This was really inspiring! I am the custodian of 9 acres of land in Umbria, Italy, where we also suffer from summer heat and poor water retention. Seeing this makes me glad that our out of control species are the wild boars, who although they are a nightmare and dig everything up, don't graze the land down to the bare earth like goats. I have a PDC and social permaculture cert, but designing the water is the thing I have most difficulty with. I am looking up your course right now! THanks
I believe what the farmer said! Here in Europe a lot of farmers told me that goat are able to destroy almost every plant because of a typ of enzymes they got in their saliva.
It is their ability to graze everything down to the soil, climb trees and eat all the leaves. If you take most of the leaves off a tree less falls on the ground as fertiliser. Grazing everything to the soil leaves no grownd cover and lets the wind and rain erode the soil. @@franklucas6414
We have a saying here in Greece, when we want to underrate a person or a subject : "this is thin letters". Unfortunately for the vast majority of the Greek people, water or forest management and ecology in general is exactly that, thin letters. And the funny thing is that this mindset applies mostly to the inhabitants of the rural areas, the ones who actually live in nature, than to city people. Like you said, our country is sick and suffering, and the people are the disease. Thank you for this video.
it's certainly not the people...people exist all over the planet and not all planet is eroded and dying. It's a specific kind of civilisation with specific goals and structures. Zack explains very well what the problem is with goats in the EU
@@gryspnikngrysp2821 I am working at the Cleaning Department of a large Municipality of Greece. Believe me, l know hell of a lot better about the people of my country and their habbits.
Almost everyone who is left on thoose rural poor places are the ones that can't afford to leave so their education level is very low usually. My mother comes from a place like this and they left in the 70s.
@@zaxarispetixos8728 it has nothing to do with this...educated and specialist people are advancing and promoting this way of land management. The EU is promoting this land management. They are just disconnected
@@gryspnikngrysp2821 The EU is giving money to people to invest it in their buisness buy equipment etc and make more money, some people that are not educated use that money to live or buy a new mercedes and neglect their animals, let them roam around and eat everything.
I love seeing videos like this where real change is happening. Great job, keep up the great work and keep the videos coming. So excited to see how this land improves. The stark difference between this and the neighboring property is quite a visual representation of the delta in land management.
To the point video, new examples, not the same projects as always. Very articulate and you explained it all clearly. Great job Zack. I’m sure it will bring good results!
..YOU REALLY ARE A LIFE SAVER 🙏❤🙏..WELL DONE YOU AND YOUR TEAM..MAGNIFICENT WORK...SUCH GREAT KNOWLEDGE YOU HAVE ON SUCH A VERY IMPORTANT SUBJECT..KUDOS TO YOU ALL..🙏❤🙏..JUST SUBSCRIBED..✌
Thanks for the video, very cool. Would you consider planting canopy trees around the reservoir, and introducing water plants to provide shade in order to minimize evaporation, and of course improve the aesthetics?
I’ve obessed on videos like this over the past 5 years- I’m surprised you didn’t use the approach of swales/contoured trenches, like Geoff Lawton and Andrew Millison do - were you aware of their work but chose the terrace approach because it made more sense in this situation?
Great video. Small point to make. I think your commentary and imagery stands on its own and doesn’t need the dramatic music during dialog to camera which makes things harder to hear and follow.
Samothrace (the island of the project) has the worst goat population problem, reached to a level that the locals are searching ways for extracting a lot of goats out of the island to stabilize the population. Astypalea island in the Southern Aegean, which is smaller than Samothrace, has almost 16.000 goats. So i can guess the goat population in Samothrace is much more worse. On the section of water, you were very lucky, because Samothrace is of the most rare small sized greek islands that has a lot of water springs, so that's making your project process more easy!!!
Go and see Tinos. It's a destroyed island. The situation is simple. Ikaria people have found it. If a goat is found few l free roaming, anyone had the right to slaughter it and bring it to the big summer panygiri
Looks great! Can you give more information about the specific site? The aerial views show lots of cool features and projects on the property. Is there any other videos of this land? Great work. Keep it up!
Awesome project, keep up the good work. Was shocked by the amount of soil lost due to erosion; great to see permaculture projects happening all over the world
Great story of a huge success! I wonder how many cubic meters big is this pond and how many thousand dollars it needs to do something like this. And how many of these ponds would a small farm need to have enough water for men, animals, trees and vegetable? Is there an adress and website of this greek project?
Land does not “receive or reject” rain. Precipitation is routed to “recharge or direct runoff”. Land isn’t “hydrated”, people are. You seem to be missing basic hydrology and engineering principles here. What is the annual precipitation depth? How is it seasonally distributed? What is the texture and permeability of the soils/subsoils? What’s the catchment area of the project? Can these terraces and impoundments handle a 50- or 100-year storm (and what are the potential impacts downstream?)
1:40 Notice that at the root of so many environmental problems is government interference. Trying to create some result, but ignoring and/or ignorant about other consequences of their schemes. Subsidies and other gov't incentives and programs inevitably create more damage than it fixes or prevents, because it depends on central planning, which is opposite of nature, and then it is backed up by force. And expecting government to fix the problems it has created is even sillier than thinking it could fix problems that exist naturally. #VOLUNTARYISM
10 หลายเดือนก่อน +1
yeah, we are funding our demise, although I don't agree with you - what is funded can be defunded and vice versa. "In August 2023, the IMF issued a global estimate of what it categorizes as “subsidies” for fossil fuels, totalling USD 7 trillion in 2022 (Black et al., 2023). This estimate covered 170 countries and includes what the IMF calls “explicit” and “implicit” subsidies."
Goats aren’t making it rain less. Anyone who’s lived in the Mediterranean for at least the last 10 years will tell you it rains half as much as it used to basically everywhere. So it used to rain twice a mont and now we are lucky if it rains once. Sometimes we go three months with no rain.
Basic Income could have prevented a human-caused ecological goat disaster. Just give people cash! Our societies twist themselves into pretzels with things like goat, food, and oil subsidies instead of simply trusting average people to mind our own business. Every Basic Income study shows increased work & education, or more time with family. All positive impacts. No negatives. No goats tearing up the landscape so their "owners" (with no stewardship, of course) can make a living.
That you together with the members bring change in close cooperation with the local people to restore, en become as self efficient as posible en to create an intresting invoirement for young people so that they return to were thy came from instead of fleeing away to modern cities. At the end of your inspirering video you try to sell a educational product. In general that is ecactly the reason why these project don't come to their full potential. It does not come from the right intention. That is sad!!
People have to make a living! Water stories offer scholarships and opportunities for people who struggle to access their course. If people can't sustain themselves with a livelihood, how are they expected to do the work and support their families? It's unfair to ask them to offer all their years and experience for free, though I suspect they do offer plenty of free advice and support to causes where they can.
This was really inspiring! I am the custodian of 9 acres of land in Umbria, Italy, where we also suffer from summer heat and poor water retention. Seeing this makes me glad that our out of control species are the wild boars, who although they are a nightmare and dig everything up, don't graze the land down to the bare earth like goats. I have a PDC and social permaculture cert, but designing the water is the thing I have most difficulty with. I am looking up your course right now! THanks
Mark Shepards water book is also very good, and the grey water oasis guy from Arizona!
Great project. Looking forward to more videos showing landscape recovery
Farmer in Africa told me, and he was a good farmer, "Goats Create Deserts"
Living brush hogs, they eat everything.
They don't, it has been always bad management of those animals
They don't, it has been always bad management of those animals
I believe what the farmer said! Here in Europe a lot of farmers told me that goat are able to destroy almost every plant because of a typ of enzymes they got in their saliva.
It is their ability to graze everything down to the soil, climb trees and eat all the leaves. If you take most of the leaves off a tree less falls on the ground as fertiliser. Grazing everything to the soil leaves no grownd cover and lets the wind and rain erode the soil. @@franklucas6414
What a great project in a magical location. Dream job.
We have a saying here in Greece, when we want to underrate a person or a subject : "this is thin letters".
Unfortunately for the vast majority of the Greek people, water or forest management and ecology in general is exactly that, thin letters.
And the funny thing is that this mindset applies mostly to the inhabitants of the rural areas, the ones who actually live in nature, than to city people.
Like you said, our country is sick and suffering, and the people are the disease.
Thank you for this video.
it's certainly not the people...people exist all over the planet and not all planet is eroded and dying. It's a specific kind of civilisation with specific goals and structures. Zack explains very well what the problem is with goats in the EU
@@gryspnikngrysp2821 I am working at the Cleaning Department of a large Municipality of Greece. Believe me, l know hell of a lot better about the people of my country and their habbits.
Almost everyone who is left on thoose rural poor places are the ones that can't afford to leave so their education level is very low usually. My mother comes from a place like this and they left in the 70s.
@@zaxarispetixos8728 it has nothing to do with this...educated and specialist people are advancing and promoting this way of land management. The EU is promoting this land management. They are just disconnected
@@gryspnikngrysp2821 The EU is giving money to people to invest it in their buisness buy equipment etc and make more money, some people that are not educated use that money to live or buy a new mercedes and neglect their animals, let them roam around and eat everything.
I hope u politicians are watching, ❤ from Pottsville, Australia 😊
Very nice video! Superbly informative. Please keep creating similar content so these good landscape management practices can spread. Well done!!
Shocking to see how much topsoil is gone. Thank you for addressing this issue.
Beautiful! hopefully the success and beauty of the land will inspire others to do the same nearby!
I love seeing videos like this where real change is happening. Great job, keep up the great work and keep the videos coming. So excited to see how this land improves. The stark difference between this and the neighboring property is quite a visual representation of the delta in land management.
Lovely project, thanks for your work!
To the point video, new examples, not the same projects as always. Very articulate and you explained it all clearly. Great job Zack. I’m sure it will bring good results!
Beautifully shot and explained. Very inspiring, guys!
Beautiful. Thank you for sharing.
That sediment trap is a great idea. I haven't seen anyone else doing it.
We're all doing it...There is no actual pond that is fed by a waterway without a sediment trap.
..YOU REALLY ARE A LIFE SAVER 🙏❤🙏..WELL DONE YOU AND YOUR TEAM..MAGNIFICENT WORK...SUCH GREAT KNOWLEDGE YOU HAVE ON SUCH A VERY IMPORTANT SUBJECT..KUDOS TO YOU ALL..🙏❤🙏..JUST SUBSCRIBED..✌
Thanks for the video, very cool. Would you consider planting canopy trees around the reservoir, and introducing water plants to provide shade in order to minimize evaporation, and of course improve the aesthetics?
Amazing channel and to see what is possible! It encourages me a lot to learn this type of knowledge. Thank you so much
I’ve obessed on videos like this over the past 5 years- I’m surprised you didn’t use the approach of swales/contoured trenches, like Geoff Lawton and Andrew Millison do - were you aware of their work but chose the terrace approach because it made more sense in this situation?
Great video. Small point to make. I think your commentary and imagery stands on its own and doesn’t need the dramatic music during dialog to camera which makes things harder to hear and follow.
Samothrace (the island of the project) has the worst goat population problem, reached to a level that the locals are searching ways for extracting a lot of goats out of the island to stabilize the population. Astypalea island in the Southern Aegean, which is smaller than Samothrace, has almost 16.000 goats. So i can guess the goat population in Samothrace is much more worse.
On the section of water, you were very lucky, because Samothrace is of the most rare small sized greek islands that has a lot of water springs, so that's making your project process more easy!!!
Go and see Tinos. It's a destroyed island. The situation is simple. Ikaria people have found it. If a goat is found few l free roaming, anyone had the right to slaughter it and bring it to the big summer panygiri
Looks great! Can you give more information about the specific site? The aerial views show lots of cool features and projects on the property. Is there any other videos of this land?
Great work. Keep it up!
One of the many devastating EU descisions! Luckily this project might bring the necessary solutions for most mditerranean coastlines 🎉!
I planting the trees because Fuguoka too.
Very nice video but I'm surprised that you left planting for so much later after the earthworks.
Whow !!! Is that baba's land? I wouldnt recognize it if it wasnt for the yurt the tipee and the rice plots. Great job. All the best.
Nice video. Very similar pitch to Andrew Millison at the end ;)
Awesome project, keep up the good work. Was shocked by the amount of soil lost due to erosion; great to see permaculture projects happening all over the world
great video!
Love this. Is it possible to visit the site?
Regenerative agriculture is nothing but win. Cover always on the ground, mob grazing, a broad variety of (preferably) indigenous species, etc.
Wow love this! What is the hay you laid on the land is there any reason for it?
Great story of a huge success! I wonder how many cubic meters big is this pond and how many thousand dollars it needs to do something like this. And how many of these ponds would a small farm need to have enough water for men, animals, trees and vegetable?
Is there an adress and website of this greek project?
2:01 if you’re not a vegetarian goat meat is nice! Or you can rent the flock to clear brush
I was hoping that you would be willing to invite people to become a member of a communitie that surge for barre land
if the goats have overgrazed, why aren't they removed?
Subsidies ($$$) to the farmers to keep them! ☺️
Wonder when the last predator walked that isle..?
Land does not “receive or reject” rain. Precipitation is routed to “recharge or direct runoff”. Land isn’t “hydrated”, people are. You seem to be missing basic hydrology and engineering principles here. What is the annual precipitation depth? How is it seasonally distributed? What is the texture and permeability of the soils/subsoils? What’s the catchment area of the project? Can these terraces and impoundments handle a 50- or 100-year storm (and what are the potential impacts downstream?)
1:40 Notice that at the root of so many environmental problems is government interference.
Trying to create some result, but ignoring and/or ignorant about other consequences of their schemes.
Subsidies and other gov't incentives and programs inevitably create more damage than it fixes or prevents, because it depends on central planning, which is opposite of nature, and then it is backed up by force.
And expecting government to fix the problems it has created is even sillier than thinking it could fix problems that exist naturally.
#VOLUNTARYISM
yeah, we are funding our demise, although I don't agree with you - what is funded can be defunded and vice versa.
"In August 2023, the IMF issued a global estimate of what it categorizes as “subsidies” for fossil fuels, totalling USD 7 trillion in 2022 (Black et al., 2023). This estimate covered 170 countries and includes what the IMF calls “explicit” and “implicit” subsidies."
@🤯🤯🤯
so why aren't the locals doing all this?
Who called you in here , who owns the land ? 😊
i think the goats are not the "only" cause of the drying landscape... but ok, it's a slip i guess
so they basically did the cobra effect but for goats
I'm for this but you cannot say that the reduced rainfall is 'because of' over grazing. Climate breakdown does play a part . . .
Overgrazing reduces local humidity which can lead to reduced rainfall
Great, but why do you say "Ocean" ??? The Aegean is a sea.
Goats aren’t making it rain less. Anyone who’s lived in the Mediterranean for at least the last 10 years will tell you it rains half as much as it used to basically everywhere. So it used to rain twice a mont and now we are lucky if it rains once. Sometimes we go three months with no rain.
The Scapegoats.
EU subsidies for Agriculture need a complete makeover based on sustainability then a living income for those that 'work" the land!!
The system will always be worked by charlatans. Subsidies need to be abolished.
Fire maybe hard on humans but it's good for the land.
Basic Income could have prevented a human-caused ecological goat disaster. Just give people cash! Our societies twist themselves into pretzels with things like goat, food, and oil subsidies instead of simply trusting average people to mind our own business. Every Basic Income study shows increased work & education, or more time with family. All positive impacts. No negatives. No goats tearing up the landscape so their "owners" (with no stewardship, of course) can make a living.
When AI has taken 10 percent of the jobs, people will want a universal basic income (UBI) system. AI will take far more than that.
i didn't know jack harlow was into environmental conservation
Bit strange to hear Mediterranean Sea being called the ocean.
put some aphanius fish to have clean water and increase biodiversity
Just a reminder ,miditerranean sea isn't an ocean
Ah EU subsidies. One way to make sure you destroy your ecosystems and efficient practices ! Do X and get Y amount of money out of the sky, YAY !
That you together with the members bring change in close cooperation with the local people to restore, en become as self efficient as posible en to create an intresting invoirement for young people so that they return to were thy came from instead of fleeing away to modern cities. At the end of your inspirering video you try to sell a educational product. In general that is ecactly the reason why these project don't come to their full potential. It does not come from the right intention. That is sad!!
People have to make a living! Water stories offer scholarships and opportunities for people who struggle to access their course. If people can't sustain themselves with a livelihood, how are they expected to do the work and support their families? It's unfair to ask them to offer all their years and experience for free, though I suspect they do offer plenty of free advice and support to causes where they can.