What you have demonstrated here is what our ancestors all over the globe had put in place for us. Look at Peru, Africa, Afghanistan, India, Pakistan Ireland. Now they call it a mystery and made it into a tourism site. You in the other hand used this knowledge and brought forth a wholesome and beautiful concept back to life. You will receive many blessings for this, your ancestors are proud of you and smiling at you in this moment. May you continue to uplift and create Wholeness and balanced vibrations
Mate ireland ain't the agricultural permaculture paradise you think it is and it has unfortunately never been, its like 90% cows over here with minimal forest cover, so uh... sorry.
@@gorg8882 lmao the downpour and climate in ireland has lead to quite lush forests, you know people joke about england being a rainy place but ireland man thats even more, ireland is very very lush, pretty sure there are even some temperate rainforest in ireland
@@catboynestormakhno2694 sorry comrade but the celtic rainforest is long gone, I live in ireland, I'll admit the climate does have the ability to create lush forests, but most of them have been cut down for agriculture, and the ones that remain are mostly made up of confiers brought over from Europe for logging.
Hey wouldn't such design kill the river/lake?I mean he is holding the water in the middle instead of dropping down, and he was building way too many plants. Wouldn't too many plants also cause damage to the water?
@@Handlebarrz weird. I was told in school that water rains down the mountain, creates a river or something and connects to Lake/bigger river/ocean and keeps it healthy, no?
@@canisterbottournament yes, but sometimes humans come and build all over and slap concrete intop of the water filtering earth and water runs off through surface picking up oil and chemicals from surfaces
2:40 Trees at higher elevations also helps in preventing landslides and directly feed aquifers (I see you covered my latter point). This was amazing, you got a sub 👍🖖
you'll notice the politicians, corporations, and banks ain't saying nothing about this and working as hard as they can to dismantle it! but i agree, what the world could be, and what the world used to be! cheers, send the demos off the planet!!! peacefully of course, but time for abundance, enough of manufactured scarcity...
Not all poverty, war and scarcity are due to bad land management. Dictatorships and communist regimes want to control everything, people as well as nature! Look at the CCP, (Chinese Communist Party). They for one, will not stop short of world domination, nature be damned! 😑
@@GypV right - agreed and upvoted - but resource privation is a huge contributing factor for why dictatorial and oppressive regimes are able to come into power in the first place and maintain it. Their people are desperate and deprived. Such a populace is vulnerable to such regimes in a way that empowered, resource-stable, economically viable and sound populations are not. Good land management moves the chains in the right direction. Solving these ecological and economic issues is one piece of the puzzle. It takes a lot of wind out of the despotic sails of any demagogues seeking or holding onto power.
Very informative. I live on a slope above a river bed. Knowing that runoff was going across my property, I’ve subtly modified my profile over the years and filled the area with trees to increase my canopy. All this in a suburban neighborhood. Two lots further down the slope, the homeowner paved over everything and put in artificial grass. Sad, isn’t it? Of course, I’ve never had flooding problems in my yard. They can’t say the same.
Figuring out water flow and storage is the most important thing, not just for agriculture, but for human landscapes in general. Even in urban areas. This is such a great video!
The challenge is in acquiring the land in large enough blocks and in blocks that correspond to logical subdivisions of the water cycle. We don't need one single authority to control all the land from the mountain to the river mouth, individuals can easily manage a few acres w/in a watershed, especially when they are working on secondary ridges and valleys.
Definitely! The division of land into squares (in the US) is a big obstacle to watershed-scale work. But if you have the perspective of designing for a whole catchment basin, then when you are selecting land, you have a big advantage in knowing what you're looking for. Also, take a look at my India's Water Revolution video series to see full watershed-scale design: ruclips.net/p/PLNdMkGYdEqOCgePyiAyBT0sh7zlr7xhz3
YT recommended. This was informative, structured and detailed. I can apply this anywhere I chose to expand. I had to subscribe to your content. *chefs kiss*
I have really enjoyed learning more about these permaculture concepts, but I have a small house in a neighborhood. I'm unsure of how to bridge the concept you're talking about with my little postage stamp. My wife and I have done quite a bit of work towards naturescaping and developing a little bit of a food forest, so I think we're on the right track, but we want to be practical in our implementation. We both work full-time and don't have the extra time to spare for doing full-time permaculture for our property. Any thought inspiration or resources would be much appreciated. Thank you for making such a wonderful video.
i recently put a line of bricks between my front yard and the sidewalk, so water (and soil) no longer runs off when it rains. it has only been maybe 8 weeks but there is a noticeable difference in the grass!
I'm not a farmer and never will be, but I hope that all the people who ARE connected to agriculture farming in any way (esp if they live in drier biomes) manage to see this! Thanks for this, Andrew :D -Ariel
The idea is good…to a point. It would work wonderfully in places next to mountains, but in almost completely flat places like Kansas and Northern Ohio, it might not work that great. Also, even in areas with the right topography (and the topography of the board is extremely specific), it would still be difficult to make sure you do not lose a lot of the water to evaporation or that you accidentally either slow down or decrease the volume of natural occurring rivers and steams.
Sadly the amount of money required to did is incredibly high. Most people really would need a extremely cohesive community to do this. I've dreamed about finding a marginal catchment that I could buy to do this. For me, could you do a video on halophyte productivity and shallow marine ecosystems? I would love to restore a mangrove forest or help build a coral reef as part of my system.
I study forest ecology and would love to join projects like after my studies. I am extremely inspired by the methods in the video and would love to learn a lot more, can you recommend me books or give me insight to your approach?
Levelled gathering, storing, and filtering. Working with the natural progression and design of the earth. We should be doing this worldwide wherever possible on a mass scale, creating smaller functioning ecosystems everywhere that would be beneficial. This planet needs an unprecedented REGENERATION of all its environments.
I wish you the best of luck with this brilliant concept. It reminds me of the project 'greening the desert' where water management is the key element, factored into the landscaping. This actually would be building back better!
@@jdkillzone does it though? the greening the desert project was using native species. it doesn't have to be green wall projects like in china or ethiopia/sahel/sahara
Ahhhh I love permacultures!! There are lots of videos on RUclips that you can tour them with, from the smallest backyard to the giants that span across acres 💗
Thats cool, easy to understand and believable. What about the larger part of the world that has no mountains? That could heal land around mountains in tropical zones. Would it work in non tropical zones? Thanks for the video.
One major correction to your logic: Grasses are a major source of water slow down and retention. Forest floors tend to be more open and dirty, allowing for water to run off them more readily. By introducing pockets of grassy hallows you create "speed bumps" for the water that slows it down coming off of the steep and partially barren mountian hillside. Obviously you don't want all grasslands. But having an interchanging mix works better, and offers more diverse areas for wildlife, than a full canopy of trees.
This is how it is done on Madeira island. However, instead of ponds we use natural aquifers to store water. It took us completely destroying two aquifers with tunnels to realize how important they are.
@Andrew Millison I meant to say, we need awesome people like you, to simplify things for the rest of the WOrld, especially those that make a living off the unbalancing act eh! : ) Stay Well and Bless you and mama planet and all of it's most appreciated awesome creations, a million times over. Thank you for sharing your easy to understand visuals! PErfect! Wish all wood cutters, land owners, could see this and do the experience! : )))
I really have enjoyed your sense of design and common sense approach. If possible, perhaps you'll consider doing a vid for folks with flat areas in wet lowlands. I live in Louisiana where its level as a table and much of our yard doesn't full dry out. Our plan was to have a small pond dug out and to use the clay soil to elevate the adjacent area to cover with raised beds. We worry about conventional farming where it often rains daily. We thought it best to cover the bed areas with high domes that can open fully at the sides for maximum cross flow of air, but controlling the watering vs allowing Ma Nature to do it. As we will be using bed, we have considered building as large aquaponic system using the nearby pond, and installing media beds as well as floating raft beds. Would you have any thoughts on this idea?
I am considering traveling to Mexico City to film the chinampas there. But for now, google "chinampas of mexico city" and you'll get some good ideas for swampy flat bottom land.
I have Mark Shepard author of "Restoration Agriculture" right in my back yard in the drifless area of Wisconsin. He use to sell produce to us at Organic Valley. I would help him with produce food safety.
This is a great presentation and helped me understand a bit more about irrigation! Thanks! However, you brought up the issue that private homeowners alter the land with a grid. Where do you suggest people live then? It all sounds good on paper but also getting people to leave their homes for elsewhere would be difficult..but also as a hopeful future home buyer as well, I aim to live out in the woods/mountains eventually. The idea of being stuck living in rent having no individual control on my environment doesn't appeal to me. I've already been living like that for years but I've been wanting out of it because it's too expensive.
Mmmmmmmmm, I wonder how conducive this sort of agriculture is to the use of tractors, combine harvesters etc which are necessary for the sorts of yields we require to sustain large populations?
Would love to see this system explained for plains and hill-less semi arid regions. Can anyone point me to an existing video? Hubby and I will likely only be able to make one home purchase in our adult lives; and we want to establish a self sustaining home that will support the generations long after we are gone. But, to support the elder generations now, we have to stay in central Oklahoma. Not quite as flat as Kansas, but there are no significant elevation changes in this part of the state.
Thank you Andrew! I'm so sorry I missed out on your Meetups when I lived in Portland. In Eugene now. Do you know anybody who does Permaculture groups/events down here?
Pretty cool video.Love the concept,and the topo light.(still tryin to figure out how that works).Makes complete sense and includes habitats for wildlife.That being said,where can you build houses?
Great in theory, but most of us have to deal with a plot that has been cut without any regards for those principles, as he shows in the beginning, and are therefore unable to plan from scratch as he suggests.
Interesting. Looks very similar to rising rice paddies in Vietnam and some mountainous farming areas in, I think, Peru. Flying over US farmland is always a nice way to observe the bizarre, in terms of nature, but accepted way we have out here.
I wonder can this be simulated well in a game like City Skylines? If not, maybe you could contact them, via some organisation, community or collection of professionals? If you could tell them how best to implement this or as a community give feedback this would be epic. The educational value for players of treating the land poorly and get mudslides or do it well and have a thriving landscape will be the best ever!
Hi! I am trying to implement this, but I am just a beginner. I have a cartographic map of the area so, if anybody wants to help, drop your mail and I will send you the map and other data!
I really hate when people say save the planet or heal it. That phase I grossly inaccurate the planet if fine humans are screwed the planet has been through apocalyptic events for billions of years. Please start using the phase. This is how we can keep living on earth
Our planet will be ok. It went through myriad of changes and it will go through many more. Earth will be earth regardless whether it freezes completely or change into a huge dessert. Some species will disappear, others will evolve to cope with new surroundings. On the other hand saving humanity is the key. And responsible production of food is one of the most important aspects of modern world.
The flaw that i get from those videos is that it only shows it's working near rivers and high lands, what happens when you don't have one or both variables? Or you are proposing to move everyone on places that fits those geographical features?
How can a video be both absolutely logical and right, yet super crazy (like (the need for or extent of) human intervention on the environment, in our II super crazy moderntimes) at the same time? - watch this video to find out!
Is there a Formula for how much water buffer you need for your land? I calculated the land of Sepp Holzer, and 1/5 of his land is water. Is there any Information available?
Is there a recommended proportion between the areas? I totally see this being profitable with crops of high value per area, but I’m skeptical about applying this to crops like corn, cotton or soy. Has it ever been done in that scale?
Yes, it is totally an oversimplification and would be different for different climates. But the over all concept of uses of the landscape profile is the main point of this video.
What you have demonstrated here is what our ancestors all over the globe had put in place for us.
Look at Peru, Africa, Afghanistan, India, Pakistan Ireland. Now they call it a mystery and made it into a tourism site.
You in the other hand used this knowledge and brought forth a wholesome and beautiful concept back to life.
You will receive many blessings for this, your ancestors are proud of you and smiling at you in this moment.
May you continue to uplift and create
Wholeness and balanced vibrations
🙏🤍
Yep I agree with you but you know saying Africa is a whole continent not a country
Mate ireland ain't the agricultural permaculture paradise you think it is and it has unfortunately never been, its like 90% cows over here with minimal forest cover, so uh... sorry.
@@gorg8882 lmao the downpour and climate in ireland has lead to quite lush forests, you know people joke about england being a rainy place but ireland man thats even more, ireland is very very lush, pretty sure there are even some temperate rainforest in ireland
@@catboynestormakhno2694 sorry comrade but the celtic rainforest is long gone, I live in ireland, I'll admit the climate does have the ability to create lush forests, but most of them have been cut down for agriculture, and the ones that remain are mostly made up of confiers brought over from Europe for logging.
In 3 years of studying permaculture this is the most concise helpful explanation of an ecological perspective I've seen
Hey wouldn't such design kill the river/lake?I mean he is holding the water in the middle instead of dropping down, and he was building way too many plants. Wouldn't too many plants also cause damage to the water?
@@canisterbottournament kill more rivers by flushing loads of water every rain
@@Handlebarrz weird. I was told in school that water rains down the mountain, creates a river or something and connects to Lake/bigger river/ocean and keeps it healthy, no?
@@canisterbottournament yes, but sometimes humans come and build all over and slap concrete intop of the water filtering earth and water runs off through surface picking up oil and chemicals from surfaces
@@Handlebarrz but so wouldn't the design he showed kill the river since it's blocking water to fall in the river?
2:40 Trees at higher elevations also helps in preventing landslides and directly feed aquifers (I see you covered my latter point).
This was amazing, you got a sub 👍🖖
What an incredible teaching tool! Great work Andrew!! Much Love!!
Thanks Matt. Great to hear from you, bro!
This is a straight forward and simple to understand. But very important at the same time.
We can truly design poverty, war, and scarcity away.
you'll notice the politicians, corporations, and banks ain't saying nothing about this and working as hard as they can to dismantle it! but i agree, what the world could be, and what the world used to be! cheers, send the demos off the planet!!! peacefully of course, but time for abundance, enough of manufactured scarcity...
Not all poverty, war and scarcity are due to bad land management. Dictatorships and communist regimes want to control everything, people as well as nature! Look at the CCP, (Chinese Communist Party). They for one, will not stop short of world domination, nature be damned! 😑
@@GypV right - agreed and upvoted - but resource privation is a huge contributing factor for why dictatorial and oppressive regimes are able to come into power in the first place and maintain it. Their people are desperate and deprived. Such a populace is vulnerable to such regimes in a way that empowered, resource-stable, economically viable and sound populations are not. Good land management moves the chains in the right direction.
Solving these ecological and economic issues is one piece of the puzzle. It takes a lot of wind out of the despotic sails of any demagogues seeking or holding onto power.
People are so caught up in our broken way of living that they think it's normal or natural when it's the furthest thing from it
@@GypV the only thing the CCP has had in common with communism since the late 70s is the name. China is a capitalist country!
This is the kind of stuff that should go viral I swear taking care of the planet is taking care of yourself
You do immensely nice graphic job to explain us any concept. Very appreciable
Easier said than done. I hope this can apply one at a time to a community of farmers.
Very informative. I live on a slope above a river bed. Knowing that runoff was going across my property, I’ve subtly modified my profile over the years and filled the area with trees to increase my canopy. All this in a suburban neighborhood. Two lots further down the slope, the homeowner paved over everything and put in artificial grass. Sad, isn’t it? Of course, I’ve never had flooding problems in my yard. They can’t say the same.
Figuring out water flow and storage is the most important thing, not just for agriculture, but for human landscapes in general. Even in urban areas. This is such a great video!
The challenge is in acquiring the land in large enough blocks and in blocks that correspond to logical subdivisions of the water cycle. We don't need one single authority to control all the land from the mountain to the river mouth, individuals can easily manage a few acres w/in a watershed, especially when they are working on secondary ridges and valleys.
Definitely! The division of land into squares (in the US) is a big obstacle to watershed-scale work. But if you have the perspective of designing for a whole catchment basin, then when you are selecting land, you have a big advantage in knowing what you're looking for. Also, take a look at my India's Water Revolution video series to see full watershed-scale design: ruclips.net/p/PLNdMkGYdEqOCgePyiAyBT0sh7zlr7xhz3
YT recommended. This was informative, structured and detailed. I can apply this anywhere I chose to expand. I had to subscribe to your content. *chefs kiss*
Who are u making such a professional, artful, informative and inspirational presentation! Great work!
I talked about buying some land and creating a neighborhood with them and this guy was the first thing on my RUclips recommendation list.
I love you. Thanks so much for making these videos available. You're helping your students and helping to inspire us all. Keep em coming please!
My homesteading plans just got a level upgrade.
I have really enjoyed learning more about these permaculture concepts, but I have a small house in a neighborhood. I'm unsure of how to bridge the concept you're talking about with my little postage stamp. My wife and I have done quite a bit of work towards naturescaping and developing a little bit of a food forest, so I think we're on the right track, but we want to be practical in our implementation. We both work full-time and don't have the extra time to spare for doing full-time permaculture for our property. Any thought inspiration or resources would be much appreciated. Thank you for making such a wonderful video.
I also so live in house in a neighborhood. Check out what I did with my place over 12 years of permaculture: ruclips.net/video/1vKAPL_WfBA/видео.html
i recently put a line of bricks between my front yard and the sidewalk, so water (and soil) no longer runs off when it rains. it has only been maybe 8 weeks but there is a noticeable difference in the grass!
f2f
I'm not a farmer and never will be, but I hope that all the people who ARE connected to agriculture farming in any way (esp if they live in drier biomes) manage to see this! Thanks for this, Andrew :D
-Ariel
Looks cool on a little map. What happens when all the farmer's tractor tires are spinning in the mud?
Best possible use of a reality sandbox ❤️👍
The idea is good…to a point. It would work wonderfully in places next to mountains, but in almost completely flat places like Kansas and Northern Ohio, it might not work that great. Also, even in areas with the right topography (and the topography of the board is extremely specific), it would still be difficult to make sure you do not lose a lot of the water to evaporation or that you accidentally either slow down or decrease the volume of natural occurring rivers and steams.
Such a great, effective and also beautiful way to teach.
Sadly the amount of money required to did is incredibly high. Most people really would need a extremely cohesive community to do this.
I've dreamed about finding a marginal catchment that I could buy to do this.
For me, could you do a video on halophyte productivity and shallow marine ecosystems?
I would love to restore a mangrove forest or help build a coral reef as part of my system.
I study forest ecology and would love to join projects like after my studies. I am extremely inspired by the methods in the video and would love to learn a lot more, can you recommend me books or give me insight to your approach?
Awesome ideas. Keeping looking for more awesome ideas.
Thanks for this comprehensive and amazing explanation
My pleasure! Thanks for watching :-)
Levelled gathering, storing, and filtering. Working with the natural progression and design of the earth. We should be doing this worldwide wherever possible on a mass scale, creating smaller functioning ecosystems everywhere that would be beneficial. This planet needs an unprecedented REGENERATION of all its environments.
I wish you the best of luck with this brilliant concept. It reminds me of the project 'greening the desert' where water management is the key element, factored into the landscaping. This actually would be building back better!
wasn't that qadaffi???
Except the desert is its own ecosystem. Greening it means destroying it and the flora and fauna that live there.
@@jdkillzone does it though? the greening the desert project was using native species. it doesn't have to be green wall projects like in china or ethiopia/sahel/sahara
@@TheKlink I don't think Robert has a clue as to what he's saying.
I don't plan on planting anything but I'm really interested in sustainability. Great video :)
Ahhhh I love permacultures!! There are lots of videos on RUclips that you can tour them with, from the smallest backyard to the giants that span across acres 💗
Most awaited video on permaculture
Thats cool, easy to understand and believable. What about the larger part of the world that has no mountains? That could heal land around mountains in tropical zones. Would it work in non tropical zones? Thanks for the video.
Our science center has one of these topo sandboxes. Have to bring some rosemary clippings with me next time.
Thanks for your service.
Doing a reforestation project in Mexico. 😊
One major correction to your logic: Grasses are a major source of water slow down and retention. Forest floors tend to be more open and dirty, allowing for water to run off them more readily. By introducing pockets of grassy hallows you create "speed bumps" for the water that slows it down coming off of the steep and partially barren mountian hillside. Obviously you don't want all grasslands. But having an interchanging mix works better, and offers more diverse areas for wildlife, than a full canopy of trees.
Sir could you please mention the study material links to support this, for further studies. Thank you 👍 Hope to see this soon.
I love the down projected video display. Such a great vid. Me likey, thanks
This is how it is done on Madeira island. However, instead of ponds we use natural aquifers to store water. It took us completely destroying two aquifers with tunnels to realize how important they are.
@Andrew Millison I meant to say, we need awesome people like you, to simplify things for the rest of the WOrld, especially those that make a living off the unbalancing act eh! : ) Stay Well and Bless you and mama planet and all of it's most appreciated awesome creations, a million times over. Thank you for sharing your easy to understand visuals! PErfect! Wish all wood cutters, land owners, could see this and do the experience! : )))
Let me know when you're president and we'll get started :-)
Great presentation, especially for areas with seasonal rains and topography.
I really have enjoyed your sense of design and common sense approach. If possible, perhaps you'll consider doing a vid for folks with flat areas in wet lowlands. I live in Louisiana where its level as a table and much of our yard doesn't full dry out.
Our plan was to have a small pond dug out and to use the clay soil to elevate the adjacent area to cover with raised beds. We worry about conventional farming where it often rains daily. We thought it best to cover the bed areas with high domes that can open fully at the sides for maximum cross flow of air, but controlling the watering vs allowing Ma Nature to do it.
As we will be using bed, we have considered building as large aquaponic system using the nearby pond, and installing media beds as well as floating raft beds.
Would you have any thoughts on this idea?
I am considering traveling to Mexico City to film the chinampas there. But for now, google "chinampas of mexico city" and you'll get some good ideas for swampy flat bottom land.
I have Mark Shepard author of "Restoration Agriculture" right in my back yard in the drifless area of Wisconsin. He use to sell produce to us at Organic Valley. I would help him with produce food safety.
This is a great presentation and helped me understand a bit more about irrigation! Thanks! However, you brought up the issue that private homeowners alter the land with a grid. Where do you suggest people live then? It all sounds good on paper but also getting people to leave their homes for elsewhere would be difficult..but also as a hopeful future home buyer as well, I aim to live out in the woods/mountains eventually. The idea of being stuck living in rent having no individual control on my environment doesn't appeal to me. I've already been living like that for years but I've been wanting out of it because it's too expensive.
I have no idea how I found my way here, but this is some great content!
Amazing. I am planning to buy a piece of desert and cultivate it.
Let's restore our planet to it's rightful glory.
Okay... But where can I get one of those tables that looks really fun and informative to use
Mmmmmmmmm, I wonder how conducive this sort of agriculture is to the use of tractors, combine harvesters etc which are necessary for the sorts of yields we require to sustain large populations?
Would love to see this system explained for plains and hill-less semi arid regions. Can anyone point me to an existing video?
Hubby and I will likely only be able to make one home purchase in our adult lives; and we want to establish a self sustaining home that will support the generations long after we are gone. But, to support the elder generations now, we have to stay in central Oklahoma. Not quite as flat as Kansas, but there are no significant elevation changes in this part of the state.
Thanks. I a visual learner
Thank you Andrew! I'm so sorry I missed out on your Meetups when I lived in Portland. In Eugene now. Do you know anybody who does Permaculture groups/events down here?
This is a good, sensible and applicable idea. This is precisely why I fear it will never see the light of day.
Fascinating
Please, everyone, share this video.
I wish I had 5 hands so I could give you 5 thumbs up! 👍 great work as always Andrew!
Wow this RUclips video solved everything. The world is saved 😑 not like we tried this before and if it was this simply we'd have done it
Pretty cool video.Love the concept,and the topo light.(still tryin to figure out how that works).Makes complete sense and includes habitats for wildlife.That being said,where can you build houses?
I addressed that question in a similar video: ruclips.net/video/RDCFbfcRcUE/видео.html
How much would this land reconstruction cost a landowner with 50 acres?
Man, i hope this can apply to my already very development (expanded) town.
Great in theory, but most of us have to deal with a plot that has been cut without any regards for those principles, as he shows in the beginning, and are therefore unable to plan from scratch as he suggests.
I am starting to read about permaculture, but one important point is that, is not possible to be harmonious in a system drive by profit at any cost.
Very neat
I have this already on our hundred acre farm we have
Magnific!
wow amazing
Interesting. Looks very similar to rising rice paddies in Vietnam and some mountainous farming areas in, I think, Peru. Flying over US farmland is always a nice way to observe the bizarre, in terms of nature, but accepted way we have out here.
I have a question. where should you build your house in this landscape?
I wonder can this be simulated well in a game like City Skylines?
If not, maybe you could contact them, via some organisation, community or collection of professionals? If you could tell them how best to implement this or as a community give feedback this would be epic.
The educational value for players of treating the land poorly and get mudslides or do it well and have a thriving landscape will be the best ever!
Great video! Cool visuals
Thank you! Cheers!
Very smart, now how are you gonna implement this?
Hi!
I am trying to implement this, but I am just a beginner. I have a cartographic map of the area so, if anybody wants to help, drop your mail and I will send you the map and other data!
Are you inferring that private ownership is a problem? From your comment around the one minute mark. Please explain.
I really hate when people say save the planet or heal it. That phase I grossly inaccurate the planet if fine humans are screwed the planet has been through apocalyptic events for billions of years. Please start using the phase. This is how we can keep living on earth
I get that there isn't a lot of space on this table, but it would have been cool if you could have put in house sites.
Our planet will be ok. It went through myriad of changes and it will go through many more. Earth will be earth regardless whether it freezes completely or change into a huge dessert. Some species will disappear, others will evolve to cope with new surroundings. On the other hand saving humanity is the key. And responsible production of food is one of the most important aspects of modern world.
This is fascinating.
Great summary! ❤️
The flaw that i get from those videos is that it only shows it's working near rivers and high lands, what happens when you don't have one or both variables? Or you are proposing to move everyone on places that fits those geographical features?
GREAT CONTENT!
How would you use this model to restore the Aral Sea? Can you do a video on it?
Pretty cool
Awesome!
Wow, I feel like I'm reading a book in just 6 minutes!
Wonder if this would help with the water problems in California.
How can a video be both absolutely logical and right, yet super crazy (like (the need for or extent of) human intervention on the environment, in our II super crazy moderntimes) at the same time? - watch this video to find out!
How do you build this sandbox?
Good luck with getting the rich people on this... You're going to need it.
Is there a Formula for how much water buffer you need for your land?
I calculated the land of Sepp Holzer, and 1/5 of his land is water.
Is there any Information available?
This is cool in concept but where do the people live? What about modern infrastructure etc?
Very nice video(s) with nice explanations! May I ask how you solve the lighting for the topographic colouring?
I wonder what the smallest scale is that still works
what is that projector you are using? that's really cool
This video made me subscribe
How can we use this kind of info in our city front and back yards?
GET IT GOING LOVEE IT
Thank you! What can be the minimum size of land to immigrate this for food forest? Can it be done on a hectare ?
Is there a recommended proportion between the areas? I totally see this being profitable with crops of high value per area, but I’m skeptical about applying this to crops like corn, cotton or soy. Has it ever been done in that scale?
This is not the case everywhere on earth. It's a oversimplification to a massive sticky issue, that we need to deal with ASAP.
Yes, it is totally an oversimplification and would be different for different climates. But the over all concept of uses of the landscape profile is the main point of this video.
This is slowly confirming my thoughts of eywa being real