Check Dams (gully rehabilitation and reclamation)

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  • Опубліковано 28 січ 2025

КОМЕНТАРІ • 67

  • @brooksanderson2599
    @brooksanderson2599 6 років тому +33

    Thank you for giving such detailed instructions! I wish that more videos would do that. This could be done here in Mexico. Much of our land has been degraded by overgrazing, slash and burn agriculture, deep plowing, erosion, climate change and other causes leading to desertification.

  • @ethanpetrea6164
    @ethanpetrea6164 4 роки тому +4

    Free knowledge of complex systems and simple solutions should never be undervalued. Thank you.

  • @hanifissa5436
    @hanifissa5436 6 років тому +16

    Hearing that song again brought tears to my eyes. Ah!! schooldays in Malawi.

    • @kembe7704
      @kembe7704 4 роки тому

      hello, can u give me the name of the song?

  • @ernesto99111
    @ernesto99111 4 роки тому +1

    I like your videos so much.....regards from colombian citizen living in London...god BLESS you

  • @IncogNito-xx7to
    @IncogNito-xx7to 5 років тому +20

    Greetings from Texas, USA! Wow what a great video production! You were very effective in use of time & teaching. You explained all the benefits, even long term. Thank you so much! I heard of vetiver grass before but didn’t know cows don’t eat it. Can you explain the word panga please? Again THANK YOU!!!

    • @sambraid987
      @sambraid987 5 років тому +5

      Thank you. A panga is also called a machete. It is a broad-blade tool like an axe used for cutting grass or cutting thin trees.

    • @TheVigilantStewards
      @TheVigilantStewards 4 роки тому +2

      Also from Texas here, this was great video

  • @Catlady77777
    @Catlady77777 4 роки тому

    Brilliant! I love using materials you have to solve problems. Literally " bloom where you are planted!"

  • @ralphaaron1
    @ralphaaron1 7 років тому +7

    Very good and cheapest method to fight erosion. you are the best like it thanks for sharing it.

    • @LureThosePixels
      @LureThosePixels 5 років тому +1

      Cheapest method would be leaving trees along water ways to begin with :^)

    • @MrGigi-dz9cv
      @MrGigi-dz9cv 4 роки тому

      @@LureThosePixels Yes. People cut down trees for wood.
      Probably they should adress this issue first

    • @MrGigi-dz9cv
      @MrGigi-dz9cv 4 роки тому

      @@inharmonywithearth9982 În a region where growing any plant is a problem, 'invasive' species, will not be a problem.

    • @xyzsame4081
      @xyzsame4081 3 роки тому

      @@inharmonywithearth9982 Bamboo is not NATIVE, so it is not adapted to the semi-arid conditions, and likely does not work well in the local ECO SYSTEM. It needs way too much water anyway to grow in arid areas. (if one would get to lengths to water it would be Leucaenia that is a nitrogen fixer and can be cut back drastically every season - it just regrows.
      And nothing grows in the shade of bambo, the drop off (leaves etc.) seem to be detrimental. That can be useful if one wants to clear an area for instance of weeds or wants to turn a meadow into a garden (then the bamboo has to be removed at some point, but it is not a long lived plant anyway). Or nearby a hen pasture, where the hens scratch around and leave no grass anyway. Geoff Lawton has it on his farm in Australia - depending on what job he wants get done and what he wants to harvest. (bamboo to eat, the wood, or clearing the area around a bamboo).
      So one _can_ use foreign species - with knowledge of the traits and requirements of bamboo, and what you want from it. that plant.
      Bamboo is a good carbon fixer - but many plants can do that. Nitrogen fixers and plants that are draught resistant and have very deep roots is what you want. and they for sure need to be friendly to any vegetation that _might_ come up under their shadow.
      One could have a vegetable garden under the protective shade of an acazia or Leucaenia (which is a nitrogen fixer) so it is a fertilizer). But one cannot have that under a bamboo - not even IF water would be easy to come by.
      As for that area - they should rather look what Geoff planted in the beginning of the Jordan project (greening the desert).
      Hardy draught resistant thorny trees that are able to go into draught hibernation for 1 - 2 years if need be and spring back to life the moment they get some good rain. As theydevelop deep roots they secure the soil.
      Goats often like to eat thorny shrubs and trees. Branches and dead wood and wood from cut backs can be used as firewood or as chop and drop plants (to harvest annually material for compost or mulch or firewood). The problems is of course harvesting the thorny branches (w/o modern equipment to protect yourself).
      There is a reason many bushes and trees in arid regions have thorns and spikes, where young growht is rare wildlife would decimate all plants without those defenses. Cactus has spikes for the same reason.
      But as pioneer plants they are good.

    • @xyzsame4081
      @xyzsame4081 3 роки тому

      @@inharmonywithearth9982 You are right regarding _one_ thing - in that arid area bamboo has no chance to become invasive - it would be just pointless trying to use it there. I am astonished how you confidently make claims when you obviously have not even superficial (corrrect) knowledge about ecology. And your critical thinking skills also failed you in regards to your claims about herbices and invasive species being a scam.
      On which click baiting site did you hear that ??
      These farmers would not be able to afford herbicides. And no one promotes herbicides to get rid of invasive species (certainly no government or agency. Farmers that practice big ag, but that is an utter failure and in the end also way too costly).
      Invasive plants, and animals exist in many parts of the world. Leucaenia trees have become invasive in parts of Africa - no wonder they are hard to kill if they have a modest amount of rain, and can fix their own fertilizer from the air. So they outcompete plants that are native - but those plants may be very important for other functions and participants in the system.
      Leucaenia is a valuable tree in many contexts BUT outside of its natural ecosystem it must be carefully managed. Same for bamboo and many other plants.

  • @tonydoggett7627
    @tonydoggett7627 4 роки тому +1

    Very good informative video, from Australia

  • @snipper1ie
    @snipper1ie 4 роки тому +13

    You must armour the banks of the whole dam, upstream and downstream. Otherwise there will be erosion above and below your dam. Construct your dams in a V configuration. If you do, the force is directed towards the middle. If you don't, the force will wash away the sides and destroy your dam

    • @bacilluscereus1299
      @bacilluscereus1299 2 роки тому

      Vetiver grass hedgerows can be employed for this armouring I understand.

    • @LureThosePixels
      @LureThosePixels 2 роки тому +1

      They also mentioned creating a lip in the centre which would act like the V in regards to directing it to the middle

  • @crpth1
    @crpth1 3 роки тому

    Very good video. Simple, basic and straight to the point. Well done! ;-)

  • @jayschubert1281
    @jayschubert1281 4 роки тому +1

    A really great idea, so simple.

  • @bacilluscereus1299
    @bacilluscereus1299 2 роки тому

    That vetiver grass at 2:30, it's hedgerows can be used in conjunction with these check dams to control soil erosion.
    At 3:20, why not plant the vetiver grass at the interface of the soil and the ends of the dam, to forestall any breakthrough by the water there.

  • @luigicristiani7709
    @luigicristiani7709 3 роки тому

    v Great and simple idea.

  • @rm6857
    @rm6857 6 місяців тому

    nice manual dams work

  • @networkbike543
    @networkbike543 4 роки тому

    Good instructional vid and granddaughter.

  • @shrachi91d
    @shrachi91d 3 роки тому

    Very simple and effective.

  • @estadoanarquista
    @estadoanarquista 4 роки тому

    Congratulações: excelente vídeo!

  • @SanketGhadgePatil
    @SanketGhadgePatil 2 роки тому

    Noicly explained

  • @forcesightknight
    @forcesightknight 4 роки тому +1

    I have a creek that runs through my place almost yearly. The water shed can be very extreme. I have willows growing to help with erosion. I also recycled used carpet. It makes great erosion control padding.

  • @ananthapandi4845
    @ananthapandi4845 5 років тому +2

    Super

  • @guttormurthorfinnsson8758
    @guttormurthorfinnsson8758 4 роки тому

    Gogo is a big man .

  • @gissie391
    @gissie391 4 роки тому

    Herbs like parsley which has vitamin A in it and chives etc.soil you removed can be used can it not what about potting plants up like avocado's putting pots in ground?

  • @downbntout
    @downbntout 4 роки тому

    Why won't YT let me do more than a like? It's a ❤

  • @johnrowland2867
    @johnrowland2867 2 роки тому

    still, short term thoughts planting in the gaps better to put trees either side of the gully water will seep into water table and feed cropland next to the gully plus give you clean water for longer in the gully

  • @traildude7538
    @traildude7538 5 місяців тому

    Tops of check dams should not be level -- the center should be lower. The one made of broken brick in the middle of the video has it right.

  • @johne7123
    @johne7123 4 роки тому

    very good

  • @elfootman
    @elfootman 4 роки тому

    where's the follow-up??

  • @brettknoss486
    @brettknoss486 4 роки тому

    Is the check dams combined with erosion crops?

    • @sambraid987
      @sambraid987 4 роки тому

      Once the erosion has been stabilised, suitable crops can be grown behind the check dams, especially crops that do not require regular tillage.

  • @luigicristiani7709
    @luigicristiani7709 4 роки тому

    The vetiver is not in free sale in Italy; it is sold only by very few gardening and consolidation companies.
    Provided that they do the necessary work.
    This is what is called a monopoly "

    • @xyzsame4081
      @xyzsame4081 3 роки тому

      it is easily multiplied with propagation. yxou can buy one plant, share with friends and family (backup if yours would die off). It can be quite invasive that is why it is only sold in that form.

    • @luigicristiani7709
      @luigicristiani7709 3 роки тому

      @@xyzsame4081 v Thanks but I'm aware of it.
      The problem is that to the private individual who wants to buy, if and only if ... they sell it to you, they sell them in blocks of 50 or 100 plants ...
      To avoid any risk of competition.

    • @18booma
      @18booma 3 роки тому

      In Malawi they should use Vetiver, but elsewhere in the world you should look for something similar, but that's indigenous. And with grasses and similar plant matter, you usually buy in bulk, because just one plant isn't going to serve the purpose.
      Also, you should consider whether the climate calls for check dams. These kind of projects are best suited to combat desertification.

  • @wrightgregson9761
    @wrightgregson9761 3 роки тому

    woould that there had been videos of the check dams doing their jobs.

  • @swarajyalakshmi7747
    @swarajyalakshmi7747 3 роки тому

    Check dam between one kilometre to another one kilometres beside dom two sides built nearly twenty feet hight tank and pumping to the dam to. The

  • @MrGigi-dz9cv
    @MrGigi-dz9cv 4 роки тому +3

    They need beavers .....

    • @dustinkrejci6142
      @dustinkrejci6142 4 роки тому

      Would beavers properly thrive in Africa?

    • @MrGigi-dz9cv
      @MrGigi-dz9cv 4 роки тому

      I have a feeling, desertification in Africa, is a man made problem, since they probably cut down trees for wood or farming fields.

    • @MrGigi-dz9cv
      @MrGigi-dz9cv 4 роки тому

      @@inharmonywithearth9982 Well ... In this case, nothing will stop the desert.

    • @dustinkrejci6142
      @dustinkrejci6142 4 роки тому

      I took a screenshot so in the future I have an idea of what to do when I go to dominate the world. Because I would change the world 🗺. That would also include Africa too.
      I must have first a plan and and beliefs the second the power to change the world.

    • @MrGigi-dz9cv
      @MrGigi-dz9cv 4 роки тому

      @@dustinkrejci6142 It was just a little joke. First, beavers live most of the time în the water. So, they need water first. Second, they would become pray of predators like crocodiles or hunters.

  • @cezmikaloie
    @cezmikaloie 4 роки тому

    You should had left Africa with us during great migration lol :)))

  • @BabyBoomersDoomer
    @BabyBoomersDoomer 2 роки тому

    #california

    • @BabyBoomersDoomer
      @BabyBoomersDoomer Рік тому

      It’s been 10 months since I did this and it works! Grass grows where water flows through

  • @paulmaydaynight9925
    @paulmaydaynight9925 4 роки тому

    planting coppicing trees around gullies is a good way to provide and sustain the raw materials, provide the stabising root system for healthy compost soil bacteria, and one man Bodger Works ua-cam.com/video/KUv3OwY5Etg/v-deo.html
    A Bodger at Work
    507,603 views•Jul 17, 2013
    ,WoodlandsTV
    The Amberley Bodger shows how to use a traditional pole lathe to create garden dibbers, chair legs, spindles and spurtles using green wood in his workshop at Amberley Museum and Heritage Centre, West Sussex.
    living Hedge Laying wind brakes, Make a Gate Hurdles etc ua-cam.com/video/ET0k9PkIfz8/v-deo.html

  • @MUBARIZALIYIV
    @MUBARIZALIYIV 4 роки тому

    /Belaya Kaza naxapala virus/G⚫/ ot zhadnosti i skuposti.

  • @d.e303-anewlowcosthomebuil7
    @d.e303-anewlowcosthomebuil7 4 роки тому

    better to teach them scientific pasture rotation

  • @cleric7788
    @cleric7788 6 років тому +3

    Good advise for stone age people.

    • @edouardomaindargent7685
      @edouardomaindargent7685 4 роки тому +3

      Go fuck yourself !

    • @Barskor1
      @Barskor1 4 роки тому +1

      When you have stones and stones do the job just fine why would you use anything else?

    • @timmills3823
      @timmills3823 4 роки тому +4

      Remember the so called "stone age" people have not caused the problems of today, rather they are finding the ways to fix them. the technique is used in the desert southwest of the United States... about 20 washes in my area that were created by modern cattle farming techniques that both destroyed grass land marshes and created a 1000 square mile desert where Zane Gray wrote about grasses higher than a man on horseback 120 years ago.

    • @forcesightknight
      @forcesightknight 4 роки тому +1

      So many "stone age" technologies that are still in use today. The wheel comes to mind. I'm assuming your ignorance comes from being simple minded. So easy to be happy, when your stupid.