Changing a Landscape to a Lifescape: The Humboldt Ranch

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  • Опубліковано 29 вер 2024
  • The story of the Humboldt Ranch is about how a change in livestock grazing practices on a ranch in northeastern Nevada is transforming gullies to wetlands and landscapes to lifescapes. The Humboldt Ranch encompasses more than 140 miles of streams and over 350,000 acres of mixed public lands administered by the Bureau of Land Management (BLM) and private lands owned by Nevada Gold Mines. Collectively, these lands support important habitat for an abundance of wildlife including Nevada’s native Lahontan cutthroat trout.
    Learn more about this type of conservation + ranching work here: iwjv.org/new-v...
    Historically, cattle and sheep grazed on streams and surrounding uplands throughout the growing season every year for over a century. Eventually, soil stabilizing plants that grow naturally in the area began to decline and miles of willow-lined stream channels became miles of gullies. The local BLM office has a long history of working with ranch personnel and other partners to improve priority habitats in the area, but it was not until about 2004 that grazing practices began to change over the entire ranch, affecting thousands of acres of both public and private lands.
    Based on a vision that combines economic viability with environmental sustainability, Gregg Simonds, mentor and founding partner of the Humboldt Ranch, implemented a ranch-wide grazing program based on the concept of managing livestock for plant recovery. Rather than reducing livestock numbers, the ranch controls when and how long cattle stay in any one area, giving plant communities a chance to grow and thrive. Humboldt Ranch manager, Jesse Braatz and his wife, Ricarda, have been applying the principles of grazing for recovery for almost 15 years now in the face of floods, wildfires, and droughts.
    Today, willows and other plants are becoming re-established, old gullies are starting to heal, beaver are returning, water tables are rising and better habitat conditions are being created for a multitude of wildlife ranging from insects to trout and from birds to pronghorn antelope. In essence, this vast landscape is becoming a “lifescape”. By comparing current conditions to historical imagery and by conducting interviews with people who have lived or worked in this area for decades, the film explores the power of managed grazing to restore landscapes at scale and ultimately, to offer a vision for sustainable ranching on western rangelands.
    The story of the Humboldt Ranch was created by the production company Little Wild, and funded by the Intermountain West Joint Venture, Bureau of Land Management, USDA’s Natural Resources Conservation Service’s Working Lands for Wildlife (www.wlfw.org), and Open Range Consulting.
    Copyright: MB01OWBDBL0SJWK

КОМЕНТАРІ • 13

  • @grantsimonds3644
    @grantsimonds3644 Рік тому +5

    "It's not the cow its the how"

  • @Paco928.
    @Paco928. 2 місяці тому +2

    350 thousand acres holy fuck

  • @tamforee445
    @tamforee445 Рік тому +5

    Great documentary! This shows how it is possible to make a change in range management to improve habitat conditions, when needed. Love the before and after photos..... The cinematography is so professional, the music in fantastic. wonderful story.....wow...Thank you for all of your hard work making this information available to us all.

  • @Ifyouarehurtnointentwasapplied

    It would be great to see the trees going up the slopes with infiltration pits and seeding it could be greatly sped up good start tho ✌️👍

  • @gratefultube
    @gratefultube 6 місяців тому +1

    May human beings wise up before we dry up.

  • @georgehaydukeiii6396
    @georgehaydukeiii6396 7 місяців тому +1

    Excellent work! We desperately need more of these cooperatives/collaborations. Its not too late to recover some of the populations.

  • @dekelpolak4190
    @dekelpolak4190 Рік тому +1

    How Human Nature Works
    Human nature is the desire to receive, also called “desire to enjoy,” and it functions by receiving what is beneficial to itself and rejecting what is harmful. Everything in our lives is built upon this calculation where we first try to distance ourselves from harm, and then seek how to draw ourselves closer to what is beneficial.
    Human nature also includes a multilayering of systems that work simultaneously on still, vegetative, animate and human levels. One of those systems is our bodily one, which operates involuntarily. If our bodies are healthy, then they know what is good for them and draw that goodness to themselves. After the bodily system, there is the emotional system, which also functions relatively according to instinct. From the emotional system, we move to the mind, and from the mind to the intellect, and so on. That is, we have systems over systems that concurrently work on receiving what is beneficial and rejecting what is harmful.
    Such is human nature and the essence of our lives. Our every desire, thought and action operates according to the calculation, “How can we receive what is most beneficial to us and reject what is harmful?”

  • @alinemooney5361
    @alinemooney5361 Рік тому +2

    Is this Squaw Valley?

  • @Wildnativeedimentals
    @Wildnativeedimentals 2 місяці тому

    Trees more trees

  • @caroldimarco3533
    @caroldimarco3533 Рік тому +1

    WOW! Very impressive! Wonderful work Greg!

  • @rubyquail
    @rubyquail Рік тому +2

    Owned by a gold mine ... Scary future of land and water . And BLM. Well, it's a lovely project for now