How these suburbs are turning into sustainable villages!

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  • Опубликовано: 7 май 2022
  • The united states of America, is the 2nd highest co2 emitting country in the world and has the third largest population with approximately 330 million people.
    According to US Department of Transportation. 276 million vehicles registered in the USA that means 91% of households have access to a vehicle.
    This is largely attributed to the fact that 50% of the population live in low density suburban neighborhoods and therefore depend on a vehicle to be able to get around.
    American Suburbia has grown exponentially since the post war era which was meant to elevate the housing crisis at the time, new building techniques made it fast & cheap to make mass produced homes,
    By the 1950s the landscape of America changed drastically from people working in industrial cities and then being able to afford what looked like a luxurious life in the suburbs.
    These suburban designs have not changed much over the last decades due to strict zoning laws which encouraged developers to leave out side walks, making these neighborhoods even more car dependent.
    The result is suburban sprawl, where all houses are equally spaced apart with large green open spaces to give the illusion of country living.
    These green spaces often consist of mono-cultures of lawns, which cover over 50 million acres in the USA.
    The lawns also come with ordinances that force the homeowner to regularly cut their lawns and refusal to do can result in receiving a penalty.
    Keeping the lawn neat and tidy is a huge industry, in 2020 Americans spent a staggering $105 billion on lawn care.
    But even more shocking is how the lawn has created biological desert zones,
    A study of residential lawns at National Science Foundation found that lawn maintenance is contributing to a continental-scale ecological homogenization.
    One million species on planet face extinction, U.N. report says. And humans will suffer as a result.
    However several states in the USA are making an effort to turn this around, starting in the gardens of American citizens.
    In this video we are going to show you how and why the American suburbs are bringing back biodiversity to their neighborhoods to help save the planet.
    Leading the way are the states with suburbs and cities in the desert, Las Vegas in Nevada and California, but is it enough and are they doing it correctly?
    Let us know what you think in the comments below 👇
    Learn more about Sustainable Landscaping with Doug Tallamy:
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    Learn more about using Permaculture for Green Infrastructure with Andrew Millison:
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Комментарии • 454

  • @LeafofLifeWorld
    @LeafofLifeWorld  2 года назад +49

    What do you think? Are suburbs doing their bit to restore threatened biodiversity? Can desert suburbs really be sustainable? Do we need to design future housing neighborhoods differently? Let us know in the comments below 👇
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    • @dustinabc
      @dustinabc 2 года назад +3

      If the #nonaggressionprinciple is applied things will definitely improve.
      When growth & development are subsidized and controlled by force & coercion (government), you cannot have a sustainable system.
      Natural ecosystems change according to feedback from the environment. Decentralized decisions are made by individual organisms following basic principles.
      When change occurs and decisions are made in response to mandates, dictates, subjective laws, and corrupt regulations, you are bound to have problems.
      Always remember to ask, "is it consensual/voluntary?". If it isn't, then the thing is neither sustainable nor moral.

    • @Boo-pv4hn
      @Boo-pv4hn 2 года назад

      The uk towns are also rewinding, adding hundreds of trees, creating biological mini ecosystems by letting previously excessively trimmed grass to go back to nature - LOT of flowers and plants have come back and i the ink it’s really helping our nature, my local towns been doing it for a year, I’ve been gardening all my life even when I had a bedsit grew lots of fruit and veg, now have front and back garden, put out 5 hanging baskets, 80 bulbs, 10 roots, grown 30 house plants and my 10 tomatoes 3 potato’s 9 peas, 17 strawberries. 5 pepper plants, chives, spinachx2, plum tree, planning a cherry tree next year and ordering some plants to add to my seedlings (35) in the home that will go outside. We can all do our part, you can also put in “green walls” these can be put up easily they are like plastic boxes that house plants against a wall, it also helps insulation if you are building a home consider green roofs they are beautiful and great for nature.

    • @pepwoui
      @pepwoui 2 года назад

      @@dustinabc Agreed.

    • @rubenvanderlaan4234
      @rubenvanderlaan4234 Год назад +2

      This combined with adding bicycle lanes, seperate bus lanes and good metro and train systems will save the americans billions of dollars they can invest in healthcare and the school system.

    • @arkadea3046
      @arkadea3046 Год назад +1

      If anything, the English lawn doesn't belong in Arizona or California. Also, if someone has to have their nice cut lawn, then how about just let famers bring a flock of sheep to graze instead of wasting time riding around on a gas-powered lawn mower.

  • @wisses1805
    @wisses1805 2 года назад +716

    I would prefer a city plan that included Shops, Schools and everything you need on a daily basis in a walkable range less than 15 Minutes. So that you are more independent from the car.

    • @NotPearse
      @NotPearse 2 года назад +46

      that's why I think we should abolish zoning, or at least make it more lenient, if people could make shops and businesses in their houses or on their lawns I think that would be cool. Also make it so people can do what they want on their land and not have to maintain fences as lawns according to city ordinance

    • @BossOfAllTrades
      @BossOfAllTrades Год назад +14

      @@ivalice1313 yea true cars also are a massive waste of energy and resources that can be solved.

    • @ladyselenafelicitywhite1596
      @ladyselenafelicitywhite1596 Год назад +12

      Ironically, that's one thing the Soviets got right!

    • @evanstowers8529
      @evanstowers8529 Год назад

      This is the huge thing people realize. These zoning laws creating the suburban sprawl will be our undoing.

    • @evanstowers8529
      @evanstowers8529 Год назад

      People don't* realize

  • @soulshadoww55
    @soulshadoww55 Год назад +298

    One thing I'd like to add is that new housing developments here in the U.S. should include small businesses. Like a small grocery store that you can send your kid to on his bike. It's ridiculous to have to drive just to get a carton of milk. Why don't these housing developments include essential shopping opportunities.

    • @Distress.
      @Distress. Год назад +3

      Now every housing development is the same, mine has a shopping center nearby, but I don't go there to get my groceries usually I drive to my preferred supermarket a but father away.

    • @CQuinnLady
      @CQuinnLady Год назад +1

      is it not possible to put in a corner shop? Alot of places used to use the front of houses around where I live in australia. As long as u got council approval to convert that part of ur house to a shop. Does America have a similar dept?

    • @jgreijin
      @jgreijin Год назад +12

      @@CQuinnLady Zoning codes in America usually make it illegal. It's why older places with apartment buildings and stores are getting really expensive. They're cheaper and offer higher quality of life, but older people living in suburbs will not allow changes because it would change the "atmosphere" and whatnot. Theres a lot of videos out there on why suburbs are pushing cities into debt and why they are all around horrible.
      Edit: Cheaper as in lower heating bills, you need to use your car less etc

    • @MagnaMater2
      @MagnaMater2 Год назад +10

      @@CQuinnLady As an European just learned yesterday that the US is completely unflexible and has not constructed any liveable and workable village in the last 50, perhaps even 70 years. If you wanted a lession in how to completely fail at sustainability, look at american - and 'modern' european - suburbs. Europe isn't really much better at planning:
      We now have a solar-technician and a window-blends maker, both a 15-minutes walk away, what a win, indeed. - BUT: In our village the brickheads annihilated the largest local farmstead with a woodland and about the best field with the best crop-yields in the area, we got most of our food from, just to build some 600 new living units without adding a shopping-possibility in walking distance (asides solar-pannels and window-blends, thank you). The gardens in front of the new houses are so small and shaded by the next house, that the inhabitants can impossibly feed themselves. Now the wheat is gone, AND the new settlers can not be fed by the local produce, lacking gardening space (and water cisterns, because the well and the rivulet - the remains banned into a subterranean channel in case of heavy rainfalls - dried up with the wood gone), AND there is no possibility to get food around the corner. The last farms selling homemade bread, milk and eggs are a two hours walk away - in opposite directions.
      And checking on regional development-plans, even those farms are already projected into housing rows. - Nobody in the regional development-center is wasting the most basic thought: WHAT will these new settlers EAT? Where do they get their food from? - We haven't even gotten a bus-stop, those having been erased in the last decade for alleged 'lack of use'. (The bus was stopping half an hour's walk away from both: our village-center and the shopping centers, of course nobody would use it for shopping). That is indeed 'smart' planning. And now the government tells us, we're not supposed to use private cars...
      - But my cousin knew nothing better and moved in with her family. 'Oh, it looks so neat, here.' - No, my dear, 'neat' in this case translates as 'dead'.

    • @CQuinnLady
      @CQuinnLady Год назад

      @@jgreijin ok so u cant apply to having the area rezoned commercial?

  • @elainefarr3155
    @elainefarr3155 2 года назад +138

    Living in the desert southwest, USA, I live the water worry every day. When we moved into our home, it had a huge lawn, which I soon let die. We now have several drought tolerant trees, elderberries, cactus, pomegranate shrubs and chickens in our yard,. We are working to improve the rain management as well as plants that are drought tolerant and also offer food or medicine for us and our animals. I'm glad to see cities and towns removing lawn requirements, allowing chickens and small livestock like rabbits in town and allowing more diversity in landscaping. I've never lived in an HOA run neighborhood, and hope I never do.

    • @TakatoSakurazawa
      @TakatoSakurazawa 2 года назад

      HOAs are the cancer of the US housing market. I'm glad that I keep seeing more developments near my home that says in big "NO HOA"

    • @andrew300169
      @andrew300169 Год назад +5

      Interesting, there’s no reason that can’t happen. I live on a 10 year old estate in the UK and saw my first squirrel coming into the backyard picking up bird feed and sneaking off into the young trees I planted very rewarding. The small pond helps bring in the life.

  • @fastestanimal7922
    @fastestanimal7922 2 года назад +88

    In this supposed "Land of the free", the people are not allowed to freely customize their houses and lawns to match the local biodiversity. Because the local authorities will impose a fine. What you get is a continent full of boring copy-pasted suburbia with the same lawns and unwalkable accident prone suburban roads.
    Why can't the people build gardens on their lawns? Why not have small public eatery stalls and food-zones peppered at random spots in the neighborhood? Why does a family of 6 need to have the same size and style of house as the neighbor with 2 people and a dog? Why is it necessary to have homogeneous architecture style across all of the suburban sprawl which has no significant history and is teared down every 20 years because it needs repairs?

    • @beckysam3913
      @beckysam3913 Год назад +9

      its land of FREE MARKET , capitalism, its not meant for individual rights, lol.

    • @gdspace5592
      @gdspace5592 Год назад +4

      I hate people like you who make it sound like the U.S is such a terrible place to live and that the government is oppressing us. FOR CRYING OUT LOUD, IT’S A FREAKING LAWN. Plus you didn’t even mention that fact that the rules in every neighborhood are different. Some do have really strict rules, but others let you add and customize what you want on your house and lawn.

    • @happymolecule8894
      @happymolecule8894 Год назад +3

      @@beckysam3913 Yes actually, it was supposed to be individual rights, which includes free markets. Unfortunately the two major parties are both trying to restrict freedoms to fit their own agenda, the founding fathers were libertarian.

    • @kwasiahenkora6583
      @kwasiahenkora6583 Год назад

      @@gdspace5592 85% of America is homogeneous looking (and ugly) because of strict (and honestly dumb) zoning codes. But it’s deeper than that.

    • @backintimealwyn5736
      @backintimealwyn5736 Год назад +3

      @@gdspace5592 the lawn thing is really stupid though. C'mon. It's stupid. As for the zoning , stupid. It's okay we all have our stupidities. IN my ocuntry you're not allowed to own a cow.

  • @amillison
    @amillison 2 года назад +122

    Thanks for highlighting my work and keep the great content coming :-)

    • @oraach
      @oraach 2 года назад

      Kind and sharing people usually have their ideas shared...and noticed...

    • @onthemoveot
      @onthemoveot 2 года назад +1

      Hello Andrew. We really need your help in Australia, lots of bio-desert sprawl happening down here and I can see minimal evidence of these type of practices. Cheers Chad.

    • @erickm119
      @erickm119 Год назад +1

      This is the comment I was looking for, thank you Andrew for the great content you share with all of us.

  • @laMoria
    @laMoria 2 года назад +135

    You've failed to address the core issue : suburbs sprawling. Denser neighbourhoods leave more space for wildlife outside of towns, yet cities like Los Angeles have an average population density of 215 inhab./km², which is mediocre compared to France's capital region (Ile de France) which has an average population density of 1'021 inhab./km². And 80% of it is cropland or woodlands.

    • @b_uppy
      @b_uppy 2 года назад +17

      And that a zoning problem based in part on false environmental assumptions (leastwise in my area). Pretty disgusting. It's broken up farms and increased a wasteland of mcmansions in my area...

    • @victorevans6639
      @victorevans6639 2 года назад +16

      yeah all i could think was we wouldnt have to rewild the suburbs if they were still wildnerness, we need to build desner housing if we wanna stop climate change

    • @karld1791
      @karld1791 2 года назад +16

      @@victorevans6639 houses are so expensive now that if zoning is changed to allow infill development it would be worth making that infill. That would provide homes to keep people from spreading more. California SB9 and SB10 are attempts to do this though the bills aren’t all powerful. Zoning also needs changing to allow small shops and offices in residential areas so people don’t have to drive as much to run errands.

    • @adurpandya2742
      @adurpandya2742 2 года назад +5

      Dense neighborhoods require industrial agriculture. Yards allow you to fulfill all your noncaloric nutritional needs on your own property.

    • @laMoria
      @laMoria 2 года назад +19

      @@adurpandya2742 yeah, ofc. Until you realise there's no one who grows vegetables in their backyard. Plus you can live in cities and get cheap organic food from local farmers. The denser the city the more cropland available for local food growth.

  • @b_uppy
    @b_uppy 2 года назад +107

    It's a false assumption that native plants have deep roots, and that cultivated plants have shallow ones. It really depends on each plant because there is a diversity of root depths in both categories, and some grasses get deep roots and others don't, but there is also the factor of how they're maintained...

    • @trumplostlol3007
      @trumplostlol3007 2 года назад +9

      Native trees can better adapt to the environment. Say black locust has shallow roots that spread very widely. Black locust adapts to an environment that is destroyed by humans, i.e., with not many other trees. So, instead of forced to have their root being deeper, they just spread their root widely to absorb more water during the rainy season. Their leaves are very small. They can conserve water during the dry season. But some native trees actually have very deep roots. Some maple trees have deep roots and are native. But not all of them have deep tap roots. HOWEVER, ALL native trees have DEEPER roots than grass. It is not only roots that matter. The shades provided by trees will protect the soil surface from absorbing excessive sun radiation in the summer. This makes the relative humidity of the entire area much higher. Grass can't protect the soil surface. And with all the lawn mowing freaks, the summer gets even hotter and drier.

    • @b_uppy
      @b_uppy 2 года назад

      @Trump Lost LOL
      Locust trees are nitrogen 'fixers' and can be coppiced, harvested for tree hay, used for fenceposts and firewood and has lovely flowers and produce edible beans that must be cooked. The leaves are compound. The root system is considered both a taproot and a heart root.
      Conservation is largely a myth. The environment has been altered, the carrier pigeon and the dodo are gone and buffalo roam a fraction of the land that they used to.
      Vetiver grass gets roots 7 meters deep, and hard and red fescue grasses also get deep roots, deeper roots than many native conifers. Native Buffalo grass gets roots up to three feet.
      What do *you* bring?

    • @trumplostlol3007
      @trumplostlol3007 2 года назад +3

      @@b_uppy The grass you mentioned is not native and almost definitely will not be used by property owners for their lawns. Almost 99.999% of property owners will NOT grow tall growing grass. I have Timothy and tall fescue in my property for controlling gophers and other critters. But most if not all property owners will use runner type grass that are very short with extremely shallow root systems. And it is NOT just the depth of the roots, it is also the strength of the roots. And as I have said, it is NOT just about roots. Grass will never ever produce the amount of organic matter that trees can produce. A tree can produce leaves, branches, root branches, ... that are more massive than ANY grass on this planet. The dead and decaying branches, tree leaves, underground tree roots, .. are called "humus" or simply decaying organic matter. No grass can match what a tree can produce. And organic matter is what matters to the fertility of soil. HUMUS. You want to talk about soil microbiology next? LOL

    • @b_uppy
      @b_uppy 2 года назад

      @Trump Lost LOL
      Buffalo grass is native across America, red fescue is native to the to the Eastern and Western US--contrary to what you said. Buffalo grass and hard fescue are short growing grasses are suitable for lawns.
      Forbs, grasses, trees and shrubs are needed *symbiotically* along with avoiding chemical amendments is crucial to rebuilding soil carbon, etc. You can say 'trees are the great carbon sinks' but it means zero without the support of a balanced soil biome.
      It is the biota in the soil that is really sinking the carbon.
      Compaction is an issue that affects tree growth and merely planting trees fails to correct the problems that poses on using trees as a carbon sink.
      I believe it is either Dr Elaine Ingham or Dr Christine Jones discusses that at length in a video lecture on YT It is the diverse biome supported by a variety of plant types that allow optimal carbon sequestration.
      UC Davis says Grasslands More Reliable Carbon Sink Than Trees because aerosolization of carbon during a forest fire.
      Conversely UC Davis is ignoring the role succulents could play in fire suppression, as well as allowing diverse plant life and the benefits of forest rakes reduces fire danger...
      What do you bring?

    • @trumplostlol3007
      @trumplostlol3007 2 года назад +1

      @@b_uppy I have a PhD in Economics from Johns Hopkins. I had a 3.9 GPA in a pre-vet program. My interest now is plant physiology, soil microbiology, human nutrition. I am now PRACTICING natural farming. You have no idea who you are talking to.
      Tall fescue is native too. But no one will grow tall fescue in their lawn. Do you have Buffalo grass in your lawn? LOL
      Buffalo grass is NOTHING compared to my Big Leaf Maple tree. Don't lie to yourself and just admit the fact. Trees and shrubs are 100% much much much much more productive than stupid grass in producing carbohydrates from sun radiation. Why would anyone be stupid enough to think grass is better than trees in Carbon Fixation?
      How much biomass can you get from 1 acre of grass? How much biomass can you create with 1 acre of trees? Don't just look at the surface. I have tons and tons of tree roots underground to produce humus underneath the soil to make the entire are much more fertile NATURALLY. Your grass is NOTHING.
      You want bio diversity? Replace 99% of existing grass by trees, shrubs and flowers. We have birds, bees, hornets, butterflies, tree frogs, tree snakes, spiders, .......... in a forest. What do you have in your grass pasture? LOCUSTS? LOL We need native shrubs and flowers to feed butterflies and other native species. What do you have in your stupid pasture? Ground squirrels? Gophers? Voles? Moles? LOL You love those critters? LOL
      You want diversity? How many living organisms do you have on the surface of our land? How many living organisms do you have underneath the soil? There are hundreds more TIMES of living organisms under than above ground. Trees create an underground world that ignorant people can't even dream of.
      Sylvia, D.M.; Fuhrmann, J.J.; Hartel, P.G.; Zuberer, D.A. (1999). Principles and Applications of Soil Microbiology. New Jersey: Prentice Hall. pp. 39-41. ISBN 0130941174.
      99.99% of all wildfires are created by stupid human actions, like burning trash, camp fire, vandalism, cigarette ends, ... There is no cloud and hence no lightning in California in summer. How do you get any wildfires started? You need people management, not forest management, to stop wildfires. Bring back the forest to raise the relative humidity and lower the surface temperature. Then you will have a lower chance of wildfire.
      You are making me laugh. LOL LOL LOL LOL LOL LOL LOL LOL LOL LOL LOL LOL LOL LOL LOL LOL LOL LOL LOL

  • @syedalishanzaidi1
    @syedalishanzaidi1 2 года назад +73

    Yes, agreed with most of what is explained here. Just to add, builders of housing complexes should by law be compelled to forgo lawn spaces in favor of patches with dense shrubbery which provides food and shelter for birds and insect life. This also goes for sidewalk trees. Many so-called Avenue trees are sterile without being able to provide food and shelter for birds, insects and other wildlife. This is done to minimize the costs of cleanup for councils who plant and manage trees an do decorative shrubs. Suburbian landscapes are built to sanitizing standards, lest birds and bees should have a chance to find sustenance from them. Time to think less of ourselves and more of nature, so in return nature will reward us in ways we have forgotten from our past.

    • @trumplostlol3007
      @trumplostlol3007 2 года назад

      The majority of Americans are not that advanced in their thinking. They think that will lower than property values. There are still many lawn freaks who love to see their properties looking like a golf course. LOL

    • @jamessparkman6604
      @jamessparkman6604 2 года назад

      And have less children

    • @NatoriousGamePlay
      @NatoriousGamePlay Год назад

      LMAO that's exactly what the "elite" want. For you to not have kids

    • @jamessparkman6604
      @jamessparkman6604 Год назад

      @@Moses_VII Hey here’s something to think about with less children In America can I make Santa Clause job easier easier doesn’t it I think it would take a load of heavyweight of Kris Kringle shoulder

    • @trumplostlol3007
      @trumplostlol3007 Год назад

      @@NatoriousGamePlay It is called family planning. The elite foul orange and that the elite Cuban are killing you people, their poorly educated supporters. LOL LOL LOL LOL

  • @davidcanatella4279
    @davidcanatella4279 Год назад +15

    I noticed that suburban houses these days are ridiculously too big. That needs to stop and be reversed. Also, small schools, a public library and small shops all surrounding a park should be within walking distance letting community life develop and a reduction in car use

  • @Justus11167
    @Justus11167 2 года назад +12

    I’m just finishing up the permaculture design class from Oregon State. Forced out of my old career into a new one so I’m following my passion, permaculture. It’s the future.

  • @giuseppecappelluti3626
    @giuseppecappelluti3626 2 года назад +52

    I live in the UK. The housing model is similar to the one in the US, and I fail to understand why the public authorities don’t plant trees in the lawns.

    • @CircuitReborn
      @CircuitReborn 2 года назад +3

      'Traditional' neighborhoods.

    • @danishsyed1068
      @danishsyed1068 2 года назад +3

      Honestly, I always find it odd that they are neighborhoods don't have trees tho that probably because my neighborhood is right next to a forest and every house has a tree next to the mailbox

    • @avatr7109
      @avatr7109 Год назад +7

      You cry about that ....
      you guys don't know whats the situation India..
      NO TREES , ONLY people eveywhere...
      We sniff each others sweat here...

    • @icetrip2417
      @icetrip2417 Год назад +2

      Bro you lie the houses here in the UK are garbage and small

    • @claireskrine4837
      @claireskrine4837 Год назад +2

      Really? I'm in the UK too - I've seen many new developments go up near my MiL and also my parents. You cannot get permission for new development without making provision for easy accessibility to shops, schools, roads and other infrastructure like sewerage and electricity supply (most recently, west London boroughs have had to put a moratorium on new housing as the electricity is being taken by data farms). Most of the developments I've seen try to have a range of different types and sizes of houses. And there are no restrictions on what you can do with your gardens - they start basic but you can plant your own trees and shrubs with due regard for boundary lines. So these developments start out looking like toy town, but within 10-15 years, individuality has often been asserted.

  • @jamesbackyard7192
    @jamesbackyard7192 2 года назад +13

    I lived in southern California for 5 years and I never watered my yard and yea it was dirt for a few months but most of the year it was still green. And I lived on a super dry mountain.

    • @LeafofLifeWorld
      @LeafofLifeWorld  2 года назад +5

      For everyone living in the desert you have to accept the plants won't be green all year around! The rest of the year you can enjoy it

  • @starmole5000
    @starmole5000 2 года назад +6

    Leave your lawns to grow. It's amazing what turns up.
    And definitely don't poison your lawn to make it perfect. It's not good for anyone!

  • @chrisl418
    @chrisl418 2 года назад +16

    We don't need megahouses. We need communities, small houses, frontand backyard biodiverse food forests.

    • @Law19157
      @Law19157 Год назад +2

      People like spacious homes not closets to live in. Native Wildlife gardens does the job just fine. Local parks can also be turned into native wildlife gardens.

    • @TheOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO
      @TheOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO Год назад

      @@Law19157 except you can't walk to the supermarket. Old people and kids don't have the freedom to go anywhere without a car. Most kids can't even go to school by themselves.

    • @Law19157
      @Law19157 Год назад

      @@TheOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO I can walk to my Supermarket. Most suburbs have groceries stores close by. In a big city you still have get on a bus or subway to go to a grocery store and places in NY don't even have groceries stores to begin with just bodega's.

  • @HisameArtwork
    @HisameArtwork 2 года назад +4

    the mayorship put lawns around our apartment blocks. I put thornless blackberries and flowers. I can't put native stuff because they are considered weeds and they'd rip them out. They already cut some of my blackberries with their truck lawn mowers. Out of all the dumb things we copied from americans, lawns is in my top 5.

    • @LeafofLifeWorld
      @LeafofLifeWorld  2 года назад

      Thats sad, why are native considered weeds? Madness! Where are you located that does this?

  • @randysmith5435
    @randysmith5435 2 года назад +7

    There are far too many acres of land being devastated by a custom of maintaining monoculture lawns to look like over grazed pastures we have to plant more trees and keep the environment diverse.

  • @KJSvitko
    @KJSvitko 2 года назад +8

    Every child should plant a tree, bush or flowers with a parent or teacher.
    It will help connect them to nature and the environment.

  • @kerryfoster1
    @kerryfoster1 Год назад +1

    We have lawns both front and back but no matter how dry they get they are NEVER watered. If the grass dries out it just goes brown. As soon as the rains come it springs back into life - no problem. Sometimes I don't need to cut the grass for weeks. there is absolutely NO NEED to water grass it will not die!

  • @yo2trader539
    @yo2trader539 2 года назад +6

    So Indigenous people of the Americas were most sophisticated in their approach to nature. And the Europeans killed 90% of them took their land.

  • @udoheinz7845
    @udoheinz7845 2 года назад +7

    Great video!
    We schould do permaculture projects and build food forrests where ever we can.
    It would solve so many problems at once.
    Its cheap, easy and everyone can work together.
    I think that exactly what we need!
    The sooner the better.

  • @bullion87
    @bullion87 Год назад +3

    I am always wondering why people need all that grass around their houses, why not planning tree and fruit

  • @Raven1015
    @Raven1015 Год назад +1

    I work for a lawn care company... I fucking HATE when people are watering their lawns when it's raining outside or literally just rained a few hours prior or a day before...

  • @kevinbyrne4538
    @kevinbyrne4538 2 года назад +8

    4:44 -- This is the gypsy moth caterpillar (Lymantria dispar dispar). It is a non-native, invasive species, which has devastated North American trees.

    • @jennifersvitko5997
      @jennifersvitko5997 Год назад +2

      And, the robin at 5:00 is a European robin (Erithacus rubecula), not an American robin (Turdus migratorius).

  • @JasonVectrex_187
    @JasonVectrex_187 Год назад +7

    I can tell you that, these changes are bot happening across the USA, mostly in desert areas, where they are forced too for financial or by government laws. The average American does not give a damn about insects/animals or nature. And that has not changed where I am in 40 years. It's work, people will not do the work for free and even if you give tax credits or something else in return, people will still not all do it because of laziness.

  • @Collin_The_Red
    @Collin_The_Red 2 года назад +18

    As far as plants go, i know that in almost every single major city across the USA, Food based plants are NOT welcome on your own property. Mainly because people who control the food imports and exports don’t like you giving food away for free. It affects their $$$
    The rest don’t like it cause it “makes your yard look bad” so they will complain to whoever will listen.
    In the smaller towns across the country, food based plants are more welcome as well as plants in general. Most people like the idea of it.
    For the country homes, you do you. Anything goes.

  • @raphlvlogs271
    @raphlvlogs271 2 года назад +12

    non native and introduced doesn't always mean invasive

    • @JohnJohnson-rl7fq
      @JohnJohnson-rl7fq 2 года назад

      Bermuda grass is taking over. It alone is bad enough.

    • @MrChristianDT
      @MrChristianDT 2 года назад

      True, not all of them are worth worrying about clearing out, if they can be reasonably worked around. Out of all the invasive species in my area, I'm primarily just concerned with four- domesticated grapes, trees of Heaven, Japanese knotweed & multiflora rose. I might end up expanding that to include burning bushes, but that's really the extent of it.

  • @grambo4436
    @grambo4436 Год назад +1

    The HOA, Zoning laws, restrictions is everything why i hate suburbia.

  • @meta.aesthetica
    @meta.aesthetica 2 года назад +1

    Thank you for sharing!

  • @drinny26
    @drinny26 Год назад +3

    The hard part is convincing home owners to do this.

    • @LeafofLifeWorld
      @LeafofLifeWorld  Год назад

      not all of them but some of them probably

    • @drinny26
      @drinny26 Год назад +2

      @@LeafofLifeWorld in my neighborhood out of 100 homes about 5 actually plant gardens and care about their landscaping. I always thought inspiring others by showing them by example is the best way but I think it boils down to most people are just lazy.

    • @souljahaden6184
      @souljahaden6184 5 месяцев назад

      @@drinny26most people are lazy and won’t do it until they see how badly the earth is trending but they won’t realize that until their modern luxuries are taken away

  • @bunnyben5607
    @bunnyben5607 Год назад +1

    This is so wrong on so many levels. For one thing no matter how many native plants you put on your lawn, the larger animals are never going to come back, or if they do they'll be in direct contact with humans, which will lead to attacks and more animals getting put down.

  • @thefamilydud2225
    @thefamilydud2225 Год назад

    We have a front yard garden. No chemicals and less work than a lawn. Just plant perennials. We are loaded with aronia for smoothies. It’s stringent so you don’t use much in a smoothie. But it’s the most nutritious fruit that grow super easy.

  • @hoponpop3330
    @hoponpop3330 Год назад +2

    If you ever get to Connecticut it’s been taken over by the wilderness.
    There is more wildlife than when I lived there years ago.

    • @LeafofLifeWorld
      @LeafofLifeWorld  Год назад

      Wow that's amazing, do you have any before and after pictures of that, if so send to leafoflifefilms@gmail.com thank you!

  • @frankfranze5538
    @frankfranze5538 Год назад +1

    Shows how industrialized our environment and thinking 🤔 has become without realizing it day to day for the past few hundred year's.

  • @kevinbarnes218
    @kevinbarnes218 2 года назад +7

    Andrew Millison is a great channel. Especially loved his video on permaculture in Egypt. Great video again!

    • @LeafofLifeWorld
      @LeafofLifeWorld  2 года назад +1

      I really loved the India series but I think he's educational specific videos are the most enlightening about permaculture

  • @OldManDave1960
    @OldManDave1960 Год назад

    That said, preserving, restoring, improving and maintaining a better environment is a fine idea. It improves quality of life for everyone. And everything. ❤

  • @user-fv9ri9uc1i
    @user-fv9ri9uc1i Год назад +1

    In Japan, there is a long-standing custom of planting a tree in the yard when a child is born.
    When the children grow up and get married, they make furniture from the tree and take it to their new homes.

  • @jamesgrover2005
    @jamesgrover2005 2 года назад +4

    Good job, this is an interesting topic.

    • @LeafofLifeWorld
      @LeafofLifeWorld  2 года назад +1

      Thank you, definitely I think it's important to consider how we make our future settlements as a human species as it is impacting the environment, we need to design our suburbs and cities better, I hope to see it in my life time

  • @TomTom-xp2jb
    @TomTom-xp2jb Год назад +1

    105 billion in lawn care products is insanity. We don't need any more golf courses. What we do need is more thoughtful planning. 👍

  • @Zoza15
    @Zoza15 2 года назад +2

    What about local zoning regulation for services like grocery shopping, dentist, barber shops etc etc reachable by walking and cycling.
    Greenery is simple.

  • @aptorres01
    @aptorres01 7 месяцев назад

    Great work.

  • @MassiveChetBakerFan
    @MassiveChetBakerFan Год назад +2

    We need denser cities and towns.

  • @FlamespeedyAMV
    @FlamespeedyAMV 2 года назад +12

    I would love to have a city looking like a jungle, that be so sick

  • @samanthab1923
    @samanthab1923 Год назад

    What’s interesting is all us kids who grew up in Levittowns or those kind of starter home developments don’t want that.

  • @notnotjake
    @notnotjake Год назад

    This is great stuff! I really want to see how we can bring this all up at scale

  • @joaocosta3374
    @joaocosta3374 Год назад +4

    É uma pena que não estejam ao corrente do que está a acontecer em Detroit, com a criação de quintas urbanas no meio dos subúrbios depopulados.

  • @scipioafricanus2
    @scipioafricanus2 Месяц назад

    all suburbs should be required to have sidewalks, curbs, drain sewers and grassy knolls between the curb and sidewalks for tree planting.

  • @86Corvus
    @86Corvus Год назад +1

    Thats why you should turn your lawns into gardens

  • @kimberleypex
    @kimberleypex Год назад +5

    Feels very good ! This sort of initiatives ⭐️⭐️⭐️
    Green the World is the only option .

  • @johnjohnfrederickh.webber2124
    @johnjohnfrederickh.webber2124 Год назад +2

    Instead of grass lawns....trees that provide shade and even fruit.... communities like these should have tree farming systems that can be managed and made into a business by a homeowner's cooperative. It will help conserve water resources that may not be easily provided due to climate change... Very important for all of us to be concerned and ever protective of our beautiful environment and good air quality. Good tree farmers can help with the dwindling supply of trees in the planet....

    • @souljahaden6184
      @souljahaden6184 5 месяцев назад

      Look up LA Crop swap, basically using rain water and providing food to his local community

  • @wolfy1987
    @wolfy1987 Год назад +1

    This isn't a commentary on the main subject of the vid, but the bit at the end showing "sustainable" houses. Modern architecture is not sustainable, includes many large panes of glass, many man-made high polluting materials, etc. Look into what kind of architecture was historically built in your area. That's usually the best option. In my region many structures were built from, or clad in, locally sourced stone, often with very thick walls for insulation. And no structures were built with flat roofs before 1930, as flat roofs(like are common on modern architecture) do no suit the climate. Stucco was also rarely used here, as it doesn't hold up as well to our fairly harsh winters. Of course the opposite is true in New Mexico, where people could build structures of earth with flat roofs, due to little rainfall

  • @cyrilroux7830
    @cyrilroux7830 Год назад

    Hi from France. Very interesting video thx

  • @ryhol5417
    @ryhol5417 Год назад

    Zone to allow services within biking range, no lawns, no mandatory watering, mandate native plants

  • @Zerolucky7777
    @Zerolucky7777 2 года назад +19

    It's amazing how the United States can plan its urban planning so badly

    • @LeafofLifeWorld
      @LeafofLifeWorld  2 года назад +9

      I don't think they are alone, everywhere in the world seems to have problems, but I don't see why the USA can't turn it around, I think they will have to soon

    • @mikepowell8611
      @mikepowell8611 2 года назад +3

      Its easy to look back in hind sight and pick out all the bad.

    • @catherinesanchez1185
      @catherinesanchez1185 2 года назад +3

      Big $$ ijn highway building , $$ equals influence , then everyone wanted the so called "american dream" house, lawn, garage , trees etc ...

    • @garcjr
      @garcjr 2 года назад +3

      Everyone's to blame for it. We could build more walkable less car dependent communities. But one side of the political spectrum doesn't want affordable housing or densely populated neighborhoods near their suburban or urban cookie-cutter neighborhood. Then the other side claims we want more walkable communities but not in my backyard because it'll destroy the"character" of the neighborhood.

    • @seanthe100
      @seanthe100 2 года назад +4

      We live the way we want to live most Americans like having back yards and being able to escape the rat race temporarily at our own homes. In dense configurations the ability to escape is severely diminished.

  • @mikeycbaby
    @mikeycbaby Год назад +2

    Love this video but must point out that the robin footage was that of a European robin and not an American robin which is in the thrush family and much larger.

  • @nickc6380
    @nickc6380 2 года назад +2

    The ecosystem would be even healthier if it was just forests and no neighborhood is there. Build denser in urban areas so we aren’t clearing more and more land to build plastic jungles

    • @LeafofLifeWorld
      @LeafofLifeWorld  2 года назад +3

      Denser urban areas also have many problems, live in a dense city of Europe and it just smells of sewage

    • @nataliekhanyola5669
      @nataliekhanyola5669 Год назад

      Exactly!!

    • @nickc6380
      @nickc6380 Год назад

      @@LeafofLifeWorld those are vanity problems, all science shows that denser living is better for nature

  • @utethornburg7715
    @utethornburg7715 Год назад

    Las Vegas takes up grass from neighborhoods, which is great, however dozens of golf courses are still there.

  • @bennyjenkins5954
    @bennyjenkins5954 Год назад

    I live in suburbia but I am very lucky to live on the edge of a zone to where I can walk to a school, restaurants, and a grocery store in 10 minutes. My neighborhood thankfully has side walks and is covered in trees but things need to change.

    • @austinradtke9730
      @austinradtke9730 Год назад

      The "old suburbs" built before the reliance on cars are usually the ones that are the most walkable and have the most diverse housing. Unfortunately due to outdated zoning policies, they're not the kind of suburbs that can be built anymore.

    • @bennyjenkins5954
      @bennyjenkins5954 Год назад

      @@austinradtke9730 My neighborhood was built in the early 2000s

  • @P4RRY-G
    @P4RRY-G Год назад +2

    Permaculture food forests is the way forward
    Large Green lawns are a waste of space if not used

    • @souljahaden6184
      @souljahaden6184 5 месяцев назад

      Yeah or native plant habitats instead of lawns

  • @darkmatter6471
    @darkmatter6471 Год назад +2

    Who wants to have boring hours with when we should have more permaculture as a solution for water shortage and the sun’s unbearable heat

  • @angelacondezojimenez9891
    @angelacondezojimenez9891 2 года назад +3

    Nice video!!!!!!!! Nice video!!!!!!!! could you help us to understand the difference between agroecology and permaculture? Greetings from Peru!!

  • @jahangirkakarjahangirkakar6649
    @jahangirkakarjahangirkakar6649 Год назад +1

    Wish you good luck gentlemans. 😍😍😍😍😍

  • @nicolediedrichsen3000
    @nicolediedrichsen3000 2 года назад +15

    Thank you for the interesting video.I did not realize how much nature was destroyed to clear space for the suburbs. I think the only way to live sustainably is to live with and in nature. Build housing without destroying nature and then planting new "nature". Even with local wild plants and permaculture it is not the same as nature. Biodiversity always suffers. Use space more efficiently too.

    • @LeafofLifeWorld
      @LeafofLifeWorld  2 года назад +4

      Totally agree i believe we can integrate our lives with nature like we have done for thousands of years, permacture does not mean to exclude nature, at least from my understanding of it since its meant to be about permanent culture which is about integrating nature 💚🌿🌾🌱

    • @nicolediedrichsen3000
      @nicolediedrichsen3000 2 года назад +4

      @@LeafofLifeWorld From what I understand, permaculture does integrate nature and tries to replicate nature to a certain degree but is still designing nature in doing so. I like to look at this by looking at nature as the work of all plants and animals that live their lives and shape their environment. Man is just one of many and not the designing part. If you design nature, only those plants and animals that fit into the design will survive.

    • @Reyajh
      @Reyajh 2 года назад

      @@nicolediedrichsen3000 This is very true and I'm not disagreeing with you, however, we can design for MORE diversity. We can actually have a net positive impact and increase diversity. We alone can do this. We CAN reverse the negative impacts we've created.

    • @LeafofLifeWorld
      @LeafofLifeWorld  2 года назад +5

      Tbh I don't think there is anything wrong with humans designing nature, because we have already been doing it for thousands years, we would not have the food we eat as we know it, we have manipulated nature to be able to exist and thrive within it
      (excluding all the monocultures that some civilizations have gravitated towards)
      as long as we do this manipulation in a holistic way in the areas that we live and settle around, then we can thrive in a more harmonic and sustainable way, like we have done before, before we lost this knowledge almost altogether!
      Thats not to say we can't leave nature alone, we already have national parks that are strictly protected for wild life for that.

    • @nicolediedrichsen3000
      @nicolediedrichsen3000 2 года назад

      @@Reyajh Yes, we can increase biodiversity. But less than if we lived with nature. They found out that in the USA, I believe, areas that were restored had less biodiversity than areas that native Americans had stewardship over. I presume, they knew how to live with nature.

  • @nuclearwarhead9338
    @nuclearwarhead9338 Год назад

    This is more of a band-aid instead of an actual fix.
    Car dependency designs must gone.

  • @bogeyonanostrilhair9568
    @bogeyonanostrilhair9568 2 года назад +10

    You're forgetting about drying out water elsewhere, because these suburbs are dry places and the gardens still need watering. Recycled and cleaned drinking water going to waste.

    • @LeafofLifeWorld
      @LeafofLifeWorld  2 года назад +3

      Good point check out the video we did last week, rain water harvesting is all covered in that, plant drought hardy species, these tend to be native ones

    • @bogeyonanostrilhair9568
      @bogeyonanostrilhair9568 2 года назад

      @@LeafofLifeWorld To stand the highest chance, people would have to be banned from planting anything, and only have planting where the top scientist say. Even then there's mistakes and the unknown. Have you seen the floods happening in parts of the world where they've been planting millions or thousands of trees here and there? it can heat, cool, dry, flood and more by planting where ever. Even if it was done perfect, it wont reveres global changes, just slow them down. Deserts are also natural, and although you can plant to stop the spread of the desert, filling them in altogether will have a bad effect. We've moved, reshaped and flattened the earth to fit our needs, and there's no longer any natural flow for water We've taken the wildlife out and so green wont be able to sustain all the planting, Maybe releasing the dangerous wildlife, and all our pests may help more. Not to mention the constant growth of the human population. We're f**ked, because even the scientists don't have a clue

    • @LeafofLifeWorld
      @LeafofLifeWorld  2 года назад

      Wouldn't it be better to live around the things already there? Instead of building a settlement and bulldozing away all the native vegetation, to build around the native vegetation, in a harmonic way, as people have done and still do, its just profit driven infrastructure that does not care about nature that is destructive, Ive seen first hand that it us possible for humans to live with nature in a sustainable way, thats where we have come from and we have forgotten how to do so.

    • @bogeyonanostrilhair9568
      @bogeyonanostrilhair9568 2 года назад

      ​@@LeafofLifeWorld Would have been better if we worked around nature rather than forcing nature to work around us, but too late for that. Our building s are in the way and in the wrong places. We need streams, lakes, ponds etc running through our cities and towns too. Yes its possible to live in a sustainable way, but there's too many of us for a world scale. The biggest problem we have, is that we live in a green house affect, and what one country does, can effect their own country, or even a country on the other side of the world. It needs to be worked on as a whole and calculated by the world. We can't plant too close to the cold parts of the earth either, as that will melt the ice caps quicker. If all the rainforests died it would wipe out most of us.
      The oceans produce more oxygen than all the rainforests combined, removes almost 1/3 of the atmosphere's manmade carbon dioxide, and control our planet's temperature and weather. If all the sharks and whales died, we'd all be gone because we wouldn't be able to breathe. I don't see a way out of this mess.

    • @bogeyonanostrilhair9568
      @bogeyonanostrilhair9568 2 года назад

      @@LeafofLifeWorld Listen to this then.
      The Edan project in England made way for the biggest biodome in the world. Over time, this dome created it's very own rainfall that works like clockwork. They didn't expect this, so they had to do some rethinking and work to accommodate that water flow.

  • @helenagushiken2447
    @helenagushiken2447 2 года назад +11

    E um futuro próximo,espero que isto possa ser aplicado aqui no Brasil. Pois as cidades crescem de maneira desordenada sem qualquer planejamento e ultimamente as prefeituras, inclusive a de São Paulo concretam tudo!? É um absurdo!!?? E isto só piora a falta de permeabilidade do solo e a questão de enchentes nos dias de chuva. Em um país que tem parte do seu território na Amazônia, e triste ver como as políticas do atual Governo só visam o lucro fácil e destruição: desmatamento recorde favorecendo madeireiras, grileiros e pecuaristas, perda de direito dos povos indígenas e ribeirinhos favorecendo o garimpo ilegal.

    • @LeafofLifeWorld
      @LeafofLifeWorld  2 года назад +3

      Exactly what you say here is why I am so interested in green infrastructure and planning because I've visited these humid places and concrete makes no sense, not to mention the environmental cost of concrete, we can change the course of the future, and ask for more sustainable alternatives for our future!

  • @HigoWapsico
    @HigoWapsico 2 года назад +2

    Andrew’s RUclips channel is fantastic

  • @KJSvitko
    @KJSvitko 2 года назад +2

    Humans are crowding out all other species of plants and animals.
    A variety of vegetation needs to be part of any tree planting project. A variety of trees, bushes and flowers are all necessary to support wild life and plant diversity. There needs to be forests, there also needs to be some open space for grasslands and some wildflower areas that support populations of insects, bees, butterflies, birds and other wild life

  • @noeddebo94
    @noeddebo94 Год назад +1

    we do this in denmark as well :D more green is better

  • @KJSvitko
    @KJSvitko 2 года назад +2

    Population needs to be in balance with jobs, resources, nature and the environment. Having a bigger population in any country than the country can support makes no sense. Access to food, water, shelter and jobs should guide population levels. The worlds population is still expected to add another billion people to feed, clothe and produce pollution.

    • @dianebarnes3180
      @dianebarnes3180 10 месяцев назад

      The world population is on a very steep decline with birth rates at less than 2 per family over much of the world. If we don't learn how to produce our own food starvation will become a reality. Watch demographic winter and see what's down the road for all of us.

    • @KJSvitko
      @KJSvitko 10 месяцев назад

      @@dianebarnes3180 Yes - populations are declining in the developed world. But the world population is still projected to add another billion mouths to feed. clothe and house. The worlds population is still growing and demanding more resources and adding more pollution every day. Where will the resources come from to feed an additional billion people. Education and birth control are key to reducing poverty and hunger. Having a child that you can not provide for yourself is cruel and irresponsible.

  • @richflash1360
    @richflash1360 Год назад

    There is not a housing shortage in california 🙄 none of it is affordable, thats why it sucks here

  • @alexanderebersberger4650
    @alexanderebersberger4650 Год назад

    The most important authority in the US is lawn enforcement.

  • @venpeddapalli7189
    @venpeddapalli7189 2 года назад +1

    That's like stabbing someone in the chest and taking him to the hospital.

  • @nauticalnovice9244
    @nauticalnovice9244 Год назад +1

    I absolutely HATE lawns.

    • @LeafofLifeWorld
      @LeafofLifeWorld  Год назад

      Me too, because there is too much and people only use a small area but make large lawns that they don't even use!

  • @Marketplace-Media
    @Marketplace-Media Год назад

    Oak is as foreign a species to Colorado as Gingko. Are you saying native as in native to your areas USDA climate zone, or native as native to your state/region?

  • @AndresGonzalez-qn2kv
    @AndresGonzalez-qn2kv Год назад +1

    Basicaly England sub urban style

  • @oldgreenknees1205
    @oldgreenknees1205 2 года назад +4

    Suburban living is a tax on all urban residents. That could be old growth forest if you just stop building suburbs.

  • @taramansion
    @taramansion Год назад

    We really need to slow down population growth.

  • @cyprianturyashemererwa9014
    @cyprianturyashemererwa9014 Год назад

    Problems that don't affect Uganda. The lawns are natural. They don't require fertilisers

  • @aldretaldret4310
    @aldretaldret4310 Год назад +2

    Oui, sauvons les sols !✌🏻🌹

  • @dl6860
    @dl6860 Год назад

    finally someone calls out that low density housing means low ecological impact, period.

  • @janosik150
    @janosik150 Год назад

    I think it is too late, my garden, barely brought any insects this year...and I don't know why.

    • @LeafofLifeWorld
      @LeafofLifeWorld  Год назад

      How is the rest of the neighbourhood, are they growing a native wild garden, have you got rid of invasive? Maybe check out doug tallamys work and contact him about your issue

  • @YSLRD
    @YSLRD Год назад

    Our neighborhood shops seem called Dollar General. We have 6 in our small town.
    The Vegas law is outrageous. I NEVER water my Bermuda grass. All my watering goes to other plants.
    I've seen some businesses plant native grasses instead of lawn. Bad idea. The main purpose of a manicured lawn isn't just visual ( although that does matter) . It discourages pest insects and rodents.

  • @lisamo128
    @lisamo128 2 года назад +1

    Interesting subject but what a strange voice over. Is it computer generated?

  • @hunnerdayEDT
    @hunnerdayEDT Год назад

    Part of the problem is also homes in the city are expensive therefore people like myself are forced to buy homes in rural car dependent areas.

  • @bentcn8511
    @bentcn8511 2 года назад +1

    Then homeowers want to cut them down because they're blocking the view.

  • @mikew1051
    @mikew1051 2 года назад +6

    Great work, thank you for the video

    • @LeafofLifeWorld
      @LeafofLifeWorld  2 года назад

      It is great work to see that people are changing lawns to biodiverse gardens, nature so desperately needs this but so do we! I hope we can build more sustainable suburbs and cities of the future!

  • @davidmurray6070
    @davidmurray6070 Год назад

    Love the video's initial tease picture that shows the suburban new build and then several years later when the landscaped trees have grown in. While there may be more green in the latter picture, there certainly isn't as much as before the subdivision was built and clearly is the precise opposite of biodiversity given that these subdivisions plant a very limited number of tree species. I live in a subdivision, so I'm not against people living in suburbia, but let's not contort reality here. Note: The bulk of the video is much more factual on the conservation topics really being discussed.

  • @angethompson6086
    @angethompson6086 Год назад

    Give fines to those who trick bees using sugars then trap to deaths.
    They could just give the bees sugar and leave them alone

  • @moondog3056
    @moondog3056 Год назад

    If you are going to use a then and now picture at least make sure it is the same place in question.

  • @lorebrown5307
    @lorebrown5307 2 года назад +2

    You should look at Village Homes community in Davis Ca. Planned for sustainability designed by Mike Corbett in the late 1960's

    • @LeafofLifeWorld
      @LeafofLifeWorld  2 года назад

      I looked it up, and its very interesting they use all the permaculture concepts but they still seem to have a lot of lawns...maybe they didn't get the memo yet about how they are ecological desert zones

    • @lorebrown5307
      @lorebrown5307 2 года назад

      @@LeafofLifeWorld They grew a lot of perennial food in the community. It was built decades ago but better than the current suburbs of today. They had green space and walking paths .

  • @MesmerAloofly
    @MesmerAloofly 2 года назад +2

    There is no such thing as "clean energy" .... the only way to save the world is to stop driving!

    • @husch05
      @husch05 Год назад

      And for that to happen, we would need to change our entire infrastructure

  • @alidz9885
    @alidz9885 Год назад +3

    Turn golf courses into nature reserves and parks. Golf clubs are a nightmare that only a few privileged people can access. They should be turned into something benefitial for the many and that would increase biodiversity.

  • @d.serrador9277
    @d.serrador9277 2 года назад +1

    Hypocrisy in action

  • @narlycat
    @narlycat Год назад

    are you sure that picture of a robin was not the English robin because it didn't look like the North American robin at all.

  • @bernardonobre788
    @bernardonobre788 2 года назад +2

    I like the idea. It's a good solution for a terrible urban design.
    (google translator)

  • @nilsp9426
    @nilsp9426 Год назад

    The problem of suburbs is that the very concept is at odds with both biodiversity and natural habitats in general. It is the most space inefficient way to settle: most land use and most need for commute - which still is mostly based on fossil fuels. Ironically, the most "unnatural" landscape, the dense city, is best for nature: it uses by far the least space and makes long distance or car commute mostly superfluous.

    • @LeafofLifeWorld
      @LeafofLifeWorld  Год назад

      If a surburb was a community and had mixed use development then there is less need for travel, if people could grow their own foods within the surburb they would be much more sustainable. Land use for development is not the greatest threat the nature and biodiversity its actually agricultural. I don't think cities are unnatural because all you have to do is look at traditional housing, its always densely packed together, even in a rural setting, British surburbs are more like this, however American surburbs for some reason are just way bigger more spaced out, so how they use this extra space is going to determine their sustainability.

    • @nilsp9426
      @nilsp9426 Год назад

      @@LeafofLifeWorld I agree. The prototypical (american) suburb, that is not simply a village or city district, is a crime against any city planning logic or conservation effort, though.

  • @gromnir
    @gromnir Год назад

    There would be no need for "restoring" if they hadn't bulldozed it in the first place to build the most inefficient and expensive housing in the world.

  • @alberpajares4792
    @alberpajares4792 2 года назад +1

    You got nothing better to do that put some trees in your garden, ¡ mean, you even save water if you are lazy to water the grass every sunny day..,

    • @LeafofLifeWorld
      @LeafofLifeWorld  2 года назад

      Sorry I don't quite understand this comment, maybe the translation doesn't work so good?

  • @user-gu6nw9bs6q
    @user-gu6nw9bs6q 2 года назад +2

    A beautiful and intelligent voice. Thanks.