Thank you for your hard work! It's nice to see such young men working in construction with the decline of carpenters. Your work is always so neat and tidy! I wish I could come work for you myself, seems you have made a wonderful work environment.
@jadr3123 Жыл бұрын
When I requested subtitles I didn’t imagine that was awakening a poet. Thank you, great job and fantastic video.
@derekpbyrne11 ай бұрын
Greetings from Ireland 🇮🇪 brilliant work ! 👍😊 expertly constructed
@nioatonondaphi6614Ай бұрын
Sarebbe bello vedere come sia cresciuta la vegetazione a distanza di tempo dopo l'intervento di ripristino della frana . Saluti dall'Italia e complimenti per il video.
Im amazed at the patients these guys have, meticulously placing stones and caging with fencing, lacing the panels together with the lacing springs... all without a word out of place... Id be all over the place especially with trying to lace the panels together.. not to mention the frustration language accompanying it...
The song in the background, the Christmas carol "Oh come all yee faithful" is a strange choice for an earthworks video. But I find your chanel really interesting.
@kntn82411 ай бұрын
河川の護岸にも使われること多いし、蛇篭って便利ですよね。
@williamlloyd376911 ай бұрын
Japanese nonprofit taught this same dry stone stacking technique to villagers in Afghanistan. It was interesting to see / everyone working together to improve a canal ( as I recall). A similar technique utilizes chicken wire to reinforce / build earthquake resistance walls in Nepal
@johnpacella951911 ай бұрын
Using “chicken wire” (which is used to contain…chickens) to protect against earthquakes? Hmmm, there are several condos in Miami which used similar logic.
@qtdcanada11 ай бұрын
@@johnpacella9519 You seem to miss a rather big difference between the 2 situations. Miami is near the ocean and exposed to salt water & air; this combination would corrode metals, especially if there is no proper maintenance of the metal structures. Afghanistan & Nepal, on the other hand, are higher up and probably have very dry atmosphere. Also, if Japanese people -- with their long history facing this kind of problems -- have come up with such technique and found that it works for them, then you could say that it is a tried-and-tested technque, wouldn't you?
@ВиталийНный7 ай бұрын
@@qtdcanadaI know such structures are used in Eastern European countries to strengthen the sea coasts. To protect against salt water, insulated nets are used (I don’t know what material the insulation is made of), but such structures have stood for more than 20 years without damage
Wow, amazing job and salute to you workers! But may i know as to how many years will the gabion holds? Im just curious also because if the gabion becomes weak, will the stones layed will surely comes down also? But overall, im amazed. Im just a housewife to a civil engineer who works with japanese company but when im a teenager im really interested on how things work in a construction, and regrettably wasnt on the civil engineering course when i went to college, im a bsba graduate, only worked in accounting dept before with a japanese construction also but now no more. God bless those hands that work and those minds who keeps on innovating to make things work for humanity!
@russcrawford3310Ай бұрын
WOW ... I didn't know the Japanese had galvanized steel 2,000 years ago ... that's late Bronze Age in Europe ...
@hrenesАй бұрын
Christmas carrol on the background (Adeste fidelis)
@anthonywall5227 Жыл бұрын
Thank you
@4623620Ай бұрын
😲Did they really had metal mesh in Japan two thousand years ago❓ 😲2000年前の日本には本当に金網があったのか❓
@47machiy7611 ай бұрын
中村哲さんがパキスタンに河川の堤防技術として教えた方法ですね
@MKPROJECT-DOBOKU11 ай бұрын
そうなんですね! またひとつ賢くなりました。 ありがとうございます!
@qwe597610 ай бұрын
アフガニスタンで故中村哲医師がもちいた誇るべき日本の伝統
@dydactic1112Ай бұрын
What's so special about this? This is basic civil engineering in my country too
Vetiver grass would also have been a very workable solution. Its roots are extensive (up to 3 metres) and, planted 30 cm apart, more than enough to stabilise hillsides such as these. Rather than the regular maintenance required of a rock wall, vetiver grass can instead provide a twice yearly harvest of grass for livestock or as mulch.
@chaosordeal29411 ай бұрын
This "2000 year-old technique" of supporting stacked rocks is at least 200,000 years old.
@alanjackson4646Ай бұрын
The background music is the accompaniment to the English Carol “Oh come let us adore him”.
@rossramsdell758411 ай бұрын
best restoration would be to close the road and let the mountain slide as all mountains do
точно! 2000 лет назад вовсю использовали стальную проволоку для укрепления каменюк
@hiro-uz3ofАй бұрын
ホントに大変そうだからリサイクル加工とかでレゴ化して良いと思う
@raymondletourneau3679Ай бұрын
Great video Can I ask why you never back filled in the void behind the first Gabion where there was no dirt when you installed the second tier Gabion? I was thinking it would be better to backfill with rocks and then add the second tier instead of just leaving a void behind the first Gabion to allow further collapse. Is there a reason? Thanks
@НатальяПанфилова-ф6гАй бұрын
Конечно 2000т.лет назад у наших предков тоже была непроницаемая ткань, и они тоже ее стелили, чтоб не было промывания песка и гравия😅😅😅. Да и сетки металлические они покупали в супермаркете!