How Sahara Fog Nets are Making Abundant Water in the Desert - GREENING THE DESERT PROJECT

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  • čas přidán 25. 05. 2024
  • The Sahara is one of the most extreme and harshest environments on earth. Its the largest hot desert in the world spanning across 11 million km2 covering a greater surface than the Australian continent.
    It has a vast topographical diversity from altitudes below sea level to mountains of 3,000 m resulting in a varied climate.
    On the edge of the Sahara in South Western Morocco, the Anti-Atlas mountains receive less than 5.2 inches of rainfall a year, barely 10 percent of the global average, which makes this one of the driest place in morocco and is prone to severe droughts.
    In this region 60% of people do not have running water in their homes, and the water may not be safe for drinking.
    The lack of water and severe drought have made farming unpredictable, as a result men are forced to search for work in the cities, whilst women remain in the villages and walk for 3 miles a day to wells to access safe drinking water. Unfortunately these Wells are now drying up because ground water levels are plummeting
    Currently around 40 percent of the world’s population faces water shortages. That includes some two billion without safe drinking water, despite the fact the planet is covered by 70% water bodies
    Only 3% of the world’s water is actually freshwater and two-thirds of this is unavailable for us to access because it is tucked away in frozen glaciers.
    However a new innovative technology is turning water scarcity around bringing safe drinking water to the Sahara region in south west Morocco.
    In this video we will show you how water abundance is being created in the desert, using the largest water capturing system of its kind, to provide safe drinking water to hundreds of thousands of people, in 16 remote villages and how they have managed to irrigate agricultural fields, turning desertified land back into a farmland oasis.
    T hanks to Aissa Derhem the president of the Moroccan NGO Dar Si Hmad, fertility in the western Sahara is being restored.
    Aissa Derhem is mathematician and businessman whose parents were originally from Mount Boutmezguida in the anti atlas mountains near the coastal town of Sidi Ifni. where the slopes are covered in mist on average 130 days a year. Despite the lack of rain Aissa Derhem knew that he could create water from the fog.
    Whilst living in Canada in the 1980s Aissa Derhem was studying for his PhD.
    He learned about fog collection in Chile’s Atacama Desert one of the first projects in the world to collect water from nets. However it would have to be using slightly new technology that could withstand the strong winds that come off the Atlantic oceans
    The German Water Foundation known as Wasserstiftung, have created a new innovative technology known as Aqualonis, formally known as CloudFisher, to catch safe drinking water with fog nets that can withstand 120km and have higher water yields than other types of fog nets.
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Komentáře • 2,7K

  • @LeafofLifeWorld
    @LeafofLifeWorld  Před 2 lety +141

    Want to know more about water harvesting? Check out these 5 solutions: czcams.com/video/zDa1x2UQMH8/video.html
    🌳Support our on the ground regenerative projects that make a positive impact on peoples lives & the environment: www.leafoflife.news
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    Make a one time donation here: paypal.me/leafoflifefilms (make sure to change "what is payment for?" to paying friends & family)
    Thank you 🙏

    • @jerrywhere86193
      @jerrywhere86193 Před 2 lety +16

      What is the real environmental impact on changing a dry place into a farming area on a global scale? If they are right and the butterfly affects are real. Then would taking water from the air destined for another religion cause your climate change? I understand that America, china and Russia are some of the worst in changing in local countries rain. But as they say "two wrongs don't make it right" and trying to make America the sole cause of the world's worst climate change producer wrong if the people of other countries are change the climate as well? There is so many hypocrisy going on in this world that it is not funny anymore.

    • @curiousnomadic
      @curiousnomadic Před 2 lety

      @@jerrywhere86193 It causes the climate to cool and be returned to where it was before humans overgrazed it. As the ambient temperatures cool the atmosphere can hold less water and as a result there is more rainfall increasing the former cycle that humans disrupted. This mythical human construct of yours "butterfly effect" is reduced as sands from the Sahara are less likely to be blown to countries in Europe and elsewhere. Trees and other vegetation also lock down the soils, they also keep the soils cool and moist and reduce evaporation.

    • @curiousnomadic
      @curiousnomadic Před 2 lety +7

      @@jerrywhere86193 "There is so many hypocrisy going on in this world that it is not funny anymore." There's so much idiocy going on in this world that thinks things like "hypocrisy" is even relevant to reality it is not funny anymore.

    • @user-ul9is6nn1v
      @user-ul9is6nn1v Před 2 lety +2

      These systems shouldnt be too expensive. Because you know Africa.... Even the countries in South America and Asia who have deserts are not so rich. Is this system good for poor countries?

    • @peace4peaceful
      @peace4peaceful Před 2 lety +8

      Would be nice to see more of the system working. Do they pipe the water to a tank or reservoir? How far are they going to take the project? Will it lead to reforresting and rewilding some parts? I've seen many videos where this has been done. Providing streams and lakes. It would be nice to see a complete video from start to finish and see what the people think and their future plans.
      Thanks for the videos.

  • @WhiteDragon689
    @WhiteDragon689 Před 2 lety +11

    In the Novels of Dune, they did this to collect water from the desert. That was back in 1965. That was 57 years ago.

  • @dawnpattison7731
    @dawnpattison7731 Před rokem +5

    I live in Canada and so there are many things that are incredibly essential life-saving and life-changing innovations that without CZcams I would have never been made aware of. Thank you LEAF of LIFE FILMS and CZcams.

  • @user-tt4sh2yy6r
    @user-tt4sh2yy6r Před rokem +64

    Oh man how GREAT it feels to see some constructive development occurring on some surface of this planet.

  • @glendagraves1637
    @glendagraves1637 Před rokem +81

    I'm so proud of the people who put this project together and of your channel for sharing it. There is hope in the world as long as we have creative, industrious, caring people. Thank you.

    • @matthewsjohn8463
      @matthewsjohn8463 Před rokem +1

      Thank you so much. This is a kind of people we need in this world

  • @SunRabbit
    @SunRabbit Před 2 lety +719

    This is similar to what they've used in other parts of Africa for millenia. They're called Air Wells and they're just a huge pile of smooth rocks piled on top of an appropriately shaped rock outcrop that channels the water into one spot at its edge. The inner stones are always cooler than the outside ones and any moisture that passes through the rockpile will condense there. Since the rocks are loosely packed the water trickles downward and gets caught by the solid rock underneath it for use.

    • @ThePaulv12
      @ThePaulv12 Před 2 lety +68

      Cheers for posting that. Very interesting. I'm off to check out Air Wells.

    • @hawkeye-vv4kb
      @hawkeye-vv4kb Před 2 lety +21

      @@ThePaulv12 Please post your finding!

    • @jhde9067
      @jhde9067 Před 2 lety +15

      @@hawkeye-vv4kb yes, please do!

    • @HepCatJack
      @HepCatJack Před 2 lety +18

      Something similar was used in Theodosia and re-discovered by Friedrich Zibold there is information on it on the Air Well Wikipedia entry

    • @ludovicrebouillat3128
      @ludovicrebouillat3128 Před 2 lety

      @@jhde9067I found that one czcams.com/video/X-skeKIxflU/video.html

  • @Tadeoska
    @Tadeoska Před 2 lety +204

    when I was a kid in 2003 I saw on the Chilean public TV how Hugo Streeter Cortez make his firsts "Atrapanieblas" that we call in Spanish, after that, the idea of making this all around the world has accompanied me. It is an honor to watch how Moroccan people is doing it, greeting from Southern Chile.

    • @LeafofLifeWorld
      @LeafofLifeWorld  Před 2 lety +16

      I think it could definately be made in different parts of the world 💧 🌎

    • @alijaafari210
      @alijaafari210 Před 2 lety +12

      thanks man, greeting from Morocco

    • @iah469
      @iah469 Před 2 lety +6

      Chile could use this technology. It has one of the longest deserts in the Southern Hemisphere, caused by the Andes mountain range. This could overcome the obstacles of altitude and start reseeding the arid areas

    • @Tadeoska
      @Tadeoska Před 2 lety +7

      @@iah469 that's right, in fact this technology is used in the Fray Jorge National Park, wilderness that hostage the northernmost Temperate Valdivian Rainforest that inspire the creation of the Atrapaniebla here on the 90's. This park lies close to the Atacama Desert, but on the Sea face of the Coastal Range, so the Camanchaca fog is condensed by the leafs, mosses, and lichens of this Prehistoric Relict.

    • @iah469
      @iah469 Před 2 lety +4

      @@Tadeoska: so does it help the dry areas over the other side of the mountains towards the inland? I’d love to hear.
      I had the privilege of being able visit the region and other parts of the Andes and the Amazon in 1977 with my college biology studies class for about 3 weeks and we studied the contrasting climates of the lush rain forest, then the mountain climate with wind-resistant but still thick flora and thriving fauna and then the surprising desolate desert, so close and yet so far, from the Pacific Ocean waters.
      People don’t remember that conservationists and environmental concerns have been trying to examine and cure the damage humans have done for many decades now

  • @WideWorldofTrains
    @WideWorldofTrains Před rokem +40

    I have thought for many years that it would be wonderful if parts of the Sahara could be re greened. This is a great idea and I Hope it can continue and be expanded.

    • @tarikrouwassi1852
      @tarikrouwassi1852 Před rokem

      Only some part would be great, but if tomorrow the majority of Sahara get re-greened, it would be the begining of the Amazon forest extinction....sand from the Sahara is transported to Amazonia and is a fertilizer for the forest. Without it, the Amazon forest will die.

    • @zuubaa239
      @zuubaa239 Před rokem

      Its one of the worst idea

    • @Browsinginb
      @Browsinginb Před rokem

      Isnt fog full of bacteria?

    • @Gabcikovo
      @Gabcikovo Před 8 měsíci

      ​@@zuubaa239no

    • @Gabcikovo
      @Gabcikovo Před 8 měsíci

      ​@@Browsinginbisn't your body?

  • @Emansmus109
    @Emansmus109 Před rokem +4

    When we devote our minds to assisting others, humanity is truly magnificent.

  • @weatherloops
    @weatherloops Před 2 lety +6

    I love when i see my beautiful country succeeding 🇲🇦🇲🇦🇲🇦🇲🇦🇲🇦🇲🇦

  • @chrisb9319
    @chrisb9319 Před 2 lety +1481

    Funny thing is: If trees and bushes were there, they would act the same way as the nets and also catch a lot of the fog. Since all of them are gone, they have to be replaced with man-made solutions.

    • @saggyai7950
      @saggyai7950 Před 2 lety +185

      That makes sense. Hopefully when more moisture and water is caught and retained in the regions where these nets are, hopefully they will act as a foundation to better the environment for trees and plants to grow, so that we wont need these nets anymore

    • @jerrywhere86193
      @jerrywhere86193 Před 2 lety +187

      Trees would have helped to put water into the ground keeping the salt water out of the aquifer. Willow Trees would probably grow there and help bring back the soil as well. Sorry
      I am a huge fan of how water gets into the ground. Plant life and how the ground filters through everything to get into the ground. I have studied it for years and to me. Short term this is a good idea. But they should have and should still invest into forest restoration. There is no way to fix the brackish water aquifer. But it would help other parts of their troubles.

    • @terrancewilliams9965
      @terrancewilliams9965 Před 2 lety +99

      Man I tell you.... the answer is so simple and cheaper to implement but man just want to show how smart them be.
      Trees Don't take a 100 years to grow a forest tree will take about 5 years to reach a stage of maturity then can grow for past 100 if left alone

    • @tracesprite6078
      @tracesprite6078 Před 2 lety +68

      Many places are re-greening these days.

    • @ginonunes843
      @ginonunes843 Před 2 lety +73

      Willows shouldn't be used in the desert might aswell use native trees

  • @skylinecreations.1634
    @skylinecreations.1634 Před rokem +3

    Science can bring miracles, turn deserts to green forests. Feel happy how this technique of water production is working and helping people to live. Such great projects are required.

  • @jcam783
    @jcam783 Před rokem +65

    This is amazing and life changing for all the people living in those regions . So happy to see this kind of technology in that area . It's a reminder of just how important water is to us all .

    • @thomasjust2663
      @thomasjust2663 Před rokem +2

      Not really, these things have existed for decades in several regions

    • @luisalfonsoguajardoalvarez480
      @luisalfonsoguajardoalvarez480 Před rokem +3

      @@thomasjust2663 in the desert of Atacama Chile this is have been done since 1800s, the fog is not called fog over there, its called "camanchaca", if you go near it at night you get as soaking wet as if you jumped in a pool.

  • @gangleweed
    @gangleweed Před 2 lety +179

    In the mid 60's I lived in Namibia on the Skeleton coast and every evening the mist rolls in from the sea and goes out again the following morning......the coast and surrounding area is bone dry but a system like this to collect the mist water would turn it into a productive area.

  • @trading_HT
    @trading_HT Před 2 lety +8

    FREE and CLEAN water for EVERY1 🙏🏼♥️🌍✨

  • @jailcatjones3250
    @jailcatjones3250 Před rokem +33

    When I lived in the Sonora desert in Arizona we dug holes, place bowls in them and used plastic wrap and tarps to collect water from the condensation.
    By day it's one of the hottest and driest places on earth and by night it could get freezing cold to the point you can see your breath.

    • @OmmerSyssel
      @OmmerSyssel Před rokem +3

      Impressive, living in a extreme environment without knowing about something called a thermometer ... 👀🙈

    • @mattchilds4149
      @mattchilds4149 Před rokem +3

      I’d love to know more about this process as I just bought property in AZ in dry area

    • @williamolliges2622
      @williamolliges2622 Před rokem +1

      This method pulls moisture out of the ground, not the air.

    • @Gabcikovo
      @Gabcikovo Před 8 měsíci

      ​@@williamolliges2622water is everywhere (still). One can use several methods to collect it. From air, fog, as much as from the ground, if there's no well nor stream nor river to make the region flourish

    • @Gabcikovo
      @Gabcikovo Před 8 měsíci

      Also remember baobab collects and stores the water within during the monsoon rains of abundance and then, in the times of dryness, lives off its rich inner reservoirs and feeds other who die due to no water nor nutrition

  • @theprisonerofzenda2862
    @theprisonerofzenda2862 Před rokem +6

    🎉 These efforts are a blessing for our entire world. Keep on doing your good work.

  • @TheSchiffReport
    @TheSchiffReport Před rokem +326

    These mesh should be available on the markets for all interested to buy...I myself want it so badly for my property in the Middle Atlas Mountains in the north of Morocco ...we have quite good amount of fog and very little rain ....

    • @davidndavidn2222222
      @davidndavidn2222222 Před rokem +16

      Couldn't you just catch the fog better with some tarpaulin sheets or something and take them down in the wind? Most businesses these days don't care so much if you could do it cheaper and easier yourself... they just want to make money!
      eg.I use one or two sheets of kitchen roll in my basic £8 supermarket home water filter instead of charcoal.It works much much better for much longer than their rip off carbon filters and I save £4-£8 per month!! They/msm wouldn't ever tell you about this.Try it yourself and don't ever drink unfiltered water again.
      Please answer why not.

    • @davidndavidn2222222
      @davidndavidn2222222 Před rokem +16

      Or what about vertically bound string, or plastic washing line wire? That always seems to hold/collect loads of droplets.

    • @priscillaroberts7945
      @priscillaroberts7945 Před rokem +3

      Iv'e got some old net curtains that could do the job. I heard of this on the east side of the Andes a while ago.

    • @hnskyo9251
      @hnskyo9251 Před rokem +4

      This is available in the Market, they were using it in many southamerican countries for at least the past 30 years if not more.

    • @generbasa909
      @generbasa909 Před rokem

      @@priscillaroberts7945 Ed

  • @edwardfinholdt3146
    @edwardfinholdt3146 Před 2 lety +8

    Incredible work. Rich information that should be spread out all over the world!!!

  • @thisbushnell2012
    @thisbushnell2012 Před rokem +6

    I first learned about the harvest nets decades ago and expected this to come to pass. The idea was the result of studying a Sahara beetle that harvests its daily needs on a unique spiky carapace which dew condenses upon and channels to the beetles mouth. Peru was developing nets years ago. The advances are amazing and encouraging.

    • @andyroubik5760
      @andyroubik5760 Před rokem

      I believe it was a beetle from the Namibian desert.

    • @thisbushnell2012
      @thisbushnell2012 Před 11 měsíci +1

      @@andyroubik5760 could well have been. The information came to me decades ago.

  • @hav1byte
    @hav1byte Před 2 lety +159

    wow, that's just incredible...hope it continues to expand, would make significant changes to many...

    • @percreig
      @percreig Před 2 lety +5

      Overpopulation will be a huge problem.

    • @alanwayte432
      @alanwayte432 Před rokem

      @@percreig actually the world is due to suffer from depopulation over next 200 years,,,,

    • @SWR112
      @SWR112 Před rokem +2

      @@percreig Population has been on a massive decline it just looks like it because we now all live next to each other. Populations are in free fall.

    • @rickrandom6734
      @rickrandom6734 Před rokem +5

      @@SWR112 No. Read statistics. Population is declining only in some developed countries. Population of Earth is increasing with about 80 million more people every year.

    • @somethingorother9263
      @somethingorother9263 Před rokem

      Or it's going to dry out the air so plants and animals who depend on it will fie.

  • @happy17761492
    @happy17761492 Před 2 lety +13

    I am thrilled to see that change is coming to such places. It makes my heart sing with joy. I hope and pray that many parts of this world that suffer for a lack of fresh and clean water get this new technology.

    • @SirenaSpades
      @SirenaSpades Před 2 lety +2

      It makes your heart sing??? Really? How about TREES?? Natural fog nets.

    • @rocoe9019
      @rocoe9019 Před 2 lety +4

      @@SirenaSpades who are you to question what gives people joy ! Must be hard walking with all that pretentiousness weighing you down!

    • @linobenetti6578
      @linobenetti6578 Před rokem

      ...prometheus....you were a true pioneer....you gave us the use of fire
      .....
      we are on our own now ...we ll master the art of water making

    • @Gabcikovo
      @Gabcikovo Před 8 měsíci

      ​@@SirenaSpadesget water, trees will grow, f00l

  • @flounder2129
    @flounder2129 Před rokem +5

    I enjoyed this video greatly. Very interesting, such a simple concept, it looked to be rather inexpensive at the onset and I would think much less for upkeep. Looks like a win-win.
    I’m gonna try it in the back yard.

  • @lilifang1940
    @lilifang1940 Před rokem

    Very happy to look at your video. very happy for the people in the desert.thank you. congratulations .

  • @pkbrown58
    @pkbrown58 Před 2 lety +6

    Promising news! Thank you and keep spreading the word!

  • @RobCummings
    @RobCummings Před 2 lety +23

    It's a great idea, but it may be limited to a zone close to the coast. You wouldn't see much fog past 50 km inland. Like the west coast of Chile, the west coast of Maroc has consistent onshore winds, blowing over a cold ocean -- ideal conditions for fog generation. I've also seen fog-catchers shaped like 12-foot-high beehives, constructed out of brick and breezeblock, with large cisterns below the hive. That might be cheaper to build than the plastic nets.

    • @illadelagos8770
      @illadelagos8770 Před rokem +7

      The thing is, the greener the coast is, the more the transpiration from the trees and plants contributes to clouds and a little bit more rain inland.

    • @halnelson5936
      @halnelson5936 Před 14 dny

      And also it makes more water for the wadis who begin on the eastern slopes who irrigate the inland desert

  • @johngakunga6094
    @johngakunga6094 Před rokem +1

    Again, wonderful technology for creating water for life in deserts. I like this really.

  • @daisyy99
    @daisyy99 Před rokem +4

    Ingenious use of the fog nets. I loved seeing the gardens villagers grew.

  • @leendertwassenaar1934
    @leendertwassenaar1934 Před 2 lety +6

    That is why trees are so important!

  • @trading_HT
    @trading_HT Před 2 lety +18

    We love this content!!! Thank you planet for everything we have 🌏🌎🌍♥️✨

  • @sanmac8745
    @sanmac8745 Před rokem

    This is a real humanity. Making a project beneficial to human kind.

  • @jenv9782
    @jenv9782 Před rokem +35

    Thank you so much for your wonderful video! We here in California could definitely use something similar. There is abundant fog on the coast around San Francisco, Oakland, Point Reyes, and Monterrey, for example. I don't know how much water this would provide, but definitely something for our California leaders to investigate.

    • @Bob-dz6rr
      @Bob-dz6rr Před rokem +4

      It's up to all of us. We need to take the initiative.😊

    • @markdavidson1835
      @markdavidson1835 Před rokem +1

      Yes finally something useful for a problem!

    • @Oniphius1
      @Oniphius1 Před rokem +1

      Don't just stop there, go up the coast and run an Aqueduct down.

    • @buggyridge
      @buggyridge Před rokem +4

      Spot on Jen! Was just going to write something similar. That fog could amount to inches of much need water. not provided by rainfall. I've seen it so thick around Sacramento, one cannot drive safely in it.

    • @alfredgeorge317
      @alfredgeorge317 Před rokem +2

      Jen...excellent...I lived in Pacific Grove for 23 years...fog...fog...fog...more fog...

  • @rockyraccoon8270
    @rockyraccoon8270 Před 2 lety +7

    Wow cool so good to hear a positive message. People working with nature not trying to fight it for the good of mankind.

  • @Hari-pi2tx
    @Hari-pi2tx Před 2 lety +6

    Wonderful ❤️ life giving video - Thank you

  • @vaggeliss2010
    @vaggeliss2010 Před rokem

    The fact that fog net water harvesting is being implemented on a large scale is the best news I've read in days! Nice contribution to scientific literacy! Many thanks! Some comments are also very informative! Thanks too!

  • @toolscarriagesmodellbauand7246

    What a great idea. Water is a valuble recource.Everywhere on earth. Best wishes from Germany

  • @katherinemahon9471
    @katherinemahon9471 Před rokem +5

    A wonderful account of a working solution not another problem with no solution. Uplifting for me!!!

  • @mohannair5671
    @mohannair5671 Před 2 lety +8

    Reassuring and inspiring!!!!

  • @TeweldeberhanTzeggai-Amenay
    @TeweldeberhanTzeggai-Amenay Před 9 měsíci +1

    Fantastic news! Thank you!

  • @garybriggs5829
    @garybriggs5829 Před rokem +4

    This should be done in our southern deserts in US!

  • @mermage_
    @mermage_ Před 2 lety +55

    I think San diego could definitely implement this. Ive grown up here; theres barely any rain per year but it gets very foggy because of the ocean

    • @donaldkasper8346
      @donaldkasper8346 Před 2 lety

      Ca Coastal Commission with screw that project into the ground, enviros will sue over migrating birds and butterflies, and it will go nowhere for decades. There is a reason why these projects are implemented in the third world but never the United States.

    • @1locust1
      @1locust1 Před 2 lety +2

      Fog point Vodka, San Francisco.

    • @SS-yj2le
      @SS-yj2le Před 2 lety +3

      The problem is that the amount of fog has decreased as well. Even the extremely foggy San Francisco only gets 1/3 of the fog it normally gets due to climate change causing the water to get warmer.

    • @DeirdreSM
      @DeirdreSM Před 2 lety +1

      Also Orange County and even LA. In fact, the fog continues all the way north along most of the California coast.

    • @benghazi4216
      @benghazi4216 Před rokem

      @@SS-yj2le That is just an argument for going all out on this tech.
      If the fog is decreasing, the little rain you get is also decreasing. And water is already scarce.

  • @lenux21
    @lenux21 Před rokem +13

    dont have a water shortage where i live but this is a really cool idea especially in the mountains where it get very foggy would love to see this used more widely around the world

  • @ednelson60
    @ednelson60 Před rokem +7

    Desejo sucesso e que o povo dessa área possa ter uma vida digna e com muita água.

  • @dennismiller5235
    @dennismiller5235 Před rokem

    That is a very good use of human technology helping the world keep it up

  • @Nizar37814
    @Nizar37814 Před 2 lety +15

    I’m proud of the development of my country Kingdom of Morocco 🇲🇦

    • @bhushanganthade8442
      @bhushanganthade8442 Před rokem

      How is life in Morocco

    • @sequoiapark4506
      @sequoiapark4506 Před rokem

      Through Western technology.

    • @denhaag8455
      @denhaag8455 Před rokem

      @@sequoiapark4506 its not westerns or eastern the basic started with the first humans so if you want to go on that tour its african technoligy. And besides the western technologie brought more damage to the earth and its inhabitants so dont be so proud of your technologie.

    • @Rebelconformist82
      @Rebelconformist82 Před rokem

      @@sequoiapark4506 yeah, so ?

  • @KJSvitko
    @KJSvitko Před 2 lety +29

    Rain water collection systems should be a common part of any home or business building.

    • @RegenerativeMojave
      @RegenerativeMojave Před 2 lety +7

      Shit, I'd go as far as say they should be beyond common and written into law. Capture rainfall in tanks and our soils.

    • @curiousnomadic
      @curiousnomadic Před 2 lety +2

      Look up Yacouba Sawadogo. He's teaching modern humans the old ways and it is working.

    • @LeafofLifeWorld
      @LeafofLifeWorld  Před 2 lety +7

      We made a video about it yacouba actually, you can find it in our other Sahara video and in the playlist in our description

    • @KJSvitko
      @KJSvitko Před 2 lety +1

      @@Moses_VII Why pay for water when you can collect it and save money on utility bills.

    • @RegenerativeMojave
      @RegenerativeMojave Před 2 lety +2

      @@Moses_VII Everywhere. Preparedness is better than regret.

  • @PrecariatElite
    @PrecariatElite Před rokem +1

    ดีมากเลย ขอเป็นกำลังใจกับทีมงานครับ สู้ๆ

  • @choolankal
    @choolankal Před měsícem

    Those ariel shots clearly shows how sahara was once lush green forest with mountains and rivers. Some catastrophic events caused the entire Sahara area flooded and washed away by Sea water..., incredible...

  • @dawnpattison7731
    @dawnpattison7731 Před rokem +1

    Hello. I had never heard of this technology/method of water collection. It is incredible. Congratulations on developing this innovative technology and adapting, adjusting and improving it as needed along the way. IMPRESSIVE.

  • @johnfischer1298
    @johnfischer1298 Před 2 lety +74

    Thank you very much for this proof of concept. Me and my brother had this exact idea. I’m glad to see it can be done in the driest of locations.
    Me and my brother are starting a project for regreening the western United States.
    Since this is where I live. I’d love to implement low tech systems such as this

    • @LeafofLifeWorld
      @LeafofLifeWorld  Před 2 lety +14

      Probably worth getting in contact with the company, the Western USA water table is drying up so probably need more solutions not only nets but ways to recharge the aquifers just with using permaculture techniques

    • @samlebon9884
      @samlebon9884 Před 2 lety +7

      Maybe you could found some open source technology you could implement on your own. It's not really high tech after all. Check universities web sites, for instance
      Good luck to both of you.

    • @Gustav4
      @Gustav4 Před 2 lety +4

      Hey John, your project sounds interesting, would like to hear more.

    • @c-light7624
      @c-light7624 Před rokem +3

      That’s great and I’d love to follow your work. Do you have a channel, organization, or website?

    • @ZenEndurance
      @ZenEndurance Před rokem +4

      My brother and I

  • @RuleofFive
    @RuleofFive Před rokem +7

    Amazing ideas. Thanks for producing this. Its refreshing hearing a positive story about what can be done sustainably when our media in the US just talks about the problems of climate change and none of the solutions. We have serious water problems in the US midwest (our farming area) and the southwest.

  • @dardar1862
    @dardar1862 Před rokem +3

    We have strung shade screens for our garden to reduce evaporation, the bonus is that they capture fog and give it to the soil🤗
    Excellent source of water, if fog is in the area.🙏

  • @noregrets7469
    @noregrets7469 Před 6 měsíci

    This is wonderful and I’m so happy for all the people that need it, that now have it. May they all prosper and live free for their children and themselves. Thank GOD that this new technology is available to them and future generations.

  • @Janepint
    @Janepint Před 2 lety +4

    That is wonderful. I hope the idea continues to expand in similar areas.

    • @OmmerSyssel
      @OmmerSyssel Před rokem

      Try relate to reality.. Why do you think Morocco is so poor and inefficient that they it can't even fix running water in their mud huts?
      Ever heard of something called Islam, and how it hinders any necessary development? 👀😴
      🐖💨🧕🏽💩 🤣

  • @benoitbach6317
    @benoitbach6317 Před 2 lety +19

    great video. I would have loved a small description of the process of capturing water from mesh but I could imagined that as the process is fairly simple but it feel just lacking for me. and I presume the visualization isn't that difficult to show.

  • @discordanceok
    @discordanceok Před rokem +3

    It would be good if you outlined the principal behind what makes the water collection possible and what conditions are needed for this system. Either way, thank you for the video!

    • @LeafofLifeWorld
      @LeafofLifeWorld  Před rokem

      Great suggestion! water collection is possible because the environment experiences fog, pretty sure that is mentioned tho :)

  • @sharonannrees2824
    @sharonannrees2824 Před rokem +2

    I’ve heard of this method! It’s wonderful to see them cooperate with nature!

  • @marklinsdell7527
    @marklinsdell7527 Před 2 lety +5

    Finally.
    I've been waiting on this for years

  • @user-zh5jo4vh4o
    @user-zh5jo4vh4o Před 2 lety +6

    It's great to see your film about collect water at morroco, I also know that some peru n chilean aboriginee collect water by erect a plastic net with same way .These kind of water collecting method should be widely encouraged to other places.

  • @SamsungSamsung-ph9ln
    @SamsungSamsung-ph9ln Před 8 měsíci

    Wonderful creative work

  • @Karasulu
    @Karasulu Před rokem

    Ein großes Lob und Danke an die Wasserstiftung 👍

  • @Ben_The_First
    @Ben_The_First Před 2 lety +4

    Impressive, just impressive

  • @CollectiveConsciousness1111

    Brilliant content, thanks for sharing 💚🌍

  • @mehmetberisha3681
    @mehmetberisha3681 Před 11 měsíci +1

    I really enjoyed this video.

  • @mememorii.
    @mememorii. Před rokem +1

    Nice video Keep up the good work❤

  • @KoenBlank
    @KoenBlank Před 2 lety +50

    This was something described in Science Fiction book Dune from 1965. While the desert planet is way dryer than in this video I always wondered how well such a technique would work in real life. Amazing to find out it does!

    • @deborahwallace9801
      @deborahwallace9801 Před rokem

      Those big snake things came out of the sand i remember

    • @Einwetok
      @Einwetok Před rokem

      Passive air wells on a massive scale could work. IIRC the movie showed the tech to be underground. There's also some correlation with how you can make ice in the desert, and cool air by passive heat pumps.

    • @earthling_za
      @earthling_za Před rokem +2

      @@deborahwallace9801Giant Sand Worms. It's an amazing series of novels. Highly recommend you give it a try if you're into Science Fiction.

    • @Noqtis
      @Noqtis Před rokem

      @@earthling_za Is it Science Fiction though? or spoilers of the future LUL

    • @dunruden9720
      @dunruden9720 Před rokem +1

      As I recall, the trick in Dune was to get the excess water from stillsuits, rendered bodies and plant material etc., underground to the seitches (underground lakes), before it evaporated. Another thing I've always found strange is that, here in Australia, we wash our cars and sprinkle our crops with treated drinking water. Quantum attitude shift required, no?

  • @summerhilldavid
    @summerhilldavid Před 2 lety +8

    I proposed this method for reforestation of the hills of Lanzarote 30 years ago. My scheme was accepted but unfortunately some incompetents took over who excluded me and paid themselves well for a failed project. I still have hopes, the site is perfect....

  • @francisdalapo5770
    @francisdalapo5770 Před rokem

    Wonderful continue the good works.

  • @RATCLIFFE-LISTENS
    @RATCLIFFE-LISTENS Před rokem

    This Genius deserves the support of the World. With the right engineering and commitment there is no reason why the greatest portion of this Desert cannot become a Garden
    of life for those inhabitants who deserve a life equal to ours. The Countries at odds with each other should assemble a Summit to put aside differences at least until this Oasis is developed. The Earth itself would benefit from the change in atmosphere. Fresh Water could be piped from the Poles. This at present is a small project needing a Mega Project. Let’s stop shipping arms and save lives.
    Prace

  • @skizztrizz4453
    @skizztrizz4453 Před 2 lety +6

    You deserve way more subs.🤔🤔👏🏾👏🏾👏🏾👏🏾💯🗽🗽

  • @originalloverman
    @originalloverman Před rokem +3

    Amazing this is the first I’ve ever heard of such projects.

  • @kman2783
    @kman2783 Před rokem +2

    I came across your channel and thoroughly enjoyed your video, I subscribed. Content is highly educational and cultural. I enjoy seeing what is happening around the world, especially conservation. Thank you, Leaf of life films.

  • @flanconsult
    @flanconsult Před rokem

    Interesting video with good content and video clips. Unlike many videos which are full of filler to make them longer, this one is solid information.

  • @MichaelCarter
    @MichaelCarter Před 2 lety +5

    Great idea

  • @joshdenton611
    @joshdenton611 Před 2 lety +4

    that is genious. good stuff!

  • @Nitka022
    @Nitka022 Před rokem +1

    Amazing technology. I heard of it before but did not see such large project done as yet! So well done!

  • @DrSkippy1
    @DrSkippy1 Před rokem

    Fabulous. Life-changing.

  • @iah469
    @iah469 Před 2 lety +5

    This reminds me of the 1950’s French short story THE MAN WHO PLANTED TREES. It was made into an Oscar winning animated feature in the 1980’s and Christopher Plummer narrated. The story was about a single man planting trees in an arid region of France and over 30 some years the whole climate revived with trees, plants, water flow, birds, etc. Very good to do to repair some of the damage we’ve caused. The Sahara wasn’t always a desert

    • @iandavies4853
      @iandavies4853 Před 2 lety

      A great film.
      We do need to remove the goats.
      There is a limit though.

    • @iah469
      @iah469 Před 2 lety

      @@iandavies4853: I’m thinking the animals he had were sheep not goats. I have a goat farm and they are a lot of work, and even they can over graze the pastures and kill young trees, so giving the land a break from them was probably a wise thing for the time.

  • @jakemoeller7850
    @jakemoeller7850 Před 2 lety +7

    There are desert beetles that crawl to the tops of dunes, position themselves with heads down, abdomens up in order to capture some of this mist. Small drops of water roll down their bodies to their mouths. Fascinating! 🐞 🐞 🐞

    • @Einwetok
      @Einwetok Před rokem

      They already copied that tech into modern fog nets.

    • @kfl611
      @kfl611 Před rokem +1

      They have nets called beetle nets. Not sure if they got the idea of the shape of the nets from the beetles or not.

  • @paulortiz2035
    @paulortiz2035 Před rokem

    I stayed on the top floor of a hotel sitting on one of the hills in foggy San Francisco, in a corner room giving me windows facing east and north!
    The windows were so dirty, so covered in irregular dust and dirt patterns I called the desk to inquire about how often they clean the windows. For $600 a night (15 years ago) I kind of thought I might be able to see out my windows at night!
    They had recently washed the windows! The windows get so dirty from the fog! Seems fog holds and carries plenty of dust and other stuff, and it coveres everything with that mixture leaving the solids when the moisture evaporates!
    I found if I want to look out the windows at night all I had to do was turn the room lights off. The dust film acted as a exterior window shade reflecting the room's light back into the room. Turning the light off allowed me to see through the layer of dust, so I could see the beautiful night cityscape and boats coming into port from overseas. With the lights off the dust layer disappeared allowing me to get wonderful pictures of a big, bright, full moon rising in the east! Completely unexpected; what a surprise!
    What a lucky happenstance! If I hadn't been fussing over my dirty windows I would have missed it completely!
    Some of the best pictures I've ever gotten all due to dirty windows from abundant fog.

  • @kyukyu5982
    @kyukyu5982 Před rokem +2

    I'm glad that we are finally remembering these techniques.... Let's hope this wakes some people up to all the ideas and creative solutions we for some strange reason do not apply to our cities or towns or environment. We have all the knowledge we could possibly need to solve most if not all our survival problems... So ask yourself why you live the way you live and why is there still so much suffering and damage left unchanged?

  • @markfarrelly925
    @markfarrelly925 Před 2 lety +39

    This was done in Chile 40 years ago, a project to supply water to a village. It fell into disrepair after the project ended unfortunately. But great idea, this is why I studied agriculture engineering.

    • @diosamurcielaga9418
      @diosamurcielaga9418 Před 2 lety +1

      what do you mean by "it fell into disrepair" exactly? I am curious. Greetings from Mexico

    • @jordillach3222
      @jordillach3222 Před 2 lety

      Yes, I visited the fishing cove of Chungungo, Coquimbo region in Chile, in the early 1980s where the "atrapanieblas" were giving water to the village by collecting it from the "camanchaca" (indigenous word for thick fog). Those days it was a novelty. 🇨🇱

    • @jordillach3222
      @jordillach3222 Před 2 lety

      @@plus_2853 Really? I didn't know that professor Carlos Espinosa was a Moroccan, his name sounds very Spanish to me.

    • @GamingStarslegends01
      @GamingStarslegends01 Před 2 lety

      But this is upgraded version of it according to winds of this area of sahara

    • @hangzhang6390
      @hangzhang6390 Před rokem

      t is a great idea! Please install it all over the world! Catch water vapor in the air could greatly reduce green house gas (water is a much bigger portion of green house gas in our climate systems compare to CO2). We solved global warming/climate change issue and water shortage issue at the same time. Submit it to UN let lots of UN politicians lost jobs:)

  • @nibiruresearch
    @nibiruresearch Před 2 lety +4

    Thank you for this video. It gives hope for many dry areas. The only bottle neck is to unite people to invest in such a system. I know that there are also windmills that extract water from the air.

  • @died4us590
    @died4us590 Před rokem

    I think this should be available to anyone needing water, a great invention that could help millions. GOD bless all who need help with anything.

  • @ackeethree
    @ackeethree Před rokem +1

    personally I once made an application to produce trees and fresh water in Morocco, but we were told a big fat no. you have to stay 5 km from the coastline as that is a protected area for birds. turning salt water into fresh water is not that difficult, but if the government does not want to help, we have started helping other countries. not everyone wants to reason his country. glad to see something positive for humans and animals

    • @anasabou1904
      @anasabou1904 Před rokem

      salt water into fresh water is not that difficult, but it needs a lot of energy, morocco is an energy poor country

    • @ackeethree
      @ackeethree Před rokem

      @@anasabou1904 yes and with a lot of sun, nowadays everything runs on solar panels 🤲

    • @anasabou1904
      @anasabou1904 Před rokem +1

      @@ackeethree solar is still the most expensive energy sources on a kwh basis, which is what matters most in desalination

    • @ackeethree
      @ackeethree Před rokem

      @@anasabou1904 you can also draw a lot of energy from wind without spending a lot of money, in think it's bad that we can't help each other, I'll do anything to help the planet, but our governments want money and that's where it ends. I have had small windmills on my roof for years and a little bit of electricity from the grid. or they'll put us out of power completely. but I am provided. we are so many that run everything on electricity that our planet can never continue to carry this. hopefully one day we will get a yes to help your country too .Insha'Allah

  • @margaretbedwell3211
    @margaretbedwell3211 Před 2 lety +14

    That is just amazing. What a Blessing for these people. I hope that people living in drought regions of the world will have the correct climate to duplicate this effort. Thank you so much for sharing this.

  • @Fabdanc
    @Fabdanc Před 2 lety +73

    This was really cool! It is really just expanding on what plants evolved to do that live in these fog belts, which are usually covered in trichomes that help catch fog. I cannot imagine that installing these systems would be all that expensive either and that they could have a relatively long useful life.

    • @kirkkirkland7244
      @kirkkirkland7244 Před rokem

      Evolution is total bullshit!!!
      They have never found one transitional fossil and there would be billions and billions of them if evillution actually happened!!!

    • @alaska1718
      @alaska1718 Před rokem

      Gets really foggy here in up north Alaska...super foggy . Zero visibility kind a fog

  • @jenniferhenderson3249
    @jenniferhenderson3249 Před rokem +8

    Thank you so much for making this excellent video and posting it here for everyone to see! This is an important aspect of human existence, our ability to improve our environment. We all need to be aware of the fact that there is a choice to be made every day of our existence. We can choose to improve our world or we can choose to be a destructive force. It brings a sense of great joy and satisfaction to choose to be one of those that makes things better.

  • @kpatel7995
    @kpatel7995 Před rokem

    It’s wonderful to see this video. Thanks.

  • @humanbeing3337
    @humanbeing3337 Před 2 lety +3

    Bless you for offering one brilliant moment of hope in a cacophony of darkness.

  • @markusgorelli5278
    @markusgorelli5278 Před 2 lety +60

    I first saw this about redwoods - they do this naturally from the mists coming in on the Californian coasts to the extent that it would be dripping from the leaves and down the trunk. I would expect that they would pull in enough water for other plants around them as well.
    What they would need to do, is to look for native species that do this, plant them, protect them from firewood harvesting and see what happens next. We could imaging that if all the redwoods got taken out, that the ecosystem would dry out - not because of climate change per se, but that a keystone species was taken out.
    Did this happen in some places? And can this damage be reversed.

    • @em945
      @em945 Před rokem +1

      Researchers at The Australian national university has just published a paper showing that thinning out of forrests creates a drying effect and therefore is a major creator of bush or wildfire.
      Actual proven science.
      Intact Forrests naturally keep themselves cool and damp.
      The science is very important to show the culling or thinning out of trees argument by forrestry industry is what makes fire worse, and is used heavily in the US, Australia and around the world.
      I do think you could then argue that the damaged environment would then also add to climate change and block more efficient carbon sinks.
      I do believe it is what you are eluding to.
      I hope the science paper gets more attention.
      It made national radio news here a month ago or so.

    • @jakeolthof
      @jakeolthof Před rokem +2

      I live in the Santa Cruz mountains among the redwoods for many years and they do pull an amazing amount of moisture out of the moist ocean breezes that blow inward from the Pacific. However all the species dependent on the redwoods would die out were that air to be replaced with a dry wind like that that blows across the Sahara because it has so little water that even if it was 100% drained of the little moisture that it carries it's wouldn't be enough to keep grass alive.

    • @iah469
      @iah469 Před rokem +7

      Evaporation rates are much higher and faster on deforested land. The land requires the plants and trees to hold the existing moisture like a sponge. Not only living things require water, the land itself will crack and blow away without it

    • @jakeolthof
      @jakeolthof Před rokem

      @@iah469 That doesn't change the fact that no matter how many redwoods you plant in the Sahara none will grow.

    • @jakeolthof
      @jakeolthof Před rokem +2

      Except for clear cutting redwoods don't seem to get removed, even forest fires won't kill them. There's no problem regrowing redwoods if you removed all of them, the anti logging activists are fighting to preserve old growth redwoods not worried that they will go extinct. Redwoods can grow in dry climates if they have water.

  • @gv8001
    @gv8001 Před rokem

    Thanks for sharing this inspirational message!

  • @luisfernandocuestasanchez4343

    You guys have an amazing chanel , thank you so much for sharing this high quality educational material

  • @victoryfirst2878
    @victoryfirst2878 Před 2 lety +35

    The ancient people of the sahara used a type of netting which causes small droplets attract each other to turn it into pure water. That is right out of history. So nice to see someone used his God given brain to make this happen. WATER IS LIFE, LIFE IS WATER.

    • @goheine
      @goheine Před 2 lety +1

      Indeed

    • @victoryfirst2878
      @victoryfirst2878 Před 2 lety +5

      @@goheine Old technology seems to come back in spells. But it does come back.

    • @nos9784
      @nos9784 Před rokem +1

      What did they use for the nets?
      Someone else mentioned "air wells", which seems to accomplish the same with piled rock and a channel in a rock floor.

    • @victoryfirst2878
      @victoryfirst2878 Před rokem +2

      @@nos9784 The gary matter says, the people of old used waven reeds like sails to make this happen. Grooved rocks or grooved wood for channels for proper directions. Hope that helps. Good day NOS.

    • @rabokarabekian409
      @rabokarabekian409 Před rokem

      Wasn't this putative God the one who made the area so dry?
      All deities are praised for fixing problems they made. Ever hear of "the problem of evil".
      People are pretty good at inventing all sorts of things on their own.

  • @MrBonners
    @MrBonners Před rokem +7

    Saw this idea on some nature show in the 60s or 70s. Some engineer joined the dots from seeing a large spiderweb holding a large amount of dew. Many desert plants do variations of this.

  • @andrerovigatti9997
    @andrerovigatti9997 Před rokem

    Blessed people that brings knowledge and prosperity to the world !

  • @trishwilliams3153
    @trishwilliams3153 Před rokem

    Wow! Look what can happen!
    …when we work, and love, each other and our beautiful life giving land together ❤️🙏 It is possible.

  • @rumiwani9743
    @rumiwani9743 Před 2 lety +3

    Extremely innovative ❤️

  • @ZeuzBluez
    @ZeuzBluez Před 2 lety +3

    WOW. Really happy for these people.

  • @fangorn1000
    @fangorn1000 Před rokem

    Congratulations. Yes, the people deserve that and more. Excellent idea. I love it . Thank you