Tiny Forest documentary about the effects of the Miyawaki method in the Netherlands

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  • Опубликовано: 16 фев 2021
  • In December 2015 IVN Natuureducatie invited TED-talk speaker Shubhendu Sharma to the Netherlands for a special initiative: we planted our very first Tiny Forest. Together with Sharma, the municipality of Zaandam, Hoek Gardener, school children and local residents we planted the first Tiny Forest, right in the center of the town Zaandam.
    A Tiny Forests® is a densely packed native forests, that fits into the size of a tennis court. The forest is not just an pleasant spot for butterflies, birds, bees and small mammals; it is a great place for people too. In the outdoor classroom, children learn about nature and it also serves as a meeting place for the local community.
    We created a documentary about the effects of the Miyawaki method in the Netherlands. Did it work? Watch the video and find out.
    Read more about Tiny Forest: www.ivn.nl/aanbod/tiny-forest...

Комментарии • 144

  • @TheDrsyam
    @TheDrsyam 3 года назад +214

    I have made a similar Miyawaki Forest in Okha, Gujarat. It has been 8 months since plantation and the Canopy trees are already 10 Feet tall. The once barren place, looks extremely dense now. BTW Okha is a strip of land in between Arabian Sea and Gulf of Kutch and the soil is either salty or rocky. But improvising through the activity, we could create a Mini Forest. It's such a great feeling to watch them grow.

    • @bestmoments4287
      @bestmoments4287 3 года назад +2

      Bay of Bengal?

    • @TheDrsyam
      @TheDrsyam 3 года назад +8

      @@bestmoments4287 oh sorry. Gulf of Kutch. My bad. Was typing in a car while returning from work.

    • @llt8101
      @llt8101 3 года назад +7

      That's great! The more people making forests, the better for the world.

    • @rushabhsoni407
      @rushabhsoni407 2 года назад +6

      I feel you man 🌱

    • @sanjaydoshi7968
      @sanjaydoshi7968 2 года назад +3

      Well done

  • @tuexss
    @tuexss 2 месяца назад +27

    It's been 8 years - can we have an update? :)

    • @maruorsa
      @maruorsa День назад

      This is the spot. You can see the project site the Google Streetview. Click the "see more dates" to view previous years image of the site.
      Twiskeweg
      maps.app.goo.gl/JAREbXTAXsAS14Kx5?g_st=ac

  • @MH-pz8wf
    @MH-pz8wf 10 месяцев назад +34

    A follow up again on this please in 2023 and beyond

    • @TomatoHeadBananne
      @TomatoHeadBananne 2 месяца назад +2

      Yes please. I'd like to see an old tiny forest !

    • @maruorsa
      @maruorsa День назад

      This is the spot. You can see the project site the Google Streetview. Click the "see more dates" to view previous years image of the site.
      Twiskeweg
      maps.app.goo.gl/JAREbXTAXsAS14Kx5?g_st=ac

  • @akshaypanambur907
    @akshaypanambur907 3 года назад +47

    Great one shubendu , I too had my doughts when I initially saw the trees , knowing Holland weather , but you & the trees pulled it up . Credit to Holland municipality for taking up the project...🌳🙏

  • @Aryaputhran
    @Aryaputhran 3 года назад +82

    A very recent photo/video of the development of this forest would have been great addition.

    • @oldchild527
      @oldchild527 3 года назад +2

      But dont they take over 10 years to look like a forest?

    • @Aryaputhran
      @Aryaputhran 3 года назад +7

      @@oldchild527 No. That's the magic. I've seen 6 month, 1 year growths that look really amazing with this method in my home state where we don't have cold winters. Just a few years and it looks like a real forest and is self growing. The method I've seen used here is that drip irrigation is used for 2-3 years and then forest has deep roots, enough mulch(tree leaves) at the bottom to hold moisture and mulch as organic fertilizer.

    • @joshcollins9125
      @joshcollins9125 3 года назад +3

      I would also like to know what month the saplings were planted in. We have similar weather cycles in the U.K. and this timing worked

    • @worldcitizenra
      @worldcitizenra 3 года назад +2

      To learn a bit more about the Zaandam tiny forest follow the link to the IVN web site at the last sentence of the expanded description of this vide at the point "Read more about Tiny Forest". The IVN web page doesn't show a recent photo of the tiny forest, but it does have what appears to be a 2 year time lapse video. The second year growth was impressive. It also has a video giving info about tiny forest efforts in the UK.

    • @renevalencia7121
      @renevalencia7121 2 года назад +4

      This kind of tiny forest will be great for big city’s with small spaces

  • @TheEager77
    @TheEager77 3 года назад +18

    This man has my respect

  • @cornerslice
    @cornerslice 3 года назад +15

    Good job. Wish more municipalities would follow this example.

  • @monsieurlaguillotine3481
    @monsieurlaguillotine3481 Год назад +3

    No problem is insurmountable if we put these wonderfully creative minds of ours to good use

  • @andyroubik5760
    @andyroubik5760 2 месяца назад +2

    Good work! It looked to me like some of the trees were being planted too deep without the root flare exposed. That is a very important aspect as the trees will not do well if the root flare is buried. If I mulched my young trees that thoroughly, I would have a huge vole problem in the winter when the rodents would chew the bark off. Keep up the good work and thank you.

  • @vipul4239
    @vipul4239 3 года назад +15

    Great initiative by the mucipality for encouraging such methods to help grow greener environment.

  • @jige1225
    @jige1225 Месяц назад +4

    Visible on ggl-maps, Twiskeweg, Zaandam, The Netherlands, 150m from the roundabout.

  • @carinuchis
    @carinuchis 3 года назад +1

    Gracias! 🙌🏼🙌🏼🙌🏼🙌🏼🙌🏼

  • @mopjetc
    @mopjetc 8 месяцев назад +1

    Hopelijk kun je jullie dit bij zoveel mogelijk gemeentes voor elkaar krijgen!! Super echt!

  • @IvanKinsmanSDP
    @IvanKinsmanSDP 3 месяца назад +2

    There is a project going on at Granja Caimito in Spain - a 40 ha ranch in the dehesa in Andalusia. This seems to be a very interesting method and a great video explaining it.

  • @somesshbahuguna9620
    @somesshbahuguna9620 7 месяцев назад

    Appreciate Shubendhu's hard work and beliefs.🙏

  • @ananthakrishnan2706
    @ananthakrishnan2706 3 года назад +1

    I am always a fan of him

  • @ahmednoman26
    @ahmednoman26 3 года назад +7

    Great work. Respect from Pakistan.

    • @ahmednoman26
      @ahmednoman26 3 года назад

      @Izaiah Lennon u r right. Nobody gives even their shits

  • @Nitka022
    @Nitka022 2 года назад

    amazing! and such a brilliant result!! wow and wow!

  • @MegaDeepRoots
    @MegaDeepRoots 5 месяцев назад

    Thank you!!!!!!!!!!!!!

  • @noelialeiro8636
    @noelialeiro8636 2 года назад +2

    Great idea! I'd love to plant a miyawaki

  • @RamLal-cc6oo
    @RamLal-cc6oo 3 года назад

    Good job.
    Save nature save forest and save lives.
    No live can not exist without forest.
    Save . increase,and protect it.
    Mother Nature bless all of you.
    Namste

  • @Arviploverakhewar
    @Arviploverakhewar Год назад

    What u r doing is above humanity...

  • @mountaingardening
    @mountaingardening 2 месяца назад +2

    What a cool concept! I’ve never heard of this method. I would like to try this in the high desert to see how it does. Thanks for sharing this and continuing to do this in different places!

    • @jajajaja2606
      @jajajaja2606 Месяц назад +1

      There are many other projects for the dry climate on RUclips which you should watch. You can form the land to store more rainwater, cover it with grass or other native cover plants, etc. There's really a lot of it on RUclips and I highly recommend you to have a look. Also we all would love to hear how your project is going!

  • @alkachaudhary5890
    @alkachaudhary5890 3 года назад +1

    Good workGod bless all

  • @stefan59871
    @stefan59871 3 года назад +4

    Impressive initiative. Hope the idea will spread

  • @rpsingh2911
    @rpsingh2911 3 года назад +1

    This is very interesting, doing a great work with Passion..

  • @eBangaloreProperty
    @eBangaloreProperty Год назад

    Great work 👍

  • @sachinkhandale4817
    @sachinkhandale4817 3 года назад +2

    Nice ,in futures generation and for now it's very nice to see in our India specially dry section of rural India, in rural area lot of land not used for crops such area located along with peaks of mountain

  • @teacher24-73
    @teacher24-73 3 года назад +1

    Great work

  • @hemamittal9338
    @hemamittal9338 2 года назад +7

    Hi shubhedu,
    What a fantastic work you are doing! I want do same kind of activity in NZ as I live here. If we plant forrests just on the boundary lines (sort of fencline) of the institutions or even of the houses which catch the fancy of people's eye & become a
    vogue,could also be one winning point! What's your advice on that! If you say yes then could the width of boundary line be 50cm to 100cm, please suggest. I want to join this movement very actively from this part of the🌍. Let me know how to & how not to.If you come to NZ stay with us it will be a pleasure. I myself am a passionate lady for enviro stuff.
    You have taken a big & worthwhile mission 👌that to at such a young age, sucess has to be with
    you👍🏾.Wish you the best.
    Cheers
    Hema

  • @wenikasoebhag3552
    @wenikasoebhag3552 3 года назад

    Mooi! Super gaaf!

  • @frankfernandes9517
    @frankfernandes9517 3 года назад +4

    Planting trees are really necessary for us but also need educate people not to cut them not worth it. Humans cannot survive without.

  • @mypodcast3604
    @mypodcast3604 3 года назад

    Wonderful JOB

  • @townstunsltd6727
    @townstunsltd6727 11 месяцев назад

    Posthumous Awards to honour and advertise Dr Miyawaki work!

  • @aBuAraDaH
    @aBuAraDaH 3 года назад +2

    Thanks I'm going to do it 😉👍

  • @Dr_krish20
    @Dr_krish20 3 года назад +1

    Well done... 👍👍👌🌱☘️🌿🌳🌴🌲🍀☘️🍂🍃

  • @NihalNihal-sn5bx
    @NihalNihal-sn5bx 3 года назад +1

    Beautiful 💕❤️kudos buddy

  • @manik-pg4et
    @manik-pg4et 2 года назад

    excellent....

  • @lmclrain
    @lmclrain 3 года назад

    thanks for the video

  • @FlipsterFlipinoy
    @FlipsterFlipinoy 3 года назад +9

    Why would anyone click the thumbs down button on this video???

    • @murthykrishna3834
      @murthykrishna3834 3 года назад +3

      jelousy

    • @___PK__
      @___PK__ Месяц назад

      @@murthykrishna3834 True! But why be jealous when they can do it as well?

  • @TheSchiffReport
    @TheSchiffReport 2 года назад +7

    My only question is : if you make a Miyawaki food forest , how would you be able to collect the fruits , or would you just leave them for the birds and other insects to feast on ?

    • @onechristianwallace
      @onechristianwallace Год назад +7

      Leave them to the birds 🙂

    • @alphabetagamma4142
      @alphabetagamma4142 Год назад +3

      You can have some pathways in between to access the interior parts... As long as the pathways are well planned and don't disrupt the forests growth, you should be fine.

    • @masterofzombie
      @masterofzombie Год назад +2

      This is more for reforestation and less for human consume... You can find what you want in permaculture food forests

  • @hanswurst1125
    @hanswurst1125 Месяц назад +1

    Awesome👍👍👍👍😄

  • @sophiareygrace6656
    @sophiareygrace6656 6 дней назад

    loveeeeee

  • @brunetyannick1174
    @brunetyannick1174 Месяц назад

    Pretty much same concept as syntropic agroforestry, with maybe less emphasis on natural succession ? Many names for an efficient concept, great forest !

  • @maddyc503
    @maddyc503 3 года назад

    ❤️

  • @Sblatus
    @Sblatus 2 года назад

    Please show how does it look today

  • @aswadaslu4430
    @aswadaslu4430 2 месяца назад +2

    ❤🌳🌳🌳❤

  • @Jthe5th
    @Jthe5th 3 года назад +4

    It's great that finally we start thinking outside the mono-culture forest style that until now it is still considered "great".
    But so many trees so close there is going to mean lots of competition for resources in a tiny place, but it is method of forcing trees to get tall to compete for the sun resources, appears as so "fast" growing.
    I see oaks being planted so close to other trees, they not only grow slow but they need a lot of light and space.
    We can already see some leaf rust (fungal infectiion) on leaves, which can be encouraged on such crammed area.

    • @srinivas8220
      @srinivas8220 3 года назад +2

      That’s a good observation - wonder how it should be addressed - maybe oak should not be part of this ?

    • @striker44
      @striker44 Год назад +1

      Maybe due to constricted space, the oak may not be a full featured but a miniature version. This is good for urban gardens to create some green space amongst the concrete.

    • @falfield
      @falfield 7 месяцев назад

      @@srinivas8220 Oaks manage quite well in the partial shade of early colonisers such as birch, whose leaf canopies are not dense. And recent research in England suggests that cover by thorny shrubs and scrub trees such as blackthorn was an important way for juvenile oaks to get established through protection from browsers such as deer and heavier ungulates such as stock animals and bison. Two hundred years later, the oaks towered over and shaded out the smaller trees that had given them a good start in life. I imagine the climax vegetation from a Miyawaki plot will be no different: it certainly starts more quickly - will be interesting to see what happens with time.

    • @jige1225
      @jige1225 Месяц назад

      "that finally we start thinking outside the mono-culture forest" - was started long ago...

  • @SolidGoldShows
    @SolidGoldShows Год назад +2

    Can you please come here in my desert land to see if you can do the same? It's a bit challenging, but I believe it is doable

    • @ryangrady6894
      @ryangrady6894 Год назад +1

      I'm in Albuquerque, New Mexico. How about you?

    • @SolidGoldShows
      @SolidGoldShows Год назад +2

      @@ryangrady6894 We are located in Southern California

  • @tpsdas
    @tpsdas 3 года назад

    kindly give the names of different varieties of plants may be planted in indian soil..

  • @MugurDeBrad
    @MugurDeBrad 3 года назад

    That is Francesca from Survivor Redemption Island and Survivor Fans vs Favorites 2 at 02:11 :D

  • @nitinmeena8071
    @nitinmeena8071 3 года назад

    Bhai india me bhi koi project chal raha hoga?

  • @katrielp
    @katrielp 10 месяцев назад +1

    I know that the Miyawaki forest method instructs that the trees should be planted 1 meter apart. This might produce a rapid forest, however I don't think the trees would be able to grow to full size because it simply is not enough room for their trunks to expand their girth. Has anyone experimented conducting a Miyawaki method when spreading the plants further than 1 meter apart?

  • @khurram498
    @khurram498 3 года назад

    nice

  • @hemamittal9338
    @hemamittal9338 2 года назад

    You are doing wonderful! I live in NZ & quite passionate about environment.
    already doing some work for that purpose. Let me know the way you started your Holland forrest step by step please. Like
    -1 You liked the place.
    -2 Talked to the concerned organization.
    -3 Gathered the volunteers
    etc.
    I will wait for your feed back. Thanks
    Hema

    • @hemamittal9338
      @hemamittal9338 2 года назад

      Hi Shubhendu,
      I am waiting quite eagerly foryour response.
      Thanks
      Hema

    • @amay9870
      @amay9870 Год назад

      @@hemamittal9338 Shubendu is busy planting tress. Better you contact to him on twitter or linkindn or their official website.

  • @ollievw3450
    @ollievw3450 3 года назад +1

    Yes trees do grow very slowly here...wonder whatit would do in the poor sandy soils we have.

    • @shashankjp88
      @shashankjp88 3 года назад +2

      He has done same in desert in India..

    • @ollievw3450
      @ollievw3450 3 года назад +1

      @@shashankjp88 well worth a try then 👍🏻

  • @joshcollins9125
    @joshcollins9125 3 года назад +2

    I would like to know what month the saplings were planted in. We have similar weather cycles in the U.K. and this timing worked

    • @gauravarya8952
      @gauravarya8952 3 года назад

      A general hint - plants don't grow much in winter.

    • @joshcollins9125
      @joshcollins9125 3 года назад

      @@gauravarya8952 It looks like that was when they were planted though, which makes sense because the roots grow instead. I would think it works best to let them get anchored in before growing tall but I would like to know what these guys actually did so I can confirm that theory

    • @MP-gw2ek
      @MP-gw2ek 3 года назад +1

      I have planted individual trees around september and even october (midwest US, known for pretty solid winters) and they grow really well. a local landscaping company that we hire, who know what they are doing, always recommend planting trees at the same time.

    • @LPKlok
      @LPKlok 2 года назад +3

      The basic rule for plants, how bigger a plant can be, how more you plant before the winter is coming. You put tree in the ground 2 or 3 weeks ( the earliest moment) When al the other tree in Your Area led there leaves totaly drop down on de ground. The latest moment. is 2 weeks before the frost comes. The reason is that the root system in the soil must connect to the food web in the soil. The mistake is that we think that plants with minerals survive, but plants need underground networks of tiny little animals to get to them. These are most active when the trees drop there leaves. Al these leaves must be take down in de ground. Al minerals water go in the ground en must put in the right place in the ground. Mulchen is the key word for very good soil with millions of tiny little living creatures who work together with plants. A plant alone without living soil Goes dead. Mulchen makes humus. Mulching is actually repeating the annual cycle at an accelerated pace. so more humus accelerates. Compost is so digested that it is fast food. Compost does not produce humus. When the soil is too poor and contains too little soil life, compost applied very thinly can help. Too much compost means that the tree thinks, I don't need the underground network, no connections take place and the result is that the plant has become much more susceptible to disease. Only when the soil is extremely nutrient-rich with the living help of a huge network of living Tiny creatures can you use normal compost. This is de basic of soil every were on the Earth. The misstake of thinking minerale and not thinking living creatures. Good luck, herma ( Chemical food for plants, is saying a Give you fastfood, you need no help from the little creatures, and Yes Its kill also ground little creatures. So Its look above the ground good When you See fast grow, But Disease have it much easier and the ground is dying. in the long run it means that nothing can live without our help. look after farmland. we have to spray against diseases, the ground is getting deader. The vicious circle after down. Mulching with all organic materials breaks this vicious circle en bring you future. (much every 1 cm with a other organic material, 7 to 15 cm the layer may be thick it shrinks to 1 a2 cm. small branches, herbs, grass, leaves .How you do, just make a sandwich with organic material and so alternate, 1 cm then had something else that you can find. Yes is normal That some product are in more layers. And When you have no organic materials, buy a straw bale and shake it out 10 cm thick. ** When you realistically view this planted forest you will see several very fast growing trees. As a result of their growth, they give off a lot of leaves in the coming years. so the ground gets better. however, in the long run, some will have to be removed, as they take away the light for the lower growers. the plants are too close together. After 10 years look 70% up to the Sky between the leaves, and look than down around you. Than you understand how a forest lives.

  • @aborginalsingh
    @aborginalsingh 3 года назад +3

    If you find a way to mix both permaculture and this method , you solve many problems at same time.

    • @SidMalloy
      @SidMalloy 3 года назад +2

      In permaculture, Zone 5 constitutes wild area where trees grow on their own without human interference. You can use Miyawaki method of planting trees in this zone.

  • @yuk-im6uj
    @yuk-im6uj 4 месяца назад

    If people use the land for Agriculture, How implementation the method when the people doing that's land

  • @pureindiatrust
    @pureindiatrust 2 года назад

    Hi Can we talk... I want to ur advice

  • @utkarshakulkarni0705
    @utkarshakulkarni0705 3 года назад +3

    Can we join u?

  • @TheReepe
    @TheReepe 29 дней назад

    6:32 April plus 4 months is august, not octobre

  • @sanjaydoshi7968
    @sanjaydoshi7968 2 года назад +4

    Ladakh has no trees in the mountains . Any idea what can be done there ? India could meet its forest cover requirements if the Himalayas turn green .

    • @vishwajeetcharan2904
      @vishwajeetcharan2904 2 года назад +1

      Just start planting as much as you can,like me in my village located in Jodhpur Rajasthan
      Because something is better than nothing

    • @dv9239
      @dv9239 10 месяцев назад +1

      No that would ruin the ecosystem of the Himalayas
      Dry lands, Deserts, Rain forests, Shrubs are all important and we need to preserve them

  • @acquisitium
    @acquisitium 9 месяцев назад

    goed zo!

  • @emilywong6923
    @emilywong6923 Год назад

    Introduced species become evasive long term.

  • @okwaleedpoetry
    @okwaleedpoetry Месяц назад

    did they give you a tennis court to work with?

  • @rajeevgupta7857
    @rajeevgupta7857 3 года назад

    How do you manage water

    • @HSstriker
      @HSstriker 3 года назад

      Belgian here but same climate. Its only in the last 5 years that we have starded getting droughts. when planted in the correct time you never have to water any tree because whe have a rather wet climate. So we dont have to manage water for these projects. The netherlands is a very low country so its actually even wetter than belgium.

  • @bokishandudley8561
    @bokishandudley8561 2 года назад

    Youngbo approved

  • @coralanturn
    @coralanturn 2 месяца назад +1

    :)

  • @rohitagrawal8809
    @rohitagrawal8809 3 года назад

    Use modicare activemax and active80gold for better yield , cost effective , easily adaptable as nutrient and activator for all type plant , soil , water , region ,climate

  • @riseup2227
    @riseup2227 2 года назад +1

    Dutch and other Scandinavians care alot about Environment. Hats off to them.

  • @mixm4k925
    @mixm4k925 3 года назад +2

    I like this content and concepts.
    I am also working on plantation in villages for increase income of farmer, need u r help.

    • @trueindian3623
      @trueindian3623 2 года назад

      Where are you from any social media for contact

  • @GoodTimesAhead27
    @GoodTimesAhead27 3 года назад +2

    nature is a religion for most Indians 🙏

  • @godspeed7717
    @godspeed7717 11 месяцев назад

    People are become a tourist in the nature.

  • @MrSomethingdark
    @MrSomethingdark Месяц назад

    "education"

  • @ankitjain3760
    @ankitjain3760 Год назад

    These types of forest are good to increase tree density but not to support wildlife.

  • @sethikush
    @sethikush 3 года назад +3

    *Plantation not forest

  • @famejay7318
    @famejay7318 3 года назад +1

    Why is he giving lecture about someone’s else’s work

    • @KETANRAMTEKE
      @KETANRAMTEKE 3 года назад +6

      He is spreading the work of Miyawaki, it's not a lecture but a tribute to the original creator and continuing his legacy.

    • @famejay7318
      @famejay7318 3 года назад +1

      @@KETANRAMTEKE umm no he goes around doing lectures that’s not spreading thats taking credit

    • @KETANRAMTEKE
      @KETANRAMTEKE 3 года назад +6

      @@famejay7318 Nope, there are many western Yoga teachers who teach yoga, we wouldn't look at it as they are "taking credit" but rather spreading the age old technique in the other part of world which benefits the society, Shubhendu is doing the same.

    • @famejay7318
      @famejay7318 3 года назад +1

      @@KETANRAMTEKE Did you just compare exercise with science?

    • @laughingcube
      @laughingcube 3 года назад +13

      So by your logic, Teachers and Professors and anyone else who wishes to spread their knowledge - should stop lecturing about others work?
      At least this guy is trying to make a difference

  • @nayanmolla32
    @nayanmolla32 Месяц назад