Restoring Watersheds with Andrew Millison & John D. Liu
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- Опубликовано: 10 фев 2025
- For any large-scale land restoration project to be successful, it needs to be placed within the context of the water flow and soil distribution of the watershed.
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Nature's land divisions are the ridges, hills and mountains that delineate the drainage basins known as watersheds. This presentation will look at examples of successful large-scale projects from around the world and how they interact with their watersheds.
Andrew will be joined by John D. Liu for the live audience question and answer session.
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Thanks for disseminating so information “for free” to the general public. I have watched hours and hours of your videos, always learn something and feel encouraged about our future
Thank you Andrew and John! You are true legends of the field. Best rabbit hole ever.
Thank you for having these webinars. They always are reminders of hope and inspiration for innovation for each place. Thank you Andrew and John for sharing your experiences.
Thank you for these great Webinars. With love from South Africa.
Keep up the great work. I like the possible messages & videos. They give me hope that we can do something about climate change.
Your my heroes
These webinars are legit!
AWESOME special guest! I’m watching and learning always from these guys! Out of Oklahoma! 2:09
Thanks for the webiners. They are really helpful and very educative
Our pleasure!
Thank you. Watching from Finland.
Hi Andrew delighted to hear of your progress we did the PDC with Geoff Lawton at the same time
that ended in 2017
Ce qui est aussi important en agriculture syntropique, c'est qu'on plante avec une très grande densité des végétaux qui vint se succéder et donc pousser les uns à la suite des autres.
Cela permet de nourrir le sol avec la matière organique des plantes qui sont taillées (perturbation).
Omg, I live in Pacific City, I didn't even know yall were in oregon !!
Love you guys....❤❤❤... great work... please keep it up 🙏🕉️🙏
Think it's larger number and variety of poisonous snakes in these areas that drives the demilume systems as opposed to swales. Bare ground is easier to spot snakes and walk thru than planted ground. It's why the villages have bare ground...
My daily walk takes me through a dense tropical jungle on a paved pathway. I’ve seen cobras and other snakes.
So just having a clear pathway is enough to help protect yourself. We don’t have to clear everything.
@@lamdao1242
I never said they "clear everything."
Thank you watching from Ethiopia
Are swales becoming less favored or obsolete?
Personally I utilize swales and love them. Some are more like micro ponds, some merely a garden aisle, and others help form access roads across the hilly land. Some hold water all the time, others fill up after rain for days or weeks but will dry out. I see mostly advantages to swales - I'm on 5° to 18° slopes. I also have incorporated single shank ripping on contour in areas where annual gardening and tree saplings happen, and I like the results. I'm lucky to have a tractor to do these things.
Not the fundamental flaw of civilization Andrew; the fundamental flaw of Western civilization. There've been other civilizations that do not see land and nature like that.