How to turn deserts into grasslands : Rodger Savory
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- Опубликовано: 27 сен 2024
- Rodger Savory is an ecologist and land manager, who also helped run Holistic Management, the ecorestoration movement his dad Alan Savory started. He uses cows, chickens, fungi and microbes to create a biological carpet that brings back vegetation and rain.
His website is www.fixdeserts.com
The accompanying article for this interview is at climatewaterpr...
When he said, " I know cows, shit, grass and fungus", that made me laugh.
Why only 996 views since July 2023? You need to post this on multiple channels - this vital information is not getting viewed.
Geoff Lawton has begun successful projects in the Middle East and Australia. He also did a documentary about a community in (Oman?) centuries of water management and abundance. Also, Alejandro Carillo has restored a lot of acres in the Chihuahuan desert. Similar techniques.
Absolutely phenomenal, thank you Alpha this is so inspiring and optimistic. I am gonna write a blog post. 🤣😍
excellent video
Gives a lot of credence to the large scale production and usage of activated BioChar
This is fascinating!
Thanks for this!
We all need to share this... lets do our part...
Cows will definitely be up early to graze when the dew in on and even more if it's Foggy. Definitely getting that moisture.
What kind of tree seeds are the cattle going to eat?
Your comment about water vapor made me think about cows seem to go to the lower area at night. Wondering if maybe they are doing this so they can absorb the water vapor created in the cool night air??
Someone please connect Roger with Elon Musk
In 4 months he’s only lost 902 views.
deserts are necessary landscapes, just like forests and mountains and tundra. Why do men have to conceitedly think they need to change nature? Leave it the f alone and learn to live in harmony with it. Have you learned nothing the last 500 years?
apparently they were basically grasslands in the past. the buffalo would revisit every couple years and go thru... there wasn't as much grass as the prairies but way more than today