This is turning out to be such a hard project, as software engineers we do mostly stuff on "paper", when you translate what looks good on paper to reality its so hard. All the best keep up the good work. There is bright sunlight at the end of the tunnel.
Wirh all the people taking half secrions and turning them into Oasis in 1 to 2 years and all we see is tje before and after. It is really nice to see the process from someone who is learning as they go. You let us see all the failures and successes. You give us, the feeling of being there. At least with me and my family. BTW: we have land just down the road on big tank road, so your success is really inspiring for us.
Sep Holzer advocates sealing ponds with pigs. Their wallowing compacts the clay if you're patient. When asked what to do without pigs, he replied "Then you must do the work of the pig!"
I’ve help build beaver dam analogs… on the Rio Guadalupe in New Mexico. Along with the Dept. of Game and Fish, we were trying to restore riparian habitat for the native Rio Grande cutthroat trout. We returned to the sites 6 weeks later to find that beavers had moved in… beavers weren’t thought to be within 75 miles of the area. The beavers also “remodeled” our work, which the biologists of NMDG&F now use in their analog design. Overall, the beaver dam analogs were a huge success. Good luck on your application!!
There were RGCT in the stream… we were stabilizing and improving the riparian zone on a heavily used stretch of river. I’m a member of New Mexico Trout, a 501(c)3 focused on the Rio Grande Cutthroat, a threatened species that is also the New Mexico state fish.
Having spent almost 50 years in the construction industry I used to tell my apprentices something an older carpenter once told me: "I don't want carpenters working for me who don't make mistakes. I want carpenters working for me who know how to fix mistakes. Because everyday when we go to work we will make a mistake(s) and mess something up. Don't hide it, don't bury it, just fix it." That is where the real progress comes in life...fixing our mistakes. I love your story. I feel like I am learning a lot. And, I love watching you grow. Good Luck! Progress is when we keep putting one foot in front of the other, over and over and over and over again.
Tell me about it. I work for a small rebar shop. We do all the maintenance around the shop . There’s a bunch of hands on training and lots of walking back to the tool box. It gets frustrating but we gotta get’er done.
Beavers are amazing but they can't create something out of nothing. They need an existing source of material to work with. And to eat. So yeah, be the beaver!
Exactly my thought to. Beavers would be fantastic for this enviroment BUT they need something to eat and the beavers living in the village i live in has so far not been interested in eating rocks and dirt. In 20 years beavers may be a thing but definitly not now.
Before beavers can build, one has to have suitable habitat for them to eat, drink, and shelter within. Once Shaun retains water and plants become established, the beavers will have a chance, but that is probably at least a decade or more away. I've been watching other videos in desert Africa and water retention systems like Shaun is using are even holding back the expanding Sahara. It can be done. Go Shaun!
Well if he ever stops the channel he has shown the location of the property. A flight to Texas, rental pickup down a gravel road and you can see the progress
In Canada in summer I watched a beaver dig a canal to it's dam. It worked for hours and hours pushing mud from the canal bottom onto the entire length. The beaver families lake was easily 100 acre's. No exaggerating the dam was 50 yards wide and the uppermost dam was probably 6 to 8 feet tall. They also had three dams below the main main one. Truly amazing animals
My husband the mechanic had a policy. If one hose blows, they are ALL getting close. Just replace ALL of them rather than constantly have the same essential breakdown time after time. Sounds extreme, but really works well.
I kind of did that. I pulled 3 hoses that were nearby and easy to access. But, I didn't want to pull 10 and then worry about remembering what goes where
Mark them before you remove them, and also take photos. You should also get some flare nut wrenches to keep from damaging up all of those hydraulic nuts.
That rub through he had blow is not about the age of the hose it is about a bad repair before and the external protection not being put on properly. If you put a brand new hose on there without the external protection it will be the next hose to blow.
Your attitude towards mechanical problems has improved immensely over this series. You used to shut down when faced with a breakdown. But now you gave problems with a plan and persistence. I'd say the moment you improved was when you dropped the fuel tank off your truck. You began to give up but then you decided to take action. This dozer breakdown shows exactly how far you have come.
You should have some replacement hoses on hand. Even if they are too long, they will still work (with some zip ties) and allow you to run the machine. Then the next time you come out you bring an actual replacement hose and remove the temporary hose.
Was thinking the same- it would be nice if had all replaced as Dozer is so vital to the work being done. Alas only so many hours in a day to do so many things. Progress made is so nice to see by all of us.
I really appreciated the aerial map, where you plotted out what you intend to do. In many of the videos it's hard to visualize what you are doing. I know it makes perfect sense on the ground, but on a video it' very easily just becomes an unintelligible pile of rocks. So more of this please, and thanks for the content. I'm following your progress from Denmark by the way
I completely agree! I think this UA-cam channel is an amazing opportunity and such a fantastic project. But it’s really hard to visualise where he is working and what he’s doing in each area. Another pointer for you Shaun is to really edit down the video to condense the information. I speak for myself here but there is a lot of talk and not many visual ques like before and afters etc. I would like to see progress as well as what it looks like now. As at the moment it is all just a pile of dust and rocks. Really excited to see where you go next
Beaver Dam Analogs... Time... Trees and shrubs in the riparian zones... Then Real Beavers... Real recovery... The original slow, spread and soak engineering. LOVE IT.
@@fareshajjar1208Is anyone holding a gun to your head forcing you to watch? You've left so many negative comments wasting your time. Just don't watch, you come across as insanely jealous. Take your negativity and bugger off
I think you did the right thing from the start. You have rocks...use rocks. If check dams create habitat that can grow aspens, other trees that beavers like, then build BDAs from fiber that grows on your land. Make a ton of little check dams, even more than you already have. When you have a few thousand high up where the water flow is low, you may never have those blow-outs. Someday the beavers may show up, once there's something for them to use.
Shaun, I grew up in west Texas and unless one has been there, it is hard to imagine the bone dryness and extreme heat and cold. It has been frustrating to watch your videos and see so many things go wrong. I can just imagine how you might want to give up! Don't give up.....We are all watching and rooting for you!
Fantastic! We've cooperated with the NRCS to build four small dams on our ranch in Wyoming. The resulting ponds hold water year round, providing habitat for migratory waterfowl. We keep the cattle out of the pond areas during the nesting season, and the cows can use the water the rest of the year. All this from a creek that is dry most of the year, only running after heavy rains. It's been fascinating to watch the development of the surrounding area through the years. The banks of the ponds started out as nothing but piles of alkali-laden soil, pushed up by a backhoe to create the ponds next to the creek. Now the soil is covered by vegetation that seems to thrive despite the alkali.
We made 30 barriers from hay bales (many over 30 bales) they held the water enough for trees and other vegetation to take hold in very abused land. I was amazed at how much soil and fine sand they collected the first few years.
The very last thing you said in the video was the most important; you changed the other hoses that looked suspicious as well. In the military we have a saying; "the easiest problem to fix is the one you prevent" which is followed by the '7 P's (Proper Prior Planning Prevents Pi$$ Poor Performance). Short version; just change them all and get it done and over with. You have the same problem we do (other than being shot at!); being in the field a long way from the serious maintenance facility. So anything you can do to prevent problems by doing maintenance that forestalls a failure is a mission success. You are doing great considering you are a one-man army. Keep it up and keep moving forward because the only easy day was yesterday!
the reason beaver dams are curved down stream, is to increase the area where water can over top. by spreading out this area, it reduces the power of water by spreading it's energy over a wider area provided by the curving structure
Be the Beaver and the beaver will come on their own. The Beaver is a Keystone species just like the Wolf. When they reintroduced Wolf packs to Yellowstone they changed the course of rivers and new trees were allowed to grow with out being over grazed.
Shaun, I’ve gotta say, as you describe yourself as someone who keeps messing up, you deserve all the credit for getting up again every time you fail. You are certainly not afraid to try something new. Whether that is by choice or necessity, it is still commendable and a great example to others afraid to try new things. It’s encouraging to see you succeed after so many setbacks. You are doing great things.
Yesterday I had never heard of you. Today I couldn't pull myself aways. I watched at least 6 hours of your videos. Fascinating. I love your overall optimistic attitude. I love the volunteers. Your plan to rejuvenate the land is great.
Beaver-style FTW! Between this and working to establish mycelium networks you seem to be on the right track. A couple of ideas/questions: 1. Would it be possible to drill a number of boreholes down say, 30-50 feet a few inches in diameter in the path of where the water would normally flow during the rainy season and block off around the first 4-5 feet of the edges with say, PVC and cover with screen material? I would think that this might assist in allowing the ground to recapture some of the water in localized areas which could then be absorbed by some of the more deeply rooted plants but avoid the evaporation 2. Since one of the big issues is getting a large amount of organic matter to start improving the soil, something to potentially take advantage of would be some of the fires that have been happening lately more north. When we had the fires in Bastrop near Austin, after they were out there was a lot of business in clearing land and removing burned timber from properties for things like new builds/etc. Some people started entire firewood businesses out of it. However, all of that burned wood makes for a great base for something like terra preta. People pay to have that kind of thing removed, which covers the gas cost to get it delivered to the ranch. If you had a tall long trailer w/ metal sides, you could have people clear brush/logs for a base fee (or do it solo), then haul it out and use it as a basis of an area en-masse. Afterwards, it could be buried and when the water comes, it would allow it to start to rot and the microorganisms can get to work. As it stands it kind of seems like it's going to take a really, really long time to build up enough organic matter to make a significant difference on such a large property, but by doing something like the above, you could potentially both turn a profit from the brush clearing, fund the gas to get it moved, help people in the process and also save on the cost of having to truck in existing soil by building your own more quickly. Burying the logs would be relatively easy with the dozer and would get them out of the sun, and looking at even home projects for permaculture this kind of technique seems to provide pretty good yields as the matter breaks down for around ~2 years. If combined with something like swales, e.g. burying a large number of logs in an area, covering with dirt, then building a swale to capture future rainwater, I would think in theory that would then allow the water to seep down into the wood, allot it to begin the decomposition process and you'd have a massive amount of good soil on the cheap to allow for more efficient branching out of arable land. If you used some long 2x6's, 4x4 posts, L brackets and a bit of concrete you may also be able to fashion some rudimentary pergolas to help provide shade in place of trees and help reduce the soil temperature and thus reduce evaporation in set areas. This may mimic the effect of using vertical solar panels in other projects to provide shade and cooling for growth. Sorry for the text block but hopefully it provides some ideas if they weren't already considered. I've loved following this project & seeing it develop :D I have aspirations to do something similar in the future when it becomes fiscally viable. I'm honestly half tempted to move out there somewhere and help for the exercise xD
I'm from Maine and have been relocating nuisance beaver my whole live and would love to see this work as I also would reconstruct some beaver dams in order to preserve my favorite fishing spots.
I told ya so! I mentioned beaver dam analogs way back in one of the first videos. That got a ton of comments, too, which I thought was very unusual. The BDA's work just like the Leaky Weirs you went on to build. The problem is that you've just not installed enough of them. That Gabion you made was a good start, but you stopped when you should have continued. I wouldn't want to see you building anything that requires you to bring in materials like posts. With all the rock you have, buying wooden posts that you'd have to drive in the ground is just silly. You've got rock, so use it. While we say "be the beaver", we need to remember that beavers would happily use dynamite if they could! They use wood and mud because that's what they can handle. You've got rocks and dirt, with a smattering of shrubbery, so use that. Don't drive up the costs by purchasing stuff in town. Of course, I say that, but you should do whatever the grant tells you to do. If there's going to be tax-money spent, this is a good cause for it. Just remember to start at the highest point and work your way down. It might not seem like you're stopping much water with those first few you make at the highest elevations, but they are critical to slowing the water before it can build up speed and power. Let the water get too much of a run built up and it'll be able to possibly blow out the first few BDA's that it hits. This is basically what you saw happening with the Gabion. That one structure never stood a chance against all the water that was coming down the channel. Miles and miles of gravity working and the flood waters running unimpeded meant that the Gabion was in big trouble right from the outset. That's why any channel needs many BDA's or other structures. The first few might fall under the onslaught, but they still strip energy from the water and make it easier for the next structures to stand firm against the flow. Beavers will not be able to survive in that area for at least another century. But we can learn from them, and mimic them. We can Be The Beaver.
How deep is bed rock? Would it be better to drive corrugated STEEL panels all the way down and then it would FORCE all water to either stay behind the steel retaining wall OR become ground water table?
@@1truthseeking8 oh no. That's way too much work and expense. Even if you could easily hit bedrock, you'd always have gaps between the metal and the rock since one of them isn't a nice even surface. Then there's the cost off all that metal and the labor to install it! Yikes!! In the end, it's better to just learn from the experts, the beavers who have been at this for millions of years. We might have to switch materials a bit since all that's there is rock and dirt, but we can at least follow the principles that the beavers have established for us.
@@HTOP1982No. it depends on the amount of rain water. 4 months of 100+ heat, no clouds, will dry up his property into cement. Nothing will grow. I think he’s underestimating what he can’t control, the weather.
@@GotoHere Hence the money vs effort tradeoff. If money was no object, he could build loads of much larger dams. Or with money being a limiting factor, he can try to keep adding a certain % of ground cover each year. Ground cover protects from the sun, less evaporation, more water for longer on the soil, more water on the subsoil, It will take ages, that is for sure. A decade probably.
@@GotoHere he can't control the weather--but with the right plants and the right strategy he can control the water. Bill Mollison has been teaching the basics of this since the 70s and Andrew Millison is now the most prominent expert. There are lots and lots of examples of people reversing desertification. What you don't understand is that it's been done before by lots of people and there are several ways to do it. You really should learn some basics of nature before saying something so very obviously wrong.
It's definitely possible, theyre doing the same thing around the world like in the African union from Dakar to Djibouti, Israel, Saudi Arabia, North China. Really anywhere with desert. Also humans have been doing things like this forever
@@fareshajjar1208 he has spent quite a bit and is actually working toward his goal! the UA-cam channel might help off set his expenses! and you are just a nah sayer!
Your attempts to fix the hydraulics is so reminiscent of every mechanical problem I try to solve, except that you are doing it in the desert with a damn bulldozer instead of in a temperate backyard with a little lawnmower. Much respect for hanging in there.
I really admire you for chasing your dream. your story reminds me of an animated short film I saw as a child of a man in France who day after day would soak acorns in water and hike the barren hills around his home and plant thousands of acorns one by one. This led to the entire area being reforested and the watershed to be restored. This was something that really stuck with me and was something I always wanted to do myself but never did anything about it. Props to you for going out there and doing something!
@@buddhamack1491Jealous? Goodness why? Scrub land and making videos for years of zero progress. Wouldn't trade a single minute of my life for any part of this train wreck. Sometimes criticism is just what it appears to be: a critical take on the choices being made.
@@fareshajjar1208 hahaha and yet you watch and give him views. You're so jealous, if you weren't and you didn't like it, you could leave and not bother coming to leave hate filled comments. But you won't, you're not strong enough to simply ignore something and walk away.
With me owning a chunk of land down close to you when someone says release beavers I guess they pretty much just want to kill them. Beavers don't live in the desert🤦♂️ I also on a construction company and have for 33 years, that dozer you purchased is slap worn out. The H series JD dozers were the first of the series they were the first fully hydraulic dozer, it's just a computer running a pump that turns the final drives. And if you want headaches you start having to replace that stuff at a cost of about $20,000 Everyone in the construction world stays away from the H series just due to the cost of ownership If you would've went back one model to the G series you would have a true gem on your hands, it was The last of the truly mechanical dozers you could put a new final drive in it for about $6000 in a weekend even with your basic mechanical skills it's simple Believe me before too long you're gonna get rid of that 450H after it lets you down too many times. Just watching it drive-by in the videos you can tell it is severely worn out on the bottom end having it in rough terrain and rocks makes it even worse. Owning an H series JD it's about like owning a private jet. You can afford to purchase one, but you just can't afford to own it🤣💦.
Bevers absolutely do live in the desert boomer. The people that hate beavers are the idiots that build houses on flood planes or key locations in the watershed--these are the worst kind of people.
Appreciate how you share the realities without inflating, or overly dramatizing your experiences. You are a practical person which is very refreshing to watch and see. Keep the videos coming and sending you all the best as you continue to work towards your goals and passion.
My brother is a higher up in the NRCS, he would love what you are doing. We grew up on a farm, and know firsthand how important it is to be good stewards of the land. Can't wait to see the results. Best of luck.
Look into a solar water pump. They put out a very small stream of water but they work very well for filling a cistern tank that you can draw from. They typically have a float switch that will turn them off once the cistern is full. We use them on remote areas of our ranch that use to have windmills to fill the cistern to have water for them cattle in those areas. Much more reliable and cost effective than a windmill.
The thing about beaver dam that I'd love NRCS to address is once the beavers grow up beaver highwyas so they can actually spread out properly. (IE dry creeks that reshape thelandscape but maybe aren't always filled all year long) Sometimes they got these beavers and the reason why they don't spread is because it's an island. Doing things like setting up highways with native food plants & willows and so forth means you get a population that actually spreads out. you also might want to setup a willow nursery so you can plant your way out of your only having rocks. if you pair your check damns with a willow nursey you will get further and have both options over time. Plus, if you get a bunch of different types of native willow to your area you will be able to sell that as a source of income plus, willow is really easy to propgate. (even if you never get a beaver you might get an offer to rehome some and having the footprint is helpful) Second part about setting up a micro native nursey for food plants all of them get to be sold. it's to bad you don't live in Cali because air wells are under used and actually work really well there. I'm not sure if you have fog out there but using a blatter style water storage. (I'm not sure the real name sorry) but after the last war, they had a lot of these on the market, still not sure if they are. But they used them to storage water in the desert. They hold a shocking amount and if you spread it out with an air well you can storage water in zones across your land.
you should develop a routine of checking over your machinery. A lot of problems can be prevented by just simply giving a look at things like hoses also checking for vet spots under the machinery from engine and gearbox and wiring loom locations, things can get loose and start rubbing. Also rubber when it gets old it starts to crack so just give hoses a slight bend and look at the surface, if tears appear on rubber it's getting near the end of service life.
Have you tried 'Madre de Cacao'? I don't know what it's called in English, but like Moringa, it can also grow through cuttings, so you can probably plant one in your house, then cut it every 3-4 months or so, then plant the cuttings in the desert forest, that way, even if it does, it still becomes biomass.
I'm so happy to have come across your channel. I get easily frustrated when I'm trying something new or that I don't do regularly and I get upset or ticked off, and want to give up if it doesn't go as I expected. However, at some point, I'll either come back to it later and try again, and if it still isn't working I'll reach out to others to see who knows how to fix this thing or that thing. Yet your video shows me to keep trying. I lack confidence in my abilities to do things outside of my comfort level, and yet here you are doing things you don't have any or much knowledge in and you keep trying. Thank you!! You've really encouraged me to not give up so quickly. Very much appreciated!! 😁👍🤩
I have always told my wife that someone needs to dam water in the dry areas, dessert regions to bring life, help wildlife and --- I will want to come look some day. I would donate but do not have resources but will keep it in mind for future if possible.
Beavers would be detrimental to his project. The amount of foliage they can take out is mind boggling. There wouldn't be a shrub left and then the beaver would starve.
Watching that hydraulic repair reminds me of Andrew Camarata's channel. He has a fleet of sad construction equipment and does all his own maintenance on them when (not if) they break down. Some of his camera work, drone shots, and edits are incredible too. Imagine a drone shot of Shaun on his Cat out in the desert, rising until the dozer is just a tiny spec in an endless waste!
I'm a mechanic that works on heavy equipment like that dozer. When you habe to work on anything liks that again, just take the time and remove tue thing that's in your way pr slowing you down, it ends up being faster to take it further apart and put it back together than fight around that 1 fitting/bolt/connector.
An actual beaver needs building material, meaning you have soil and plants growing in that soil, to slow water flow. You're basically working with the rock layer of the Earth. Your only goal should be slowing water flow to build soil for the plants first. I haven't finished the video, but I'm assuming your rock dams will be determined to be not only the most cost effective, but also the more effective way. I still hope you get the grant money so we can have the side by side comparison of both methods to observe over time. 🤞🏻🤞🏻
Learning the hard way. Its always a pain when you're trying to do stuff on site, but it activates a part of your brain that most people ignore. Enjoy the dopamine rush when it works out
Love your perserverance. Mechanics is maddening enough, so I am glad you have the pressure washer. Better when you can see it, and goop means leakage.! Thanks for taking us along!!
You're doing a great job, I have experienced new machines that give hydraulic problems, don't feel you're losing time working on machinery as before long it will become second nature and you will look back and wonder how was changing out a hose such a big job. I'm really enjoying this project.
You should take some of those old hoses and cut some pieces off to use on the radiatior grill slats. Cut a slit lenghtwise and zip tie them to the metal bars where the new hoses will contact. They'll protect the new hoses from rubbing on sharp edges.
Hope you get the NRCS approval to work on your property. It will be interesting to see what is approved and what the cost share will be. The grant I received from the USDA for working in my woodlot and the almost $30K I received helped with the expense of owning real estate. I worked on a bit over 43 acres and enjoyed felling trees to improve the forest stand and left the course woody material for wildlife to slowly rot.
Eventually you will have replaced enough on the dozer it will not break down for awhile haha Remember big jig saw puzzles take a while before all the pieces fit.
I went to look at Sundays dog food right away when I saw it and was instantly dismayed. The internet taught me long ago that anyone selling something online that tend to present you with a bunch of product info to read about how good they are and ask you to sign up and evaluate what kind you dog you have, ALL before even telling you the cost for a freaking bag.. is probably far too expensive to be sustainable and way outside normal peoples wheelhouse.
I don’t think you understand that he’s just doing the sponsor for the money. If you too broke to buy expensive dog food you would take a few grands as well for a bad sponsorship
Hello Shuan, I'm new at watching your channel and sure like what I'm seeing. I believe in what you're doing and your goals are admirable. I am impressed at what you tackle in your learning of how to repair things you have little experience with. We lived on 23 acres in Western Oregon and like most properties we could use the different methods to slow water and allow it to sink and store in the ground. So far three representatives from the USDA have visited our place. They seemed to know little of what is being done with permaculture around the US and the world. I wish they had that knowledge to be able to support what I would like to do with our property. Maybe they will in time. I'm almost 82 and no longer have the strength to carry out the work that needs to be done here. But I have built some rock dams to slow water down our slopes in our seasonal drainages. I look forward to following the progress you're making as you work on your land. Dan
Makes way more sense paying someone to study why lesbians are fat, study the effects of climate change on groundhog mating, or earmarks for sex parties.
Im glad you pointed out at the end that the "shortcuts" you tried to take to save you time actually didn't. You were trying to save driving time, and ended up taking a day or two anyways to fix it. Live and learn.
why is the government using our hard earned tax dollars to pay for ridiculous projects like these but says it has no money for social security? if this guy wants to waste his own money in order to have material to grow a youtube channel that's one thing...but leave my tax dollars alone to pay for things that are actually important
Very interesting as always Shaun. I am always looking forward to watching your videos. It gets me so happy when I see a notification from you. I wish you a success in this huge project and hope to visit one day this place and see personally how everything turned out into a desert forest. Sending warm greetings from a Ukrainian in Dubai! And meanwhile going to check a video about desert beavers...
Love your work. I have a similar project at a much smaller scale. It warms my heart when there is a gully gusher of a rainstorm and all the other washes are done flowing by the time water appears in my wash.
They should do this moreso on the fringes of deserts and the ultimate goal should be to reintroduce beavers as they will outlast your project and are a permanent instead of a few decades solution
I'm glad to see you are still making good progress! I'm living vicariously through you until I can get out of the suburbs and get my own land to restore
I appreciate you, Shaun. I appreciate the videos, your humility, your goals, your process of learning, the community you are building in the real world and online, and the huge investment of time and effort you've put into the land and the channel.
If your water table is only 30' below surface, you might be able to drive a sandpoint well yourself on your own land. It'll never be high-flow, but if you bought a tank (or ibc totes) you could use a solar-powered pump to slowly fill it while you're not onsite.
Shaun, I just discovered this channel yesterday. I worked in I.T. most of my life, but I've done a lot of other things too. If I had the money, I know I would be doing something challenging like you are; as it is, I've done enough projects to know that what we envision and even draw up on paper is always more challenging than we think when taking to the physical world. The real, physical world is always the ultimate challenge. I can relate to the frustration you had working on the dozer. One thing leads to another. Take it slow and small. Nail it, then scale it. Good luck. New subscriber here.
Careful with the pressure washer around hoses. Yours truly was trying to clean up underside of truck, ruined a power steering line that was very difficult to replace. Hats off to you Shaun and all those that volunteer!
Can you do Gabion rock walls with driven green t posts possibly line with a textile fabric like weed barrier or canvas painters tarps. The rock walls allow water to pass thru but stop larger materials and the tarp or weed barrier will slow water and collect soil and materials to create a barrier or natural damn. Build as tall as you can or as wide as you want. 😊
What if there are areas without clay layers or caliche formations to impede water percolation? Wave in the direction of the nearest river and say bye bye?
Hello Mr. Shaun, I was watching some older videos, the first rains, and I saw that there are woody bushes that you called trees. That reminded me of FMNR. Meaning management of trees/bushes by pruning/coppicing/cutting branches off leaving a few branches only, to encourage growth upward. That is my understanding, I may be wrong. Might not work as these bushes provide shade, but it's just an idea.
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This is turning out to be such a hard project, as software engineers we do mostly stuff on "paper", when you translate what looks good on paper to reality its so hard. All the best keep up the good work. There is bright sunlight at the end of the tunnel.
Wirh all the people taking half secrions and turning them into Oasis in 1 to 2 years and all we see is tje before and after. It is really nice to see the process from someone who is learning as they go. You let us see all the failures and successes. You give us, the feeling of being there. At least with me and my family. BTW: we have land just down the road on big tank road, so your success is really inspiring for us.
Try having a water producing machine from air in your property. When constant water is available in your dry property, more plants will grow.
@@reyquinto3538Uh...its dry there...
Sep Holzer advocates sealing ponds with pigs. Their wallowing compacts the clay if you're patient. When asked what to do without pigs, he replied "Then you must do the work of the pig!"
I’ve help build beaver dam analogs… on the Rio Guadalupe in New Mexico. Along with the Dept. of Game and Fish, we were trying to restore riparian habitat for the native Rio Grande cutthroat trout. We returned to the sites 6 weeks later to find that beavers had moved in… beavers weren’t thought to be within 75 miles of the area. The beavers also “remodeled” our work, which the biologists of NMDG&F now use in their analog design. Overall, the beaver dam analogs were a huge success. Good luck on your application!!
great news all round. any trout?
There were RGCT in the stream… we were stabilizing and improving the riparian zone on a heavily used stretch of river. I’m a member of New Mexico Trout, a 501(c)3 focused on the Rio Grande Cutthroat, a threatened species that is also the New Mexico state fish.
That is a great success story!
That's really cool!! 😎
Amazing!
Having spent almost 50 years in the construction industry I used to tell my apprentices something an older carpenter once told me: "I don't want carpenters working for me who don't make mistakes. I want carpenters working for me who know how to fix mistakes. Because everyday when we go to work we will make a mistake(s) and mess something up. Don't hide it, don't bury it, just fix it." That is where the real progress comes in life...fixing our mistakes. I love your story. I feel like I am learning a lot. And, I love watching you grow. Good Luck! Progress is when we keep putting one foot in front of the other, over and over and over and over again.
We do it right because we do it twice.
Tell me about it. I work for a small rebar shop. We do all the maintenance around the shop . There’s a bunch of hands on training and lots of walking back to the tool box. It gets frustrating but we gotta get’er done.
Beavers are amazing but they can't create something out of nothing. They need an existing source of material to work with. And to eat. So yeah, be the beaver!
Exactly!
Possibly Shaun has to also bring some organic matter for this, such as wood and branches.
Exactly my thought to. Beavers would be fantastic for this enviroment BUT they need something to eat and the beavers living in the village i live in has so far not been interested in eating rocks and dirt. In 20 years beavers may be a thing but definitly not now.
Before beavers can build, one has to have suitable habitat for them to eat, drink, and shelter within. Once Shaun retains water and plants become established, the beavers will have a chance, but that is probably at least a decade or more away. I've been watching other videos in desert Africa and water retention systems like Shaun is using are even holding back the expanding Sahara. It can be done. Go Shaun!
@@karinlindblom2934 more like 100 years to be honest
This youtube channel is going to keep me in suspense for decades !!!!!
Same!!!
Literally
Well if he ever stops the channel he has shown the location of the property. A flight to Texas, rental pickup down a gravel road and you can see the progress
It's an amazingly boring channel. Nothing ever gets done!
@@galenstaunton1720 😂
In Canada in summer I watched a beaver dig a canal to it's dam. It worked for hours and hours pushing mud from the canal bottom onto the entire length. The beaver families lake was easily 100 acre's. No exaggerating the dam was 50 yards wide and the uppermost dam was probably 6 to 8 feet tall. They also had three dams below the main main one. Truly amazing animals
My husband the mechanic had a policy. If one hose blows, they are ALL getting close.
Just replace ALL of them rather than constantly have the same essential breakdown time after time.
Sounds extreme, but really works well.
I kind of did that. I pulled 3 hoses that were nearby and easy to access. But, I didn't want to pull 10 and then worry about remembering what goes where
Mark them before you remove them, and also take photos.
You should also get some flare nut wrenches to keep from damaging up all of those hydraulic nuts.
Not extreme. Wise.
That rub through he had blow is not about the age of the hose it is about a bad repair before and the external protection not being put on properly. If you put a brand new hose on there without the external protection it will be the next hose to blow.
Your husband was smart
Your attitude towards mechanical problems has improved immensely over this series. You used to shut down when faced with a breakdown. But now you gave problems with a plan and persistence. I'd say the moment you improved was when you dropped the fuel tank off your truck. You began to give up but then you decided to take action. This dozer breakdown shows exactly how far you have come.
Mechanical problems are easy. Ever deal with a woman?
You should have some replacement hoses on hand. Even if they are too long, they will still work (with some zip ties) and allow you to run the machine. Then the next time you come out you bring an actual replacement hose and remove the temporary hose.
Was thinking the same- it would be nice if had all replaced as Dozer is so vital to the work being done. Alas only so many hours in a day to do so many things. Progress made is so nice to see by all of us.
Sometimes that would work provided they are the same diameter and the correct fittings.
I really appreciated the aerial map, where you plotted out what you intend to do. In many of the videos it's hard to visualize what you are doing. I know it makes perfect sense on the ground, but on a video it' very easily just becomes an unintelligible pile of rocks. So more of this please, and thanks for the content.
I'm following your progress from Denmark by the way
I completely agree! I think this UA-cam channel is an amazing opportunity and such a fantastic project. But it’s really hard to visualise where he is working and what he’s doing in each area. Another pointer for you Shaun is to really edit down the video to condense the information. I speak for myself here but there is a lot of talk and not many visual ques like before and afters etc. I would like to see progress as well as what it looks like now. As at the moment it is all just a pile of dust and rocks. Really excited to see where you go next
Beaver Dam Analogs... Time... Trees and shrubs in the riparian zones... Then Real Beavers... Real recovery... The original slow, spread and soak engineering. LOVE IT.
Love what? A broken bulldozer? Some tiny heaps of gravel that do nothing and took 10 videos and a year?
@@fareshajjar1208Is anyone holding a gun to your head forcing you to watch? You've left so many negative comments wasting your time. Just don't watch, you come across as insanely jealous. Take your negativity and bugger off
@@fareshajjar1208damn homey, why are y’all here if you’re so negative?
Dreamers often fail, but who wants to live in a world without dreams?
@@rjsisco6056 He's not failing at all. His goal was to string people along with a YT channel and make money from it. He is succeeding.
I think you did the right thing from the start. You have rocks...use rocks. If check dams create habitat that can grow aspens, other trees that beavers like, then build BDAs from fiber that grows on your land. Make a ton of little check dams, even more than you already have. When you have a few thousand high up where the water flow is low, you may never have those blow-outs. Someday the beavers may show up, once there's something for them to use.
Working on old machines is rough, but each lesson you learn the hard way makes it a heck of a lot easier in the future.
Experience is something one does not have until just after one needs it.
Shaun, I grew up in west Texas and unless one has been there, it is hard to imagine the bone dryness and extreme heat and cold. It has been frustrating to watch your videos and see so many things go wrong. I can just imagine how you might want to give up! Don't give up.....We are all watching and rooting for you!
Fantastic! We've cooperated with the NRCS to build four small dams on our ranch in Wyoming. The resulting ponds hold water year round, providing habitat for migratory waterfowl. We keep the cattle out of the pond areas during the nesting season, and the cows can use the water the rest of the year. All this from a creek that is dry most of the year, only running after heavy rains. It's been fascinating to watch the development of the surrounding area through the years. The banks of the ponds started out as nothing but piles of alkali-laden soil, pushed up by a backhoe to create the ponds next to the creek. Now the soil is covered by vegetation that seems to thrive despite the alkali.
Maybe a "Be The Beaver" tee shirt?
Be the beeaver you want to see in the world ;)
I'd buy one!
YES!! “Be the Beaver” is the key phrase / takeaway from the vid, AND THE MERCH!!
Don’t forget to always set your torque wrench’s back to zero when finished which will take all the pressure off the spring in the wrench.
If your spring is succeptible to such stress then it is NOT a spring to begin with.
We made 30 barriers from hay bales (many over 30 bales) they held the water enough for trees and other vegetation to take hold in very abused land. I was amazed at how much soil and fine sand they collected the first few years.
It helps if the expert explains WHY something won’t be done, and not just “no way”. Education is what this is about, thank you.
The very last thing you said in the video was the most important; you changed the other hoses that looked suspicious as well. In the military we have a saying; "the easiest problem to fix is the one you prevent" which is followed by the '7 P's (Proper Prior Planning Prevents Pi$$ Poor Performance). Short version; just change them all and get it done and over with. You have the same problem we do (other than being shot at!); being in the field a long way from the serious maintenance facility. So anything you can do to prevent problems by doing maintenance that forestalls a failure is a mission success. You are doing great considering you are a one-man army. Keep it up and keep moving forward because the only easy day was yesterday!
the reason beaver dams are curved down stream, is to increase the area where water can over top. by spreading out this area, it reduces the power of water by spreading it's energy over a wider area provided by the curving structure
Be the Beaver and the beaver will come on their own. The Beaver is a Keystone species just like the Wolf. When they reintroduced Wolf packs to Yellowstone they changed the course of rivers and new trees were allowed to grow with out being over grazed.
Shaun, I’ve gotta say, as you describe yourself as someone who keeps messing up, you deserve all the credit for getting up again every time you fail.
You are certainly not afraid to try something new. Whether that is by choice or necessity, it is still commendable and a great example to others afraid to try new things. It’s encouraging to see you succeed after so many setbacks.
You are doing great things.
Yesterday I had never heard of you. Today I couldn't pull myself aways. I watched at least 6 hours of your videos. Fascinating. I love your overall optimistic attitude. I love the volunteers. Your plan to rejuvenate the land is great.
Really wonderful to see Samuel's animations in the video! It's so good that you're encouraging his interests!
Keep it up man. Nature takes decades to change what you’re trying to changes in a couple of years. I believe in your mission.
😂😂😂 Qe
Beaver-style FTW! Between this and working to establish mycelium networks you seem to be on the right track. A couple of ideas/questions:
1. Would it be possible to drill a number of boreholes down say, 30-50 feet a few inches in diameter in the path of where the water would normally flow during the rainy season and block off around the first 4-5 feet of the edges with say, PVC and cover with screen material? I would think that this might assist in allowing the ground to recapture some of the water in localized areas which could then be absorbed by some of the more deeply rooted plants but avoid the evaporation
2. Since one of the big issues is getting a large amount of organic matter to start improving the soil, something to potentially take advantage of would be some of the fires that have been happening lately more north. When we had the fires in Bastrop near Austin, after they were out there was a lot of business in clearing land and removing burned timber from properties for things like new builds/etc. Some people started entire firewood businesses out of it. However, all of that burned wood makes for a great base for something like terra preta. People pay to have that kind of thing removed, which covers the gas cost to get it delivered to the ranch. If you had a tall long trailer w/ metal sides, you could have people clear brush/logs for a base fee (or do it solo), then haul it out and use it as a basis of an area en-masse. Afterwards, it could be buried and when the water comes, it would allow it to start to rot and the microorganisms can get to work.
As it stands it kind of seems like it's going to take a really, really long time to build up enough organic matter to make a significant difference on such a large property, but by doing something like the above, you could potentially both turn a profit from the brush clearing, fund the gas to get it moved, help people in the process and also save on the cost of having to truck in existing soil by building your own more quickly. Burying the logs would be relatively easy with the dozer and would get them out of the sun, and looking at even home projects for permaculture this kind of technique seems to provide pretty good yields as the matter breaks down for around ~2 years. If combined with something like swales, e.g. burying a large number of logs in an area, covering with dirt, then building a swale to capture future rainwater, I would think in theory that would then allow the water to seep down into the wood, allot it to begin the decomposition process and you'd have a massive amount of good soil on the cheap to allow for more efficient branching out of arable land. If you used some long 2x6's, 4x4 posts, L brackets and a bit of concrete you may also be able to fashion some rudimentary pergolas to help provide shade in place of trees and help reduce the soil temperature and thus reduce evaporation in set areas. This may mimic the effect of using vertical solar panels in other projects to provide shade and cooling for growth.
Sorry for the text block but hopefully it provides some ideas if they weren't already considered. I've loved following this project & seeing it develop :D I have aspirations to do something similar in the future when it becomes fiscally viable. I'm honestly half tempted to move out there somewhere and help for the exercise xD
It's great to see your 'progress' and struggles. It means you're accomplishing things. Looking forward to more videos
I'm from Maine and have been relocating nuisance beaver my whole live and would love to see this work as I also would reconstruct some beaver dams in order to preserve my favorite fishing spots.
I told ya so! I mentioned beaver dam analogs way back in one of the first videos. That got a ton of comments, too, which I thought was very unusual.
The BDA's work just like the Leaky Weirs you went on to build. The problem is that you've just not installed enough of them. That Gabion you made was a good start, but you stopped when you should have continued.
I wouldn't want to see you building anything that requires you to bring in materials like posts. With all the rock you have, buying wooden posts that you'd have to drive in the ground is just silly. You've got rock, so use it. While we say "be the beaver", we need to remember that beavers would happily use dynamite if they could! They use wood and mud because that's what they can handle. You've got rocks and dirt, with a smattering of shrubbery, so use that. Don't drive up the costs by purchasing stuff in town.
Of course, I say that, but you should do whatever the grant tells you to do. If there's going to be tax-money spent, this is a good cause for it.
Just remember to start at the highest point and work your way down. It might not seem like you're stopping much water with those first few you make at the highest elevations, but they are critical to slowing the water before it can build up speed and power. Let the water get too much of a run built up and it'll be able to possibly blow out the first few BDA's that it hits.
This is basically what you saw happening with the Gabion. That one structure never stood a chance against all the water that was coming down the channel. Miles and miles of gravity working and the flood waters running unimpeded meant that the Gabion was in big trouble right from the outset.
That's why any channel needs many BDA's or other structures. The first few might fall under the onslaught, but they still strip energy from the water and make it easier for the next structures to stand firm against the flow.
Beavers will not be able to survive in that area for at least another century. But we can learn from them, and mimic them. We can Be The Beaver.
How deep is bed rock? Would it be better to drive corrugated STEEL panels all the way down and then it would FORCE all water to either stay behind the steel retaining wall OR become ground water table?
@@1truthseeking8 oh no. That's way too much work and expense. Even if you could easily hit bedrock, you'd always have gaps between the metal and the rock since one of them isn't a nice even surface. Then there's the cost off all that metal and the labor to install it! Yikes!!
In the end, it's better to just learn from the experts, the beavers who have been at this for millions of years. We might have to switch materials a bit since all that's there is rock and dirt, but we can at least follow the principles that the beavers have established for us.
I would love to see West Texas transformed into a garden. So much wasteland out there. However, I am skeptical so I'm watching intently 😊
It's a matter of effort over time.
A lot of hard graft and some money, or a lot of money and some hard graft.
@@HTOP1982No. it depends on the amount of rain water. 4 months of 100+ heat, no clouds, will dry up his property into cement. Nothing will grow. I think he’s underestimating what he can’t control, the weather.
@@GotoHere Hence the money vs effort tradeoff.
If money was no object, he could build loads of much larger dams.
Or with money being a limiting factor, he can try to keep adding a certain % of ground cover each year.
Ground cover protects from the sun, less evaporation, more water for longer on the soil, more water on the subsoil, It will take ages, that is for sure. A decade probably.
@@GotoHere he can't control the weather--but with the right plants and the right strategy he can control the water. Bill Mollison has been teaching the basics of this since the 70s and Andrew Millison is now the most prominent expert. There are lots and lots of examples of people reversing desertification. What you don't understand is that it's been done before by lots of people and there are several ways to do it. You really should learn some basics of nature before saying something so very obviously wrong.
It's definitely possible, theyre doing the same thing around the world like in the African union from Dakar to Djibouti, Israel, Saudi Arabia, North China. Really anywhere with desert. Also humans have been doing things like this forever
Geoengineering is real. One man can do this.
Nah. It's just a you tube channel. This endless spinning is the point.
@fareshajjar1208 endless spinning? It's been a year and he's building his foundation and learning along the way. Rome wasn't built in a day.
@@fareshajjar1208 he has spent quite a bit and is actually working toward his goal! the UA-cam channel might help off set his expenses! and you are just a nah sayer!
Your attempts to fix the hydraulics is so reminiscent of every mechanical problem I try to solve, except that you are doing it in the desert with a damn bulldozer instead of in a temperate backyard with a little lawnmower. Much respect for hanging in there.
I really admire you for chasing your dream. your story reminds me of an animated short film I saw as a child of a man in France who day after day would soak acorns in water and hike the barren hills around his home and plant thousands of acorns one by one. This led to the entire area being reforested and the watershed to be restored. This was something that really stuck with me and was something I always wanted to do myself but never did anything about it. Props to you for going out there and doing something!
The Man Who Planted Trees. A very inspiring story.
Many others have his same dream of having a profitable You Tube channel
@@fareshajjar1208yes and you seem insanely jealous of his hahaha you weirdo
@@buddhamack1491Jealous? Goodness why? Scrub land and making videos for years of zero progress. Wouldn't trade a single minute of my life for any part of this train wreck. Sometimes criticism is just what it appears to be: a critical take on the choices being made.
@@fareshajjar1208 hahaha and yet you watch and give him views. You're so jealous, if you weren't and you didn't like it, you could leave and not bother coming to leave hate filled comments. But you won't, you're not strong enough to simply ignore something and walk away.
With me owning a chunk of land down close to you when someone says release beavers I guess they pretty much just want to kill them.
Beavers don't live in the desert🤦♂️
I also on a construction company and have for 33 years, that dozer you purchased is slap worn out. The H series JD dozers were the first of the series they were the first fully hydraulic dozer, it's just a computer running a pump that turns the final drives.
And if you want headaches you start having to replace that stuff at a cost of about $20,000
Everyone in the construction world stays away from the H series just due to the cost of ownership
If you would've went back one model to the G series you would have a true gem on your hands, it was The last of the truly mechanical dozers you could put a new final drive in it for about $6000 in a weekend even with your basic mechanical skills it's simple
Believe me before too long you're gonna get rid of that 450H after it lets you down too many times. Just watching it drive-by in the videos you can tell it is severely worn out on the bottom end having it in rough terrain and rocks makes it even worse.
Owning an H series JD it's about like owning a private jet. You can afford to purchase one, but you just can't afford to own it🤣💦.
Actually beaver do live in the desert, just north of las vegas Actually.
You can have my beavers I don’t care if they don’t make it. But you have to have a permit.
Bevers absolutely do live in the desert boomer.
The people that hate beavers are the idiots that build houses on flood planes or key locations in the watershed--these are the worst kind of people.
But Shaun likes to do things the see if it was the right thing to do. The beauty of being ignorant is that everything is possible !
Beavers used to live in Arizona in the 1800’s.
Appreciate how you share the realities without inflating, or overly dramatizing your experiences. You are a practical person which is very refreshing to watch and see. Keep the videos coming and sending you all the best as you continue to work towards your goals and passion.
Sean, get a solar powered electric fence to keep cattle out of your sensitive areas. They're cheaper than installing barb wire.
true
Yep, cows eat EVERYTHING. Every penny he puts into this property will be stolen by the cows, until he installs fences.
Yeah!! Another awesome video from Shaun. I just love your journey to green-up your Texas land!
My brother is a higher up in the NRCS, he would love what you are doing. We grew up on a farm, and know firsthand how important it is to be good stewards of the land. Can't wait to see the results. Best of luck.
Look into a solar water pump. They put out a very small stream of water but they work very well for filling a cistern tank that you can draw from. They typically have a float switch that will turn them off once the cistern is full. We use them on remote areas of our ranch that use to have windmills to fill the cistern to have water for them cattle in those areas. Much more reliable and cost effective than a windmill.
The thing about beaver dam that I'd love NRCS to address is once the beavers grow up beaver highwyas so they can actually spread out properly. (IE dry creeks that reshape thelandscape but maybe aren't always filled all year long) Sometimes they got these beavers and the reason why they don't spread is because it's an island. Doing things like setting up highways with native food plants & willows and so forth means you get a population that actually spreads out. you also might want to setup a willow nursery so you can plant your way out of your only having rocks. if you pair your check damns with a willow nursey you will get further and have both options over time. Plus, if you get a bunch of different types of native willow to your area you will be able to sell that as a source of income plus, willow is really easy to propgate. (even if you never get a beaver you might get an offer to rehome some and having the footprint is helpful)
Second part about setting up a micro native nursey for food plants all of them get to be sold.
it's to bad you don't live in Cali because air wells are under used and actually work really well there. I'm not sure if you have fog out there but using a blatter style water storage. (I'm not sure the real name sorry) but after the last war, they had a lot of these on the market, still not sure if they are. But they used them to storage water in the desert. They hold a shocking amount and if you spread it out with an air well you can storage water in zones across your land.
you should develop a routine of checking over your machinery. A lot of problems can be prevented by just simply giving a look at things like hoses also checking for vet spots under the machinery from engine and gearbox and wiring loom locations, things can get loose and start rubbing. Also rubber when it gets old it starts to crack so just give hoses a slight bend and look at the surface, if tears appear on rubber it's getting near the end of service life.
probably safe to say every hose on that dozer is beyond the end of its service life.
This channel is fascinating. I'm really enjoying it a lot, and thanks for taking the time to share all the efforts, the ups and the downs with us.
Have you tried 'Madre de Cacao'? I don't know what it's called in English, but like Moringa, it can also grow through cuttings, so you can probably plant one in your house, then cut it every 3-4 months or so, then plant the cuttings in the desert forest, that way, even if it does, it still becomes biomass.
I'm so happy to have come across your channel. I get easily frustrated when I'm trying something new or that I don't do regularly and I get upset or ticked off, and want to give up if it doesn't go as I expected. However, at some point, I'll either come back to it later and try again, and if it still isn't working I'll reach out to others to see who knows how to fix this thing or that thing. Yet your video shows me to keep trying. I lack confidence in my abilities to do things outside of my comfort level, and yet here you are doing things you don't have any or much knowledge in and you keep trying. Thank you!! You've really encouraged me to not give up so quickly. Very much appreciated!! 😁👍🤩
love this project, keep going!
I have always told my wife that someone needs to dam water in the dry areas, dessert regions to bring life, help wildlife and --- I will want to come look some day. I would donate but do not have resources but will keep it in mind for future if possible.
4:10 speaking up for the beavers! Dream big!!
Beavers would be detrimental to his project. The amount of foliage they can take out is mind boggling. There wouldn't be a shrub left and then the beaver would starve.
@@Esser44 Sounds epic.
I love how you tell your story. It's so lifelike, so intense! Great job!
❤
You're doing great!
Watching that hydraulic repair reminds me of Andrew Camarata's channel. He has a fleet of sad construction equipment and does all his own maintenance on them when (not if) they break down. Some of his camera work, drone shots, and edits are incredible too. Imagine a drone shot of Shaun on his Cat out in the desert, rising until the dozer is just a tiny spec in an endless waste!
Sending you strength. Keep your optimism. We are all rooting for you.
I'm a mechanic that works on heavy equipment like that dozer. When you habe to work on anything liks that again, just take the time and remove tue thing that's in your way pr slowing you down, it ends up being faster to take it further apart and put it back together than fight around that 1 fitting/bolt/connector.
I hope you get that grant- BDAs on your property would be a game changer!!!!
Thanks!
Thank you!
An actual beaver needs building material, meaning you have soil and plants growing in that soil, to slow water flow. You're basically working with the rock layer of the Earth. Your only goal should be slowing water flow to build soil for the plants first. I haven't finished the video, but I'm assuming your rock dams will be determined to be not only the most cost effective, but also the more effective way. I still hope you get the grant money so we can have the side by side comparison of both methods to observe over time. 🤞🏻🤞🏻
Learning the hard way. Its always a pain when you're trying to do stuff on site, but it activates a part of your brain that most people ignore. Enjoy the dopamine rush when it works out
Your son's animation is top notch! Love it!
I was looking for this comment! Good job to your son. Very nice animation again! 👍
Amazing work, love to watch the progress from the UK.
Beautiful footage
Love your perserverance. Mechanics is maddening enough, so I am glad you have the pressure washer. Better when you can see it, and goop means leakage.! Thanks for taking us along!!
Hello.I'm really enjoying following your project.
You're doing a great job, I have experienced new machines that give hydraulic problems, don't feel you're losing time working on machinery as before long it will become second nature and you will look back and wonder how was changing out a hose such a big job. I'm really enjoying this project.
You should take some of those old hoses and cut some pieces off to use on the radiatior grill slats. Cut a slit lenghtwise and zip tie them to the metal bars where the new hoses will contact. They'll protect the new hoses from rubbing on sharp edges.
In order to build a forest in the desert, you must first become a diesel mechanic.
You need to buy a hose crimper and some hose. That way you can build your own hydraulic hose! Save a lot of down time.
Samuel delivering the spice for the video 👌
Thanks!
Thank you
Just what do these beaver lovers think the beavers are going to eat?
Beaver Chow.
rocks, dirt, unicorn poop
Hope you get the NRCS approval to work on your property. It will be interesting to see what is approved and what the cost share will be. The grant I received from the USDA for working in my woodlot and the almost $30K I received helped with the expense of owning real estate. I worked on a bit over 43 acres and enjoyed felling trees to improve the forest stand and left the course woody material for wildlife to slowly rot.
Too hot for beavers.
Thank you dr. Beaver
No it’s not beavers are found in Nevada and California. But your in luck their the beaver.
@@trollslayer2116 Interesting !!
I like the the many comments with helping ideas
Me, too
Eventually you will have replaced enough on the dozer it will not break down for awhile haha Remember big jig saw puzzles take a while before all the pieces fit.
That philosophy works until the cost of replacement parts exceeds the value of the machine.
Love coming back to the channel after a few months to check the progress. Now I have like, 20 episodes to watch and I’m very excited about it haha.
I went to look at Sundays dog food right away when I saw it and was instantly dismayed. The internet taught me long ago that anyone selling something online that tend to present you with a bunch of product info to read about how good they are and ask you to sign up and evaluate what kind you dog you have, ALL before even telling you the cost for a freaking bag.. is probably far too expensive to be sustainable and way outside normal peoples wheelhouse.
If you have to ask how much, you can't afford it
You sound poor
I don’t think you understand that he’s just doing the sponsor for the money. If you too broke to buy expensive dog food you would take a few grands as well for a bad sponsorship
@@Lunch_box what a 🐓🍭
@sonnyjs15 hey how'd you know I like fried chicken and lollipops?
Hello Shuan,
I'm new at watching your channel and sure like what I'm seeing. I believe in what you're doing and your goals are admirable. I am impressed at what you tackle in your learning of how to repair things you have little experience with. We lived on 23 acres in Western Oregon and like most properties we could use the different methods to slow water and allow it to sink and store in the ground. So far three representatives from the USDA have visited our place. They seemed to know little of what is being done with permaculture around the US and the world. I wish they had that knowledge to be able to support what I would like to do with our property. Maybe they will in time. I'm almost 82 and no longer have the strength to carry out the work that needs to be done here. But I have built some rock dams to slow water down our slopes in our seasonal drainages. I look forward to following the progress you're making as you work on your land.
Dan
lol Beavers 🦫 with no running water or 🌲 🤦🏽♂️
Glad to see you making progress with the bda's. Love all your content!
We're $35 trillion in debt as a nation, makes sense to pay someone to install beaver dam analogs in a desert.
Makes way more sense paying someone to study why lesbians are fat, study the effects of climate change on groundhog mating, or earmarks for sex parties.
Im glad you pointed out at the end that the "shortcuts" you tried to take to save you time actually didn't. You were trying to save driving time, and ended up taking a day or two anyways to fix it. Live and learn.
This is my favorite channel - I'm not exactly sure why but I think its the passion and genuineness
why is the government using our hard earned tax dollars to pay for ridiculous projects like these but says it has no money for social security? if this guy wants to waste his own money in order to have material to grow a youtube channel that's one thing...but leave my tax dollars alone to pay for things that are actually important
Very interesting as always Shaun. I am always looking forward to watching your videos. It gets me so happy when I see a notification from you.
I wish you a success in this huge project and hope to visit one day this place and see personally how everything turned out into a desert forest.
Sending warm greetings from a Ukrainian in Dubai! And meanwhile going to check a video about desert beavers...
Love your work. I have a similar project at a much smaller scale. It warms my heart when there is a gully gusher of a rainstorm and all the other washes are done flowing by the time water appears in my wash.
They should do this moreso on the fringes of deserts and the ultimate goal should be to reintroduce beavers as they will outlast your project and are a permanent instead of a few decades solution
Cool animation Samuel! Keep up the good work! You and your father are both learning and growing!
OMG YESSS!!!! BDAs!!! Now you are really headed in the right direction. And hooray for grants.
I'm glad to see you are still making good progress! I'm living vicariously through you until I can get out of the suburbs and get my own land to restore
good job Samuel for your animations
I appreciate you, Shaun. I appreciate the videos, your humility, your goals, your process of learning, the community you are building in the real world and online, and the huge investment of time and effort you've put into the land and the channel.
If your water table is only 30' below surface, you might be able to drive a sandpoint well yourself on your own land. It'll never be high-flow, but if you bought a tank (or ibc totes) you could use a solar-powered pump to slowly fill it while you're not onsite.
Water isn't 30' under me. It's 30' on his land. It's 400-600' on mine
Shaun, I just discovered this channel yesterday. I worked in I.T. most of my life, but I've done a lot of other things too. If I had the money, I know I would be doing something challenging like you are; as it is, I've done enough projects to know that what we envision and even draw up on paper is always more challenging than we think when taking to the physical world. The real, physical world is always the ultimate challenge. I can relate to the frustration you had working on the dozer. One thing leads to another.
Take it slow and small. Nail it, then scale it. Good luck. New subscriber here.
Careful with the pressure washer around hoses. Yours truly was trying to clean up underside of truck, ruined a power steering line that was very difficult to replace. Hats off to you Shaun and all those that volunteer!
And dude, 145,000 subscribers!! That's awesome.
Can you do Gabion rock walls with driven green t posts possibly line with a textile fabric like weed barrier or canvas painters tarps. The rock walls allow water to pass thru but stop larger materials and the tarp or weed barrier will slow water and collect soil and materials to create a barrier or natural damn. Build as tall as you can or as wide as you want. 😊
What if there are areas without clay layers or caliche formations to impede water percolation? Wave in the direction of the nearest river and say bye bye?
Another awesome animation, good job!
You'll be a Great beaver! Stay plucky in face of it all. We're rooting for you.
I can’t wait to see the success y’all are gonna have with this project!
Keep up the good animation work Samuel!
Hello Mr. Shaun, I was watching some older videos, the first rains, and I saw that there are woody bushes that you called trees.
That reminded me of FMNR. Meaning management of trees/bushes by pruning/coppicing/cutting branches off leaving a few branches only, to encourage growth upward. That is my understanding, I may be wrong.
Might not work as these bushes provide shade, but it's just an idea.