators can reduce the manpower requirement by a factor of 10. Once you have the system figured out, you can have task an autonomous machine to repeat this patterns annually. The advent of Limited AI allows this process to be completely automated
South of you in Tunisia it's already too low that the government started regularly cutting running water in some regions to try and cut down consumption.
I know you guys are blast in the west and all but they're actually starting to do stuff like this in California. Besides building more reservoirs there were finally which is good. They're actually taking the overflow from the wet seasons and flooding out lands and trying to actually map where there is gravel that will help it go through the ground better and get into the aquifer so we're not perfect here. And certainly we've got a long way to go, but the fact is even in California. Even the newest they are starting to wake up. Maybe I should say we since I'm an American but like this is starting to happen here. It's in the central valley if you're curious
What I really like about this story is that this proves that there is still hope for our planet. There is no mention of using any high tech gadgets or ground breaking discoveries or "special projects" of large wealthy organizations or corporations. Its just a combination of the following; 1. Leaders who have no personal interests or ambitions or abusing their positions. They really care about their communities. Have the political and moral will to take action. 2. Learned people or scientist/experts are being heard and followed. 3. People are cooperative and not selfish. Are wise enough that if the community benefits they benefit. 4. They didn't need any new high tech device or ground breaking method. Just knowledge, careful management of their environment and team work. These 2 men deserves a Nobel in my humble opinion.
Excellent analysis. The fact that this is completely low tech, in fact, ANCIENT TECH, is one of the most important aspects of this project, because it is replicable anywhere there are willing hands
Rising atmospheric CO2 levels are also changing the Stomata levels in plants, thus making them more water efficient and drought resistant, while also causing the plants to grow bigger and faster.
I agree it is great this doesn't need tech but with more tech, this process could perhaps be used to regenerate millions of hectares instead of thousands @@amillison
Climate is constantly changing across the globe. These people didn't do more than the shamans who prayed for rain. After a decade there coud be few dry years there and they will realize their stupidity.
19s ago lucky me I show my friends your videos about drought resilience and it really helps them feel less anxious about the ability for humans to have positive impacts on the ecosystems thet live in. Thank you for your videos!
5 to 10 feet? As an Australian I am spellbound. Beautiful work, absolutely life changing. A mosaic net work of intersecting water channels… simple, but genius. The things this could change.
I am currently developing a food forest on my 61' by 120' rental property in the center of Tucson, AZ in the heart of the Sonoran Desert. I started on July 11, 2021. I have had 8 or 9 loads of arborist woodchips delivered and spread all over the property. Now, it is a food forest that I do not water any more. I don't remember the last time I watered, but it was definitely in 2023. Probably around the holidays. I am so loving it!
@@happybunny6152 I honestly have no idea. Sorry to say, but thank you for asking. I'd have to google it myself, as I have not looked into it. I am developing what is commonly called an urban food forest, and have concentrated most of my efforts these last three years on learning how to grow stuff. Now that I know how to do so here in the desert, I will be looking for a large piece of land myself. Are you growing stuff yourself at this time? Or just looking into it? And, what part of the world are you currently in?
@@alonalanski7119 Actually, I can tell you that the learning involved spans ten years, and involves a lot of learning time (books and videos) and lab time (putting stuff in the ground). It also involves a lot of what I call Flat Tire Theory. This is basically the idea that all things are, at some level, identical. From farming to nursing to astrophysics, there are common threads. I got the name from the old story of the boy who asked his grampa if they were going to the park that day. "We can't, because the tire on the truck is flat." The child looked at the tire and said, "But it's only flat on the bottom." Wherever the nail punctured the tire, the whole thing went flat. And that one point needs to be fixed before the whole tire can hold air. But, if you are interested, I would gladly walk you through the best way to get started, and key you into some of the best instructional videos I have found on the subject. The ones I have watched in full many, many times myself. As for the food forest, I started to grow my own greens because my wife was going to die of diabetes otherwise if I didn't. She was in the hospital for over a week (when the covid had not yet hit, but was hitting...spring of 2020), so I used the time to discover that diabetes (type 2) is a self-inflicted wound; not a disease. We used Keto and Intermittent Fasting to begin curing her, and we have both enjoyed vastly improved health. Since then, I am sure I have put in at least 5,000 hours of "class time" plus a lot of lab work. I did have a major advantage, having started, owned, and operated a yardwork business. I knew how weeds grew! And could identify them easily. No problem knowing if the sprout was a weed or something I planted. I knew all the weeds in my Tucson area completely! If you would like, please email me at: thearbor153@gmail.com I'm Bill. I have nothing to sell. I just enjoy "going on and on" about all this. As long as I enjoy it, you may as well take advantage of it, eh? Well, I look forward to an email from you. Just remind me that you wanted to start a water free food forest in your own dry place.
They work for all not just their village but neighboring ones. This system helps all for generations to come. Thank you for bringing this to our attention. More is needed.
I've now watched just 2 of these videos and I'm actually crying now. It is such a beautiful thing to see people actually taking care of the Earth instead of ravaging its resources in egocentric attempts to colonize a dead planet...
I’m in northern Illinois, USA, and there’s little else here but flat land and cornfields. We have dry ponds here to stop towns from flooding when the rains come. However, they’re typically drained back into ponds or rivers and the water is lost downstream. When the summer heat comes, everything starts turning brown.
You might be interested in watching on RUclips about places, including regreening the deserts, being turned green. ‘How this woman turned Arizona’s desert into a farmland oasis’.
This is really heartening. I live in California where we've watched most of our abundant rain over the past two winters run off into the ocean. It was such a wasted opportunity to restore ground water.
Amazing work Mr. Singh and thank you Andrew for documenting this! I am so inspired by the resilience of indigenous communities to recreate their paradises, we in the Western world need to support not interfere with their efforts.
While I'm not normally focused on learning about permaculture, you present it in ways that are comprehensive and engaging. Each video video is a balanced blend of easily absorbable and well-informed content presented with in a positive spirit that gives me hope for the future of humanity and the earth. Thank you for sharing your knowledge, your hard work, and conveying the hard work and passion of others around the world.
wow.. r u a farmer..?.. The theme of India's G20 Presidency - “Vasudhaiva Kutumbakam” or “One Earth · One Family · One Future” - was drawn from the ancient Sanskrit text of the Maha Upanishad. we would love to share some techs to the world if they need any help!!
This man deserve national and international level award , Bravo man. You should also visit Odisha ( a eastern State Of India ) and see how one man Daitari naik irrigated Villages and communities by digging canals in mountainous region of Gonasika. He is also known as Canal man Of Odisha and awarded Padmashri by Indian Government.
Will not happen as there is no money to be made by recharging groundwater. Less groundwater means more money for water tanker mafia owned by politicians.
The night temperatures were around 10°C which must be just pleasant for someone from a temperate regions like Germany but locals in Rajasthan are used to 45-50°C, they need their jumpers during the early mornings because of the fluctuation.
Germans are very used to cold. Not because of cold weather but you guys open windows and suntna in 17 C degrees so you will literrally melt there. In my city we have cold winters with hot summers so I am more adapted to warm rather than cold because cold is easier to fight against while being hot impossible to fight.
I say it often.........India is saving itself and will save the world. I do not own land but the Mexican dessert could benefit greatly from this and so could the plains of northern Texas and the Ogallala aquifer.
Hi... also have a look at the technique of LNC (liquid natural clay) form Desertcontrol. They are now also active in the USA, I think in some projects with the university of Arizona.
I absolutely love your videos. I am especially partial to your visual aided drawings. My family and friends are now into the wonderful world of permaculture because of your videos. Thank you for all of your hard work. It is much appreciated.
I've always known how important groundwater is, but seeing how these places are able to revitalize and thrive off groundwater is amazing. The infrastructure they build to allow water to go back into the aquifers is quite something. It's sad to me that the state I live in, only started seriously thinking about groundwater recharge since last year. We were in a mega drought for years and things were getting dire, but we got incredibly lucky with the recent storms that our reservoirs went from way below the historical average level to now above it.
The transformative power of community-led water management in Rajasthan's Loria village is truly inspiring! By implementing the Chala system, they've not only safeguarded their water supply but also enhanced local ecosystems-a brilliant model for sustainable development. 🌱
Your videos are such an inspiration! I purposefully want to buy degraded land and restore the groundwater, plant trees, create wildlife habitat and build water retention systems! Thank you so much for putting these videos out there! It really drives and creates a movement in the right direction!
Sir Andrew thank you for providing hopeful examples of us being a keystone species working to build instead of ...what most of our society is currently and unfortunately geared toward
Here in the Brazilian North East we have many cities that have to face the drought every year and they need to learn how to overcome this. Some people have projects like that one but it's not something that gather all the comunity.
So heartwarming to see the fantastic progress of this once almost barren land. Working in partnership with Mumma Nature really is the way to create Alchemy in this situations - and indeed, all of life #BRAVO to the entire Community and thank you so much for sharing Andew
These videos are one of the few things giving me hope that we won't all be screwed over by climate change. It shows that we have solutions to many of our most critical problems, all it takes is actual collective effort and leadership interested into applying them.
When everyone learned climate change is a joke by the government to gain power regulate and tax the people the world will be a better place. Stop letting them put fear into you, fear is used to control the weak.
"where cant we do this?" is actually a pretty big question! seems places like india with historic, deeply rooted village lifestyles and social structures can pull this off. cant see this happening in red tape europe and HOA's america. though i know some models in deep rural europe could pull things like this off, though we are suffering from extreme depopulation in these areas. where would the labour and capital come from?
I see the problem more in a loss of cultural knowledge. In northern germany we have so called "Knicks", hedges on small mounts surrounding fields, protecting against wind, dryout and waterloss. Most fields are way below 20ha in size. But when you go into the former DDR where they built large scale fields without seperation it is way more sandy and dry. But even in northern germany people are all too eager to remove these "Knicks" to get the last few square meter of field, not knowing or disregarding their function.
Every single episode you publish, I'm just in awe. Such a wonderful collective cooperation by people seeking to attain the same goal - the generation and preservation of wealth - all beginning with water.
Kya bat hai pahli bar kisi foreners ko India ke bare me achhi bate batate huye dekha.. Lekin laxman sing ji ka kam bahot badiya laga..vaha ke gramin janta ki ekjutata aur mehnat ko salam ..
@@invalidaccount6147 Abey yaar gajab ke pagal ho, main usse wahan ke\a culture, area, kon kon se province mein h jss respect mein pucha tha bhai. Aur tu kyun itna tej bnn rha h ?!
Am in awe and admiration of projects like these, where citizens and sometimes one person by themself make all the difference by a region, and so often by the planting of trees, which make all the difference to soil retention and slowing down the percolation of ground water. The visible difference over the years is stunning. Mr Singh has created awareness and realised the possibility of actually doing something, educating his community in the process, a truly laudable activity. Wonderful positive story in a world full of negativity, thanks for sharing.
Your videos have been a corner stone in my learning process for permaculture design. I am currently saving to buy hopefully 5-10 acres outside of Tucson to turn into a permaculture food forest with extensive rain water capture both passive and active collection. I want to do my part to help green the Sonoran desert and begin restoring water tables.
Das ist ein wunderbares Beispiel für gelungene grüne Lokalpolitik. Ein großes Lob und meine Hochachtung für die Menschen, die ihr Schicksal in die Hand genommen haben, und das Land mit Verantwortung und viel Fleiß in ein grünes Paradies verwandelt haben. 💚💚💚
What a loving, wonderful example of a leader for his people and with his people .I am so grateful to the villagers for setting such a wonderful example for all of us to learn from .May the village be blessed and all the villages around them prosper 🙏 Thankyou
What a wise leader he was to set all this up decades ago. Some of this is the old irrigation methods older cultures always used once they moved to growing crops. It makes sense.
The results speak for themselves. Thank you for the videos! Could you possibly do a video on the cultural aspects that enable these works? Seems that most of these projects in India are village wide efforts (or regional). Maybe you could deep dive on things like land ownership/stewardship, leadership structures and relationships, communal vs individual attitudes etc. I know these might be large and difficult to tackle, but maybe you saw some simple and tangible ideas in these areas that could be explained as clearly as you explain the water works!
For this place in particular, there is a very deep and long story of rallying community support over decades. I am so interested in water that I tend to focus there. But perhaps another video will focus more on culture. Have you watched this one? ruclips.net/video/q7q8friw1p8/видео.html
@@amillison I’ve watched all your videos! They’re all so good! Just wondered if on your travels you had come to any conclusions about the culture part of permaculture. Seems to me that may be the harder part for us to implement these days…
This video represents pretty long term effects, 45 years. But you can see many ancient terraforming projects throughout India to see very long term effects
What really caught my eye was the reported drop in temperatures. Do hot areas create enough thermal updrafts to prevent moisture laden air from entered the area? If so, then would cooler lands attract more rain? Amazing efforts and a great video. Excellent to see it being scaled out to surrounding areas.
Absolutely beautiful, Andrew. This is quite timely too - it's come at a time when a lot of cities are facing harsher summers every year. Mother Nature will surely bless the hard work of the people of Laporiyah. It was really heart warming to see how much gratitude everyone had for Laxman - 9:45 brought tears to my eyes. What better purpose does one need in life than to be able to help bring fresh water and food to those in need. Thank you so much for telling this story and bringing it to the world. 🙏
Wow, I would really love to visit Rajasthan! It is right up near the top, on my bucket list. There is so much the world can learn from the people of Rajasthan.
Thank you ANDREW for sharing incredible story of LAXMAN SINGH JI & LAPORIYAH, it’s fascinating to see the transformation of Arid flat terrain through “ The Chauka System “ ❤️👍🙏
Mr. Singh and his organization isn't saving lives, they're saving generations. What a beautiful gift to the world.
Indeed. Amazing work.
Rising atmospheric CO2 levels are also changing the Stomata levels in plants, thus making them more water efficient and drought resistant, while also causing the plants to grow bigger and faster.
They’re still saving lives as well…
@@SoloRenegade While it is true that rising CO2 will allow plants to use less water, it is also worth noting that the lower flux of water into the plant's roots from the soil is associated with a lower flux of soil nutrients into the plant. This means that plants will become more water efficient, but less nutritious over all. On the ecological scale, this means primary consumers need to eat more of a plant to extract the same amount of energy, which will have echoes up the food chain to secondary and tertiary consumers. On the agricultural scale, this means that we will either need to invest in more efficient farming methods, or (more likely) expand current farming operations.
@@sensitivedesensitivity7349 nice cherry pick. focusing on one aspect that doesn't matter. more green plants is still a net positive for higher CO2 due to shade, lowering surface temps, retaining water, creating more rainfall in desert regions, etc.
And you still haven't addressed any of the other hundreds of lies the climate change crazies push.
This is what a true leader looks like. Working for the people, not just for themselves. Making lasting changes that improve lives for generations to come.
Nnnoow...how can we get something like this happening in Australia? Oh, that's right...we can't
@@andrewparry1474Australia is almost as much of a failed democracy as the USA. Oh well....
its much easier to make efficient and not curropt leaders in small comunities. its more challenging to scale it up to a level of big city or a state
And within a few generations there's always some individual that wants it al for him/her selve.
That starts a series of conflicts etc. etc. etc.
How do we deal with that problem ?
Very well said!! A true leader and hero and did you notice how many times he rightfully credited the local people for doing the actual work.
Imagine the world if people everywhere embraced working with nature designing intelligent water system and permaculture.
but that’s not profitable!!!
@@bobsandvegan8222it could be, however it would be profitable for everyone really
Companies won't allow...buy the government and pass laws to grab the land
@@bobsandvegan8222what makes it unprofitable in your eyes?
@bobsandvegan8222 If it's not profitable then there would be no people in that area.
Sustainable is the same as profitable. It's just not your get rich quick scheme (which in turn ultimately not sustainable).
India is facing a major water crisis in Bengaluru, Karnataka. These people, who have done such a magnificent work, should be the advisers for the Government to help solving problems with their own resources. I watch this type of content and my heart gets very happy to know that there are communities that still help each other to progress and live a life less difficult.
Actually the bjp helped them..and these people are doing great man.. Bjp is developing our India. The govt is making many technologies with the help of israel in agricultural sectors.. thats y modi is the most popular leader in the world.
@@blackdiamondbd2158 Come on man this was taking place since last 45 years. No one helped them. The villagers helped themselves.
@@matheenarif8645 Exactly , that was too much .
One thing I have learned from Andrew's videos is how not to ask for help from the Government. Help may or may not come. Even if it comes, it's often too late, or there's some other vision involved.
As they say, "Self-help is the best help", or "Charity begins at home", there's also a Hindi saying "Apna haath Jagannath" - roughly translated it means 'One's own effort is verily God', or 'Anything's possible if one puts in the effort'.
Was discussing the same thing today with my roommate while watching this episode sitting in Bangalore.
I often see videos about environmentalists showing off by planting tree saplings 1 by 1. These men build irrigation systems that turns the whole village green. I think these kind of informative videos deserve more attention in the media/internet
Very true. While tree planting is, in itself, a good thing to do, the trees very rarely get more aftercare beyond a tree guard and a one-time drink of water - hence the disturbing number of tree deaths.
This project (far and wide may it's influence spread) ensures that no plant needs struggle, whether it be nature sown or hand planted.
First they planted the water, and then planted the trees!
Tree planting doesn't even work as carbon sink. To mitigate carbon emissions we need a continuous patch of greenery. Nature doesn't work like electric poles planted in series.
@@amillison heheh nice statement there 😏☺️🫴
They planted trees here too. Characterising tree-planting as 'showing off' seems harsh. But here they also did the prior work so that those trees had a good chance of surviving. Trees need a lot of water, especially to get established, so tree-planting without a water plan often fails.
I was going to nominate Laxman Singh ji for padma award (one of the highest civilian honours of India announced annually on the eve of Republic Day) but was pleased to know that Laxman singh ji was awarded Padma award in 2023. These are based on public nominations and I am happy and proud to see that people recognized Laxman-jis work and am thankful to the government for conferring him with such an honor. Padma award is the top most award and being recognized in a country of 1.4B means a lot. May there be more Laxman-jis all over the world. Humbled. Thank you Andrew for bringing this gem of an episode. 🙏🙏
That's amazing to hear that the government honors such people.
Tere nomination se ghanta kuch hota lol
Ah, soyehuve bharatiya. Have you heard of #peoplespadma? I am sure you have not. If you know google search, type this and see how the nomination works. ANYONE can nominate - provide proof (including videos like the one above and the references quoted in the video) to make a case. You can follow up with public recommendations (which will help the case when it goes in front of the committee) and this includes verbal, written, online or other means of recognition, the more the merrier. We had one successful campaign where we supported a case with proofs.
Still stuck in the "con"gress era of nominations from over a decade ago? Wake up.... LOL 🤣
@@Sia388 That's about everything they do, though.
I think in Oct 2022 he was awarded Padma Shri
Simply beautiful. I am from Spain and I cannot fathom why we are not doing the same here given our dire situation. Worst of all, many people here look over their shoulders to those areas thinking that we belong to the "developed world" and those areas are almost medieval, while being oblivious, or denying, the fact that Spain is desertifying rapidly. What a shame!
We need help.
Share videos like this as much as possible. If you can't actively start something like this project, sharing the idea could begin something instead. Good luck!
I believe your problem is the export of water. Spain is one of the leading exporters of enormous amount of fruits and vegetables. And each piece of it takes 50-100 grams of fresh water out of Spain into other countries. Yes, at the end it is still finishes in the ocean, and spain is on the coast, but pumping fresh water out of boreholes for greenhouses, you drop your ground water level. You guys need to trade vegetables for money+water. Cheap, non purified water from rivers, not a fancy artesian one, but fresh, not salty! A tonne of water for a tonne of vegetables/fruits.
Or forbid a groundwater usage for greenhouses and use only desalinated one from the ocean.
@@TushhsuTIt isn't that easy. None of the neighbouring countries have enough water. Also desalinated water is very expensive and lacks nutrients.
You just aren’t paying attention if you have to ask yourself why we can’t do anything like this in any western country.
You have to know this exists. Talk to your representatives… you mayor, environment minister or whatever you call it. Send them an email. Call them… idk start with your village or town and maybe you can inspire a group action between villages
As an American it’s so weird to see a political leader who isn’t taking full advantage of exploiting the people. What beautiful respect he has from the people.
He is not a political leader. He is a social leader.
@@realself9599 Also perhaps from a family of feudal landlords, who have no legal powers but locals respect them. But yes, this community spirit is exceptional.
i am from India (Assam) for me people are not aware of this drought happening around the country,if people would understand the problem they would come up together and solve the problem but the thing is people don't care one the y suffer they will regret...i hope people understand this soon.and to meet people like you and work with you.
OK republican. You obviously don't want to admit trump is a problem, and biden has done great things like forgiving predatory student loans. Loaners were locking in kids to 30 year loans that had a %3000 return. That's disgusting
There are plenty of good leaders like that all over the US, they just don’t get much attention because good leadership doesn’t generate views and clicks.
Another great video. Rajasthan is a near desert, yet these people have turned the land green. And pumping irrigation water from the pond doesn't lower the level tells me the ground water is just below the surface. Your videos should be mandatory education for farmers in dry areas. I farmed, but where water wasn't an issue. But visiting other farmers in dry areas heard their ground water was dropping so they had to drill deeper every few years. I knew there had to be a way to recharge the ground water, but only recently have I seen US stories about recharging systems.
Have lunch on me.
Thanks!
Thanks so much 🙏 I appreciate the support ✨
@@amillison Patreon takes much less cut than youtube iirc. It would be good to provide a patreon link for supporters.
Yes I would love to join your Patreon! I'm just an artist from Canada but amidst all the doomsaying online, your channel is a breath of fresh air and I want to support you directly!! I've gotten a few friends into your videos and they also say that your channel eases a lot of their environmental anxiety.
@@modoodles There are a few more channels that will give you more shots of hope, for anyone that's interested - Mossy Earth, Planet Wild, Leave Curious, Leaf of Life...
@@bryanbadonde9484Now following, thanks !
At the 6:54 mark--that little buffalo stealing a bite of hay! LOL. I am convinced that the success of this village is the underlying belief that they felt compelled to help their neighbors even after they were successful in their endeavors. They realized that we are one family and need to help each other out.
i was looking for this comment lol
the way that buffalo ran away 😂
yhea...I noticed the naughty fellow myself...so cute...
😋
🤫🔱
I live in northern Italy and in the southern region of Sicily they are currently suffering a major drought. They are extremely worried water will completely run out by summer. What is being done in India is truly inspirational and I just can't believe how poor water management is in certain parts of the so called "West".
West, they're in the west alright.
@Ni-dk7ni not so much westerners who hate old solutions, but rather the capitalist agricultural market/extensive farming that has been promoted for over a century. It is not only a western problem, all parts of the world are also experiencing it now. It is difficult to change when you have only known one type of practice, and when so called "old practices" have become nearly impossible in western countries due to aging populations and depletion of rural areas (as this video shows, it requires a lot of manpower to keep this type of agriculture unfortunately).
@@jagorsimp7020 excavators can reduce the manpower requirement by a factor of 10. Once you have the system figured out, you can have task an autonomous machine to repeat this patterns annually. The advent of Limited AI allows this process to be completely automated
South of you in Tunisia it's already too low that the government started regularly cutting running water in some regions to try and cut down consumption.
I know you guys are blast in the west and all but they're actually starting to do stuff like this in California. Besides building more reservoirs there were finally which is good. They're actually taking the overflow from the wet seasons and flooding out lands and trying to actually map where there is gravel that will help it go through the ground better and get into the aquifer so we're not perfect here. And certainly we've got a long way to go, but the fact is even in California. Even the newest they are starting to wake up. Maybe I should say we since I'm an American but like this is starting to happen here. It's in the central valley if you're curious
What I really like about this story is that this proves that there is still hope for our planet. There is no mention of using any high tech gadgets or ground breaking discoveries or "special projects" of large wealthy organizations or corporations. Its just a combination of the following;
1. Leaders who have no personal interests or ambitions or abusing their positions. They really care about their communities. Have the political and moral will to take action.
2. Learned people or scientist/experts are being heard and followed.
3. People are cooperative and not selfish. Are wise enough that if the community benefits they benefit.
4. They didn't need any new high tech device or ground breaking method. Just knowledge, careful management of their environment and team work.
These 2 men deserves a Nobel in my humble opinion.
Excellent analysis. The fact that this is completely low tech, in fact, ANCIENT TECH, is one of the most important aspects of this project, because it is replicable anywhere there are willing hands
Rising atmospheric CO2 levels are also changing the Stomata levels in plants, thus making them more water efficient and drought resistant, while also causing the plants to grow bigger and faster.
@@amillisonDear Andrew, this makes me wonder if you are acquainted with Julia Watson, her book Low TEK has been a huge inspiration of mine.
I agree it is great this doesn't need tech but with more tech, this process could perhaps be used to regenerate millions of hectares instead of thousands
@@amillison
Who says a few people can’t make a difference? What a great story!!!
Do not underestimate the power of one.🤗
Climate is constantly changing across the globe. These people didn't do more than the shamans who prayed for rain. After a decade there coud be few dry years there and they will realize their stupidity.
Laxman Singh is an example of what an authority figure should be.
19s ago lucky me
I show my friends your videos about drought resilience and it really helps them feel less anxious about the ability for humans to have positive impacts on the ecosystems thet live in.
Thank you for your videos!
Thank you! I am trying to shift people's belief in what is possible if we get together and do smart and kind things.
Don't believe the doom and gloom. Go out and see the world. Love humanity.
@@amillisonpeople like you deserve the respect and attention that is today given to EVs and other green nonsense
Great Work done
5 to 10 feet? As an Australian I am spellbound. Beautiful work, absolutely life changing. A mosaic net work of intersecting water channels… simple, but genius. The things this could change.
Imagine that, working as a community for a shared goal has rises all tides🤔
But its impossible in capitalism society
They call it communism in West
@@radko001that village is capitalist
Stop your communist bullshit
@@radko001bro what… this investment has a positive economical outcome. So it’s good for capitalists as well
@@ScatPack123 its good but hard to make it work
I am currently developing a food forest on my 61' by 120' rental property in the center of Tucson, AZ in the heart of the Sonoran Desert. I started on July 11, 2021. I have had 8 or 9 loads of arborist woodchips delivered and spread all over the property. Now, it is a food forest that I do not water any more. I don't remember the last time I watered, but it was definitely in 2023. Probably around the holidays. I am so loving it!
👍
Whats the price of an acre agricultural Land in Arizona?
@@happybunny6152 I honestly have no idea. Sorry to say, but thank you for asking. I'd have to google it myself, as I have not looked into it.
I am developing what is commonly called an urban food forest, and have concentrated most of my efforts these last three years on learning how to grow stuff.
Now that I know how to do so here in the desert, I will be looking for a large piece of land myself.
Are you growing stuff yourself at this time? Or just looking into it? And, what part of the world are you currently in?
How did yo learn that? What videos/books? I would like to do the same in Borrego CA. Thank you!
@@alonalanski7119 Actually, I can tell you that the learning involved spans ten years, and involves a lot of learning time (books and videos) and lab time (putting stuff in the ground).
It also involves a lot of what I call Flat Tire Theory. This is basically the idea that all things are, at some level, identical. From farming to nursing to astrophysics, there are common threads. I got the name from the old story of the boy who asked his grampa if they were going to the park that day.
"We can't, because the tire on the truck is flat."
The child looked at the tire and said, "But it's only flat on the bottom."
Wherever the nail punctured the tire, the whole thing went flat. And that one point needs to be fixed before the whole tire can hold air.
But, if you are interested, I would gladly walk you through the best way to get started, and key you into some of the best instructional videos I have found on the subject. The ones I have watched in full many, many times myself.
As for the food forest, I started to grow my own greens because my wife was going to die of diabetes otherwise if I didn't. She was in the hospital for over a week (when the covid had not yet hit, but was hitting...spring of 2020), so I used the time to discover that diabetes (type 2) is a self-inflicted wound; not a disease. We used Keto and Intermittent Fasting to begin curing her, and we have both enjoyed vastly improved health.
Since then, I am sure I have put in at least 5,000 hours of "class time" plus a lot of lab work. I did have a major advantage, having started, owned, and operated a yardwork business. I knew how weeds grew! And could identify them easily. No problem knowing if the sprout was a weed or something I planted. I knew all the weeds in my Tucson area completely!
If you would like, please email me at:
thearbor153@gmail.com
I'm Bill.
I have nothing to sell. I just enjoy "going on and on" about all this. As long as I enjoy it, you may as well take advantage of it, eh?
Well, I look forward to an email from you. Just remind me that you wanted to start a water free food forest in your own dry place.
The transformation looks absolutely stunning
God bless India! 🙏🇮🇳
With love from the UK ❤🇬🇧
Thanks bro!!
we don't want "love" from UK. We know what your people did to our people!!!!
They work for all not just their village but neighboring ones. This system helps all for generations to come.
Thank you for bringing this to our attention. More is needed.
I've now watched just 2 of these videos and I'm actually crying now. It is such a beautiful thing to see people actually taking care of the Earth instead of ravaging its resources in egocentric attempts to colonize a dead planet...
I cried too... so inspiring that i can barely feel the depths of my feelings. Blessed be the farmers!
I’m in northern Illinois, USA, and there’s little else here but flat land and cornfields. We have dry ponds here to stop towns from flooding when the rains come. However, they’re typically drained back into ponds or rivers and the water is lost downstream. When the summer heat comes, everything starts turning brown.
You might be interested in watching on RUclips about places, including regreening the deserts, being turned green. ‘How this woman turned Arizona’s desert into a farmland oasis’.
This is really heartening. I live in California where we've watched most of our abundant rain over the past two winters run off into the ocean. It was such a wasted opportunity to restore ground water.
Show this to whoever your local politicians are and see if you can convince them to do something similar
It is so refreshing to see the results of the 10000 hrs of hard work and proper permaculture farming
OUTSTANDING Innovation by local people for the good of the Whole Community. Thanks.
Amazing work Mr. Singh and thank you Andrew for documenting this! I am so inspired by the resilience of indigenous communities to recreate their paradises, we in the Western world need to support not interfere with their efforts.
While I'm not normally focused on learning about permaculture, you present it in ways that are comprehensive and engaging. Each video video is a balanced blend of easily absorbable and well-informed content presented with in a positive spirit that gives me hope for the future of humanity and the earth. Thank you for sharing your knowledge, your hard work, and conveying the hard work and passion of others around the world.
Thanks for the good feedback. More to come!
My family have yoused these techniques on our farms. What a fantastic implementation. This technique should be taught to as many counties as possible.
wow.. r u a farmer..?.. The theme of India's G20 Presidency - “Vasudhaiva Kutumbakam” or “One Earth · One Family · One Future” - was drawn from the ancient Sanskrit text of the Maha Upanishad. we would love to share some techs to the world if they need any help!!
@@blackdiamondbd2158
Kya bakwas kr raha h?
Iss tarah se parchar karne se kya ho jaayega.
Logo ko already dikh raha h.
Teach your neighbours to spread the goodness 🎉🎉🎉
I hope these videos are being shared with development agencies and farmers collectives all over the world. So beautiful and inspiring.
I'm absolutely wiped out Andrew - you couldn't do a better job if you had a wizard's wand in your hand! 👏👏👏
This man deserve national and international level award , Bravo man. You should also visit Odisha ( a eastern State Of India ) and see how one man Daitari naik irrigated Villages and communities by digging canals in mountainous region of Gonasika. He is also known as Canal man Of Odisha and awarded Padmashri by Indian Government.
What abundance in a once upon a time desert. What dedication and perseverance.
Thankyou so much for connecting us to these saviours.
Một buổi thuyết trình thật ý nghĩa và hay cùng với hình nền video tuyệt vời, tôi luôn song hành cùng bạn
As a counsellor, I often encourage my clients to get into nature more, and to work with their land with care and awareness
Thank you for sharing this story! Please do more documentaries, your work is of such high quality and can be a great inspiration for many others.
Thanks so much! I will definitely keep going. Lots of plans in motion :-)
Send this gentle man to Bangalore, so he can teach them how to recharge ground water.
I have another video in production roght now about groundwater recharge in Bangalore. Stay tuned!
PLEASE DO! People here give 0 fucks about the environment, act that way and then bitch about how everything sucks 😢
PLEASE DO! People here give 0 fucks about the environment, act that way and then bitch about how everything sucks 😢
PLEASE DO! People here give 0 fucks about the environment, act that way and then bitch about how everything sucks 😢
Will not happen as there is no money to be made by recharging groundwater. Less groundwater means more money for water tanker mafia owned by politicians.
As a German who has visited Rajasthan before it is a miracle to me how these people can wear jumpers. I felt like I melted when I was there
It must be the winter season or early morning.
Even Rajasthan sees single digit temperatures during winter months.
The night temperatures were around 10°C which must be just pleasant for someone from a temperate regions like Germany but locals in Rajasthan are used to 45-50°C, they need their jumpers during the early mornings because of the fluctuation.
Germans are very used to cold. Not because of cold weather but you guys open windows and suntna in 17 C degrees so you will literrally melt there. In my city we have cold winters with hot summers so I am more adapted to warm rather than cold because cold is easier to fight against while being hot impossible to fight.
In winter, rajasthan is quite cold. Sometimes it touch 1 or 2 degree Celsius.
I say it often.........India is saving itself and will save the world. I do not own land but the Mexican dessert could benefit greatly from this and so could the plains of northern Texas and the Ogallala aquifer.
Hi... also have a look at the technique of LNC (liquid natural clay) form Desertcontrol. They are now also active in the USA, I think in some projects with the university of Arizona.
I watched yesterday a video about a former millionaire that planted an amazing forest in the mexican desert. Yes, it can be done.
I was thinking central TX could definitely benefit from this too.
needs to save women first
Mexico is million times more violent than India, even towards women, yet India makes the headlines.@@Joe-uv9jo
I absolutely love your videos. I am especially partial to your visual aided drawings. My family and friends are now into the wonderful world of permaculture because of your videos. Thank you for all of your hard work. It is much appreciated.
Excellent! My plan is working ;-)
I've always known how important groundwater is, but seeing how these places are able to revitalize and thrive off groundwater is amazing. The infrastructure they build to allow water to go back into the aquifers is quite something. It's sad to me that the state I live in, only started seriously thinking about groundwater recharge since last year. We were in a mega drought for years and things were getting dire, but we got incredibly lucky with the recent storms that our reservoirs went from way below the historical average level to now above it.
The transformative power of community-led water management in Rajasthan's Loria village is truly inspiring! By implementing the Chala system, they've not only safeguarded their water supply but also enhanced local ecosystems-a brilliant model for sustainable development. 🌱
Your videos are such an inspiration! I purposefully want to buy degraded land and restore the groundwater, plant trees, create wildlife habitat and build water retention systems! Thank you so much for putting these videos out there! It really drives and creates a movement in the right direction!
As someone who feels a lot of climate despair, your content gives me hope as it both shows how it can be done and how it is being done. Thank you!
Wow the abundance on a foot of rainfall.🤯🤯🤯
This is beautiful. What a fantastic legacy for future villagers. What a great lesson for future residents of drylands everywhere.❤❤❤
Sir Andrew thank you for providing hopeful examples of us being a keystone species working to build instead of ...what most of our society is currently and unfortunately geared toward
Hehe i love your idea/connection that we are the keystone. With our control we really do hold all the keys to what thrives in our future
Here in the Brazilian North East we have many cities that have to face the drought every year and they need to learn how to overcome this. Some people have projects like that one but it's not something that gather all the comunity.
Andrew! Thank you for bringing these stories to us. Amazing. KEEP"M COMING!
Congratulations on launching the course. NIce to see you expanding the good work
This is so incredible! Truly inspiring to see what human ingenuity, love, and communal effort can accomplish.
This is the way to the future. Water management is crucial and this is such a great model! Thanks!
Any new video put by Andrew always excites me since I know he is about to show yet another transformation
So happy to watch. May these people prosper now and into the future!
Noice. This should go viral across India.
Each and every village already is aware of such techniques in India and is mostly in self-sufficiency with some exceptions because of geography.
लक्ष्मण सिंह जी आपके काम के लिए सादर नमन
So heartwarming to see the fantastic progress of this once almost barren land. Working in partnership with Mumma Nature really is the way to create Alchemy in this situations - and indeed, all of life #BRAVO to the entire Community and thank you so much for sharing Andew
These videos are one of the few things giving me hope that we won't all be screwed over by climate change. It shows that we have solutions to many of our most critical problems, all it takes is actual collective effort and leadership interested into applying them.
When everyone learned climate change is a joke by the government to gain power regulate and tax the people the world will be a better place. Stop letting them put fear into you, fear is used to control the weak.
So very grateful for the information you bring to us through this channel. Those with ears to hear, let them hear.
You are not only a journalist, you are also an artist. Thanks for this video!
Thanks!
Thank you 🙏🙏🙏
Proud to be Indian ❤Thank u Laxman Ji for tremendous work we are proud about your work ❤
"where cant we do this?" is actually a pretty big question! seems places like india with historic, deeply rooted village lifestyles and social structures can pull this off. cant see this happening in red tape europe and HOA's america. though i know some models in deep rural europe could pull things like this off, though we are suffering from extreme depopulation in these areas. where would the labour and capital come from?
I see the problem more in a loss of cultural knowledge. In northern germany we have so called "Knicks", hedges on small mounts surrounding fields, protecting against wind, dryout and waterloss. Most fields are way below 20ha in size. But when you go into the former DDR where they built large scale fields without seperation it is way more sandy and dry. But even in northern germany people are all too eager to remove these "Knicks" to get the last few square meter of field, not knowing or disregarding their function.
Maybe robots will be able to make this a large scale solution instead of just for a few select villages
Thank you for your inspiring work, Andrew.
Every single episode you publish, I'm just in awe. Such a wonderful collective cooperation by people seeking to attain the same goal - the generation and preservation of wealth - all beginning with water.
Kya bat hai pahli bar kisi foreners ko India ke bare me achhi bate batate huye dekha..
Lekin laxman sing ji ka kam bahot badiya laga..vaha ke gramin janta ki ekjutata aur mehnat ko salam ..
Absolutely beautiful work. Respects from Bangladesh.
Jungle bachao bhai jungle.
Bohot deforestation ho rahe h Bengal me. East or west dono Bengal me
Thanks for this! I've been looking for such efforts across Rajasthan, but it's difficult to find such community projects.
With all the bad news in the western world, it's so great to see such good news from the rest of the world!
My Deep Respect for Water Man.
Love from Pakistan.
May All Being Enjoy Peace, Happiness and Harmony.
Brother, just a curious question: are there parts of Thar desert in Pakistan too ?
Like is it huge or small !
@@DoomedCookie795map khol k dekh le.
Puch kya raha h?😂
@@invalidaccount6147 Abey yaar gajab ke pagal ho, main usse wahan ke\a culture, area, kon kon se province mein h jss respect mein pucha tha bhai. Aur tu kyun itna tej bnn rha h ?!
@@DoomedCookie795 Tera wo curious question to kuch aur hi matlab nikl raha h.
Dhang se pucha kr. 😉
Aur tez isliye bn raha hu bcz mein hu
@@invalidaccount6147 Ok bhai, abse aapse hi puchkr sb kaam krunga.
Am in awe and admiration of projects like these, where citizens and sometimes one person by themself make all the difference by a region, and so often by the planting of trees, which make all the difference to soil retention and slowing down the percolation of ground water. The visible difference over the years is stunning. Mr Singh has created awareness and realised the possibility of actually doing something, educating his community in the process, a truly laudable activity. Wonderful positive story in a world full of negativity, thanks for sharing.
Work with nature and both humans and nature are winners...absolutely amazing!!! I see the tree's and feel the sense of hope.
Wow, this is truely amazing! Community coming together to shape 3,700 acres 😳 and achieving such resiliency 👏 what a great video, thank you!
Your videos have been a corner stone in my learning process for permaculture design. I am currently saving to buy hopefully 5-10 acres outside of Tucson to turn into a permaculture food forest with extensive rain water capture both passive and active collection. I want to do my part to help green the Sonoran desert and begin restoring water tables.
Das ist ein wunderbares Beispiel für gelungene grüne Lokalpolitik. Ein großes Lob und meine Hochachtung für die Menschen, die ihr Schicksal in die Hand genommen haben, und das Land mit Verantwortung und viel Fleiß in ein grünes Paradies verwandelt haben. 💚💚💚
Lachman singh should be proclaim a national hero.
What a loving, wonderful example of a leader for his people and with his people .I am so grateful to the villagers for setting such a wonderful example for all of us to learn from .May the village be blessed and all the villages around them prosper 🙏 Thankyou
What a wise leader he was to set all this up decades ago. Some of this is the old irrigation methods older cultures always used once they moved to growing crops. It makes sense.
One of the most powerful landscape transformations I’ve ever seen. So terribly inspiring
A society grows great when we plant trees in whose shade we know we shall never sit, but if we plant them sooner, we may all enjoy some shade.
Give Thanks, for such abundance and community spirit. Andrew your videos are always a big source of inspiration.
The results speak for themselves. Thank you for the videos!
Could you possibly do a video on the cultural aspects that enable these works? Seems that most of these projects in India are village wide efforts (or regional). Maybe you could deep dive on things like land ownership/stewardship, leadership structures and relationships, communal vs individual attitudes etc. I know these might be large and difficult to tackle, but maybe you saw some simple and tangible ideas in these areas that could be explained as clearly as you explain the water works!
For this place in particular, there is a very deep and long story of rallying community support over decades. I am so interested in water that I tend to focus there. But perhaps another video will focus more on culture. Have you watched this one? ruclips.net/video/q7q8friw1p8/видео.html
@@amillison I’ve watched all your videos! They’re all so good! Just wondered if on your travels you had come to any conclusions about the culture part of permaculture. Seems to me that may be the harder part for us to implement these days…
Good job, Andrew. Excellent video.
Very inspiring. Best part is its community driven.
Wow
Landscape wide
Just awesome
Impressive. Thanks for this video. It would be interesting to see the long-term effects of such terraforming.
This video represents pretty long term effects, 45 years. But you can see many ancient terraforming projects throughout India to see very long term effects
What really caught my eye was the reported drop in temperatures.
Do hot areas create enough thermal updrafts to prevent moisture laden air from entered the area? If so, then would cooler lands attract more rain?
Amazing efforts and a great video. Excellent to see it being scaled out to surrounding areas.
"If so, then would cooler lands attract more rain?"
More trees and ponds = more moisture in the air = more rain
Truely fantastic. A living, working monument of a vision to the people from the people and their own work. ❤❤❤
Hmm I want to do this is Arizona
Do it, there is land
Absolutely beautiful, Andrew. This is quite timely too - it's come at a time when a lot of cities are facing harsher summers every year.
Mother Nature will surely bless the hard work of the people of Laporiyah. It was really heart warming to see how much gratitude everyone had for Laxman - 9:45 brought tears to my eyes. What better purpose does one need in life than to be able to help bring fresh water and food to those in need. Thank you so much for telling this story and bringing it to the world. 🙏
i love these videos. andrew millison is the water man!
Thanks!
Bring more of this!!
Thank you 🙏🙏🙏
More trees. Even higer yields and beautiful nature. Very positive. Trees are so important for the earth and climate. And to hold the water. Much love.
This is the most impactful and amazing video I’ve seen on YT maybe ever. So glad you highlighted this triumph.
Fantastic project! The brain behind it is a genius!
Wow, I would really love to visit Rajasthan! It is right up near the top, on my bucket list. There is so much the world can learn from the people of Rajasthan.
There is nothing cooler or more inspiring to me. Thank you so much for continuing to showcase these areas Andrew !!
The more villages in the region that take this up, the greater overall benefit to all of them!
Thank you ANDREW for sharing incredible story of LAXMAN SINGH JI & LAPORIYAH, it’s fascinating to see the transformation of Arid flat terrain through “ The Chauka System “ ❤️👍🙏
thank you so much for this inspiring video. A glimpse of hope in dark times!