Fantastic! Keep planting. Don’t stop! Future generations will thank every single one of you!
@j.p.72726 ай бұрын
We are having such difficult time to stop a desert on our own planet yet we are spending billions of dollars on trying to get to a planet with conditions far worse. What a great documentary!
@TheO4166 ай бұрын
unfortunately it has become our main way or living, extorting every small upgrade just to consume and throw away(like we have another planet we can just hop on to). even going as far as making behind the scene deals to not innovate too much so they can milk us. true short story; back when lightbulbs became a thing they started lasting years and eventually decades so factories didnt sell anymore, corporates made a deal that a lightbulb wouldnt excede (xxxx)hours so that they could keep selling. im guessing
@zbyniu-gh8sg6 ай бұрын
Not true. I am afraid you are eco-fanatic.
@GrandmaBev646 ай бұрын
Morroco has been replanting native species for 40 years now and it has made a difference. Iran is rebuilding a 4,000 mile Eden that Sadam Hussain had destroyed and the people there were murdered. It was 4,000 square miles of paradise and marshes, believed to be "Eden".
@TaylorLiam876 ай бұрын
Our planet will die.... the sun has a lifespan, no matter what you do all life on earth will cease one day
@aiGeis6 ай бұрын
And you are making worthless comments on youtube.
@GrandmaBev646 ай бұрын
I watch on Google Earth and your work is paying off. I can see the difference in just a few years. Its noticeable. Proves we can make a difference. It may take decades, but it's worth it.
@Daily_me-v2bАй бұрын
This is a good news
@Leronh175 ай бұрын
The success of such programmes would largely solve the issues of migration
@adenwellsmith69085 ай бұрын
Deportations solve that
@MichaelHBallard5 ай бұрын
Would create a very positive off set indeed
@adenwellsmith69085 ай бұрын
@@MichaelHBallard It's caused by overgrazing.
@antonioangelferreraa18034 ай бұрын
False! Foreign extraction of resources is the main driver of migration
@sms30374 ай бұрын
@@adenwellsmith6908 Indeed, as long mankind keep stuck in their manners nothing change! Effective education is also required. Instead of dreaming/wishing a Audi/Mercedes/BMW and a villa within the EU they should improve their own enviroment. Within the EU is the need/demand for energy very high and increasing. Why are there no wind-/solarparks and transporting/sold the energy to the EU?
@Tillerranch4 ай бұрын
Glad this scientist is a very smart man helping this nation. Hope they succeed.
@conradnelson52834 ай бұрын
Very interesting. I hope this program spreads. Good luck.
@SLICE_Science4 ай бұрын
Thank you !
@raulgutierrezconstante81193 ай бұрын
23:04 "Today this unloved plant with a terrible reputation" In my country, Mexico, the "unloved" plant is a treasure that provides us with food and fruit for us and our animals. We grow "vegetable" prickly pear for human consumption, the pads are colected when they are about a hand in size and tender We grow "forage" prickly pear for our animals, the thornless pads are allowed to grow large and a pad can weight a couple of kgs, ground and mixed with yeast, molasses and ammonium you crate a highly nutritious "soup" that's fed to cattle We grow "fruit" prickly pear which is specially selected to produce sweet fruits.
@Wul-Lop4 ай бұрын
🎉🎉🎉 ❤... Thank everyone who helps save our earth... Respect from Thailand...
@sonicclang3 ай бұрын
in that entire 49 minute video, there was not one single mention of permaculture. Look at what they're doing in India. Communities have been coming together to build water catchment structures and other warthworks to hold on to rain water. This documentary fell so short of what it could have communicated. Yes, when it rains, there are floods. But why? Because the ground can't absorbe the water, and there's nothing to stop it from flowing. They need to slow, spread, and sink the water.
@GaiaCarney3 ай бұрын
@sonicclang - you’ve said it best ⭐️ permaculture is the way to go 🌱
@mariaannainditahernawati71323 ай бұрын
could be because the new gen do not have the knowledge from the old gen about farming the old ones never have change to pass on the wisdom and knowledge something like permaculture and water the younger gen already prefer to migrate
@LadyScaper2 ай бұрын
There are other vids that show water retention and permaculture.
@PerfektFilmsАй бұрын
Indeed, it's unfortunate that permaculture techniques and practices aren't mentioned more often. However, there are permaculture projects in the Great Green Wall project! Programs like Justidiggit and Commonland are working hard on the ground to spread berm/water retention techniques!
@МаринаОбойдетесь-о4яАй бұрын
Действительно. Первое видео, которое рассказало мне мне о проекте, говорило, как жители рыли ловушки для дождей, строили ровы для задержания воды на склонах. Как строят и роют на новых участках и как трава уже закрыла старые,и какие там высокие деревья. Другое показала,как жителям помогают делать свои сады, и они своими участками строят эту стену. Куча деревьев, кустов и небольшая площадь на однолетники. На одну семью. Есть методы и есть учителя.
@FanNy-ku6wt5 ай бұрын
The great green wall is a fantastic project, the problem is: up till now, pretty much only Senegal works on it seriously and the rest of the wall is non existant. On another hand, Senegal has now 20 years of knowledge on the topic, which will be helpful for the future. But we need to speed the process.
@jolenemiller6222 ай бұрын
You might enjoy learning about what is happening in Niger - 300,000 hectares successfully rehabilitated, resulting in 500,000 people no longer needing food aid. Look up Andrew Millison - he just came out with a video covering it on 11/13/24. It's so hopeful, even as it needs to be scaled up exponentially.
@akiraode-smith6084Ай бұрын
Most other countries are currently in civil wars
@OBRfarm6 ай бұрын
This doc was amazing. Thank you
@raihanabari78313 күн бұрын
Wonderful documentary. Stop the progression of desert , future generations will thank you for your hard work and vision.
@SLICE_Science9 күн бұрын
Thank you !!
@theaquariancontrarian33166 ай бұрын
Prickly pear is a wonder plant. Its edible, medicinal, and utilitarian.
@Don-ii4vm6 ай бұрын
19:09 Wow, respect to those ladies climbing the palm trees. ... those spikes that grow to be leaves can be dangerous.
@colleeneggertson21174 ай бұрын
Permaculture techniques can also help combat desertification. See Andrew Millison's videos about successful efforts in India's desert regions.
@nekoroobi12815 ай бұрын
Moringa, plant more moringa to address not only desertification but even nutrition of people and animals.
@cassidottir4 ай бұрын
Was wondering about the same plant
@j.dragon6516 ай бұрын
Imagine if the worlds "defense" budgets were directed towards sanity?
@TaylorLiam876 ай бұрын
Well if authoritarians could stop invading countries we could
@PeterLamin-pi6rv5 ай бұрын
The banksters want forever wars. 😢😢😢
@09conrado5 ай бұрын
Good idea, but only if the money actually reaches the people at the end of the line, not the pockets of the greedy
@Veggamattic4 ай бұрын
Even if it was only 50% of the US budget, it would be enough.
@louisreniers98873 ай бұрын
We as people were all winners
@augustusmd5 ай бұрын
another great documentary from slice
@SLICE_Science5 ай бұрын
Thank you !
@Orwellian-Purple-Grapes-19844 күн бұрын
The green CAN be returned. If you work hard, we will believe in you!!!! 💪🏻
@kokohead33314 күн бұрын
Wonderful... Beautiful land and people!
@Pit53362 ай бұрын
Africa is such an amazing continent, wish it could have been easier to travel there
@adamcarnegie56606 ай бұрын
Couldn't you use hemp as as a frontier crop? Also could you make hemp hessian as both a wind barrier, a shade cloth and as a moisture trap in coastal areas to capture evening moisture and too moisture driven inland from the sea? And as the hessian breaks down the fibres feed the soil. Well done for the awesome work and achievements.
@threeriversforge19976 ай бұрын
Hard to say if hemp would grow there. That's half the problem. The conditions are so incredibly harsh, and so dry, that few plants can tolerate it, let alone thrive. The second half of the problem is that they are starting well back from the beginning of the problem. Note how they talk about the ocean being miles away from where they are building these structures. Those miles give the wind plenty of time to develop speed and power, which makes it harder to combat where they are. What they need to do is to the source of the problem and start there. Block the winds at the oceanfront property, and you will see a huge change in winds miles and miles inland. It doesn't take much, either, because you're catching the wind before it's had time to build up a head of steam.
@adamcarnegie56606 ай бұрын
@@threeriversforge1997 Thank you and good luck with the vital, awesome, work you are doing.👍😀
@Onionbaron6 ай бұрын
Hemp is a very underestimated crop! And has been for probably thousands of years! Good for soil, the weed can be turned into very resistant clothing and used as building material... But sadly ignorant religious politicians put a stop to that because they thought the farmers was growing drugs/narcotics...
@glennwall5526 ай бұрын
Problem is Hemp is a hungry thirsty plant it need lots of nutrients and water hence why it grows so well in deltra countries at river mouths like Bangladesh
@glennwall5526 ай бұрын
@@Onionbaron Depont chemicals invented nylon rope unpopular so by putting it on the drugs of addiction cut supply of hemp ropes the main export of Bangladesh. 1960 ww ban C/O the ladder of drugs. 70 and still had no H It's popular among users as it doesn't break so easily as nylon rope. JS
@TheSphat6 ай бұрын
No worries, we are making our on deserts here in europe.
@zbyniu-gh8sg6 ай бұрын
Not true
@Dailymailnewz6 ай бұрын
I mean if you think about it is a blessing to them but no one can see it??? Imagine they do a project with the help of their government to put up all kinds of walls and shelters that automatically collect sands since it wil blow into it and thus make as many as big cement block and concret block as they can and make big cities and even stronger walls and at the same time sell them as well as big block of cement and concret and within year they will be famouse and rich, mind power is in great demand everywhere ha ha ha ....
@MegaFarkh6 ай бұрын
@@zbyniu-gh8sgit's true , there us a big desert in Spain and another in Romania I guess
@zbyniu-gh8sg5 ай бұрын
@@MegaFarkh but we are not making them
@PeterLamin-pi6rv5 ай бұрын
With Nord Stream gone , prepare for higher bills, climate change/ season 😯😯
@boringopr43695 ай бұрын
Perhaps a small canal no wider than 12 inches wide can be built from the nile river to lake Chad and along the way the water can be used to grow trees and plants and that way fight desertification
@cosmoray97504 ай бұрын
The under ground drainage tunnel was blocked due to change in lifestyle. In the days of old people worked together to do whatever it takes to survive and it takes a community thrive. Nowadays due to Western individuality influences. People forgot how to come together and accomplish a common goal. People have became selfish.
@Masqueepo4 ай бұрын
Very informative! Hoping to eventually see a return to the with updates for these areas and the people they spoke to
@ronthecityronthecity57414 ай бұрын
God bless 🙏🏿 and help the world 🌍 ❤ universe as well blessings
@juanlapuente8336 ай бұрын
Sahara is already a desert, it cannot desertify, the green wall is being created south of Sahara, in the Sahel
@leedza6 ай бұрын
There are marginal micro climates even in a desert. Especially where there is water available. Also there are other buffer zones other than the Sahel.
@MegaFarkh6 ай бұрын
That's what an outsider think, in the reality there is large Savannah of desert Acacia,Cypress olives and other Sahara trees in the heart of the desert. There is also some seasonal lakes and water sources
@RandomsFandom5 ай бұрын
Wow you sound dumb. 👌
@bellascythe95944 ай бұрын
Many of those desert because human cattle eat the grass and killing the habitats. This need to be stop and tell them to grow something
@NirvanaFan50006 ай бұрын
one of the biggest issues in reforesting is insufficient water. I'm reallyyyyyyyyyyy hoping that some of the new water adsorbant materials (e.g. various MOFs) will allow dry regions sufficient water. In particular, really interested in a new MOF hydrogel that can be put in the soil to retain water and even pull water out of the air as a way to promote plant growth.
@Rayna-gn3ni6 ай бұрын
They use half-moon trench painting. It allows for the small amount of rain water to collect for the trees they've planted. They've done it, and continue to.
@NirvanaFan50006 ай бұрын
@@Rayna-gn3ni : I'm familiar with those as well, which are also great, but they work in different ways. Those collect rain water. The MOFs hold onto rainwater so it doesn't spread into the soil as quickly; they also pull water from air. So both are really good!
@nathanalex77976 ай бұрын
@@Rayna-gn3ni You have to be the only non bot on here XD. Half of the world is flooding and they talking about "oNlY sO mUcH wAtEr" funny to see people only retaining 10mins of it to fit their own view XD
@Onionbaron6 ай бұрын
Dew absorbents looks promising! (if there is dew of course!)
@Vrrrrrrrr5 ай бұрын
We just need more beaver dams 🦫
@frankordonez2826Ай бұрын
Great documentary
@diannaclarke27582 ай бұрын
What a mammoth task!!!
@louisebarnes11815 ай бұрын
Condensation of the humidity would bring many gallons of water to a desert region. The Moses West Foundation makes a water machine that produces at least 12 gallons of water daily. Also, growing desert grass into huge grids, 7’ x 7’, would stabilize the sand Desert grass is watered by the morning dew, helps to retain water and may build up the water table. Also, growing corn is beneficial as the grazing animals could be penned and eat the corn stalks and husks. If they are free to roam, they will eat any living plant, and plants will never be given a chance to grow, and so grass areas will become desert.
@jmaljmal75324 ай бұрын
Africa does wonderful things to protect the environment
@leelindsay56183 ай бұрын
If they would use adaptive rotational grazing, they could regreen huge areas of land. Allan Savory has been teaching the technique and he has been helping villages to keep year round water flow in villages across Africa.
@340wbymag17 күн бұрын
The problem in most of the world isn't a lack of water. The problem is poor water management. Everyone wants to use the water, but nobody shows even the slightest interest in harvesting water. It isn't required, spoken about, or put into action. Billions of gallons of rainwater fall every year, and it is channeled away as if it was unwanted garbage rather being captured for later use, or to percolate into the soil to replenish groundwater. Harvesting water isn't rocket science. It is ancient technology. Digging ponds, swales, Zai pits and other water harvesting techniques are restoring wastelands and desert areas around the world today, transforming them into green, productive lands, yet we do nothing and wonder where all our water went. We could change the world with a little shovel work, but instead we seem to be satisfied with our ignorance and laziness. We can become better land managers and prosper, or we can wither away and die. It is not fate. It is a choice.
@indrajitR5 ай бұрын
can you use the old motor types for walls ?
@vga-t7m5 ай бұрын
in ancient when they were supposedly less intelligent and able than us they created solutions for waterflows in ways we can only look at and marvel. and the funny thing is that we have yet to seriously involve ourselves in making things really work
@ibnekabir5 ай бұрын
very nice video bro and research
@SLICE_Science5 ай бұрын
Thank you for watching !
@louisebarnes11816 ай бұрын
Sometimes it rains very heavily in the Sahara, causing flooding. It rains heavily because there is a heavy amount of humidity. Practicing condensation would be able to turn this humidity into water for crops and drinking water. There are many methods of condensation. It would be good to use this water for Groassis Waterboxxes and grow many trees in the desert.
@MiguelPerez-fz4ib3 ай бұрын
Do cloud seading now launching
@arcbrush6 ай бұрын
The music is so intrusive
@rupertocollantes69575 ай бұрын
How about putting top soils after bulldozing less expenses and quick effect.. You can plant immediately..
@b_uppy4 ай бұрын
They need to introduce mangroves to the coast to encourage rain. Likely there were native mangroves there before but were removed. As the land near the coast is reclaimed better agricultural methods would increase the green areas. Vpconventional ag needs to be dropped. Polycropping with zero bare earth, zero synthetic chemical inputs; using livestock to manage weeds, pests and fertility; and opting for biome-appropriate, food-producing trees, vines and shrubs that alternate with perennials, pasture and annuals. Rebuilding soil carbon and groundwater is important. Adding rainwater harvesting earthworks as well as reusing greywater will add resiliency...
@marklawrence763 ай бұрын
New Subscriber. Keep the videos coming
@michelecampanelli54194 ай бұрын
👍👏❤
@Forseti26 ай бұрын
Great green wall is definitely good, but the local people must be aware of the benefits and work on improving the environment by themselves - like eg in China or India or even some parts in Africa, where there are also issues with desertation and drought, but people build water catchment structures and terraces to grow vegetables and grains. From this document, these people had chosen the way of wild animals - use local resources and when there are not any move to another place, rather than the sustainable and responsible way I've described before.
@traildude75382 ай бұрын
How much desalinated water would it take to restore and maintain that Moroccan lake?
@aviel42186 ай бұрын
I have a question, can desert animals and plants survive in the forest? I know desert greening is good for the environment but how about the desert wildlife? Can the desert animals and plants adapt to a forest that was once a barren desert?
@Ifyouarehurtnointentwasapplied6 ай бұрын
Yes desert wildlife don't live without a little bit of water and trees
@Tarzantravelsbyriver6 ай бұрын
The desert ecosystem, given enough time, will become a forest, like in mexico or arizona. We are able to speed up that process. The desert animals often do better in a more rich ecosystem, life creates more life.
@halnelson59366 ай бұрын
Desert will not turn to tropical forest but to sahel or savanna
@FanNy-ku6wt5 ай бұрын
There is still plenty of desert land for them to survive. There is not much wildlife in the desert anyway.
@wendyking975919 күн бұрын
Using the deserts sand, make thousands of glass blocks and make a long glass tunnel from ocean islands. Then build a Chinese style maglev train to move large quantities of water islands at hyper speeds. Then build large glass block green houses for growing food
@1Onionpeeler4 ай бұрын
We need educational video about the climate crisis in Central America so that people in the U.S. understand where and why these migrants at the southern border are coming from.
@FloridaGirl-Ай бұрын
They aren’t coming in because of climate! 🤣🤣🤣
@1OnionpeelerАй бұрын
@@FloridaGirl- it's pretty hard to survive when your crops fail and that's all you've got.
@FloridaGirl-Ай бұрын
@@1Onionpeeler Central American countries have been plagued by democratic backsliding, corruption, gang activity, drug trafficking and violence. Weak political institutions and poor governance have led to shoddy public services, limited social mobility and rampant insecurity. Central America suffers from some of the highest homicide rates in the world, with all seven countries among the global top 20 in 2021 . Honduras comes in a dismal second. In addition to each of the individual tragedies, the violence also reduces confidence in politicians and in democracy, decreases interpersonal trust, encourages migration and frustrates development. you could go on and on. But that’s just a start. And has absolutely nothing to do with climate change..
@svenboi39655 ай бұрын
“The Bedouin is not the son of the desert but its father.”
@williampatrickfurey6 ай бұрын
Just need things vining up from the date palms starts, the point is to bring the water up from the previous water table. ❤
@traildude75382 ай бұрын
Where can I get a "LA GRANDE MURAILLE VERTE" T-shirt?
@Leon-vp3vb6 ай бұрын
They need to modernize underground water tunnel from atlas mountains. If they want to save oasis. They need to Lay pipes in those tunnels and wells, won't reqire tonn of maintenance like centuries old system. (Though it was good design for that time)
@sarahfern71282 ай бұрын
Too much sand here, but there are several places in the world where lack of sand is a problem. More sand is needed for cement in building,, for seacoast to prevent erosion and sea incursion. Is it practical to transport some of this sand to places where it's needed?
@MiguelPerez-fz4ib3 ай бұрын
There were hope nationals Countries as well.
@isnoo12 ай бұрын
🥰🥰🥰🥰🥰🥰
@Joan-o6i5 ай бұрын
Should be more ponds etc.
@niclascrane46302 ай бұрын
We cannot forget, that the Amazon in South America needs the sand from the desert of Africa to thrive!
@bullyarena39234 ай бұрын
Hmm..I'd use a mix of edible and commercial species native to the region as its core and add in exotics from similar climates to add value. Things like baobab, african olives, palms, pistachios, macadamia, pink guavas, banana/plantains, pineapples, pomegranate, tigernuts, groundnuts, grapes and watermelon for example. All 7 layers of the forest would have to incorporated for success though. Canopy, understory, shrub, herb, root, ground cover and vine. Diversity is key.
@vivo92206 ай бұрын
Hai sir 👍👍👍👍
@ibnekabir5 ай бұрын
If the people of the world not drying their wealth into the into the arm industry for defensive reason and war and conflict state they make such projects and make the world as heaven
@thenextpoetician63286 ай бұрын
For those interested, it was a Heinrich Event 6,000 YBP (the China Event) that destroyed the greenest green Sahara in the geological record. It was a massive solar discharge that went east to west.
@TaylorLiam876 ай бұрын
How does a solar flare go against the rotation of the earth and sun?
@thenextpoetician63286 ай бұрын
@@TaylorLiam87 There's only so much detail I've looked into. However, electric currents induce a magnetic field. The moon, for instance, is phase-locked to earth. The same phenomenon was the case when proto-Saturn in its brown dwarf phase was our first sun before capture by our present sun. Also, ancient records speak of a day when the sun stood still. The Thunderbolts Project is where I started studying this almost 15 years ago. There's just no adequate short answer, though if your hungry for knowledge, it's out there.
@timkbirchico85425 ай бұрын
it was a typical event, over the last 2000000 years, in an interglacial period. solar discharge was not and could not be the cause of the recent, geologically speaking, desertification of the Sahara.
@eduardonieto4693Ай бұрын
My friends what about Bamboo or willow three and you will find in you- tube. It mite work!
@Ifyouarehurtnointentwasapplied6 ай бұрын
The compost value has to be a good thing from the cactus
@CollinMiles-v2d3 ай бұрын
What about the sea water
@c.r.p.9686 ай бұрын
It's never too late! Take instruction from the Loess Plateau and water structures created in India.
@timnadinamcclurelively41636 ай бұрын
I find it funny how they are trying to regreen the Sahara without even implementing any water harvesting techniques. permaculture teaches a number of different ways. You can do it many different ways. But i dont see this project working without doing something. It just like those people who tapped into the ground water to water those trees. And it went empty. Obviously if your going to use the water you have to set up water harvesting techniques to recharge the ground water.
@hotbit73276 ай бұрын
11:30 - clearly, not human-made weather changes, but predatory, bad farming practices killed that place, as many others. 23:56 I can only guess, my guess is herders' goats and cows cleared that area to the naked rock in the recent past.
@jonathanesportuno71722 ай бұрын
This look like Mars
@Ifyouarehurtnointentwasapplied6 ай бұрын
If they got the plants in the ground to seed or sucker and multiply it would speed up the process
@giftndori93626 ай бұрын
Narrating Afrika is always good 🌍 north Afrikan are origin from Middle East they invade us long back
@SheriKeenan6 ай бұрын
I’ve noticed a lot of the plants and trees aren’t native and there hoping farms will help. Like plant native stuff from seed if needed dig big holes everywhere deep and wide and then cover the hole in a foot of dead grass or wood chips from city trees that were trimmed. Or move and let the desert takeover which we all know won’t happen
@deatherutts6 ай бұрын
You do know that you can just dig the lake deeper and make land dug in a line from the bottom to top and build small channel's allowing the water to flow slower and plant some grass in that vicinity around lake and few tree's to start strengthening the ground around it
@helenamcginty49206 ай бұрын
I think the local people and professional ecologists and water engineers know far more about the local resources than either you or I do. Just watch, listen and learn.
@deatherutts6 ай бұрын
@@helenamcginty4920 No the problem is that people want to control outcome instead of letting nature take it's time to regenerate
@hotbit73276 ай бұрын
@@helenamcginty4920 Certainly most local people have little idea. First, they are a big source of desertification: - 11:30 - by using deep groundwater they had a few years of extra crops, but finally, they killed all the trees and greenery within less than 30 years). - many areas are destroyed due to overgrazing - caused by overpopulation - 1000% growth of population within a century is huge, isn't it? I agree that the problem is very difficult. "watch, listen and learn" 👍
@willh39753 ай бұрын
And Mars is a better more worthwhile challenge?
@njione5 ай бұрын
What kind of mushrooms
@pravachan43556 ай бұрын
Herding is the main cause of desertification and destruction of vegetation and trees.
@PonceMislang5 ай бұрын
That is 100% true.
@anthonywilliams-vx4cm5 ай бұрын
Use bitumen to form lakes all over the desert.
@Socialistayecologista6 ай бұрын
TODO LO QUE EL SER HUMANO HAGA PARA SALVAR LA NATURALEZA LO HARÁ PARA SALVARSE A SÍ MISMO.
@johng.weller4685 ай бұрын
Why would someone choose livestock farming in an arid zone? is it even normal?
@udraj9145 ай бұрын
well, they have to eat somehow. They cant grow agricultural crops. Also, it has always been their profession since biblical times.
@johng.weller4685 ай бұрын
@@udraj914 "They can't grow agricultural crops" That's not what I saw in this documentary. In biblical times the dune was probably in the ocean bed today it's in their village so the environment has evolved so they have to adapt. Instead of grassing their livestock with the few remaining vegetable life in their area, they must reforest their environment.
@njione3 ай бұрын
I can see lots of places to grow trees if someone is willing to live there
@ZombieT6 ай бұрын
Ban goats in dessert land
@glennwall5526 ай бұрын
Born free movie the man showed how the desert progressed with goat herds over a fourty year period He was murdered by goat herders as he tried to keep them out of the lion reserve.
@d_must43095 ай бұрын
The end of humans is closer than we think
@thegiggler26 ай бұрын
90% of the planted trees died. Why? Because there was no community sense of ownership.
@cliffcampbell88274 ай бұрын
"Today's youth don't want a life of hardships and low wages. "...but such a life sounds oh so rewarding. Did the narrator even know what he said as he was reading the script? "You must suffer your entire life and expect little from your toil so we can preserve our way of life."...hey dad! Did it ever occur to you that maybe our way of life ISN'T worth preserving? That maybe our way of life sucks ass!?!? Is there something to be said for tradition if the tradition is painful, doesn't yield anything positive or beneficial? Hey dad, remember this little chestnut? If everybody was jumping off a bridge, would you do the same?
@c.r.p.9686 ай бұрын
Why aren't half moon ditches interspersed to capture water during the rainy season to recharge the water table? The technology is there in other areas of the green wall, why isn't it used here? Permaculture would mitigate all these issues.
@Bernie51726 ай бұрын
these people are their own worst enemies
@dcorgard2 ай бұрын
Now we just need to stop killing one another...
@francocarrieri19886 ай бұрын
If forests create rain, why not build one around lake Chad and let the two complement each other?
@JaimeBird-n8m6 ай бұрын
Because everyone won'ts every one else to do it .iv started growing fruiting trees in pots and will slowly plant a small peice of land here in Australia everyone calls me mad.geoff Lawton has good vids on planting
@c.r.p.9686 ай бұрын
Why isn't this sand harvested to mitigate the global need for sand, as well as the wind harvested for power?
@Kwazulujabul5 ай бұрын
Urbanisation and population explosion and then illegal boats to Europe where these people due to cultural divergences find it very difficult to integrate and fit in. Help people to stay in their ancestral, beloved desert areas and educate them to thrive there.
@Devis1982Ай бұрын
странная вещь - везде где живут арабы-мусульмане там пустыни, причем растущие и с которыми никто ничего не делает. а вот если почитать про эти места скажем 2 тысячи лет назад - ничего такого там не было 🤔 да даже вот Сахара - с северной стороны и со стороны Сахеля, разница очевидна🤔
@karimhamnache12135 ай бұрын
I would like to correct an information, the Sahara doesn't and did never extend until the mediterranean sea. Fun fact, the northern part of africa is a huge hospitable green land with vegetation, trees, mountains, snow, rain during winter, the same weather as the southern Europe.
@Alphade-rp3qx2 ай бұрын
Better to trade off a desert for preerie and forests
@MiguelPerez-fz4ib3 ай бұрын
While doing the great green wall You should make a sea water way that it will make more rain there. Get the United Nations and CCPs cet .. help.
@FloridaGirl-Ай бұрын
UN and CCP. 🤣 Yah they’ll help. NOT!!!! They line their own pockets and are corrupt.
@МаринаОбойдетесь-о4яАй бұрын
Ересь. Пальмы не дают густую тень. И слишком большие территории на травы. Ну или на растения одного сбора. Неужели в культуре этого народа нет места другим деревьям и кустаникам,чтобы они дали тень и защиту траве и кустарнику и стали стеной для песка? Если регион так и продожит, стены не будет, пустыня придёт. Рано или поздно.
@AD-gi9zg4 ай бұрын
Great documentary. (When he took a bite out of the Barbary Fig, at 23:22 , that was not the fruit. Wikipedia has a page about that cactus at en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Opuntia_ficus-indica )
@dawienatral70835 ай бұрын
to stop the Desert why not plant the most invasive plants known to grow in those conditions what difference would it make as long as the desert is held back,what's more important,something thats not working or something thats going to work!!!
@larryspinks5533Күн бұрын
These greening successes are probably only being successful because of increases in atmospheric CO2. The higher the CO2 the less water plants need in order to thrive.