Are you gonna send any of those mangos to the children of Palestine?
@diannerobinson78587 сағат бұрын
How deep you you dig the swales
@dawienatral708310 сағат бұрын
is that worth putting Burms and swales on land that only has a 3ft incline?
@papapetad11 сағат бұрын
If it can work there, it can work pretty much anywhere 🙂
@karelengelbrecht769714 сағат бұрын
My next project ,i am interested,plse forward detaila
@christopherleblanc959916 сағат бұрын
goats sheep are the biggest issue in a lot of area's around the world, because they will eat everything, and i seen many areas beginning too banning open grazing and the plant mater regrowth comes back so quick with out them , cattle to a lesser degree of impact, mostly because they tend to spread out more then goat and sheep do while grazing thus have a less generalize impact, animals = $ thus they are over stocked for profit at the expense of the environments they graze in , the land can only handle so many animals / acre , hard pill to sell , even harder for the farmer /herder to swallow sadly .🥸🤓,Canada
@rammalla20 сағат бұрын
Great man soli lover I ever seen in his heart and soul through word and work, great enthusiasm and art to enlighten people to go beyond their thinking!
@Florestinhadamontanha20 сағат бұрын
Sempre uma aula excepcional. Vídeo maravilhoso.
@terry5274Күн бұрын
Thank you Thank you Thank you!!!
@dawienatral7083Күн бұрын
Drainage ditches also
@regenerativefarmsincКүн бұрын
Thanks for these details Geoff. Such a valuable demonstration of what's possible.
@dawienatral7083Күн бұрын
well explained GEOFF
@dawienatral7083Күн бұрын
What about usuing eucs for cut drop ive heard that the oils in the leaves are not so good for this method,how true is it,and would not just be Eucs used in this method
@dawienatral7083Күн бұрын
love this video ,one of your best yet Geoff.
@dawienatral7083Күн бұрын
it was galapigos that things fount there way thaere,drift wood ,strong winds etc,are those first inhabitants classed as invasive ,of course NOT.
@jakob497Күн бұрын
You could add a little coppice system around the windrow to protect the compost and to supplement your soft woodchip needs
@roxanaramstrom2 күн бұрын
Love it! Been following this project since the beginning. Would love a update on Abla.
@BuildNewTowns2 күн бұрын
Nice project!
@GuardianPrepping2 күн бұрын
Hello from South Africa, I recently planted my first few fruit trees for the canopy of my food forest. Thanks for the video!
@sheilafade20162 күн бұрын
Can you start a worm bin in the winter?
@FawziaTung2 күн бұрын
I lived in Jordan in the 1970s and early ‘80s, and love it like my own country. I’ve been following your permaculture videos and implementing the principles here on my property in Arizona. I felt very moved seeing this new project in Jerash! I was part of the first Jerash Festival and I’m not surprised to see the countryside still as dry and barren as it used to be (despite the olive trees). I can’t wait for your follow-up videos and witness the transformation you are bringing! 💪😊😊😊
@andresamplonius3152 күн бұрын
No veo plantas de servicio, plantas productoras de biomasa como Vetiver, Nopal, Sorgo, Plátano, Prosopis, Agave... Los tallos de las bananeras, en trozos de 40-50cm, cortados a lo largo y colocados sobre el suelo... Un Hugelkultur... El Nopal picado en trozos como mulch, macerado en agua y colocado al fondo del hoyo al plantar árboles... La poña u hojarasca del Prosopis (Algarrobo) e Inga (Icecream bean )... El Algarrobo del Mediterráneo (Ceratonia siliqua), con sus nutritivas vainas... También ensayar el biochar, activándolo como la cama de las gallinas, obteniendo una enmienda de suelos prácticamente eterna, tan buena para suelos arcillosos como para los arenosos. Al ver videos de Brasil me llama mucho la atención la diversidad de árboles y palmas del bioma Cerrado, un semiarido con muchas plantas interesantes, como el Cashew del Cerrado, que han mejorado y obtenido variedades enanas y precoces que podrían ensayarse en lugares como Jordania.
@andresamplonius3152 күн бұрын
¿Alba es un nombre árabe? Porque en castellano, además de un apellido, es un nombre muy poético.
@knoll98122 күн бұрын
Any scope for recreation parks.
@knoll98122 күн бұрын
Could some of the mass be fed to camels producing manure.
@CoconutInformation2 күн бұрын
Amazing. Love to hear more about the intricate rock work....
@sunitadwarka3472 күн бұрын
kzbin.info2krNvaHz6jY?si=1AnWe0Aimn6d18C5
@sunitadwarka3472 күн бұрын
I have one request in between olive tree you make rough net structure at neck level, from one side keep free for walking to break olive. You do plantation of Parwal Indian vegetable. Vegetables tree will climb on net. It's doesn't request too much water, it like sand and hot atmosphere. Surf on net. We can stirr fry or use in curry. Very delicious sweet vegetable. Doesn't rot quickly. Jay bharat.
@sunitadwarka3472 күн бұрын
kzbin.info2krNvaHz6jY?si=1AnWe0Aimn6d18C5
@ronk40732 күн бұрын
Would this system work with out tanking in outside water?
@allseezen33362 күн бұрын
looks great. how would jujubes do there?
@GFS05np2 күн бұрын
nice walk around of project. major rains all over those regions in this winter cycle of the sun. hope they have some bigger catchment up by those tents. could bio char be trenched in that path between the orchard rows. as a moisture sink. drip pond slug over the char. people must make use of rain. make it look like it did in the 2000bc times.
@colleeneggertson21172 күн бұрын
Very impressive. Inspiring.
@leonieshanahan64393 күн бұрын
You are such a blessing to the world Geoff thanks for sharing your gifts 👩🏻🌾
@dantheman91353 күн бұрын
Crush on...
@papapetad3 күн бұрын
The shaping of swales for conversion with intercrops looks beautiful. You can just tell regeneration is taking place and the land is happy being taken care of with respect and intelligence. Looking forward to seeing it flourish as the seasons get along.
@TheBarefootedGardener3 күн бұрын
Very cool Geoff and crew! No date palms in this project?
@gianni18273 күн бұрын
Looking forward to see the progress in a couple of years. This is the way to go to save our planet.
@Hunar19973 күн бұрын
Arent the new trees too close to each other?
@stefanomoretti36643 күн бұрын
sorry to say, but these olive trees are poorly pruned by Mediterranean standards: lots of wood, leaves are up too high, production is going to be very limited and with strong alternation (bi-annual production i.e.). Furthermore, mulching the olive soil with grounded (the wood cutter shown in video) olive pruned branches is now a common technique in the Med and increases soil fertility. But this you know already.
@jaydos923 күн бұрын
How smooth brained do you have to be to not understand how beneficial a swale is?
@SmithsdaleFarm3 күн бұрын
Thanks for the video, great to see the plantings between the olives. We’re on the east coast of Spain with dry land olives, Can we substitute in other fruits like peaches for the apricots? Or any other suggestions? Loves the videos please keep them coming 🙏
@Atze.Tatze693 күн бұрын
1st of all, thank you for your dedication to save our world @DiscoverPermaculture A crazy idea here, but mayhaps not that crazy at all: -> click show more Are the packed earth Roads between the row´s of trees, realy needed for harvest or accessability? Are there othere reasons to have that many packed-earth Roads between the trees? If not, then Depending on the land-layout and need for acessability, the Space of every 2nd or 3rd row, between the trees could be used for a increased water harvesting structure. The half-moon or also called "African Smile" reduces washdown and land-erosion. It also gives spaces for tiny "grass-fields" plots for fodder(chicken, goat) or biomass production(compost)
@LailandiAdventures3 күн бұрын
Farmers truly are some of the most industrious but stubborn people. We could do with more of these polyculture farms in Spain.
@dominicrichlevien3 күн бұрын
Super inspiring, this is exactly how I have planned my olive finca in Spain! I have started with a tint patch that I can look after while still traveling a lot for work and will let it grow outwards as I can. Thank you Geoff for being such an inspiration and source of knowledge
@Ifyouarehurtnointentwasapplied3 күн бұрын
The woody material is good if you can break it down I use termites then composting if you feed them they aren't a problem
@anthonysinclair57213 күн бұрын
Nice episode Geoff! All that beautiful food makes me Hungary! 😎lol
@richermorin3 күн бұрын
thank you so much for sharing, I'm really excited too this is gonna be AMAZING great job to all of you