Mulloon Creek Catchment - Gary Nairn AO

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  • Опубліковано 7 вер 2024
  • This interview with the Chair of the Mulloon Institute, Gary Nairn AO, is part of our Mulloon Creek Catchment case study. The case study outlines the collaboration between 20 farmers rehydrating their creek and agricultural landscape.
    The case study is available at www.soilsforlif...
    #regenerativefarming #regenerativeagriculture #soilhealth #mulloon #mullooninstitue #mullooncreek #regenerativeagriculture #regenag #regenerativeag #climatesmartagriculture #healthysoils #holisticmanagement #australianagriculture #livingsoil #water #carbonfarming #foodsecurity #foodsovereignty #biodiversity

КОМЕНТАРІ • 6

  • @Tupunaforever
    @Tupunaforever 3 роки тому +3

    Well done, I understand the bureaucracy one has to go through and the expense to go backwards, in other words to restore the system to it's natural state. We have a property here in New Zealand and believe me NZ has it's fair share of clean and sustainable water issues. We Riparian planted our stream and continue work very similar to your own, I find it wonderfully challenging ever since the late Peter Andrews introduced me to his methods many years ago when I lived in Australia. Our property is green during summer when the surrounding landscape is dry and parched.

  • @advandermeer740
    @advandermeer740 5 років тому +4

    Amazing project. One can only hope that this can be replicated in other areas with the knowledge won here.

  • @briank3727
    @briank3727 Рік тому

    The large flows, floods , are necessary for the environment. Catching them will in itself change the downstream river flows

  • @nicolaiitchenko7610
    @nicolaiitchenko7610 3 роки тому +2

    If only government would get its finger out of the way, remove red tape and start supporting Australian agriculture
    Alas, they still are stuck in North Eastern European farming faiths in a land diametrically opposed to such systems and are far too beholden to big agricultural and chemical companies (one and the same often) who have a vested interest in selling products which are actively destroying our land.

  • @emotophobiccdd8006
    @emotophobiccdd8006 4 роки тому +3

    Is the regulatory process mostly a good, responsible thing, done for the greater good...or mostly just the usual red tape and stupidity I've come to expect from all levels of the Australian government?