I think it's nice to see an old retired pirate taking care of his land.
@GrowTreeOrganicsАй бұрын
Rrrrrr, thank ya!✌🏾😅
@chipwellington11796 күн бұрын
😂
@stevejohnstonbaugh9171Ай бұрын
My two takeaways - the healthy grasses growing just downstream of the pockets you have created by picking a rock. That surprises me. There are grasses that survive in the area. Those grasses will spread out and form natural barriers to erosion as their roots dive deep. They just need a little more water to grow into the erosion proof mats of green. The organic matter that collects in the basins. That's your future topsoil - almost as good as gold. Prior to your structures - that black gold slid right off your land. The magic is happening. Stick to your priorities and keep at it. Get your house dried in so you have a place to live this winter. The process of picking rocks, building structures and fine tuning them is a lifelong commitment. I suspect it will take 30 years to be mostly satisfied with the placement and workings of enough structures to cover your entire property. You're making great progress! 😊👍
@GrowTreeOrganicsАй бұрын
Definitely a lifelong project we've taken on! So much growth to come though! Now house build to come. Thanks as always for stopping in!✌🏾
@chipwellington11796 күн бұрын
What if someone comes on your property and messes all your rocks up 😡💢
@carolhartley59824 күн бұрын
If you get reliable ponds, you might find you have ducks, maybe migratory geese.
@highseassailorАй бұрын
A consideration for your future monsoon-ish activities, get your raincoat on, and the rake out while it's raining. A little landscaping while the water is flowing gives one an amazing perspective on how to help it flow better or worse, as your needs be. Love what you're doing, best with all. Hello, from southern Colorado. It's raining here as I type this. 😊❤🌧
@GrowTreeOrganicsАй бұрын
Definitely thank you! I'll consider that, but that is a metal rake in a storm!🤔😅✌🏾
@martharetallick1150Ай бұрын
@@GrowTreeOrganics That's why this Tucson water harvester looks forward to winter rainfall. It tends to come without thunderstorms.
@ravenrock541Ай бұрын
Third thought to consider: Studies have been done on reforestation efforts where organic waste (orange peels, coffee grounds) was laid down on the soil in a 1-3 foot layer. Turns out it really pays off in two years. Consider networking with your local town for gathering used coffee grounds (and other waste). I point out coffee grounds specifically because, when dried and compressed into bricks with saw dust waste, they make fire logs that burn hotter than most common wood. If there are any organic vegetable processing plants close, they will be happy to deliver truck loads to you rather than pay dump fees.
@GrowTreeOrganicsАй бұрын
Most definitely. We have been creating compost from some of the stores around. ✌🏾
@woodmastergaming5795Ай бұрын
Those bigger bassins seem to make a difference, it's awsome looking at the progress! Keep it up! You guys are amazing.
@GrowTreeOrganicsАй бұрын
They definitely will make a difference! Appreciate the support!✌🏾
@RMCluffАй бұрын
You are making a lot of progress; I think you will be surprised at the positive effects in a few years. I think you found the type of property that can really be effective to improve the land by slowing the water down and soaking a large territory. It will also benefit others living on the perimeters, in the long run. I also hope you can move your buildings forward and make them more livable than a tent-that must roar during downpours. Of course, it takes a long period of sacrifice on your part. Most people would not be able to do it. Congratulations.
@GrowTreeOrganicsАй бұрын
Thank you we're definitely moving forward. I think we'll start seeing some positive results next year!✌🏾
@SFCvideographyАй бұрын
As the moisture content of the ground increases, so too will your rainfall. Moisture attracts moisture. Water is wonderfully hydrophilic!
@GrowTreeOrganicsАй бұрын
Exactly 💯 ✌🏾
@risacademicsАй бұрын
Water is life. Great ending as usual. Looking forward to next installment. 🐺
@GrowTreeOrganicsАй бұрын
Thank you!✌🏾
@HylanderSBАй бұрын
It’s great to be able to combine purposes like digging up rocks where you want catchment.
@GrowTreeOrganicsАй бұрын
Easy multi tasking!✌🏾
@sr4169Ай бұрын
That rock house is going to be epic….
@GrowTreeOrganicsАй бұрын
I'm super excited to work on it more!✌🏾
@sophiareygrace6656Ай бұрын
I’m Im excited to see the results for all these waterworks that you do!!
@GrowTreeOrganicsАй бұрын
Me as well!✌🏾
@publicdomain3378Ай бұрын
Im jonesing so bad to dig my swale, im 600 miles from my land. thanks for the temporary fix man. Its all looking great.
@GrowTreeOrganicsАй бұрын
Glad I can give ya a fix!😅✌🏾
@AgentSmith-x9pАй бұрын
Man Ive learned so much about desert rainwater harvesting from watching your channel. I live Long Beach CA but my family used to go out camping in Mojave on the regular and theres something about the desert I love. Im planning to do something similar and make an off grid cabin with a lot of rainwater collection using something like a 20x20 metal car cover and expand from there. But aside from drinking water which would be potable water ive learned so much from your channel about natural features to direct the water. I was even thinking like a small moat around the property that directs the water to some type of lined sump and you could pump the water to wherever your storage is. I think one of the best ideas for water storage ive seen is on Frugal Off Grids channel where you use heavy duty tarps like 40x40 or even 40x60 20 mil thick to create underground cisterns. Those tarps are cheap, like 350 bucks and you could even double up if you were concerned about tears. Then you make framing and a manhole to cover it all. Its way cheaper to store thousands of gallons than the traditional buck a gallon for above ground storage. It requires a lot of digging, but thats nothing if you have access to machinery like that tractor or a mini excavator. Also being that the tarps are underground and not exposed to UV radiation, they should last damn near forever in that state, but thats also why you put a tarp over the cistern like an umbrella to protect that lower lining. Subbed and like your content is great man!👍
@GrowTreeOrganicsАй бұрын
That's awesome! Glad the channel could be helpful on your venture! Appreciate your support!✌🏾
@ronbecker7939Ай бұрын
Awesome to see this! You are living the life there!
@GrowTreeOrganicsАй бұрын
Thank you very much!✌🏾
@PhilpFongАй бұрын
Wow , what you have now is what Shaun Overton (sp?) is trying to achieve in his extremely dry acreage in Texas . I love what you guardians of nature are doing ! Great job , props !😊
@GrowTreeOrganicsАй бұрын
Thank you very much!✌🏾
@divout6688Ай бұрын
He seems to get much more rain than Shaun though. I think it will take Shaun several years, if not decades, to get real growth anywhere that isn't watered. Though that's also kind of why I first got interested in Shauns project. Hoping to be wrong. 😅
@jamesmatheson5115Ай бұрын
Shaun has more money than drive to actually do the work, as his property is just a youtube money making exercise, in the time he has owned the first piece of land he bought he has done zero on it, that couldnt have been done in a week, growing Prickly Pear was crazy especially then its good for nothing.
@terryhenderson424Ай бұрын
@@jamesmatheson5115 prickly pear is edible by humans, provides habitat for some critters, provides for a lot of insects, and more.
@TheCuratorofThrift9 күн бұрын
@jamesmatheson5115 - isn't that the point! It's a learning process, and he is changing as he goes. His failures aren't failures if the change is part of the process. The issue is that he doesn't seem to have a whole lot of outside learning. I may be wrong, but, at least the viewers are helping with the process. Look at the stuff he had to remove as it was not allowed by the state. Also, that place is not going to be an easy task at all. It may take him 5 years of mistakes, and another 20-50 years to get it correctly established. His process and mistakes are why he get the views though. Those of us that want to do what he is doing are using his process to make sure we don't make those mistakes when we start our own.
@anikajain571Ай бұрын
Hi from Lightning Ridge NSW Australia 👋 this is fascinating. Very doable on my outback, arid block, which I'm starting to "landscape ". Capturing the water we do get is my priority, especially in the planning stage.
@GrowTreeOrganicsАй бұрын
What's Growin on! Thank you and good luck on your landscape project! Cheers✌🏾
@MikeKemp-m7i19 күн бұрын
Those Junipers use over 4000 gallons of water each when mature. If you want any kind of water you will need to replace them. I have 65 axres in Northern Arizona between winslow and Holbrook. Also for the clay soil you need dormant calcium for that soil compactoon.
@GrowTreeOrganics18 күн бұрын
That's pretty minimal compared to let's say a pine that can uptake 7-10,000 gallons of water or say fruit trees that can uptake up to 40,000 gallons. As you can see in the video there is more growing where there is more trees and less growth with less trees on the other edge of the property. Everything is in a similar contour, so it's not a matter of North slope and South slope, which I have evidence of the abundance of trees and grass on our northeast corner of the property which is an actual southern slope. We also have a true northern slope, but if I show the two slopes on video, you'd never know the difference. There are many variables beside the trees being the problem. ✌🏾
@DavidDrew-n6z2 күн бұрын
@@GrowTreeOrganics The trees do take up water, true, but also provide subtle shade which keeps humidity at ground level. Another option , similarly being tried with success in Scotland would be to fell the jumpers ( not killing them but just laying over the taller ones . This will create long ground level dense shaded areas amongst which native plants will grow. Basic hedgerows.
@dirttdudeАй бұрын
i'm just a humble geologist, your techniques shown here have a lot of merit. if i was on this job, i would do a perk test to more focus attention on water retention
@GrowTreeOrganicsАй бұрын
Very sandy soil down about 15 inches then we have rock shelves I think of basalt with small fractures so water can get down, but we also have a caliche layer. Takes about 1 min for 1 gallon of water to penetrate!✌🏾 what are thoughts?
@dirttdudeАй бұрын
@@GrowTreeOrganics Well my friend, that's great news for when you put in your drainfield, not so good for growing apple trees... We could talk about soil amendment and natural water retention until the sun comes up but i think that keeping your forest growing during the stressful summer months should be the priority, to nurture topsoil, it needs an assload of water, yeah, my thoughts are soil amendment and F tons of water, like a 10 thousand gallon underground tank.
@GrowTreeOrganicsАй бұрын
@@dirttdude we'll definitely be making more water storage for sure. ✌🏾
@terryhenderson424Ай бұрын
Learning little bits by watching you but .... in much less arid yet sandy soils, putting some cardboard down in the dirt adds to water retention and soil biome diversity. Would that work at all on your property?
@GrowTreeOrganicsАй бұрын
We are doing that actually, I'll probably have to make a video showing how we make 0 waste here!✌🏾
@Akio-fy7epАй бұрын
I guess this is to answer people insisting they know better than Brandon does what plants to allow to grow. Me, I am thinking about biochar. In the Amazon, for _terra preta,_ they also mix in fragments of broken pottery. They say the biochar and pottery mustn't be chopped too fine, I imagine so it won't be rinsed down and out of reach of roots. My wife just told me about "hügelkultur" mounds, a substitute for raised garden beds that I had not heard of: you dig a wide, shallow trench, lay logs at the bottom, smaller branches on those, then twigs and scrub, with compost throughout, and the soil you excavated on top, and grow your garden there. They retain water better than the native soil, and can be long and straight, or weave around drunkenly.
@GrowTreeOrganicsАй бұрын
Yea Nekas garden I built earlier this year is a form of huglekulture! Her garden did pretty good for the first year! ✌🏾
@stephaniewilson3955Ай бұрын
@@GrowTreeOrganics it gets better as time goes on and the wood rots into a sponge that feeds plants and holds water.
@1000orsowordsАй бұрын
Thanks for showing the maps.
@GrowTreeOrganicsАй бұрын
My pleasure!✌🏾
@jamesc2647Ай бұрын
How much average rainfall does the area get normally a year? Do your trees look healthier? Good job on the water collection.
@GrowTreeOrganicsАй бұрын
About 14 inches on average, but I've noticed way more grass going to seed and new grass growing since we started!✌🏾
@TheWanderingFinneganАй бұрын
The map is very helpful.
@unclewob99hard24Ай бұрын
Is the map of your property available online? I love your project but struggle at times to understand how individual changes correlate to your Master Plan.
@GrowTreeOrganicsАй бұрын
Super glad it was! I don't have anything posted, I do wanna keep my privacy to an extent. If you need help though you can email me. I do Permaculture Consulting, so I can help put together a design or plot map. ✌🏾
@hirokawiti4932Ай бұрын
@@GrowTreeOrganics ty for the effort 👌
@unclewob99hard24Ай бұрын
@@GrowTreeOrganics Thanks! I find your content super interesting. I took a screenshot of your map from my IPad and that seems to be a good interim step. Perhaps a contour map of the property might also be useful to help us novices better understand the placement of berms and bowls?
@GrowTreeOrganicsАй бұрын
Most definitely a good idea I could do! Thanks!✌🏾
@irrichmanАй бұрын
I found this channel a few weeks ago, really nice to see all the water works. You are getting quite reasonable amounts of rain to harvest. My question: I've see a lot of earth works, but not a lot of content about what kind of plants you are trying to grow. the ecology of things. Do you have videos about your plans, do you plant pioneer species, or (fast) growing mulch plants that are suited for your area? What kind of produce do you intend to grow? Love to see more about that, keep it up!
@GrowTreeOrganicsАй бұрын
Appreciate you joining the journey. I haven't talked much about planting, but winter time is when we'll be doing lots of planting and I'll talk about that!✌🏾
@justinl94262 күн бұрын
Not sure who you are but I like what you're doing. That and I'm jealous of the dreads. Best of luck and keep us posted.
@GrowTreeOrganics2 күн бұрын
Much appreciated! More to come!✌🏾
@barrettwesleyАй бұрын
Hey Brandon I love your channel. Getting ready to start a similar project in Zambia. May I ask how you created that water flow plan that you flashed in the beginning of the video?
@GrowTreeOrganicsАй бұрын
Thank you. I started with the satellite image put the image through a program to give me the contour elevation lines. Lots of study of the land before I even saw the property for myself, which I'd advise seeing a property first, but I had already drew out a plan because of the goals we had and such and now being here it's just making slight adjustments to the plan to accommodate to what couldn't be seen on the map. ✌🏾
@Yutani_CrayvenАй бұрын
You know what just struck me. I've been watching these videos and it all sounds systematic and well thought out, but at the end of the day it's just videos filming a bunch of puddles. That realization was hilarious to me, in the moment. But it's because it takes a long time (multiple seasons) to turn a few puddles into a big payoff.
@GrowTreeOrganicsАй бұрын
😅thank you a very comical observation!✌🏾
@scotttaylor7444Ай бұрын
Slowly water and silt will accumulate and bring wetland herbs and grasses that will stabilized the earth mounds and rock mounds he made
@willm581415 күн бұрын
Love it!!! Nice work!
@GrowTreeOrganics15 күн бұрын
Appreciate the support!✌🏾
@_MikeJon_Ай бұрын
Hell yeah man. Im excited to see the build progress on your home.
@GrowTreeOrganicsАй бұрын
You and me both!✌🏾😅
@jasonjohnson736Ай бұрын
Hi I live about 45 minutes away from you in ashfork I am working on my land and definitely appreciate some of the things you are doing I will adding some stuff to my plans
@GrowTreeOrganicsАй бұрын
That's awesome, glad you found some value to apply!✌🏾
@carolwright7503Ай бұрын
So many rocks and no boulders what a relief! Like the deeper areas with the bulldozer...
@GrowTreeOrganicsАй бұрын
Luckily nothing too huge yet!✌🏾
@sundancer442Ай бұрын
Just subbed to you from the South Australian outback/desert. Nice vid.
@GrowTreeOrganicsАй бұрын
Thanks, welcome aboard!✌🏾
@maha333g5Ай бұрын
HIGH FIVE!!! Well done!!
@GrowTreeOrganicsАй бұрын
🖐🏾😅✌🏾
@ridingvenusАй бұрын
Amazing how much work gets done with equipment…back in the Zoony video time I was possibly near as progressed in catchments but especially in the last month this is flown way past Franch Venus.
@GrowTreeOrganicsАй бұрын
Machines make a huge difference!✌🏾💚
@davidmurray9844Ай бұрын
Very interesting, thank you for sharing.
@GrowTreeOrganicsАй бұрын
Glad you enjoyed it✌🏾
@philleggitt3005Ай бұрын
A catapiller D8 with a single leg ripper pulling through on contour would create mini swales & berms across the whole 10 acres in a couple of days...Seed or plant them before the rains, any grass growth would create cover & cool the land down, any rocks lifted would also make for good shelter... Writing from the very wet UK today...
@GrowTreeOrganicsАй бұрын
Appreciate it!✌🏾
@carolleenkelmann3829Ай бұрын
I always thought the monsoon season there was in the winter. Have to re-think that all now. 😊
@GrowTreeOrganicsАй бұрын
We actually did get more rain last winter than through monsoon!? We'll keep tabs as the years go on!✌🏾
@CarlosGarcia-ro2xfАй бұрын
impressive work
@GrowTreeOrganicsАй бұрын
Thank you!✌🏾
@BntavirАй бұрын
It really looks great if you manage to get some logs i suggest putting them on top of the big pits sideways and you can put some branches on top of that to prove shade to water most of the water heats with the sun since it gets direct hit
@BntavirАй бұрын
i think LA did some similar thing with plastic balls in a dam to get rid of direct hit from the sun
@GrowTreeOrganicsАй бұрын
I've seen the black plastic balls in LA they did at that lake! We'll be Doing a lot of tree maintenance here!✌🏾
@mattpelofske4632Ай бұрын
All.monsoon seasons are different chances are good that you'll get bigger rains from year to year here in northern new mex we've had 2" at my place in the last 2 weeks it's been great keep up the work your doing great
@GrowTreeOrganicsАй бұрын
Definitely could and can change year to year for sure. I look forward to it! Thanks for your support. ✌🏾
@KROLLONIUSАй бұрын
Hello and greetings from Germany😀 Great work! Start regenerate the earth, perhaps by planting elefantgras or sedum or sudangras. It will stabilize the ground and build up mulch. CU🖖🖖
@GrowTreeOrganicsАй бұрын
Guten Tag!✌🏾Danke we will be planting more in the winter here!✌🏾
@insAneTunAАй бұрын
All that water is looking great and it will sure have an effect. But nature is a bit slow in that aspect. I guess that the logs are going to be used for a log cabin. Thanks for the update🙂👍
@GrowTreeOrganicsАй бұрын
We can help nature speed up a bit!😅 you'll find out about the logs soon!✌🏾
@insAneTunAАй бұрын
@@GrowTreeOrganics Yeah, but what I meant to say is that any sort of growth needs the natural seasonal cycle of hours of sunlight and temperature and all that sort of stuff before it really takes of. In that sense there is never an instant result. There are even many species that need freezing temperatures called stratification before the seeds can germinate at all. And the micro organisms like the extra moisture too, but it takes some time before their presence starts to contribute in a significant manner. In other words, there is always a bit of a delay, sort of speak. All the water that you are collecting now in the soil will be very good for the next season. 👍
@chrisblake216217 күн бұрын
Amazing project. New subscriber and loving the content. One thing I will point out for you. All the juniper trees on the property are sucking your land dry. They are prolific water drinkers and even small junipers drink a ton of water. You should start thinning them out and planting dynamic accumulating deciduous trees. These will pull nutrients from deep down in the soil and bring them to the surface. They also are not as water dependent as the juniper is.
@GrowTreeOrganics16 күн бұрын
Thank you very much! Appreciate the support!🙏🏾 definitely much more progress to be made and shown!✌🏾
@a_fellow_homesteader15 күн бұрын
We have a different view of the junipers. They play a pivotal role in the existing ecosystem here. Shade, bio mass, as well as under and around them is where much of our vegetation grows. Also, pine trees, fruit trees and most other trees actually suck up way more water than the junipers.
@IfyouarehurtnointentwasappliedАй бұрын
Have you started a Johnson and Sue aerobic compost? it might be a good idea to help the dirt come alive and grow a lot more grasses with this great system you have set up ✌️
@GrowTreeOrganicsАй бұрын
Haven't made one yet, but we'll be adding compost to the area nonetheless. ✌🏾
@ravenrock541Ай бұрын
A second thought to consider: Gold is prevalent in Arizona. With your swales and bowls, you are creating collection areas. Might help with financing if you can pan for gold after each monsoon season. Even a few dollars would be helpful. There are wet sluices and dry ones you could use for all that dirt your moving around.
@GrowTreeOrganicsАй бұрын
Good point! Thank you!✌🏾
@MulberrysmileКүн бұрын
If you plan to garden, I have some advice. This comes from trying to grow things in FL, in sandy soil. My mom fertilized in a spot outside the kitchen window trying to get anything to grow. Nothing worked. It was hot, and the soil was too sandy to hold moisture, and it was also too sandy to hold nutrients. She mulched, she did drip irrigation, everything. 😢It was the sad sad garden of death. Decades of mulching never even dented the draining of the nutrients, nor improved the sand pit into soil. So, we’d had horses out back when we were young. Decades later, my sister and her hubbie built a house in the pasture, where the barn had been. They dug out a pond to create the house pad to the required elevation. Fl has a layer of hard pan. It’s compacted dirt over more sand. (I have a theory that a big long drought caused it, based upon what happened in my own yard when he had a severe drought…it formed a new layer of hardpan much thinner than the old and very thick layer.) As they dug the pond, we were all suddenly overwhelmed by the scent of ammonia. Years of horse, cow, and goat pee had sunk through the sand and was sitting on top of the hardpan. The difference with my mom’s kitchen window area, was it did not have hardpan! It had been removed when the house was built. In the pasture, though, this layer of hardpan was five feet down…too deep for a garden or anything more than grasses, except for trees that would root deeply. So… If you don’t create your own catchment in your garden area, the plants won’t do well because the deeper soil lacks absorption material. Even if you dig deep and put in five feet of bio waste material, the water will run out and take nutrients with it. You need to create a barrier to hold water and nutrients in your growing area. Create a shallow pool, three feet deep. Buy a truck load of clay and line the pool, but don’t go higher up the walls with the clay than six inches. You want to hold water, but not drown the plants. Backfill with bio waste. It’s a worth a trip to go pick up a U-Haul full of leaf bags. Leaves are so nutrient rich! Get dead wood, too. Pick up another truckload of manure. Buy a few pounds of worms and put them in. Layer the leaves, sticks, manure, and your sand. The manure and leaves will feed the worms. If you want to, buy a truckload of topsoil, but I would just keep adding biomatter for a couple of years. It doesn’t matter if it goes anaerobic at the bottom. The worms eat bacteria and it’s food for them. Mulch the top with softwood. Apple wood, or other fruit trees. The same things you’d use to smoke food with. Surround the hole with rocks. The water and some nutrients will seep into the surrounding area, but not very far. So plant veggies in the hole and herbs that do well in semi arid climates around the perimeter, like oregano, rosemary, etc. Circle the herb area with succulents like purslane and aloe. Add posts so you can put up shade cloth. If you don’t want to do that, I suggest burying large containers with drainage holes two inches up from the bottom, rather than a hole in the bottom. I had good results with a kiddie pool, but I really don’t like plastic. I was really poor, though, and it was just twelve bucks. It was easier to manage than small pots, and did significantly better than my attempts at an in-ground garden, or even a raised bed. Hopes my lifetime of garden woes helps you! 😂
@GrowTreeOrganicsКүн бұрын
Thanks for sharing your experience. That's some great advice I'll definitely consider!✌🏾
@a_fellow_homesteaderКүн бұрын
Thanks for the ideas. The garden has been very successful for our first year 😊 we did a lot of gardening in MT and learned a ton that has translated very well to AZ. Here is a video on our first garden beds. kzbin.info/www/bejne/Z4Kyenmfr9OqeLcsi=ZyZ435QdekxlfS7U
@MyrokingАй бұрын
😮Been watching for a while. I'm amazed how it all comes together, can't wait to see what's to come... I like your pine tree😅
@GrowTreeOrganicsАй бұрын
Appreciate your support! Thanks for being apart of the journey! We have many hidden pine trees here!✌🏾
@jmarino715Ай бұрын
I'd be figuring out a way to long-term store the water that makes it to the larger basins so that I could build an irrigation pipeline with sprinkler systems attached to keep the land watered during droughts
@GrowTreeOrganicsАй бұрын
Most definitely! Thanks!✌🏾
@jmarino715Ай бұрын
@@GrowTreeOrganics Can't wait to see how you approach this solution. A sprinkler system will require power, and I'm sure you'll want to ensure that your land stays irrigated even if the power goes out. I'm thinking some kind of solar system would be the best approach. Could potentially even use the fact that water likes to flow at high rates on your property to build some kind of water-powered turbine to help offset the cost of running pumps and such. Thoughts?
@GrowTreeOrganicsАй бұрын
Gravity Irrigation will be utilized in most cases, but pumps aren't bad either. We can always get multiple pumps for backup as well. But definitely solar powered!✌🏾
@mechanics4all405Ай бұрын
Surely it would be worth buying a used cheap digger and dumper❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤
@GrowTreeOrganicsАй бұрын
Just wait till next video!✌🏾
@OfftoShambalaАй бұрын
For the love of logs… can’t wait to find out what those are for!
@GrowTreeOrganicsАй бұрын
😅✌🏾
@stephenwilliams681Ай бұрын
Can you look at bigger catchments at the top edge of your property to capture water flowing from neighbors property? That depends on their property management as well as general topography, but it would increase the ground water across your property before water even starts engaging your own catchment and distribution systems.
@GrowTreeOrganicsАй бұрын
Where I've been filming is the upper part of our property, so it is why we're doing most of the work in this area up here. ✌🏾
@abrighterday508Ай бұрын
Woohoo..big steps this week mate..just tilling might help on the south side? I don't know the typography
@GrowTreeOrganicsАй бұрын
We'll be Doing something like that!😉✌🏾
@czechvirusSАй бұрын
do you plan to put wood logs near your capture points? shadow could help plants and as it decomposes it will give it nutrients. might speed up top soil creation
@GrowTreeOrganicsАй бұрын
You'll find out!😉✌🏾
@Smarglenargle5 күн бұрын
Hey, I just had a thought. If we only have 3% drinkable water on earth, wouldn't bringing water retention back to the desert take up alot of water resources? Desert greenification like the Sahara. Is there enough water to go around?
@GrowTreeOrganics5 күн бұрын
The 3% is what's usable, or minimal processes for contaminants and such. Because of money we don't do more desalination of ocean water, but bringing more green to the globe would help facilitate more ocean water evaporation, which in turn could increase our fresh water supply overall. There's plenty of water to go around if we would utilize our technology correctly. ✌🏾
@phillipErskine-jk1jtАй бұрын
Bentonite clay spread in your holding positions help hold the water. It expands to fill in cracks and makes a better seal in you earthen works.
@GrowTreeOrganicsАй бұрын
Nice it definitely does!✌🏾
@phillipErskine-jk1jtАй бұрын
@@GrowTreeOrganics I just didn't know if you knew. Have a great weekend
@antbyrne3531Ай бұрын
Hey Man love the project and vids, at <a href="#" class="seekto" data-time="837">13:57</a> the area looks very wet spread over a big area, could you U shape dame that area so a large area soaks evenly? Have to say I was suspicious about the zuni bowls, I mean all that work, but you can see the effect with the water, and the use to control erosion, very good man, this will be un recognisable in 4 years!
@GrowTreeOrganicsАй бұрын
The areas I show when the rain started they do what you're describing. Appreciate your support!✌🏾
@hirokawiti4932Ай бұрын
Very impactful episo🎉de so much to look forward to😅
@hirokawiti4932Ай бұрын
Just found a video of another project where they're preserving the juniper trees I'd really recommend a watch, video is called " total transformation: bringing life back to damaged land, barren quarry to abundant
@hirokawiti4932Ай бұрын
Kudos btw for not jumping to conclusions with your juniper, trusting our eyes we can see the there is green beneath thier canopy just no mulch👍
@GrowTreeOrganicsАй бұрын
Most definitely!✌🏾
@GrowTreeOrganicsАй бұрын
I think I've actually seen that. There's plenty of evidence to show the trees are way more beneficial than destructive!✌🏾
@GrowTreeOrganicsАй бұрын
Exactly and thanks for your support!✌🏾
@RaymondDavis-gp8lnАй бұрын
Weird idea, but could you drive porous woods into the ground to act as water batteries or wood ollas?
@GrowTreeOrganicsАй бұрын
Yea, definitely a good idea!✌🏾
@marky2A21 күн бұрын
You are doing some fabulous work. I am tremendously interested since I have similar land, at least in appearance, in Northern Utah. I am equally frustrated that you are not saying where you are. I desperately want to know where your property is so I can compare and get an idea as to what to do to improve my land. God bless you and please say something about your location.
@GrowTreeOrganics21 күн бұрын
Thank you appreciate it! If you watch my newest video on Deserts and the older rainwater videos I show our area and the map of our place!✌🏾
@FransvandenBergeMuziekschuurАй бұрын
Get a well drill machine on a lorry. That way you can collect water. And you can sprinkle water over the property.
@GrowTreeOrganicsАй бұрын
There's an idea!✌🏾
@johnruckman2320Ай бұрын
Well the retention of water will depend on the permeability of the soil. Some places need pond liners to retain the water.
@GrowTreeOrganicsАй бұрын
Yep exactly we'll have a mix of draining basins and holding basins!✌🏾
@conorpp1Ай бұрын
Absolutely love your project. Keep up the great work. But I do have a question. Why are you not planting anything that will create ground cover that is suitable for your soil type? You have spread straw in places which is good. Whatever plants you use now for ground cover may not be the ground cover that you want to end up with, but with the volume of rain you have been getting many plants/shrubs will be able to grow and start to protect and improve the soil. Even if you are planning earth works for many sections of your property, Im sure not all areas are going to require extensive digging. The process will take many years, but the sooner you start to improve the soil, the sooner you will start to see real change. I come back to a point I made before is that all farmers know that ground cover is vital to prevent erosion. And with the recent research showing that light by itself (even without heat) causes evaporation, ground cover has become even more important especially in areas where there are extended periods of time with little rainfall. The ground under vegetation has been shown to retain more moisture than ground without vegetation even in extreme drought conditions.
@GrowTreeOrganicsАй бұрын
Thank you, the short answer is that we're waiting for winter to plant!✌🏾
@joemc111Ай бұрын
Nice to see you out while it’s raining. Are you planning to do some harvesting at the top of your property?
@GrowTreeOrganicsАй бұрын
That's the plan! More to come!✌🏾
@hardwarefulАй бұрын
I have mixed feelings about the larger ponds at the end of the property. On the one hand, you don't get to enjoy the water that infiltrated as much, unless the soil has such a high clay content that the water stays at the surface and can be pumped around. But at the very least, you get a nice sediment trap effect that'll allow redistributing the sediment to areas that are much more sandy.
@GrowTreeOrganicsАй бұрын
The bigger stuff is for our edges and is mainly for that last effort to hold water on the property but also hold large volumes of water and we can put a rubber liner in later!✌🏾
@jennyk4397Ай бұрын
Water run-off (or the lack of it) can cause problems in so many different ways. People who used the land used to manage it to suit their requirements. Now it's more difficult and sometimes rules and regulations or ignorance get in the way and traditional ways of managing water get ignored or disparaged. I'm wishing you the best in your project.
@GrowTreeOrganicsАй бұрын
Appreciate the support what you said is very true. ✌🏾
@RonthonSiАй бұрын
Have you considered trimming some of your trees? Branches from the lower part can be used for compost for example, leaving canopy on top to provide shade. That way you will not lose too much water from the soil, it can be available for grass.
@GrowTreeOrganicsАй бұрын
That's the plan! Exactly!✌🏾
@ocanadastandinguard6840Ай бұрын
Have you considered using big dugouts to retain more water? This is a method commonly used on the Canadian prairies.
@GrowTreeOrganicsАй бұрын
There's a place and time for those kinds of works. But appreciate that!✌🏾
@kittyfantastic7681Ай бұрын
Maybe invest in sand bags that you can move around so you can make changes easier and hold water on a larger scale faster with less work.
@GrowTreeOrganicsАй бұрын
Definitely an idea to try out. Thanks!✌🏾
@a_fellow_homesteaderАй бұрын
They would break down from the sun way too fast . We have used a few over the years and they are just not quite feasible with this intense sun.
@pawkie2Ай бұрын
I would be tempted to use a dozer to scrape the surface stones into a long barrier at the lower edge of your land. Create ponds later.
@GrowTreeOrganicsАй бұрын
Definitely an idea!✌🏾
@cordellscottАй бұрын
I like to order the Zuni bowl a a local restaurant. It's delicious.
@GrowTreeOrganicsАй бұрын
Good choice!😅✌🏾
@knoll9812Ай бұрын
They are rather large bring friends
@RaymondDavis-gp8lnАй бұрын
Are there any desert critters that help with this water retention strategies? Beavers are amazing at this in wetter areas, but is there a critter you could input (locally) to help out?
@GrowTreeOrganicsАй бұрын
Only the mice that dig holes to create space in the soil!😅 otherwise we gotta be the wildlife that helps with water retention. ✌🏾
@340wbymagАй бұрын
You actually have quite a bit of plant material on your property, so I would suggest that you begin trimming trees, bushes, and grasses, and adding the trimmings to the soil to provide a food source for soil bacteria. Everything begins with healthy soil.
@stephenwilliams681Ай бұрын
Pruning will increase the density of leaves (think hedges) which will increase shade for water retention and increase stem flow off the plants and increase wind breaks reducing water loss from drying winds. Good winter work when plants are dormant. But don't hedge them - wind breaks slow the wind, they don't block it.
@GrowTreeOrganicsАй бұрын
We do and we'll be taking advantage of that!✌🏾
@GrowTreeOrganicsАй бұрын
Most definitely!✌🏾
@richavic4520Ай бұрын
I'm curious to see if the strata below you eventually fills to a level that it finds somewhere to surface, and form an intermittent stream.
@GrowTreeOrganicsАй бұрын
We'll see!✌🏾😅
@mrzoukdotcomzouklambadaboo8212Ай бұрын
Plant trees and the higher they reach into the sky, the more ether they tap into, the better the soil, the more water is attracted.
@GrowTreeOrganicsАй бұрын
Most definitely!✌🏾
@owbeerАй бұрын
all the trees on your property, are those junipers? i saw on some other channel they use alot of water and he removed loads.
@TR1P0DL1F3Ай бұрын
It occurred to me that they're not big trees, so they must have huge roots systems. Which mean when the tree is cut, it leaves behind a large water-filled carbon sponge. My thoughts anyway Edit: a letter
@a_fellow_homesteaderАй бұрын
We have a very different view of the junipers than most folks. Some of these trees are upwards of 300 years old. Our only shade, create biomass and most of our vegetation grows under them. Overtime we will take some out and replace with other trees that actually use more water than juniper 😅✌🏾✌🏾
@GrowTreeOrganicsАй бұрын
They are juniper!✌🏾
@myronedocking2795Ай бұрын
just curious, why dont you plant a bush or srub in the zoni bowls
@GrowTreeOrganicsАй бұрын
We'll be planting stuff come winter!✌🏾
@CaseyKidwellАй бұрын
What is the clay content of your soil, you may be able to sift out enough clay to line your larger basin's thus holding the water even longer, like a large "oya", water pot
@a_fellow_homesteaderАй бұрын
Very low clay content. More clay in some spots but mostly sand and silt. Some basins will be lined in one way or another while others are meant to simply soak.
@GrowTreeOrganicsАй бұрын
What she said!😅✌🏾
@frank_realtorАй бұрын
Hey Brendon, Which area are you in exactly? How many milliliters of rain per year do you have in your region? I am currently planning a huge project in Namibia with at least 250 acres. Depending on government support and donations, I would like to expand the project to 2500 acres. Frank
@GrowTreeOrganicsАй бұрын
355 mm of rain on average! Exciting for you though! Good luck on your adventure!✌🏾
@chipwellington11796 күн бұрын
I was wondering where i could buy some native grasses for that area
@GrowTreeOrganics6 күн бұрын
Amazon is good. Outsidepride.com and on amazon have the native seed for the area. There are see banks here with native seed, but I haven't looked into ask of them!✌🏾
@GrowTreeOrganics6 күн бұрын
We actually collected a lot of our own seed on the land from the native grass varieties we have that we can see already work!✌🏾
@wijn1008Ай бұрын
you should look into planting lupines as a green fertiliser.
@GrowTreeOrganicsАй бұрын
Most definitely!✌🏾
@wijn1008Ай бұрын
@@GrowTreeOrganics This is how they are "regreening" iceland. It has a rocky vulcanic soil. The lupines put nitrogen into the soil, so in a later stage you could plant shrubs and trees. Good luck on your adventure!
@GrowTreeOrganicsАй бұрын
Nice thank you!✌🏾
@WaterholeExchangeАй бұрын
Ever since I began doing the great work, gods work, I have been blessed with rain when the forecasters said there would be none. Blessings and miracles are part of Life, doing the great work attracts what it needs because the universe is here for us. Keep up the great work, Mother Earth will thank you for it.
@PhilpFongАй бұрын
Pardon for the correction, but that's big G God .😊 PS: do you have a channel as well ? I'm following as much of this content as possible .
@GrowTreeOrganicsАй бұрын
Thank you for the support!✌🏾
@ethanhood204Ай бұрын
Amen 🙏🏻
@MrDxxdxАй бұрын
God's work 😂😂 What is wrong with you? You just decide that your work is God's work? Crazy....
@thelonewolf267Ай бұрын
I wonder what your soil composition looks like. If there’s a vid you have done on it just point me in the right direction and I’ll watch it. This is fascinating to me because I’ve always held the thought of the desert is near lifeless but you are showing me otherwise.
@GrowTreeOrganicsАй бұрын
Very sandy and sandy loam soil here and we have rock shelves. We're slowly figuring it out!✌🏾
@frictionhitchАй бұрын
Have you checked out the USGS lidar maps? Super cool
@frictionhitchАй бұрын
Down to 1 meter resolution
@GrowTreeOrganicsАй бұрын
I have✌🏾
@hemispherechannel4862Ай бұрын
99 people play Harvest moon on screen, 1 person play on real life
@GrowTreeOrganicsАй бұрын
😅✌🏾
@goodwaterhikesАй бұрын
👍👍😎☮
@GrowTreeOrganicsАй бұрын
✌🏾
@dreamingacaciaАй бұрын
do you have a plan to build large body water like lake or reservoir ? by having large body water would help stabilize the rain frequencies and prevent the ecosystem to stagnant at some point. Also simulating the waterfall by buildiing an uphill reservoir which connected to the lake would allowed the overall ecosystem to become more stabilized and abundance. This also solved the problem about where would you put dirt from digging a lake, just make a hill out of them is the answer.
@GrowTreeOrganicsАй бұрын
We'll have multiple small to medium basins for water storage and such!✌🏾
@dreamingacaciaАй бұрын
@@GrowTreeOrganics yeah I knew that much since I watched multiple videos from your channel. I just feel like if you want to make it real, you gotta plan for the large body water. Right now it'd last hundreds of years considering nobody disturb it after you guys go. with large body water, it could last over ten thousand years.
@jameskniskern2261Ай бұрын
Please be mindful of valley fever. Suggest wearing dust masks anytime you are excavating in AZ. Great work!
@GrowTreeOrganicsАй бұрын
Yes, thank you!✌🏾
@kmarks97236Ай бұрын
You need to add more biomass on top of your ground. I have seen where you have done that some.
@GrowTreeOrganicsАй бұрын
We'll be Doing more don't worry!😉✌🏾
@jasonpatrickolynyk81744 күн бұрын
Say "Earth Works" one more time! lol
@GrowTreeOrganics4 күн бұрын
You said it not me!😅✌🏾
@chessman483Ай бұрын
Looks like an enormous amount of work, Kudos to you all.
@GrowTreeOrganicsАй бұрын
Much appreciated!✌🏾
@quikoucatАй бұрын
🤘🤘
@GrowTreeOrganicsАй бұрын
✌🏾✌🏾
@BadBoyKoshАй бұрын
Waiting ✌️😁
@GrowTreeOrganicsАй бұрын
✌🏾
@Voltas-qf2nzАй бұрын
Try to use willows in your reforestation project.
@GrowTreeOrganicsАй бұрын
Most definitely!✌🏾
@smckay6438Ай бұрын
The Israelis invented a plastic bowl you can put around the base of trees to collect and save water just for that tree . I wonder if you could look that up and copy it using plastic tarps folded over on itself with rocks and sand inside ! This would allow you to cature and hold water for individual trees or bushes! Maybe lay the tarp around the tree as the base then put rocks and sand in it, fold it bact toward the tree with holes in it!thinking 2 or 3 feet radius. Then a dirt bowl around 6 feet, to collect water into your tree sponge ?😊 Maybe use cardboard instead of plastics, i dont like putting plastic in the ground! The Israelis pot is more ridged plastic and above ground. About 1 foot around. But for planted trees. Basically a sponge with a cover on it around the tree/ bush with a dirt bowl to collect more rain!😊
@GrowTreeOrganicsАй бұрын
Oh nice, I have seen those before super cool idea! I'll have to look into those! Thank you!✌🏾
@streddy1334Ай бұрын
We build our roads such a way that we collect the rain water and let it percolate😂😂😂
@GrowTreeOrganicsАй бұрын
Nice!✌🏾
@ravenrock541Ай бұрын
This idea will take work, but consider: I'm betting your area of the state has a good thick area layer of caliche under the soil. It might be worth while to map out the different gradient depths on your land since water sinking down will hit this layer and flow along the layer. This could direct the subsurface water to flow in ways you wouldn't expect.
@GrowTreeOrganicsАй бұрын
Hmm. Appreciate the idea!✌🏾
@martharetallick1150Ай бұрын
Caliche is great for lining swales and the sides of basins.
@ravenrock541Ай бұрын
@@GrowTreeOrganics Small bore holes would be the best way to map out the depth of the layer over a large area. Setting up a machine to do the boring and retrieving the bore plug is the first half of the problem. The depth you need to go will dictate the machine design. I expect your layer of caliche to be no more than 12 foot down, at the most. More likely less than 6 ft.
@0ctatr0nАй бұрын
If those are Juniper trees all over your property they're probably sucking up all your ground moisture. I saw a youtube video somewhere of an American Rancher cutting down these trees to restore the grasslands and native habitat because these trees sapped the life out of the soil and prevented native trees from establishing.
@a_fellow_homesteaderАй бұрын
We have a very different view of the junipers than most folks. Some of these trees are upwards of 300 years old. Our only shade, create biomass and most of our vegetation grows under them. Overtime we will take some out and replace with other trees that actually use more water than juniper 😅✌🏾✌🏾
@GrowTreeOrganicsАй бұрын
Notice you said a rancher.... it's a biased opinion, the rancher wants trees gone to grow more grass for the cattle he's not interested in the trees because the cows don't eat those. ✌🏾
@GrowTreeOrganicsАй бұрын
Native habitat would include the trees as well, so that's how you know slightly it's not directed to restoration. ✌🏾
@justinwheeler5614Ай бұрын
I don't know anything about any god's work, but intermittant piles of dead branches with leaves still intact will shade the ground, helping to retain moisture longer.
@GrowTreeOrganicsАй бұрын
Yes indeed!✌🏾
@IRailroadАй бұрын
💧💧💧💧
@GrowTreeOrganicsАй бұрын
✌🏾
@user-ks7so9lx7gАй бұрын
Working Earth’s ass off bro
@GrowTreeOrganicsАй бұрын
😅✌🏾
@ridingvenusАй бұрын
The logs presented at the end of the video are for that property. Do I win a prize?