Lets hope the SNS party rulling Ministry of enviroment wont affect the floodings. They already talked about it in a negative way, since they are more focused on exploiting the nature, not protecting it.
Extraordinary. Such projects such as this are crucial for the world that we’re living in nowadays. With people like you popping up every day, nature will have the helping hand and the reboot that it so desperately needs. If we had more individuals like that, perhaps this world could’ve been a better place. Keep on fighting for the future, Duarte. All of you are our last hope.
Even tiny patches of flooded areas can have a mind blowing number of creatures in them. There's a drainage ditch by my local train station with dense shrubs and reeds, and at one point every day the birds inside it get louder than the highway nearby.
I have scared off a few herons but not that many. Broadly I would describe the birds as a nightmarish collection of tiny hard to film birds. Patrik (who filmed for our video last year) was a lot more successful on that front. - Cheers, Duarte
After hearing the story about how this project absorbed much of the flood water, does that mean this project potentially saved some people's lives, or at least prevented a lot of destruction? That's one heck of a selling point you could give politicians in areas prone to flooding greatly increasing the rate of flood land restoration.
The Mossy Earth area is probably too small to prevent regional flooding of inhabited/human occupied lands on its own but when natural floodplains around rivers are restored on a later scale they definitely can and do prevent floods. Thing is, rivers naturally vary in their width throughout the year(s) but we humans liked to settle close by the rivers because it meant access to water and therefore also to transportation. Additionally, the soil surrounding rivers is often very fertile making it suitable for farming.
@@ScheveSneeuwSchuifSchep yet in combination with large dams like in that project, it could help significantly. They could empty the dam a couple of days before the flood reached the dam into the flood plain
When projects like these are done at scale, it can absolutely save lives and save property damage. It can potentially be cheaper to pay for these projects, instead of paying for flood damage.
@@MrRafagigapr It's not flooded at all times, only during a high water level, so when the water there has been absorbed by the ground and plants as well as been evaporated, leaving a dry land with plenty of area able to hold the water, when the river has a high current much of it will go to flooding the floodland instead of travelling further downstream.
I think it's terribly important to talk about the flood-mitigating aspect like you did here. So often, people get it in their heads that restoration or conservation is completely about humans taking a loss in some way so that other life forms (whom they generally deem lesser than humans) can gain something. But while that may look true at the zoomed-in level, zooming out shows that we can all gain benefits from trying to create this balance! Other places were not flooded because the water had somewhere to go, and the flora and fauna who live in that place benefited from receiving that water. If every place that deals with dangerous flooding tried something like this, who knows what kind of benefits we might see!
Excellent point. Not to mention that modifying the land to accommodate our own needs can be both financially costly, and ultimately risky. Here in California, Tulare lake was a massive body of water that through massive water direction projects was converted into farmland. In the recent heavy rain and snow this past winter, hundreds of acres of homes and farms suddenly became a lake again. I wonder what damage could have been avoided if we had just refrained from meddling.
Furthermore such a Floodplain forest has a huge impact on the local humidity. As research showed in Finnland it increases the humidity to above 100km away and keeps it on a stable level. Furthermore thanks to the increased humidity plant growth is increased around it, causing even more humidity to be in the air. On top it causes more rain, mist, etc. and high temperatures, heatwaves, draughts, heavy down pour, ... are much less likely. So in other words the land get's much more fertile and liveable!!
98% of trees replanted from green energy credit companies end up dying because they don’t pay people to do oversight they just take Apples money and say it’s green now. This is what proper conservation looks like and you should understand the current measures to reforest are a complete joke usually unless they are paying people to look at them after the fact which they usually don’t. Lmao I do not sleep soundly at night knowing the vast majority of the green credit initiative is a scam. You’ve got a bunch of money changing hands in a cutthroat corporate environment just so that they can lie about minimizing their impacts with little to no oversight I think this is great but the environment is screwed anyway we must enjoy it while it lasts. It’s crazy more people don’t know about what the green initiative has done it’s practically destroyed us because most people just turn their head and say sounds good when they hear Apple is a zero emission company not knowing they bought Amazonian land that wasn’t going to be chopped down anyway due to terrain and then called all of that carbon on an inaccessible mountain saved to claim their iPhones business model is safe even if it literally didn’t put a dent in the amount of rainforest cut down. If we do not actually legislate this we will let them find loopholes till it kills us all. As a realist and a pessimist the only conclusion I can draw is that humanity is unable to solve climate change for the same reasons people get locked into debt traps. Even if we all came together for that common goal are we going to go to war because China ignored the carbon limits to protect their economy or bomb those poor people that try to chop down the Amazon to feed their kids and don’t even get me started on convincing Americans to give up tights like driving.
The most impressive part of this organization is the way that you return to projects and report on actual impact rather than on your output. It;s the difference between measuring "number of trees planted" and "hectares of actual habitat restored".
yeah i completely agree, its sad to think that so many "save the planet" projects have been reduced to shoving saplings into baren soil where they're almost guaranteed not to survive. Tree planting is important and really beneficial for a lot of habitats, but it definitely isnt a blanket solution to habitat restoration.
My homecountry (Switzerland) is rewilding rivers for exactly the reason you mentioned in the end: to protect from floods. The river in my town is being rewilded at the moment and it's already so much more beautiful.
I’ll say it again and again, the £5 out of my account every month to be a member makes me happier than anything else. This is a great mission and I thoroughly enjoy catching up with all of the projects
Not sure how this video popped up in my recommendations but this was SUPER interesting and really well produced. Makes me proud knowing my fellow humans are out in the world doing things like this. Cheers!
When I heard of the danube floods in Germany, I immediately thought of this project and how similar projects probably could have helped many other areas too. Great work!
A lot has already been done in Germany as 1999 and 2013 were also really big floods, they just don't have TH-cam channels following the progress there. Keep in mind this was a statistically 1 in century event. At the danube people were pretty prepared for the most part. Most damages were agricultural as many fields flooded.
It is so hard to not cry during these videos. In a world full of fear, vitriol, and despair. Seeing people work and successfully contribute positively to mother Earth is just so powerful emotionally. Thank you for being a ray of hope in our dark world.
Thank you Chris! It was a long road to get to this job. Setting up Mossy Earth took 7 years and a lot of it was boring and difficult. I am very happy to be doing what we are doing now though! - Cheers, Duarte
Looking at how my finances have been going this month, I decided to finally become a Mossy Earth member! I'd been cautious since even a small amount was something I had to account for, but I've been doing relatively well and it's time for me to finally pay back the planet that's been keeping the earth below my feet and so much more!
Huge congratulations to the team at Mossy Earth, Broz and everyone else who came together to make this happen. A stunning and beautiful example of the power of the natural world, just waiting for a bit of help.
You’ve been with us for a while then! A huge thank you for helping us setup these rewilding projects. It still blows my mind what we can do together :) - Cheers, Duarte
Im proud of this, and of you and all the others who contributed and BROZ for the decades of work in the floodplains among many others! Thank you mate! - Cheers, Duarte
I love these videos and supporting Mossy Earth. You're a good spokesperson and presenter, Duarte, you can really tell how passionate you are and it's very compelling. Conservation efforts like this give me hope in a world that often doesn't, thank you for caring where many seem to be apathetic. This is what it looks like for humans to be the stewards of Earth
It's so cool to see this project changing so much with a lot of small changes. I hope one day a lot of those wetland habitats all over the world but especially here in Europe will be restored, hopefully with the governments one day helping. Thank you a lot for all your work, also with all the other projects you started.💞💕💖 I hope I will be able to support you more in the nearer future 🫂
Glad to see it’s appreciated! The filming in the early spring was really cold and I was a bit sick at the time so it was rough. Glad it was worth it! - Cheers, Duarte
Stellar work folks, must be incredibly satisfying to see these results. Especially liked the message about the importance of floodplains at the end, definitely think this is something people need to get more onboard with in Scotland instead of constantly calling for waterways to be dredged! 😖
I love this project!!! It is such a remarkable example of how restoring natural habitats can have impacts on so many levels both for flora and fauna but also for communities living downstream. Truly important for the development of new projects with the same concept
15:45 I love the anti mosquito makeup! :D As a german, I wish we had more flood areas. In some areas where floods are more common, cities have actually integrated nature areas with the sole purpose to take all the water in case of a flood. But those are just meadows. I wish there were more wetland forests around. Especially southern germany isn't used to heavy rain and floods.
So glad this project is doing well! And the fact that it's already directly and demonstrably helping *humans* rather than "merely" nature is just the cherry on top
It's so interesting how much the flooded forest looks like my home here in Midwest America, there is a portion of the forest that floods behind my house which leads into a wetland pond. Multiple ponds are in the area but they are unreachable. It makes sure that animals and plants are safe.
This is nice to see. I live in an area in Michigan, USA, that has been restoring natural wetlands since the 1970’s. It’s been very successful. Ducks, geese, swans, turtles and amphibians are once again in abundance.
This is my favorite project. It was the first one I followed and the one closest to my heart. It’t why I joined Mossy Earth. Fantastic job and wonderful update. So glad to near that Broz was able to buy the rest of the area. Congrats to everyone.
People think to plant trees to save the earth, but forests can be a boring monoculture. Open sunny areas can have a surprising diversity of plants. We have a lot of fun flowers and shrubs in our yard that would be impossible if shaded out by big trees.
dude im so pumped to see such amazing hands on work, im sick of people complaining that nothings being done and then doing nothing. you guys are an inspiration and genuinely doing some of best work ive seen and at a super impressive scale. i hope you continue to grow and be able to execute your vision, keep it up
Ephemeral pools are some of the COOLEST ecosystems you can stop and take a gander at. I love the fairy shrimp that come up on some of the ones in the southwest. Soooo cool
I was really looking forward to the flooded forest update video after so much had happened with the additional water coming in. Incredible video, as always. You guys never disappoint. Patrik
I was surprised to see you guys don’t sell merchandise! You guys could generate much more income for these products just from selling sweatshirts etc w your logo!
Not to get all math nerd but the volume of water a wetland can contain, even if the water is relatively shallow everywhere in it, is enormous compared to a channelized river. The shortsightedness of the people who channelized so many rivers and left the water nowhere to go is just baffling.
Great to see the forest progressing in each stage after the restoration work! Really interesting to see the results of the plant survey and which species changing, great work team!
As someone who was affected by the flood in 2021, thank you for your work. I love nature and hearing that this doesn't just help nature recover but also saves human lives, maybe even my own or those of people around me is fantastic. You have my gratitude
I found and subscribed to Mossy Earth back when you had 70k Subs and I have to say, seeing you guys grow (528k subscribers and counting) makes me so happy! You guys deserve it all and more!
I kinda forgot how cool this channel/organization is. You're doing such a great job at being proactive to make the living environments better. Also, this is such a cool ecosystem to showcase! I love the work that you are doing!
You gotta love this channel! I would love to see more projects like these, especially in my own country, Portugal, where wildlife was so destroyed by fires. Thank you for doing what you do!
Love your and Broz work in this flood forest. I was thinking about it when I read about German floods. However, I would welcome more detailed info about what happened in this forest during that flood. How much cubic meters of water was taken from the Danube stream, how it looked like when flooded, if it damaged some of the species etc. Anyway, thanks again, I always feel a nice fireworks in the back of my brain when I see a flooded land in the right places.
When I think the world is going mad and there is no return I love to see videos like this one and remember that people is doing great things out there. This was great to watch and I am learning more with each video.
Hi , now iam finally a member and proud of it.this work is amazing and i hope that more people realize how important rewilding and restoring nature is.for our future Generations.. A big thank you from the bottom of my heart. ❤ Greetings from south germany susan
Hi Susan! Thank you for supporting our work! It is the only way we can get our projects off the ground and it means a lot to us that people want to restore nature with us. A huge thank you! - Cheers, Duarte
I’m so glad that this project is still going well! This was the first project of Mossy Earth’s that I ever saw, and it immediately convinced me to sign up for a membership. So proud to have played even a tiny part in helping this beautiful ecosystem to thrive!
I'm so pleased this wetland is doing so well! I started Mossy Earth with the first video of this series, and I am super delighted that you keep going back and showing us how it's doing. I'm sorry that 9 lives were lost in the floods but pleased that the wetlands you helped restore potentially saved the lives of people downstream.
This was the project that originally had me subscribe and follow a bunch of other projects in the same orbit. Since then I’ve really gotten involved in my local conservation efforts
So glad this was recommended to me, what a wild adventure and even a good contribution to nature, being a part of these kind of projects would be so wild and amazing.
i'll admit, when i first started seeing mossy earth videos i thought "okay nice stunt, but is it going to pan out?" But just seeing video after video of you all showing your intentions, your research, your transparency with the practical challenges like rights and funds, and especially especially your follow up with showing results and keeping tabs on things; I love it, and I hope you can be examples to similar organizations across the globe. Thank you mossy earth, and thanks to all the members that help you keep doing it.
Projects like this are incredible for showcasing the resilience of the natural world. Many similar ecosystems are dwindling, but not gone. All we have to do as humans is provide them with the right catalyst and things do bounce back at phenomenal speeds. That is not to down play all the incredible work that's been done on this project, but most of that is in dealing with the humans. The frogs themselves seem pretty happy to get on with it of their own accord!
As a Mossy Earth member for the last year, it makes me so happy to see how my small monthly donation has helped with success stories like this. I'm going to keep on with my subscription for sure!
This is such an amazing transformation and proof that we can help the environment to push back invasive species and rejuvenate the world, not only destroy. Amazing job!
Proud to be a member, thank you for this amazing update! Very good lesson there at the end of the amazing benefit these ecosystems have on the lives of people. I hope many more countries reach out to start their own projects along flood plains like this.
All that plant growth made me wonder: Have there been any larger herbivores showing up? Deer etc? Plenty of food! But maybe they don't like it when it's flooded?
Plenty of deer and boar around. Hard to film but we got some on camera trap / with hides last year. Be sure to check out last years video! - Cheers, Duarte
This is solarpunk in heart. Tear down the barriers, let the spring floods flow, talk about toad and newt egg clutches as art. Also really interesting for the Americans watching, if you follow the part where he is talking about invasives and natives in the report, the two invasives he mentioned are natives in North America, Giant Goldenrod and Panicled Aster, and one of the natives that was increasing for him, Giant Reed, is a major and very bad invasive in North America. Really shows you how invasive is not a universal measure, and how invasive plants that take advantage of human commercial disturbance are destroyed when you return natural regimes of flooding (or burning or grazing, etc.)
If you think this project is worth supporting then be sure to check out our membership mossy.earth . It is truly what makes it all possible!
I think you would be very interested in the dam removals and rewilding efforts on the Klamath and eel river in northern California
Lets hope the SNS party rulling Ministry of enviroment wont affect the floodings. They already talked about it in a negative way, since they are more focused on exploiting the nature, not protecting it.
Extraordinary. Such projects such as this are crucial for the world that we’re living in nowadays. With people like you popping up every day, nature will have the helping hand and the reboot that it so desperately needs. If we had more individuals like that, perhaps this world could’ve been a better place. Keep on fighting for the future, Duarte. All of you are our last hope.
where can we sign up to volunteer? I think it would be awesome to help out! (down in NZ)
This project is what made me decide to become a member a few years ago. Great video, keep the updates coming! Thanks guys!
I love that you can point to this wetland and say "This ecological conservation project saved lives by mitigating torrential deadly floods."
Shows how important the projects even directly to human lifes. A good example of why it is good to take care of nature in so many ways
Sounds like trash science... just a guess
@@chucknorris277 It's not tho. Floodplains help take in some of the water from the floods, protecting downstream areas.
@@chucknorris277 sounds like you're trash at science lmao.
@@chucknorris277 said the tard
This project was how I initially started with Mossy Earth, glad to see it's doing well
Glad you enjoyed the update! This project has been a pleasure to update people on. I love going there to see it transformed :) - Cheers, Duarte
same here
Same
me too! I‘m getting goosebumps seeing the progress throughout the video 🥹
Same here
Seasonal flood lands are an underrated habitat tbh. So much biodiversity.
Exactly! There is something really special about a place that changes so many times depending on the season :) - Cheers, Duarte
So says Egypt
@@chucknorris277 they used to be more green lol
Even tiny patches of flooded areas can have a mind blowing number of creatures in them. There's a drainage ditch by my local train station with dense shrubs and reeds, and at one point every day the birds inside it get louder than the highway nearby.
As a Slovakian, Thank you very much, all the members, for buying this land out of our government. It is in much better hands now.
Not in the hands of our government = good
This is not sarcasm
I looked up your komposesorat system he mentioned in the video. How wild. Owning land has to be a giant headache in Slovakia
Amphibians just can't stop winning with this project.
How are the birds around there?
I have scared off a few herons but not that many. Broadly I would describe the birds as a nightmarish collection of tiny hard to film birds. Patrik (who filmed for our video last year) was a lot more successful on that front. - Cheers, Duarte
@@MossyEarthCan you bring a birder along for an avian perspective on the next update?
@@MossyEarthwhy would you scare off herons? Aren’t they part of nature too?
@@tipsynfl4516 Because birds that haven't learned to flee from humans tend to not live long enough to have offspring.
@@tipsynfl4516he had to film this video
When people say we can't do anything to help Earth, I point directly to this channel. Incredible work!
Morons say that!?
After hearing the story about how this project absorbed much of the flood water, does that mean this project potentially saved some people's lives, or at least prevented a lot of destruction? That's one heck of a selling point you could give politicians in areas prone to flooding greatly increasing the rate of flood land restoration.
The Mossy Earth area is probably too small to prevent regional flooding of inhabited/human occupied lands on its own but when natural floodplains around rivers are restored on a later scale they definitely can and do prevent floods. Thing is, rivers naturally vary in their width throughout the year(s) but we humans liked to settle close by the rivers because it meant access to water and therefore also to transportation. Additionally, the soil surrounding rivers is often very fertile making it suitable for farming.
@@ScheveSneeuwSchuifSchep yet in combination with large dams like in that project, it could help significantly. They could empty the dam a couple of days before the flood reached the dam into the flood plain
When projects like these are done at scale, it can absolutely save lives and save property damage. It can potentially be cheaper to pay for these projects, instead of paying for flood damage.
im prety sure a dry area can recieve more water in a few hours than a allready flooded area
@@MrRafagigapr It's not flooded at all times, only during a high water level, so when the water there has been absorbed by the ground and plants as well as been evaporated, leaving a dry land with plenty of area able to hold the water, when the river has a high current much of it will go to flooding the floodland instead of travelling further downstream.
I think it's terribly important to talk about the flood-mitigating aspect like you did here. So often, people get it in their heads that restoration or conservation is completely about humans taking a loss in some way so that other life forms (whom they generally deem lesser than humans) can gain something. But while that may look true at the zoomed-in level, zooming out shows that we can all gain benefits from trying to create this balance! Other places were not flooded because the water had somewhere to go, and the flora and fauna who live in that place benefited from receiving that water. If every place that deals with dangerous flooding tried something like this, who knows what kind of benefits we might see!
Excellent point. Not to mention that modifying the land to accommodate our own needs can be both financially costly, and ultimately risky.
Here in California, Tulare lake was a massive body of water that through massive water direction projects was converted into farmland. In the recent heavy rain and snow this past winter, hundreds of acres of homes and farms suddenly became a lake again. I wonder what damage could have been avoided if we had just refrained from meddling.
Furthermore such a Floodplain forest has a huge impact on the local humidity. As research showed in Finnland it increases the humidity to above 100km away and keeps it on a stable level. Furthermore thanks to the increased humidity plant growth is increased around it, causing even more humidity to be in the air. On top it causes more rain, mist, etc. and high temperatures, heatwaves, draughts, heavy down pour, ... are much less likely.
So in other words the land get's much more fertile and liveable!!
@@morkaili imma be real chief rather hot and dry or cold and dry then hot and humid or cold and humid
98% of trees replanted from green energy credit companies end up dying because they don’t pay people to do oversight they just take Apples money and say it’s green now. This is what proper conservation looks like and you should understand the current measures to reforest are a complete joke usually unless they are paying people to look at them after the fact which they usually don’t. Lmao I do not sleep soundly at night knowing the vast majority of the green credit initiative is a scam. You’ve got a bunch of money changing hands in a cutthroat corporate environment just so that they can lie about minimizing their impacts with little to no oversight I think this is great but the environment is screwed anyway we must enjoy it while it lasts. It’s crazy more people don’t know about what the green initiative has done it’s practically destroyed us because most people just turn their head and say sounds good when they hear Apple is a zero emission company not knowing they bought Amazonian land that wasn’t going to be chopped down anyway due to terrain and then called all of that carbon on an inaccessible mountain saved to claim their iPhones business model is safe even if it literally didn’t put a dent in the amount of rainforest cut down. If we do not actually legislate this we will let them find loopholes till it kills us all. As a realist and a pessimist the only conclusion I can draw is that humanity is unable to solve climate change for the same reasons people get locked into debt traps. Even if we all came together for that common goal are we going to go to war because China ignored the carbon limits to protect their economy or bomb those poor people that try to chop down the Amazon to feed their kids and don’t even get me started on convincing Americans to give up tights like driving.
@@augustuslunasol10thapostle Dry means shit don't grow
Your comfort is irrelevant to the needs of hunger and ecosystem stability
The most impressive part of this organization is the way that you return to projects and report on actual impact rather than on your output. It;s the difference between measuring "number of trees planted" and "hectares of actual habitat restored".
yeah i completely agree, its sad to think that so many "save the planet" projects have been reduced to shoving saplings into baren soil where they're almost guaranteed not to survive. Tree planting is important and really beneficial for a lot of habitats, but it definitely isnt a blanket solution to habitat restoration.
Truth. People think that slapping trees onto the ground is going to do crap when it’s just a bandage solution.
Amazing how a little provision can make such a huge difference. Well done.
Exactly! Small projects can really do a lot. Hopefully this and our other videos push people to do more. - Cheers, Duarte
@@MossyEarthSmall projects spread out will make the biggest difference. As I say good job a life well lived 👍🇬🇧
My homecountry (Switzerland) is rewilding rivers for exactly the reason you mentioned in the end: to protect from floods. The river in my town is being rewilded at the moment and it's already so much more beautiful.
I’ll say it again and again, the £5 out of my account every month to be a member makes me happier than anything else. This is a great mission and I thoroughly enjoy catching up with all of the projects
I'm with you. Best money I ever spent.
seriously, i challenge anyone to find a better use for a 5
"The reason these wetlands are so important is that they act like a nursery." Amazingly put. Thank you!
Not sure how this video popped up in my recommendations but this was SUPER interesting and really well produced. Makes me proud knowing my fellow humans are out in the world doing things like this. Cheers!
Definitely subscribe to them if you haven't already! They have so many amazing projects and members.
this year's flood's even better than last year! and it's good to see the species thriving (congrats on finding a Smooth Newt, mate).
Thank you Jack! It was quite fun to see it munching on those eggs in the channel :) - Cheers, Duarte
When I heard of the danube floods in Germany, I immediately thought of this project and how similar projects probably could have helped many other areas too. Great work!
It would be a great opportunity to mix flood prevention and nature restoration efforts! - Cheers, Duarte
A lot has already been done in Germany as 1999 and 2013 were also really big floods, they just don't have TH-cam channels following the progress there.
Keep in mind this was a statistically 1 in century event. At the danube people were pretty prepared for the most part. Most damages were agricultural as many fields flooded.
Would you ever consider setting up semi-permanent underwater cameras and leave a livestream up for people to see? That camera footage was so nice.
It is so hard to not cry during these videos. In a world full of fear, vitriol, and despair. Seeing people work and successfully contribute positively to mother Earth is just so powerful emotionally. Thank you for being a ray of hope in our dark world.
That's exactly how i felt too! This is the stuff i wanna life for.
I'm so jealous you get to do this for a job. I love everything this channel does! Keep up the great work. 😊
Thank you Chris! It was a long road to get to this job. Setting up Mossy Earth took 7 years and a lot of it was boring and difficult. I am very happy to be doing what we are doing now though! - Cheers, Duarte
@@MossyEarth I would buy your biography, what you do for a living is amazing.
The way you presented the 'silver lining' of a deadly flood was well done. Much respect. ❤
Looking at how my finances have been going this month, I decided to finally become a Mossy Earth member! I'd been cautious since even a small amount was something I had to account for, but I've been doing relatively well and it's time for me to finally pay back the planet that's been keeping the earth below my feet and so much more!
Huge congratulations to the team at Mossy Earth, Broz and everyone else who came together to make this happen. A stunning and beautiful example of the power of the natural world, just waiting for a bit of help.
Thank you! It took many people many years to make this happen and that makes me even more pleased to see the results :) - Cheers, Duarte
Wow it's already been 2 years. Its amazing the work you guys do!
Time flies when you are having fun! - Cheers, Duarte
I found you guys 2 years ago cause of the first Video you put out about this project. Happy and proud supporter since then. Keep up the amazing work!
You’ve been with us for a while then! A huge thank you for helping us setup these rewilding projects. It still blows my mind what we can do together :) - Cheers, Duarte
Happy to hear that mossy is able to secure last part of the wetlands!
It might sound weird or even overly virtuous, but nonetheless, seeing this makes me so proud to contribute to this
Im proud of this, and of you and all the others who contributed and BROZ for the decades of work in the floodplains among many others! Thank you mate! - Cheers, Duarte
I love these videos and supporting Mossy Earth. You're a good spokesperson and presenter, Duarte, you can really tell how passionate you are and it's very compelling. Conservation efforts like this give me hope in a world that often doesn't, thank you for caring where many seem to be apathetic. This is what it looks like for humans to be the stewards of Earth
It's so cool to see this project changing so much with a lot of small changes. I hope one day a lot of those wetland habitats all over the world but especially here in Europe will be restored, hopefully with the governments one day helping. Thank you a lot for all your work, also with all the other projects you started.💞💕💖 I hope I will be able to support you more in the nearer future 🫂
Thank you for the kind words! It really means a lot to the whole team :) - Cheers, Duarte
Oh wow those underwater shots were gorgeous!
Glad to see it’s appreciated! The filming in the early spring was really cold and I was a bit sick at the time so it was rough. Glad it was worth it! - Cheers, Duarte
Stellar work folks, must be incredibly satisfying to see these results. Especially liked the message about the importance of floodplains at the end, definitely think this is something people need to get more onboard with in Scotland instead of constantly calling for waterways to be dredged! 😖
Those underwater shots were gorgeous
Has it been 2 years already? ❤
Time flies! - Cheers, Duarte
This is an awesome transformation. Thank you to all Mossy Earth members for making it possible.
amazing! the underwater world of a flooded forest is something else!
Hello
I love this project!!! It is such a remarkable example of how restoring natural habitats can have impacts on so many levels both for flora and fauna but also for communities living downstream. Truly important for the development of new projects with the same concept
15:45 I love the anti mosquito makeup! :D
As a german, I wish we had more flood areas. In some areas where floods are more common, cities have actually integrated nature areas with the sole purpose to take all the water in case of a flood. But those are just meadows. I wish there were more wetland forests around. Especially southern germany isn't used to heavy rain and floods.
Great job at the restoration 👍
Thank you! - Cheers, Duarte
I love all the work you are doing. Mother nature must be looking down on you with a smile.
So glad this project is doing well! And the fact that it's already directly and demonstrably helping *humans* rather than "merely" nature is just the cherry on top
It's so interesting how much the flooded forest looks like my home here in Midwest America, there is a portion of the forest that floods behind my house which leads into a wetland pond. Multiple ponds are in the area but they are unreachable. It makes sure that animals and plants are safe.
It's honestly so odd to me that some people have never seen this seeing as I grew up slapped right in the middle of this habitat. I love it.
My heart is pounding. I have hope once again. Thank you for your awesome efforts.
This is nice to see. I live in an area in Michigan, USA, that has been restoring natural wetlands since the 1970’s. It’s been very successful. Ducks, geese, swans, turtles and amphibians are once again in abundance.
This is my favorite project. It was the first one I followed and the one closest to my heart. It’t why I joined Mossy Earth. Fantastic job and wonderful update. So glad to near that Broz was able to buy the rest of the area. Congrats to everyone.
People think to plant trees to save the earth, but forests can be a boring monoculture. Open sunny areas can have a surprising diversity of plants. We have a lot of fun flowers and shrubs in our yard that would be impossible if shaded out by big trees.
Also, what about the oceans?
dude im so pumped to see such amazing hands on work, im sick of people complaining that nothings being done and then doing nothing. you guys are an inspiration and genuinely doing some of best work ive seen and at a super impressive scale. i hope you continue to grow and be able to execute your vision, keep it up
Love this! Thank you for sharing this awesome project with the world!
Glad you enjoyed the project and the video! - Cheers, Duarte
Ephemeral pools are some of the COOLEST ecosystems you can stop and take a gander at. I love the fairy shrimp that come up on some of the ones in the southwest. Soooo cool
I was really looking forward to the flooded forest update video after so much had happened with the additional water coming in. Incredible video, as always. You guys never disappoint. Patrik
Thank you Patrik! - Cheers, Duarte
I was surprised to see you guys don’t sell merchandise! You guys could generate much more income for these products just from selling sweatshirts etc w your logo!
Not to get all math nerd but the volume of water a wetland can contain, even if the water is relatively shallow everywhere in it, is enormous compared to a channelized river. The shortsightedness of the people who channelized so many rivers and left the water nowhere to go is just baffling.
For the incredible work you are doing for our home ❤
Youre amazing
Great to see the forest progressing in each stage after the restoration work! Really interesting to see the results of the plant survey and which species changing, great work team!
Love those updates after a while. Keep up the great work
Thank you Mario! - Cheers, Duarte
As someone who was affected by the flood in 2021, thank you for your work. I love nature and hearing that this doesn't just help nature recover but also saves human lives, maybe even my own or those of people around me is fantastic.
You have my gratitude
Beautifully done 😻 Mossy earth ur da best 😎
Thank you! Glad you enjoy the project and the video! - Cheers, Duarte
I found and subscribed to Mossy Earth back when you had 70k Subs and I have to say, seeing you guys grow (528k subscribers and counting) makes me so happy! You guys deserve it all and more!
I kinda forgot how cool this channel/organization is. You're doing such a great job at being proactive to make the living environments better. Also, this is such a cool ecosystem to showcase! I love the work that you are doing!
You gotta love this channel! I would love to see more projects like these, especially in my own country, Portugal, where wildlife was so destroyed by fires. Thank you for doing what you do!
More projects coming in Portugal ;) We are setting up a big effort there! - Cheers, Duarte
It inspires me a lot to see people doing such an amazing projects in my country, Slovakia. Amazing work guys !
Tohle je nádherný projekt a moc vám za něj děkuju. Doufám, že se v blízké době i u nás budou nativní mokřady více a častěji vytvářet.
I closely watch of this project that BROZ did in Slovakia 😊, im so glad its successful
It is one of many that we have funded with them. What a great team! - Cheers, Duarte
I look forward to seeing this project every year. It’s the most exciting one and how I got into Mossy Earth. Please keep the updates coming
Love your and Broz work in this flood forest. I was thinking about it when I read about German floods. However, I would welcome more detailed info about what happened in this forest during that flood. How much cubic meters of water was taken from the Danube stream, how it looked like when flooded, if it damaged some of the species etc.
Anyway, thanks again, I always feel a nice fireworks in the back of my brain when I see a flooded land in the right places.
When I think the world is going mad and there is no return I love to see videos like this one and remember that people is doing great things out there. This was great to watch and I am learning more with each video.
The project that introduced me to your work. Super happy to be a member since then. Keep going guys!
I never thought this could be a thing! Thank you so much to your team for making this happen..
Hi , now iam finally a member and proud of it.this work is amazing and i hope that more people realize how important rewilding and restoring nature is.for our future Generations..
A big thank you from the bottom of my heart. ❤
Greetings from south germany susan
Hi Susan! Thank you for supporting our work! It is the only way we can get our projects off the ground and it means a lot to us that people want to restore nature with us. A huge thank you! - Cheers, Duarte
Where there's water there is life , and this just shows it
I’m so glad that this project is still going well! This was the first project of Mossy Earth’s that I ever saw, and it immediately convinced me to sign up for a membership. So proud to have played even a tiny part in helping this beautiful ecosystem to thrive!
I'm hoping my home state of Illinois can look more like this someday.
Hopefully change comes to most places that should have a nice wetland! - Cheers, Duarte
Cheers, fellow Illinoisan!
It’s incredible to see such kindness and love. Thank you all!
i def think this is my favorite rewilding project you guys have, it's just so much results in such a short time with relatively little effort
Bang for our rewilding buck :) - Cheers, Duarte
Your results are amazing for such a short period of time. Keep up the great work I fully support.
Love how this was done! I'm really glad there's groups like you guys that are ready to help the Earth!
I'm so pleased this wetland is doing so well! I started Mossy Earth with the first video of this series, and I am super delighted that you keep going back and showing us how it's doing. I'm sorry that 9 lives were lost in the floods but pleased that the wetlands you helped restore potentially saved the lives of people downstream.
So much love for all your work, it makes me really happy to see that progress is possible and to get such frequent Updates on all your projects!
This was the project that originally had me subscribe and follow a bunch of other projects in the same orbit. Since then I’ve really gotten involved in my local conservation efforts
Stumbled on this quite by chance - excellent work all of you, and great results.
Can't think of anything more rewarding than bringing life to an ecosystem, well done and keep it up!
❤❤❤ Im the most excited about the updates for the project. Keep up the great work!
Thank you Zuzanna! - Cheers, Duarte
Professor Aldo Leopold is smiling on you. Thank you for this special project!
This series restores my faith in humanity and our ability to heal the scars we’ve left on our beautiful planet.
Love to see the amphibians doing well
So glad this was recommended to me, what a wild adventure and even a good contribution to nature, being a part of these kind of projects would be so wild and amazing.
Calling the aquatic snails "happy little aliens" make me chuckle. What a wonderful video this is
Wow, seeing this wetland restoration really makes me want to convince my college to return a huge meadow back into a wetland.
i'll admit, when i first started seeing mossy earth videos i thought "okay nice stunt, but is it going to pan out?" But just seeing video after video of you all showing your intentions, your research, your transparency with the practical challenges like rights and funds, and especially especially your follow up with showing results and keeping tabs on things; I love it, and I hope you can be examples to similar organizations across the globe. Thank you mossy earth, and thanks to all the members that help you keep doing it.
Supporting your team and these efforts has been one of the highlights of my year. Thank you for what you're doing for these environments!
this is so cool. every project really makes a difference
Projects like this are incredible for showcasing the resilience of the natural world. Many similar ecosystems are dwindling, but not gone. All we have to do as humans is provide them with the right catalyst and things do bounce back at phenomenal speeds. That is not to down play all the incredible work that's been done on this project, but most of that is in dealing with the humans. The frogs themselves seem pretty happy to get on with it of their own accord!
Truly amazing to see such great results!
As a Mossy Earth member for the last year, it makes me so happy to see how my small monthly donation has helped with success stories like this. I'm going to keep on with my subscription for sure!
I always wonder where the little fish disappear to when it's all dry. Where do they go?
Very happy that I play a small part in making this possible. Thanks!❤
This is such an amazing transformation and proof that we can help the environment to push back invasive species and rejuvenate the world, not only destroy. Amazing job!
Proud to be a member, thank you for this amazing update! Very good lesson there at the end of the amazing benefit these ecosystems have on the lives of people. I hope many more countries reach out to start their own projects along flood plains like this.
I thank you all with all my heart..keep up this essential work.
All that plant growth made me wonder:
Have there been any larger herbivores showing up? Deer etc? Plenty of food! But maybe they don't like it when it's flooded?
Plenty of deer and boar around. Hard to film but we got some on camera trap / with hides last year. Be sure to check out last years video! - Cheers, Duarte
This is solarpunk in heart. Tear down the barriers, let the spring floods flow, talk about toad and newt egg clutches as art. Also really interesting for the Americans watching, if you follow the part where he is talking about invasives and natives in the report, the two invasives he mentioned are natives in North America, Giant Goldenrod and Panicled Aster, and one of the natives that was increasing for him, Giant Reed, is a major and very bad invasive in North America. Really shows you how invasive is not a universal measure, and how invasive plants that take advantage of human commercial disturbance are destroyed when you return natural regimes of flooding (or burning or grazing, etc.)