Thank you so much ❤️ I agree with him in all the ideas. It's great to see that Masanobu San has left his theories to evolve through his grandchild 🥰 Namaste and much love from Kerala, India 💚
@felixpfeiffer98632 жыл бұрын
Thank you, i was hoping someone would interview the descendents of this great man and show it to the world. it offers a kind of deep reflection thats invaluable to understand someones work.
@officialmasanobufukuokanat64272 жыл бұрын
Thank you
@Anonymous-fb5qn2 жыл бұрын
@@officialmasanobufukuokanat6427 Can you please upload more video of Current status of Masanobu Fukuoka's farm. I would love to see how his grandchildrens are taking his legacy forward.
@msteresa653 Жыл бұрын
Fascinating to see how his legacy and philosophy have been inherited and interpreted by his family two generations on. No tillage no weeding no fertilizer no pesticide, to me, is sacrosanct, but I'm not a commercial farmer. Perhaps that's the key difference then for being able to wholly manifest this life-giving philosophy - self-sufficiency versus for profit? Really, natural farming's goal is the total productivity of the land - it's the land as a whole living system - not simply the yield of one particular cash crop. To make compromises and allowances for disruptive interventions is to set a sequence of events in motion that will necessitate future disruptive interventions. Although ideas like sustainability and the biodiversity crisis / 6th Extinction were uncommon at the time of Fukuoka-sensei's writing, to me his philosophy is at the core of how humans as a species can live sustainably on the Earth, fostering its whole life and our own species' existence simultaneously. On a long enough time scale, in fact, those goals are one and the same. A global crisis of degraded soil fertility and topsoil erosion - the exact conditions that industrial monoculture on a mass scale perpetuates - is the stuff of nightmares; of civilization collapse.
@lapluiechampagne3 ай бұрын
Magnifique, je n’ai pas les mots, encore merci.
@Anonymous-fb5qn2 жыл бұрын
Can you please upload more video of Current status of Masanobu Fukuoka's farm. I would love to see how his grandchildrens are taking his legacy forward.
@officialmasanobufukuokanat64272 жыл бұрын
Thank you. We will try.
@IPissAwesome Жыл бұрын
Why don't you go see it for yourself.
@wk42408 ай бұрын
Fantastic! Beautiful! 😊
@vasudevgaikwad56805 ай бұрын
Thanks.i am fallower from India
@toen4442 жыл бұрын
Thank you for your love
@delightslife Жыл бұрын
Big thanks and ❤. Can you update the current cultivate culture of Sir fukuoka's Farm.
@thoughfullylost62412 жыл бұрын
I am reading one straw Revolution now thank you
@InfinitelifeBuddha2 жыл бұрын
For those who love Masanobu Fukuoka, you will surely want to know how his natural farm is now? Who will take over and will there be any changes? Here is the answer: Thank you
@doroutdor Жыл бұрын
Beautiful, anyone might know the Acacia type behind him???
@bentonhomestead Жыл бұрын
Black Wattle; Acacia mearnsii. Fukuoka calls it "Morishima acacia", which looks Japanese, but is actually an old synonym: Acacia mollissima.
@danielmurphy22718 ай бұрын
It is difficult for me to see clearly. Does it have phyllodes or bipinnate leaves?
@mg-hills-of11 ай бұрын
🕉🙏
@oshunblack68833 ай бұрын
Hmmmm.. "grown as naturally as possible". If he was growing it 100% natural he'd just say "yes its all grown naturally". Full stop. But naturally as "possible".. hmmm no, he's gone against the old mans philosophy. You can hear it in his answers. He doesnt do it purely natural like the old man did. Thats what happens when you turn it into a business. You take short cuts because he needs faster yields. What a shame.
@stevegreen49542 ай бұрын
it is true that it is not 100% inheritaged by grandson. that indicates also how difgicult to be perfect completely as a buddha.
@tomatito382424 күн бұрын
Yep, it also shows when he says it can coexist with science. So they are practicing the imperfect Hinayana farming, as opposed to Masanobu's Mahayana farming.