Farmer Managed Natural Regeneration (FMNR) in Practice

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  • Опубліковано 22 жов 2024

КОМЕНТАРІ • 10

  • @ziggypan4418
    @ziggypan4418 4 місяці тому

    🙏🙏🙏

  • @martinfalkenberg2419
    @martinfalkenberg2419 Рік тому +1

    It is really working, also in very dry countries

  • @imtheeastgermanguy5431
    @imtheeastgermanguy5431 2 роки тому +3

    It would be a good idea to try fmnr in critical areas like Somalia and these countries who are suffering from droughts caused by deforestation. I think every day if I just break up in Germany and go to Africa to try to improve their lives and do something useful with my own life

  • @veskakemboi2765
    @veskakemboi2765 10 місяців тому

    So insightful

  • @krishividhi3680
    @krishividhi3680 8 місяців тому

    Very nice technic.

  • @colleeneggertson2117
    @colleeneggertson2117 Рік тому +1

    See the UA-cam video called: "How the Sahara Desert is Turning into a Farmland Oasis - GREENING THE DESERT PROJECT" for a more complete explanation of this FMNR method.

  • @dontknowdontcare2531
    @dontknowdontcare2531 Рік тому +1

    so how does pruning tree stumps help do any of that

    • @rodfreess6019
      @rodfreess6019 Рік тому

      It doesn't. It seems to me that most of these videos are poor copies of another copy of a copy of the theory. For it to work, the selecting and pruning is instead of cutting them all off and grazing continuously. So it is allowing regrowth of the stumps, but using some of the sprouts of desirable species and all of undesirable species, and protecting them. Pruning is almost a distraction, something to do to promote buy in and a sense of ownership, they would grow just as well without pruning. The big difference between this and traditional tree planting is the use of existing surviving native roots, which is a HUGE advantage. The pruning provides some fodder and an active element.

    • @colleeneggertson2117
      @colleeneggertson2117 Рік тому

      See another UA-cam video: "Step-by-step process: Farmer Managed Natural Regeneration (FMNR)" for a better explanation of this method.

    • @tomatito3824
      @tomatito3824 8 місяців тому +2

      @@rodfreess6019 Wrong. Pruning mulches the ground, accelerates the nutrient cycling and also promotes growth by rejuvenating the plants and keeping them in a vegetative stage (which feeds the ground with root exudates and makes it hold more moisture). Heavy pruning is, in fact, also the key in synthropic farming, and there's tons of farms who applied it successfully. One difference I see is in synthropic they don't kill non-natives, they plant them and use them to their advantage (eg: pollarding eucalyptus twice a year to feed the food trees).