PERMACULTURE Farmer Shares How To GROW HEALTHY FOOD Yourself

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  • Опубликовано: 28 сен 2024

Комментарии • 225

  • @katiefair3404
    @katiefair3404 2 года назад +17

    Lovely guy. Knows his stuff. Wish there were more farmers like this

  • @sergicrisan5564
    @sergicrisan5564 2 года назад +12

    I'm sincerelly fascinated by people understanding and applying holistic action. It makes me wonder if we'll ever have this mentality in a more global framework.
    ¡Ole tú Julian, buen trabajo!

  • @subash15
    @subash15 2 года назад +29

    Farmer is very knowledgeable and looks after his community! That’s great farmer .. keep it up 👍

  • @Gulfraz.
    @Gulfraz. 2 года назад +5

    What an amazing guy. Massive respect to this hard working individual.

  • @CF1091
    @CF1091 2 года назад +18

    This is amazing, thank you! 🙏More places like this are needed

  • @aliciadupuy9228
    @aliciadupuy9228 2 года назад +3

    Wow! This channel is way underrated! Thank you!!!

    • @GrowingSmall
      @GrowingSmall  2 года назад

      Wow, thank you, very nice to read your encouraging words.

  • @johanswart1730
    @johanswart1730 2 года назад +8

    SIR,PLEASE MAKE MORE NATURE FARMING GREAT TIPS FOR ALL COUNTRY FOLKS..LOVE IT..

  • @leoscheibelhut940
    @leoscheibelhut940 2 года назад +5

    Julian is very inspirational.

  • @zakahmed455
    @zakahmed455 9 месяцев назад +1

    I would really love to see more of this guy, it must have taken so much to get to where he is now

  • @spicykittyh1
    @spicykittyh1 2 года назад +57

    Gotta love his teaching style here.

    • @GrowingSmall
      @GrowingSmall  2 года назад +3

      Yes! Very hands on, practical, down to earth. Thanks for noting this!

  • @williammcduff6531
    @williammcduff6531 2 года назад +9

    Great video love his attitude and spirit thanks for sharing.

  • @iuliab2964
    @iuliab2964 2 года назад +2

    I want a man as hard working as you and that garden. 🥰
    Good job, keep it up 😘

  • @xue5767
    @xue5767 2 года назад +15

    Amazing man! Kudos to all that he does for our planet!

  • @jean6453
    @jean6453 Год назад +3

    Such an inspiration ! It helps me so much to see farming in this different way, it opens my mind to rethink what I am doing. Thank you.

  • @kristycook6041
    @kristycook6041 2 года назад +1

    Yeah
    Everybody seems to wanna
    Speed up
    To stop at the red light.
    Good education
    Is teaching one
    To think for themselves
    Not told what to think
    But how to think.
    Thanks for the video.

  • @nataliekazful
    @nataliekazful 2 года назад +4

    Wonderful farmer and farm ☺️❤️ very inspiring

  • @o00osimbasmateo00o
    @o00osimbasmateo00o 2 года назад +2

    We love Julian here in Shinano!

  • @CarlosGarcia-vj1hw
    @CarlosGarcia-vj1hw 2 года назад +3

    Hi Julian! Nice project. I knew you at the splitboard event in Sotres, Asturias. It´s amazing your idea, your respect about nature and your knowledge about permaculture.

  • @jean6453
    @jean6453 Год назад

    Growing Small, you are such an excellent story teller. Your videos are works of art. Thank you.

  • @nbeizaie
    @nbeizaie 2 года назад +4

    fantastic! Even watching natural farming (without all the noisy machines and tools) gives me a lot of calm. I hate my neighbors' yards. They use the load tools to clip their ugly grass , etc almost daily (today is this neighbor and tomorrow the other, etc). We never get to enjoy the quiet and the sounds of nature in the city ...

    • @erfan4244
      @erfan4244 2 года назад

      well we are in a rural area but we also have to share our space with people who think modern agriculture is better than natural and sustainable practices... I suggest search for communities which share your passions and save some headaches or plant trees to reduce their noise pollution

  • @ClassicAlberto
    @ClassicAlberto 2 года назад +5

    Loved it. Greetings from Spain

  • @Michael_McMillan
    @Michael_McMillan 2 года назад +5

    Really enjoyed this video.

  • @glotzfisch
    @glotzfisch 2 года назад +2

    You really got it! This is the future.

  • @taptapindustries2580
    @taptapindustries2580 2 года назад +4

    Fantastic video! Thank you. Beautiful and so inspiring... Many many thanks

  • @chancellor9000
    @chancellor9000 2 года назад +2

    Inspiring teacher. Thank you!

  • @attilaharangozo1044
    @attilaharangozo1044 2 года назад +1

    Thank you boss!
    Tasmania Australia.

  • @cryptooutsider6157
    @cryptooutsider6157 Год назад +2

    Hi guys, I absolutely love your series on natural farmers in Japan. So inspiring!
    One piece of the puzzle is missing though. How do they sustain themselves? Do they sell their produce? Do they have a registered agri company or just produce as a non-professional? Do they have other sources of income? Expenses is not just eating: car truck/insurance, taxes, education if children, health...
    If we could maybe have some more info about that part, which is less glamourish but very important, I think it would help a lot of us to go a step further towards this kind of lifestyle!

    • @wildfish8600
      @wildfish8600 Год назад

      I absolutely agree! I would also be verry interested. This kind of life almost seems impossible to reach in my country.

  • @moemuslih314
    @moemuslih314 2 года назад +1

    I do love your video
    I live in a small village in central java indonesia
    God bless you
    Moe

  • @jurrezwart6112
    @jurrezwart6112 2 года назад +1

    I absolutely love what this guy is doing

  • @SolidGoldShows
    @SolidGoldShows Год назад +1

    Great informational video 📹 👏 👌

  • @tinglima4942
    @tinglima4942 2 года назад +3

    Very nice video.

  • @vicdagangon7510
    @vicdagangon7510 Год назад

    The nature teaches this great man the natural way of farming.

  • @dorisschmitten5276
    @dorisschmitten5276 Год назад

    There is hope with people like him! ❤ Thank you.

  • @antoniospanayiotou8619
    @antoniospanayiotou8619 2 года назад +1

    You are living my dream and my Ideal🙏🙏

  • @michaels2431
    @michaels2431 2 года назад +1

    very good content, i hope more about this permaculture method. and way to understand. -cheers

  • @madhusudan
    @madhusudan Год назад

    Very inspiring energy from this man. Surely he has much to teach if only we would listen and follow in his footsteps.

  • @biljanacevetkovic6480
    @biljanacevetkovic6480 2 года назад +1

    You are GREAT man , i like your video !! Bibi , from Serbia !

  • @jenjen7558
    @jenjen7558 2 года назад +1

    Wow!!! Thank you so much for sharing!!!❤️

  • @53nat0r
    @53nat0r 2 года назад +3

    A farmer with high ideals. Greetings!

    • @GrowingSmall
      @GrowingSmall  2 года назад +1

      Hello there! Thanks for commenting, much appreciated!

  • @beltoftruth56
    @beltoftruth56 2 года назад +1

    Great information.thank you!!

  • @taliesinmusic
    @taliesinmusic 2 года назад +1

    Amazing video. Would love to learn from this man one day

  • @floriswou
    @floriswou 2 года назад +2

    Beautiful read about natural farming he talks about: "One straw revolution by Fukuoka"

    • @GrowingSmall
      @GrowingSmall  2 года назад +1

      Almost everyone doing permaculture/natural farming in Japan has been influenced in some way or another by Fukuoka. I think Julian mentioned his name a few times during the tour, but I cut it out of this 10min video as I tried to keep everything as easy to follow as possible without references to people/places/movements that not everyone would be aware of. Not sure whether that's taking away too much from the visits, but I try to be a broad church :) Thanks for commenting though, I hope somebody reading this will go and read the book!

    • @wildfish8600
      @wildfish8600 Год назад

      I love your video's, though I think it would be more ispirational to not cut out what you just mentioned. Also wondering how they pay their bills etc. Sadly life is so expensive, who has the time to live like this? Mortgage and al the other fixed charges :( It would be verry interesting to find someone who is able to give insight anout those subjects. I wish you al the best and enjoyment without stress making al these beautifull video's. They are really priceless! doumo arigatou gozaimasu

  • @user-qq3my9fm2r
    @user-qq3my9fm2r 2 года назад +1

    God garden looks mixed and beautiful you don't see many people grow like that

  • @workerant7874
    @workerant7874 2 года назад +4

    Don't get me wrong, I love this guy's version of English. But I feel like there's a lot of good info lost in translation here, kinda wish he'd spoken in his native tongue and that had been translated.

    • @GrowingSmall
      @GrowingSmall  2 года назад

      Thank you, worker ant, I've taken note of your comment. Definitely agree that a lot of the more technical aspects would have been better conveyed in any of Julian's native tongues (which I believe are Spanish, French, Catalan and if i remember right even a local dialect of his region - impressive, ey?). Just FYI, videos with subtitles tend to be viewed less, which is obviously something I need to factor in as a creator.

    • @mysoulrambles
      @mysoulrambles 2 года назад

      I think this guy needs his own channel!

  • @SuerteDelMolinoFarm
    @SuerteDelMolinoFarm Год назад

    Greetings from the LooseNatural farm in Andalusia Spain

  • @sandrajohnson9926
    @sandrajohnson9926 2 года назад

    I spoke with a man in Arizona that said the original inhabitants there would grow in the forest there,
    semibiotic, where one plant depended on another. The land was farmed with vines supported by trees, the leaf litter stayed on the ground, prescribed burns took place. No tilling or digging. He is practicing the same techniques.
    The original tribe of people were sustained for at least 1,000 years.
    Pests were never an issue.

  • @charlesleblanc6638
    @charlesleblanc6638 Год назад

    He understands this natural cycle, by observing how it works in the wild ... Simple.

  • @danielmeegan6259
    @danielmeegan6259 2 года назад +1

    Thanks 🙏🙏🙏

  • @Sunshine-ke1jg
    @Sunshine-ke1jg 2 года назад +1

    Wonderful😍

  • @wildfish4ever
    @wildfish4ever 2 года назад +2

    Nice one

  • @Tuopbc
    @Tuopbc 2 года назад +1

    Good video.thank you!

  • @fredsnyder3063
    @fredsnyder3063 Год назад

    🌞 thank you for presenting the Teaching

  • @atransformedlife
    @atransformedlife 2 года назад +1

    Amazing! I am super impressed!

  • @theamazingmg6947
    @theamazingmg6947 2 года назад +4

    Hello my dear friend, you are doing a great job 👍 👏 😀

  • @louisecamm9058
    @louisecamm9058 2 года назад +1

    Thanks

  • @ianwise2457
    @ianwise2457 2 года назад +1

    super great farmer. respect! ❤

  • @wangtanah2909
    @wangtanah2909 2 года назад +1

    Great brother

  • @MitchDonovan
    @MitchDonovan 2 года назад +1

    Soba noodles - yum

  • @Gariiko7
    @Gariiko7 2 года назад +2

    You could have used bulls or horse.( Any cattle) yo pull or even carry the log to any place. My grandparents lived in small village in India, and let me tell you that village didy had electric till 2005 so all work were done with cooperation and using help of animals.

    • @Gariiko7
      @Gariiko7 2 года назад

      Roads were also maintained by villager before festivals or any celebration by teen boys under the supervision of old peoples.

  • @iansingsiansings2101
    @iansingsiansings2101 2 года назад +1

    Love You Brother...

  • @joannegratton491
    @joannegratton491 Год назад +1

    God bless this man. I pray Gods will is for me to do this. ✝️✨🙏🏻

  • @peacetruth3074
    @peacetruth3074 2 года назад +1

    I envy he can be put there like that! Love his style! We would have poison ivy all over us here if we were out in the greens like that. The poison ivy has been the biggest disappointment here, so allergic to it.

  • @sunandthesoil3736
    @sunandthesoil3736 2 года назад +1

    Beautiful

  • @hoang9982
    @hoang9982 Год назад

    Great vegetables!

  • @scotthuey1981
    @scotthuey1981 2 года назад +1

    Respect 👊

  • @snicksabea
    @snicksabea 2 года назад +1

    Interesting!

  • @ozziegreen4850
    @ozziegreen4850 Год назад

    He is adorable

  • @repurposedart9897
    @repurposedart9897 2 года назад +1

    Where was this guy originally born and how did he end up farming in Japan?

  • @habibrana681
    @habibrana681 2 года назад +1

    Weldon man, keep on doing that

  • @ahmad_nurrrosyd_khozai
    @ahmad_nurrrosyd_khozai 2 года назад +1

    Good

  • @juliansanllehy6971
    @juliansanllehy6971 2 года назад

    gracias de tan hermosos comentarios de todo el mundo un abrazo a todos y viva la revolucion verde un mundo mejor podemos crear seguro

  • @diarmuidsynnott
    @diarmuidsynnott 2 года назад +1

    What is the name of the grass cutting tool? I have looked for shinano machi and it just comes up as a place in Nagano. Is there a particular name of the tool or even the tool company? I think such a tool would be very useful to my farming and tree care.
    Thank you for showing us this wonderful place.

    • @GrowingSmall
      @GrowingSmall  2 года назад +1

      The shinano machi is a tool made only in this area, and apparently there's only one person left who's still making them (a whole series of different tools for different tasks actually). Julian told me that he's going to organize a crowdfunding campaign to keep the tradition going, but no idea when that's going ahead. I can share the link with you once I hear some updates. Where are you based?

    • @diarmuidsynnott
      @diarmuidsynnott 2 года назад

      @@GrowingSmall I'm in Ireland. And thanks for all the info!

    • @aryafeydakin
      @aryafeydakin 2 года назад +2

      It's called a brush scythe or "forest scythe" (see also "rozon" in spanish), the brush scythe on the video is comparable to a honen miyawaki h-117 scythe.

    • @calebfuller4713
      @calebfuller4713 Год назад +1

      It's basically what's known as a bush scythe, ditch scythe or brush scythe. You can probably find something similar in Ireland. I know Growing Small already posted that the "shinano machi" is only made by one person in the area, but local hardware stores across Japan do stock very similar small scythes.

  • @kevd7664
    @kevd7664 2 года назад

    Looks a good go the tools could be improved by making them from copper or brass as to not damage the subtle energies down keeps the slugs away. Also any cutting should be done before the sun gets warmer and on a higher angle.

  • @naturepositivevibes933
    @naturepositivevibes933 2 года назад

    Much love 🙌🏻

  • @taufiq6277
    @taufiq6277 Год назад

    Great, nice, nice nice

  • @petarbarabas968
    @petarbarabas968 Год назад

    Hi I love this video it’s amazing
    Would there be a chance you could find out what is the name of his long handle tool exactly???
    I would love to purchase one but when I’m trying to find one online I only find the ones with short handles .
    I would really appreciate if you could attach a link to this tool or the exact name for it .
    Thank you

  • @juanortizyepez7253
    @juanortizyepez7253 2 года назад +1

    In nature solutions to things are simple with love. But inside modern world we love to complicate things.

  • @alexsummersell3567
    @alexsummersell3567 2 года назад

    @5:10 Grandpa's beans are beans from the Pyrenees France region? The importation is "illegal", not the type of bean itself?

    • @calebfuller4713
      @calebfuller4713 Год назад

      Until very recently, customs and quarantine basically used to let you bring seeds in legally if you let them inspect them. I was even able to mail-order wildflower meadow seeds from the UK. However, beans were one seed they would always confiscate. I got done that way once. So yes, he basically smuggled the seeds in. Recently they have started insisting on phytosanitary certificates for everything though, which put seed imports out of the reach of everyone except large companies.

  • @harshamin961
    @harshamin961 2 года назад +1

    Come to India, you will see our farmers, in their own farm, farming without machine to save land

  • @hoboeyjobi7020
    @hoboeyjobi7020 Год назад

    where the heck do i find a scythe just like this 3:30 ???? i cannot find one anywhere 😩😩😩

  • @arnowisp6244
    @arnowisp6244 2 года назад +2

    At least this guy will survive a Societal Collapse.

  • @adlerxiloj9005
    @adlerxiloj9005 2 года назад +1

    That lovee

  • @zepedro6290
    @zepedro6290 2 года назад

    Does anyone have a contact for the scythe used in the video,thanks

  • @77goanywhere
    @77goanywhere 2 года назад

    Farming this way is wonderful, IF you have a supermarket down the street for when flood, fire or drought wipes your lovely farm out. There is a reason modern farming is what it is. I haven't heard of a famine wiping out any whole communities in modern countries for awhile.

    • @eveningwind2023
      @eveningwind2023 2 года назад +2

      Of course diversity is helpful for all of those reasons. Tendencies toward an overdependence on the more convenient options seem to be the real issue. More people would still benefit from putting in more hard work for their communities instead of exporting every natural advantage for solely personal gain. The "modern" world doesn't have to leave these values behind

  • @guillermohervas
    @guillermohervas 2 года назад

    Saludos desde Ecuador, traducción al español gracias

    • @GrowingSmall
      @GrowingSmall  2 года назад

      Gracias Guillermo, vamos a poner la traducción al español lo más pronto possible.

  • @shivakoliar4846
    @shivakoliar4846 2 года назад

    How To Live In Harmony With Nature And Reduce Pollution
    1. Many Production Which We Do Not Need Actually For Human Beings Has To Be Stopped
    We manufacture so many products and it is creating pollution. So if we minimise our products, pollution would be less.
    We produce so many things which we do not need, like cold drinks, leather products, potato wafers, chips, fruit juices, chocolates, biscuits, pickles, ice creams, etc.
    Cold drinks, fruit juices, pickles, ice creams, etc. Should be cooked at home only.
    If we stopped producing this things which are not required for humans, so much pollution could be reduced.
    If we colour the clothes pollution occurs. So if we don't colour our clothes, the pollution resulting from colouring the clothes can be stopped. Let everything remain in natural colour.
    2. We Should Cook Foods In Its Natural Form
    We can cook rice and wheat in our homes and eat it. Rice and Wheat is produced in farms. Then it is packed and transported to big warehouses, then wholesalers buy from them and supply to retail shops.
    But if a manufacturing company makes bread from rice and wheat, then to make bread a manufacturing company has to be set up, machines and working staffs are needed. When a company is built many other things are also needed. Then at last a plastic pack is required to pack the breads.
    So if we start cooking eatable things in its natural form then we do not need many companies like bread manufacturing company, tomato ketchup, noodles, fruit jam, pizza, burger, etc., the things required for the company and the plastic pack, paper box pack and glass bottles. If done like this, so many companies will not be required and hence less pollution for the world.
    Also we could save our money like this. If you buy a packet of bread, it would cost you more money than if you cook wheat and rice in home.
    Previously before industrial revolution, we didn't have technology, but our foods were rich with nutrients. Now we have technology, but technology is polluting our foods and our foods are not rich with nutrients, and because of that also we have health problems.
    If this is done, then many jobs would be lost. For that many peoples should do farming and they should be given loans if they do not have enough money to start farming on their own.
    Food, Medicines, Surgeries and Education's should be made free to the world till the world settles down with farming. After that food, medicines, surgeries and education's should be stopped free to the world.
    Many people should study botany subject so that they have knowledge of plants and they should do farming.
    Is their any another solution, that humans won't lose jobs and also pollution would decrease. Humans have to take this step certainly instead of going on polluting the earth, making wildlife extinct and also mass extinctions of humans in future.
    3. Electricity Pollution
    We create electricity from many types of sources like coal, water, etc., but it creates pollution. If electricity created from windmill and solar energy then no pollution occurs in the creation process. But still to manufacture windmill and solar machines pollution would occur.
    As I previously said that if we shut down many manufacturing companies which are producing things which are not needed for humans, then the world would not require so much electricity. If less electricity required, then less pollution generated.
    4. Could We Stop Drinking Cow's and Buffalo's Milk
    Whatever vitamins and nutrients we get from milk, if we can get it from other eatable things, then we can stop drinking cow's and buffalo's milk. As milk has to be packed in glass bottles and plastic packs and then transported to places. All of this can be stopped.
    For infants whose mother's have died or mother's who cannot breast feed their infants, only for them cow's and buffalo's milk should be given. We use milk in tea and coffee. Instead of milk we must use lime with tea and coffee or just plain tea and coffee. A lime should be cut into a few pieces and cooked with tea and coffee or something else can be used instead of lime.
    5. How Much Should Be The World's Population
    Every place should have a single house. No buildings, everything ground floor. If we do this and the whole lands of our planet earth would be occupied one day with homes, farms, forests, schools, hospitals, etc., then we would come to know how much our planet earth can have maximum population.
    Once the population is determined, then we have to maintain that population. For example if our earth can have a population of 10 billion peoples, then when the population reaches 10 billion, then everyone should have only one child till the population reaches 9 billion peoples. As if we have only one child then the population decreases. When population is 9 billion peoples, then everyone should have 2 children's till the population reaches 10 billion peoples. After that again we should have only one child. In this way population can be maintained.

  • @scotthuey1981
    @scotthuey1981 2 года назад +1

    🔥

  • @jmp814
    @jmp814 2 года назад

    In India, the famines now affect the farmers as well as the cities, because many no longer grow a huge range of plants & became capital intensive farms focussing on 1-5 crops that they sell for money but don't eat.
    While the nwo/who/un pollute the air, land, rivers lakes & seas to intentionally affect the global food supply, their hiked fuel costs, see a return to healthier methods of food production.
    The use of gmo, Sars-Cov-2 jabs, fuel, oil, electricity, pesticides & herbicides, are what's killing us.
    A return to nature for food, leisure & livelihood, together with some bare-foot on grass or dirt, will keep us grounded to what living is really all about.

  • @owenduck
    @owenduck 2 года назад +1

    Not sure our forefathers had plastic, but we'll done with the rest

  • @ptrainingbytim
    @ptrainingbytim 2 года назад

    Great vid, but I’m not following the planting of seeds amongst all of those tall weeds. Won’t the weeds shade out the light and/or choke out the veg seeds? Instead of plastic just use cardboard and woodchips to cover the soil.

    • @christinefischer2137
      @christinefischer2137 2 года назад +1

      Yes, that puzzled me as well. I d think some seeds still grow in between weeds, for the others there's the spots he cleaned of vegetation by covering them for a year.

    • @DeanTheDoctor
      @DeanTheDoctor 2 года назад +2

      The weeds and foliage help to pull up nutrients to the surface as well as provide shade to the soil, which slows water loss.
      When it comes time for winter and they are full height and mature, they are cut down, "dropped" back into the soil to become further food for the main crops. Their flowers and leaves also provide shade for insects and pollen and nectar for the bees. 😊🌎✨

    • @ptrainingbytim
      @ptrainingbytim 2 года назад

      @@DeanTheDoctor Thanks for your comment Dean. I’m pretty skeptical of this method, but am always open to new ideas of simplifying things. I’m in northern california and mostly get foxtail and goathead weeds = ☠️. The Back to Eden gardening has literally transformed my life - can’t say enough good things about it. God bless you.

  • @Silentbet1of
    @Silentbet1of 2 года назад

    Look I love the passion but I can’t watch it bc of the language barrier

  • @nhattientran7065
    @nhattientran7065 2 года назад

    from Viet Nam : xin chào

  • @kobe3576
    @kobe3576 9 месяцев назад

    Many people are used to accessing unlimited resources and products. Continuously importing food from other countries or distant areas is one of the things that are destroying our planet and making many people suffer all around the world. We should learn to enjoy what we have around us and wisely use the limited resources that nature creates in our local area.

  • @kvuppal1
    @kvuppal1 2 года назад

    He should have made the video in his mother tongue (French? or Spanish) with subtitles. He could have expressed much more.

  • @myemail5457
    @myemail5457 2 года назад

    Sure helps when your gardens aren't in warm out beach sand huh ?

  • @c.8635
    @c.8635 2 года назад

    How to find this man "Julián" please?,His accent is from Spain.

    • @juliansanllehy6971
      @juliansanllehy6971 2 года назад

      Soy Del Valle de Aran pirineo

    • @c.8635
      @c.8635 2 года назад

      @@juliansanllehy6971 Hola encantada,qué sorpresa, tienes blog,sitio donde explicas el proceso que realizas,es como el método Fukuoka? Sigues en Japón... cómo es que llegastes allá?

    • @juliansanllehy6971
      @juliansanllehy6971 2 года назад +1

      @@c.8635 muy buenas no no tengo ningún canal soy poco dado a la tecnología perdón , utilizo diferentes métodos los pruebo en pequeña escala para luego si combien en à mi proyecto las hago a mayor escala si pruebo el sistema de fukuoka y sepp holzer par a los cultivos mixtos sobretodo para aumentar mi fertilidad con abonos verdes porque estoy preparando 1 hectarea para la creación de un bosque comestible , el diseño me baso en la permacultura el sistema de planchas de cultivo Ena la sin trópica

  • @sandragordon6219
    @sandragordon6219 2 года назад

    Any bug spray advice lol

  • @nordwest23
    @nordwest23 2 года назад +1

    That is nice because yeah money is not so big right??

  • @TheudBaldM
    @TheudBaldM 2 года назад

    Great video, only surprised about the plastic used as it's not coherent with the title nor the philosophy

  • @organicgardener1112
    @organicgardener1112 2 года назад

    Another planet saviour?