I've only got half an acre on the edge of the village but I dug swales on contour by hand during the 2019 drought/bushfires. It was hard dusty work and I questioned myself many times. But the difference it has made to my little plot is remarkable. I also do demi-lunes around all the trees as there is quite a decent grade to the property. The swales and demi-lunes I fill with organic matter that I bring from the city from my landscaping job. the burm is dry, but dig a little through the organic matter and the swale is damp still... All these little things sees my small plot in good health and hopefully will remain longer as this El Nino settles in.
I don’t care what anyone says, Australian farmers are second to none. A person who doesn’t want to improve their own land, and the whole country around them, shouldn’t be on the land. These Aussie farmers are an inspiration.
Sorry mate, but overall, you're completely wrong. Other countries have been doing this for decades, if not for thousands of years. And all without Landcare advising them to do so. The new green wall of Africa is 15 km (9 mi) wide and 7,775 km (4,831 mi) long. China has restored 154,000 square miles (400,000 square km) or eroded desert in the Loesse Plateau. China has planted forest covering more than 500,000 square kilometers (increasing tree cover from 12% to 18%) - the largest artificial forest in the world. The Paani Water Foundation in India have cut 7.006 km of continuous contour trenches (CCTs), built 4420 km of deep CCTs, built 14,960 km of compartment bunding and 3,989 km of nala stream deepening and widening. Australians could do a hell of a lot more. And the countries I mentioned don't have a fraction of the resources, wealth and earthmoving machinery per capita that Australian farmers do. Most 'farmers' including feed lots and very large cattle stations are very late to the game and totally abysmal overall, although this small video is promising and heartening(well done and huge respect to the farmers involved). In Queensland during 2018-19 alone, farmers and cattle graziers destroyed around 680,000 hectares of forest(chain dragged and bulldozed). If Queensland was a country, it would have been the ninth highest forest destroying nation globally in 2019, just above China.
Good grief!! you are so down on people who are actually doing something. I would encourage them for taking the risk regardless of what other countries have acheived. I grew up on a wheat farm in WA. My father put in conture & grade banks back in the early sixty's. Get off your high horse and be part of practical improvement regardless how late people may be to the improvement. What they have actually done is different to in India, Africa etc.and is a very innovative tweak to water retention in the landscape. I congratulate them for tuning the concept to better fit their individual landscape. GO YOU GOOOD PEOPLE!!!
@@RichardB-nc8ru I suppose there will always be creatures like you that see the glass 1/2 empty instead of getting off your arse to save some water to fill the glass. Sure, many of the changes in other parts of the world are true. Many of the farmers around the world are constantly caring for the land in their care because the lands & environments around the world are just a stewardship as the lands will be there long after we are gone, just hope they will be better not worse. I do know my father continually built contours in the 1960's on any lands he had to stop erosion over the 50 years since he came to QLD. There are many continually Australians that are committed to improving the lands under their care. Peter Andrews, Tony Coote, Chris Henggeler are just a few that commit their lives to bringing the land back & teaching others. QLD farmers & graziers are sincerely invested in the properties they care for. But you want to compare Australia a huge arid country of only 25 Mil people with India with 1.3 Bil & China with 1.4 Bil? Really, maybe stop doing drugs go outside & make a difference?
Brilliant to see the land being restored by these simple measures. The more grassland, the less soils will be swept away. And what a great carbon sink this will become. It will be interesting to see how those regenerated areas survive this new drought cycle. Great work people!
Wonderful (even emotional) to see this happening at scale in dryland Australia. There is such a groundswell of understanding how effective these low cost and micro-hydrology interventions can be. Ozzies turned beavers at work.
love it, if only all our vast country could have an open and proactive mind set like these true Aussie hero's then we'd have a far better/more diverse/fertile/productive/generally happy landscape that in turn would look after those whom look after it. Pull your finger out Australia and follow their lead, show the world how to get shit done proper... Many thanks to the ingenious hard working men and women of the parched outback... Hats off to you.
This is what I love Ove been watching a lot of these style of videos from Australia, Europe, America, India and Africa and its all the same You have to slow down the water
Kenya and Tanzania has had great success digging "bunds" to slow down their rainwater. Can be done anywhere and probably less of a hindrance to animals moving around. This is great too but just wanted to supply an alternative too 😊
What a fantastic result. I can't help but think of urban areas where all the water is removed as quickly as possible, maybe more attention to water flows from roads into vegetated areas may actually help with bush fire intensity and the heat island effect. These farmers are leading the pack and providing inspiration to enable others to follow. Thank you very much for the video.
The key is the animal impact (grazing) to keep the soil healthy and reduce fuel loads. Without that you just get the grass growth and increasing fuel loads. It’s hard to graze urban areas especially in an organised way. I used to work for a LG in catchment management. Urban areas have their own challenges, but I agree, some of these thing could be applied eg engaging floodplains, slowing waters, creating wetlands ,leaving space for water and a less of a focus on hard infrastructure.
With so many awful things happening in the world in October 2023, this video brings so much hope that widespread change for the better is happening too.
Love this stuff. Slowing water, turn small events into bigger ones, increase infiltration. So simple and just a change in attitude from flood are bad to floods are good. 👍 better land management is how we keep our farmlands productive, help native ecosystem and build climate resilience.
Extraordinarily easily fixed , well done to them for taking the inititiive and having a go in the first place.....Most environmental damage comes from inaction...not even necessarliy the wrong action but pure laziness and these guys have put heaps of positive work into making what you can see is a massive difference...in just a year its stunning.
THANK YOU for all your work in restoring and regeneration of the land. My Maternal Grandparents and relatives had property’s in NSW, the kept all the rees on the land and the wild stock they run on the properties loved resting under the trees, and there was trees around certain sides of the dams and this seemed to be standard practice many many years ago. Northbrook, Danderleaf, Nugal, and Wilgabar were wonderful places to spend holidays
Incredible, simply incredible. Could not agree more, not everything requires loads of cash. Congratulations to everyone involved, may your examples and evidence be inspiration to many others...
I've always wanted to get into regenerative agriculture! Started on my parents farm, old sheep grazing with really hard, dry soil. Now it's pretty much a little forest. Just wish I had land I could do this with
So good to hear - keeping the water in the landscape keeps the country running for the long term (so much damaged and degraded grazing land all over the marginal lands. Banks swales and biological seeding - getting the land working again takes a lot of work (and workers).
Sitting here in my fluro lit office my heart yearns to be a part of this. I travel through our local hills and stretched out as far as the eye can see are dry barren hills made bare by ancient clearing practices and its all just so unnecessary. Can you imagine the potential increases in stocking rates and native biodiversity that are possible on these scales. We can feed the world and take natural ecologies thought to be on the brink back to abundance.
Awesome stuff. And some people would have you believe a lot of farmers don't care about their country. Keep on going with this low cost and effective solution to land degradation. Well done everyone.
As much as I love 'the bush' and all that Australia has to offer, I can't help thinking that despite all the technological and societal advances we've enjoyed in the last few generations and will enjoy in the next couple, we are seeing this magnificent land at its absolute worst, and we are lesser for it. I'd love to retire (early) on 100 acres or so and spend the next few decades before I depart, replanting and regrowing what I can so that a generation or few down the track, will once again see the mighty forests that used to be here, and enjoy them.
What’s happening is people are realising that the land can be brought back to good use I think by studying ancient techniques and trying this out we may still save the land.
We need this type of effort and coordinate support in the US southwest arid regions. If we could just get beaver established again would make a massive difference.
Absolutely fantastic work being done. If we could harness these ideas and a "Volunteer Army" of retired folk ( I'd love to be involved), then just imagine what could be achieved at almost no cost.
What did running that grader cost ya? $250 A a day and diesel? See the effect of making a swale every few miles across the "sheet-flow" pan. Before the cut, it would just wash down year after year. The earlier examples of "leaky dams" are being replicated in a lot of other dry areas. I've watched numerous similar projects on the Tube from Arizona and Colorado here in the States. Could it be that we are capable of fixing things? Looks like it.
Brilliant work -- it must be SO rewarding to see such simple yet clever and effective methods bring the lands back to life -- wishing you the best and and a wonderful future.
Great video. It is always good to see both the theory and the practice. I'd like to see more videos where the people on the ground tell you what they did and then show you the result.
This whole Climate Change narrative is about what man adds to the environment (Co2), but what these guys are proving is it is more what man takes away from the environment, ie destruction of native diversity, tree clearing, land degradation etc, by them now working with the environment and producing land reclamation techniques using revegetation methodology, and the management of water on the ground. Very well done and keep up the great work, pioneers in a more productive future for all.
Oh I LIKE this a lot. My going to use this in my D&D game for my druid. I live where it's wet, wet lands are normal, I value my wet lands. People don't understand the value of a healthy biome.
It's the snowball effect: water retention, gradual greening, less soil erosion, more drought resistance, increased biodiversity, ability to support trees/grasses/shrubs/flowering plants, encourage shading, more water in dams/streams/water table, all adds to better soil and yield.
More bird life will bring in the Foxes, Cats and Large Goannas, its beautiful to see the land coming back, water is king, I always felt that there isnt enough done to get the land healthy again.
This film is the best thing I've seen in years. I worked through that country in the early eighties, and west of there. All I remember is the whole place hard baked bare country. This is bloody wonderful, keep up with this great work.
This is so hopeful. How did we loose this knowledge? I know we came from Europe with that climate's mindset, but we just devastated this land. When England reports a drought, I think, if they can't conserve water in a place it always rains, no wonder they created vast tracts of cracked mud here. To think that what looked like barren land was in reality a wetland! I'm glad this knowledge is coming back and that the farmers are finding a cheap way to conserve water. It's so effective, that it will get past down generationally.
It's great to see action being taken to improve soil health in these western communities. I spent much of my childhood years in those areas and my early working career in some of these communities and the land degredation was something to behold. Sadly although these people are working to fix it in an agricultural sense most of the problem stems from tree clearing, over grazing and collapse of ecosystem function by removal of native animals and introduction of pest species. I hope more thought is put into fixing these other parts to restoring the land equation so we can all share a more productive and healthy landscape.
Phenomenal! The public must be aware that solutions exist beyond just giving money to governments and allowing them to over-regulate our lives. The solutions exist. Let's focus on Solutions and less on doom and gloom. In fact, people who profess doom but have absolutely NO real world solution are part of the problem. Don't be discouraged and focus on real world solutions.
I have a section near the edge of my property where I used to get runoff along the road like a river so I added a foot of mulch along the edge of the road and even during heavy rain the winecap mycelium that has grown into that mulch absorbs the water like a sponge and pulls it into my land
I only have an acre so I might not be scalable but we get free unlimited arborist mulch from the arborists I’ve made friends with. It’s amazing how much an acre can change with a few hundred cubic yards of mulch
I've often pondered why, aside from financial constraints, we couldn't simply redirect water back into the heartlands and the ancient lakes of Australia. It would indeed be a massive undertaking, but isn't that the point? Had we initiated such a project a decade ago, we might already be reaping the benefits?
I have heard suggestion that much of Australia was heavily forested or even rain forest but the Indigenous actually desertified much of it by constantly burning it down. I personally think there's credence in it because from what the blokes here are doing it seems on a long enough timeline the land could very well completely rehydrate and recover to something resembling what it formerly was.
I think they are emotional. People who have been through drought, flood and hardship who are now taking an alternative approach to bring back life and biodiversity, are really feeling positive about restoring their land.
we need more environmentalist to go out and speak with farmers. they know the land and what it needs, and enviro's can help get the funding through the gov offices. slow down water, not restrict. allow native plants to work with your crops. allow native animals to help fertilize and spread seed. bring back nature to boost agricultural wealth and abundance.
Keep the enviros out of it all !!! They just want jobs to boss people around, and control what happens so they get the cudos. Real people on the land can figure out what to do with a little encouragement from thinking people who care.
Great work guys. Im wondering Im a farmer in the south of Portugal and were heavily affected by aerosol spraying from aircraft the greatly reduces the amount of rainfall we get. is this something you have down in Oz too?
In reality you're fixing a problem Australians themselves have caused. Over grazing, either from livestock, or from the overpopulation of kangaroos created by the abundance of water from those huge cattle stations, possibly over grazing from introduced animals like goats and camels, logging... all of this caused massive erosion that we have to fix today.
Just one good project can change The Water Situation of 80% Australia in all directions - East West North South. All smaller projects then will be more viable and efficient. If the Government agrees and also people have to agree it's doable in 3 yrs, giving results from the very 1st yr of start. Meanwhile people have to do what little they can.
Their slowing the flash rains instead of just going like a river ,,,water around for days instead of hours and water tables can raise a little each year
I watched a D11 bulldozer build a supposed dam in a quick as possible time. The dozer was soon buried to 4 or 5 meters. And they called it a dam. No forethought as to the removal of the top soil or storage, no thought about the valuable level clay-with its water holding capacities, or secure placement. To be returned in situ to its needed place in a dam, Just like a valued canal built long ago, made to hold water and last. The dam that they built so quickly, wasn’t a dam but rather a hole. For practical reasons it was quick though but stupid?
If you do that in QLD without approval from Dept of Natural Resources you will get yourself a legal action. You can't alter water courses (creeks or rivers) & build any structure without the Dept involved. On the positive side my father always got the Dept of Natural Resources on the property & they assisted with shooting levels so we could build contours to stop soil erosion, this was in the 60's & 70's. On the negative side this is where QLD now has a problem with Cubby Station blocking a huge amount of water that should end up in the Murray- Darling basin. Cubby Station was approved so long ago & although the QLD govt really wants it gone, it's worth to much $ to buy now.
Great video. I do wonder why the embankments are placed with the trenches behind the incoming water has opposed to having the trenches being between the incoming water and the embankments. I'm certain there's a reason for it, but I can't figure it out.
I've only got half an acre on the edge of the village but I dug swales on contour by hand during the 2019 drought/bushfires. It was hard dusty work and I questioned myself many times. But the difference it has made to my little plot is remarkable. I also do demi-lunes around all the trees as there is quite a decent grade to the property. The swales and demi-lunes I fill with organic matter that I bring from the city from my landscaping job. the burm is dry, but dig a little through the organic matter and the swale is damp still... All these little things sees my small plot in good health and hopefully will remain longer as this El Nino settles in.
I’m on 1/4 acre and the result has been brilliant
Update ?
I don’t care what anyone says, Australian farmers are second to none.
A person who doesn’t want to improve their own land, and the whole country around them, shouldn’t be on the land.
These Aussie farmers are an inspiration.
Sorry mate, but overall, you're completely wrong. Other countries have been doing this for decades, if not for thousands of years. And all without Landcare advising them to do so. The new green wall of Africa is 15 km (9 mi) wide and 7,775 km (4,831 mi) long. China has restored 154,000 square miles (400,000 square km) or eroded desert in the Loesse Plateau. China has planted forest covering more than 500,000 square kilometers (increasing tree cover from 12% to 18%) - the largest artificial forest in the world. The Paani Water Foundation in India have cut 7.006 km of continuous contour trenches (CCTs), built 4420 km of deep CCTs, built 14,960 km of compartment bunding and 3,989 km of nala stream deepening and widening. Australians could do a hell of a lot more. And the countries I mentioned don't have a fraction of the resources, wealth and earthmoving machinery per capita that Australian farmers do. Most 'farmers' including feed lots and very large cattle stations are very late to the game and totally abysmal overall, although this small video is promising and heartening(well done and huge respect to the farmers involved).
In Queensland during 2018-19 alone, farmers and cattle graziers destroyed around 680,000 hectares of forest(chain dragged and bulldozed). If Queensland was a country, it would have been the ninth highest forest destroying nation globally in 2019, just above China.
Good grief!! you are so down on people who are actually doing something. I would encourage them for taking the risk regardless of what other countries have acheived. I grew up on a wheat farm in WA. My father put in conture & grade banks back in the early sixty's. Get off your high horse and be part of practical improvement regardless how late people may be to the improvement.
What they have actually done is different to in India, Africa etc.and is a very innovative tweak to water retention in the landscape. I congratulate them for tuning the concept to better fit their individual landscape. GO YOU GOOOD PEOPLE!!!
@@RichardB-nc8ru I suppose there will always be creatures like you that see the glass 1/2 empty instead of getting off your arse to save some water to fill the glass. Sure, many of the changes in other parts of the world are true. Many of the farmers around the world are constantly caring for the land in their care because the lands & environments around the world are just a stewardship as the lands will be there long after we are gone, just hope they will be better not worse. I do know my father continually built contours in the 1960's on any lands he had to stop erosion over the 50 years since he came to QLD. There are many continually Australians that are committed to improving the lands under their care. Peter Andrews, Tony Coote, Chris Henggeler are just a few that commit their lives to bringing the land back & teaching others. QLD farmers & graziers are sincerely invested in the properties they care for. But you want to compare Australia a huge arid country of only 25 Mil people with India with 1.3 Bil & China with 1.4 Bil? Really, maybe stop doing drugs go outside & make a difference?
Brilliant to see the land being restored by these simple measures. The more grassland, the less soils will be swept away. And what a great carbon sink this will become. It will be interesting to see how those regenerated areas survive this new drought cycle. Great work people!
Wonderful (even emotional) to see this happening at scale in dryland Australia. There is such a groundswell of understanding how effective these low cost and micro-hydrology interventions can be. Ozzies turned beavers at work.
Emotional for me too
love it, if only all our vast country could have an open and proactive mind set like these true Aussie hero's then we'd have a far better/more diverse/fertile/productive/generally happy landscape that in turn would look after those whom look after it. Pull your finger out Australia and follow their lead, show the world how to get shit done proper... Many thanks to the ingenious hard working men and women of the parched outback... Hats off to you.
This is what I love
Ove been watching a lot of these style of videos from Australia, Europe, America, India and Africa and its all the same
You have to slow down the water
Great video. I appreciate hearing directly from the ranchers themselves. You guys are getting amazing results -keep up the good work!
Kenya and Tanzania has had great success digging "bunds" to slow down their rainwater.
Can be done anywhere and probably less of a hindrance to animals moving around.
This is great too but just wanted to supply an alternative too 😊
What a fantastic result. I can't help but think of urban areas where all the water is removed as quickly as possible, maybe more attention to water flows from roads into vegetated areas may actually help with bush fire intensity and the heat island effect. These farmers are leading the pack and providing inspiration to enable others to follow. Thank you very much for the video.
The key is the animal impact (grazing) to keep the soil healthy and reduce fuel loads. Without that you just get the grass growth and increasing fuel loads. It’s hard to graze urban areas especially in an organised way. I used to work for a LG in catchment management. Urban areas have their own challenges, but I agree, some of these thing could be applied eg engaging floodplains, slowing waters, creating wetlands ,leaving space for water and a less of a focus on hard infrastructure.
With so many awful things happening in the world in October 2023, this video brings so much hope that widespread change for the better is happening too.
Love this stuff. Slowing water, turn small events into bigger ones, increase infiltration. So simple and just a change in attitude from flood are bad to floods are good. 👍 better land management is how we keep our farmlands productive, help native ecosystem and build climate resilience.
Fantastic work by all involved. Gives a great example of how and why to do it.
Extraordinarily easily fixed , well done to them for taking the inititiive and having a go in the first place.....Most environmental damage comes from inaction...not even necessarliy the wrong action but pure laziness and these guys have put heaps of positive work into making what you can see is a massive difference...in just a year its stunning.
THANK YOU for all your work in restoring and regeneration of the land. My Maternal Grandparents and relatives had property’s in NSW, the kept all the rees on the land and the wild stock they run on the properties loved resting under the trees, and there was trees around certain sides of the dams and this seemed to be standard practice many many years ago. Northbrook, Danderleaf, Nugal, and Wilgabar were wonderful places to spend holidays
Incredible, simply incredible. Could not agree more, not everything requires loads of cash. Congratulations to everyone involved, may your examples and evidence be inspiration to many others...
I've always wanted to get into regenerative agriculture! Started on my parents farm, old sheep grazing with really hard, dry soil. Now it's pretty much a little forest.
Just wish I had land I could do this with
So good to hear - keeping the water in the landscape keeps the country running for the long term (so much damaged and degraded grazing land all over the marginal lands.
Banks swales and biological seeding - getting the land working again takes a lot of work (and workers).
Man i'd love to go and work on this stuff. I'm a builder and people think that's real work but it's not. This is the real thing.
Sitting here in my fluro lit office my heart yearns to be a part of this. I travel through our local hills and stretched out as far as the eye can see are dry barren hills made bare by ancient clearing practices and its all just so unnecessary. Can you imagine the potential increases in stocking rates and native biodiversity that are possible on these scales. We can feed the world and take natural ecologies thought to be on the brink back to abundance.
Awesome stuff. And some people would have you believe a lot of farmers don't care about their country. Keep on going with this low cost and effective solution to land degradation. Well done everyone.
As much as I love 'the bush' and all that Australia has to offer, I can't help thinking that despite all the technological and societal advances we've enjoyed in the last few generations and will enjoy in the next couple, we are seeing this magnificent land at its absolute worst, and we are lesser for it.
I'd love to retire (early) on 100 acres or so and spend the next few decades before I depart, replanting and regrowing what I can so that a generation or few down the track, will once again see the mighty forests that used to be here, and enjoy them.
What’s happening is people are realising that the land can be brought back to good use I think by studying ancient techniques and trying this out we may still save the land.
We need this type of effort and coordinate support in the US southwest arid regions. If we could just get beaver established again would make a massive difference.
Be the spark that ignites the change you need
Legends, we're doing this albeit a smaller scale in our Chewton landcare, great vid ❤
Absolutely fantastic work being done. If we could harness these ideas and a "Volunteer Army" of retired folk ( I'd love to be involved), then just imagine what could be achieved at almost no cost.
What did running that grader cost ya? $250 A a day and diesel? See the effect of making a swale every few miles across the "sheet-flow" pan. Before the cut, it would just wash down year after year. The earlier examples of "leaky dams" are being replicated in a lot of other dry areas. I've watched numerous similar projects on the Tube from Arizona and Colorado here in the States. Could it be that we are capable of fixing things? Looks like it.
You lucky buggers have the beaver. Here, they need to re plant the trees, to then grow old and die in place
Australia’s 110 to 120 degrees for weeks on end does not help . Evaporation is cruel
Brilliant work -- it must be SO rewarding to see such simple yet clever and effective methods bring the lands back to life -- wishing you the best and and a wonderful future.
Great video. It is always good to see both the theory and the practice.
I'd like to see more videos where the people on the ground tell you what they did and then show you the result.
Absolutely amazing initiative. Thank you for filming and sharing this!
This is the stuff that makes me feel so inspired and hopeful for humanities future!
Well done, what a great educational video! You must all be very proud of what you have achieved in such a short time.
amazing to see. Thanks for taking the time to tell this story. The potential is wild!
How cool, great work by the hardest workers in Australia.
Finally thats the oldest farming methodology used in the past and present in countries reconstruction of flood land. Nice work keep it up.
Simple and effective, love it (Y)
Love it! So glad these permaculture ideas can be used at scale.
This whole Climate Change narrative is about what man adds to the environment (Co2), but what these guys are proving is it is more what man takes away from the environment, ie destruction of native diversity, tree clearing, land degradation etc, by them now working with the environment and producing land reclamation techniques using revegetation methodology, and the management of water on the ground.
Very well done and keep up the great work, pioneers in a more productive future for all.
Oh I LIKE this a lot. My going to use this in my D&D game for my druid.
I live where it's wet, wet lands are normal, I value my wet lands. People don't understand the value of a healthy biome.
It's the snowball effect: water retention, gradual greening, less soil erosion, more drought resistance, increased biodiversity, ability to support trees/grasses/shrubs/flowering plants, encourage shading, more water in dams/streams/water table, all adds to better soil and yield.
More bird life will bring in the Foxes, Cats and Large Goannas, its beautiful to see the land coming back, water is king, I always felt that there isnt enough done to get the land healthy again.
Top job.
Must keep mining waste and toxic run off from industrialism out of the system everywhere.
Water MUST be kept healthy.
9:44 Love how one guy is always rolling a shaggy (rollup sigaret) whenever he's stepping out of the vehicle to talk.
Beautiful work letting nature do its thing at scale
This film is the best thing I've seen in years. I worked through that country in the early eighties, and west of there. All I remember is the whole place hard baked bare country. This is bloody wonderful, keep up with this great work.
This is so hopeful.
How did we loose this knowledge? I know we came from Europe with that climate's mindset, but we just devastated this land. When England reports a drought, I think, if they can't conserve water in a place it always rains, no wonder they created vast tracts of cracked mud here.
To think that what looked like barren land was in reality a wetland!
I'm glad this knowledge is coming back and that the farmers are finding a cheap way to conserve water. It's so effective, that it will get past down generationally.
Amazing, I can barely imagine what the country will look like if it gets taken up everywhere
Great work Jody and Mark. Thankyou
Fabulous. Save the water Save the land.
It's great to see action being taken to improve soil health in these western communities. I spent much of my childhood years in those areas and my early working career in some of these communities and the land degredation was something to behold. Sadly although these people are working to fix it in an agricultural sense most of the problem stems from tree clearing, over grazing and collapse of ecosystem function by removal of native animals and introduction of pest species.
I hope more thought is put into fixing these other parts to restoring the land equation so we can all share a more productive and healthy landscape.
Wow that’s amazing. Really inspiring
need more of this . good work.
Stoked to see the up date
farmers are the best landcare people.
Awesome video. Amazing results
So inspiring 👍
Phenomenal! The public must be aware that solutions exist beyond just giving money to governments and allowing them to over-regulate our lives. The solutions exist. Let's focus on Solutions and less on doom and gloom. In fact, people who profess doom but have absolutely NO real world solution are part of the problem. Don't be discouraged and focus on real world solutions.
I have a section near the edge of my property where I used to get runoff along the road like a river so I added a foot of mulch along the edge of the road and even during heavy rain the winecap mycelium that has grown into that mulch absorbs the water like a sponge and pulls it into my land
I only have an acre so I might not be scalable but we get free unlimited arborist mulch from the arborists I’ve made friends with. It’s amazing how much an acre can change with a few hundred cubic yards of mulch
Sometimes all you have to do is add back the water that was taken. Mother Nature can heal herself.
That's the amazing thing isn't it?
❤ total respect
Well done!! Green the deserts!
Utterly awesome!
did he use the word country
Amazing regeneration
I've often pondered why, aside from financial constraints, we couldn't simply redirect water back into the heartlands and the ancient lakes of Australia. It would indeed be a massive undertaking, but isn't that the point? Had we initiated such a project a decade ago, we might already be reaping the benefits?
would beavers do well in australia?
I have heard suggestion that much of Australia was heavily forested or even rain forest but the Indigenous actually desertified much of it by constantly burning it down. I personally think there's credence in it because from what the blokes here are doing it seems on a long enough timeline the land could very well completely rehydrate and recover to something resembling what it formerly was.
Great work.
BTW, what common problem have all this people with eyes ? Some kind of alergy to the sun light or dust ?
I think they are emotional. People who have been through drought, flood and hardship who are now taking an alternative approach to bring back life and biodiversity, are really feeling positive about restoring their land.
You might be referring to sun damaged eyes… pretty common across Queensland.
we need more environmentalist to go out and speak with farmers. they know the land and what it needs, and enviro's can help get the funding through the gov offices. slow down water, not restrict. allow native plants to work with your crops. allow native animals to help fertilize and spread seed. bring back nature to boost agricultural wealth and abundance.
Keep the enviros out of it all !!!
They just want jobs to boss people around, and control what happens so they get the cudos. Real people on the land can figure out what to do with a little encouragement from thinking people who care.
We’ll done guys
Cool. Good luck with it all.
Bravo!
Fabulous!❤
Cheers from America! Jesus loves you!
He loves us all❤
God Bles You
Natural sequencing.
Peter Andrews?
At last SUPERIOR RACE understanding how to take CARE of Mother EARTH.
Heartiest Congratulations.
Why are some of these guys using "feet and inches " ? They would have used metric for all of their schooling. Just wondering
Great work guys. Im wondering Im a farmer in the south of Portugal and were heavily affected by aerosol spraying from aircraft the greatly reduces the amount of rainfall we get. is this something you have down in Oz too?
That's awesome
Bloody Legends
10:36 This view speaks for itself :) .
In reality you're fixing a problem Australians themselves have caused. Over grazing, either from livestock, or from the overpopulation of kangaroos created by the abundance of water from those huge cattle stations, possibly over grazing from introduced animals like goats and camels, logging... all of this caused massive erosion that we have to fix today.
Spread the word. Let governments know.
what about swales and making ponds for keeping water?
very good bravo
Working with mother nature instead of fighting against it
there are talks now of refilling lake mungo
Awesome
"We're not meant to leave the planet, we're meant to fix it."
Just one good project can change The Water Situation of 80% Australia in all directions - East West North South. All smaller projects then will be more viable and efficient. If the Government agrees and also people have to agree it's doable in 3 yrs, giving results from the very 1st yr of start.
Meanwhile people have to do what little they can.
Can someone please explain what they did?
Their slowing the flash rains instead of just going like a river ,,,water around for days instead of hours and water tables can raise a little each year
Wow👍👍👍
I watched a D11 bulldozer build a supposed dam in a quick as possible time. The dozer was soon buried to 4 or 5 meters. And they called it a dam. No forethought as to the removal of the top soil or storage, no thought about the valuable level clay-with its water holding capacities, or secure placement. To be returned in situ to its needed place in a dam, Just like a valued canal built long ago, made to hold water and last. The dam that they built so quickly, wasn’t a dam but rather a hole. For practical reasons it was quick though but stupid?
If you do that in QLD without approval from Dept of Natural Resources you will get yourself a legal action. You can't alter water courses (creeks or rivers) & build any structure without the Dept involved. On the positive side my father always got the Dept of Natural Resources on the property & they assisted with shooting levels so we could build contours to stop soil erosion, this was in the 60's & 70's. On the negative side this is where QLD now has a problem with Cubby Station blocking a huge amount of water that should end up in the Murray- Darling basin. Cubby Station was approved so long ago & although the QLD govt really wants it gone, it's worth to much $ to buy now.
Great video. I do wonder why the embankments are placed with the trenches behind the incoming water has opposed to having the trenches being between the incoming water and the embankments. I'm certain there's a reason for it, but I can't figure it out.
The power of cover cropping and swales to mitigate flooding.
Genius
Almost ready for baling✌️👍
Couldn’t understand anyone in the video until I turned my Bluetooth earbuds upside down. Crazy
Australia is "down under".
Good on yus
Work in with Mother Nature & she'll look after you.