Massive waves of toxic seaweed inundate Yucatan Peninsula beaches

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  • čas přidán 26. 07. 2019
  • It is the biggest algae bloom in the world: a 5,000-mile mass of seaweed stretching from Africa to the Caribbean. Across the Yucatan Peninsula, massive waves of the growth, called sargassum, are washing up on beaches day after day, and scientists are trying to figure out why. Jeff Glor reports.
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Komentáře • 523

  • @chuckhole
    @chuckhole Před 5 lety +146

    So the seaweed is thriving on the stuff we shouldn't have put in the ocean. And we want to stop it? Insanity rules humanity.

    • @whackamolechamp
      @whackamolechamp Před 5 lety +38

      It's like the ocean is vomiting this up and trying to put the toxins back where they came from.

    •  Před 5 lety +4

      Greed and fear rule humanity.

    • @ecuadorexpat8558
      @ecuadorexpat8558 Před 5 lety +2

      Humans need to be wiped off the face of the Earth if this Planet wants to survive !

    • @christopherschlacter4953
      @christopherschlacter4953 Před 5 lety +3

      @ Sad, but incredibly true.

    • @24June91
      @24June91 Před 4 lety

      @ Only leftists like yourself are ruled by fear and greed.

  • @rab6453
    @rab6453 Před 5 lety +69

    man has always been his biggest problem.

  • @suntoyfull64
    @suntoyfull64 Před rokem +15

    There has got to be a good use for it. It’s organic plant material and can be converted into fuel, fertilizer or used as a building material.

    • @motube5
      @motube5 Před rokem

      We shall try to turn it into a source of methane like in marshes or landfill! But presence of lead and mercury like substance need to be addressed. Other option could be to load it on ships, take it back (and with some sort of tying to weights like rocks) and sink it where the ocean is deepest. I don’t if it could be turned into fertiliser or garden mulch etc.

    • @susiea1419
      @susiea1419 Před rokem +3

      My thoughts exactly. Our ancestors used it for fertiliser and many still do in the U.K. a fantastic natural resource when the price of fertiliser has sky rocketed

    • @NBflame
      @NBflame Před rokem

      Food, ecosystem, fertilizer, paper, beauty product ingredient, ect. Yes, there are many, many, many uses for it.

    • @ShakaZoulou77
      @ShakaZoulou77 Před rokem

      @@motube5 Plenty of it sinks when cames the storms, which rushes it underwater a few feet, enough for the pressure expel all air in it.

  • @MrRedScorpion1
    @MrRedScorpion1 Před 5 lety +32

    It's washing ashore in West Palm Beach now.

  • @Ryan-jx4vh
    @Ryan-jx4vh Před 5 lety +34

    I just left St Thomas a part of the US Virgin Islands and they were hit by it too.

  • @moody_reckless6077
    @moody_reckless6077 Před 5 lety +33

    We’re all gonna die. The grass hoppers went to Vegas.

  • @jonbigman9723
    @jonbigman9723 Před 5 lety +30

    Yes and this could be stopped by going after the companies pouring the fuel on this fire. But what do I know...

    • @V0YAG3R
      @V0YAG3R Před 2 lety

      Yes, companies like Africa, where the map clearly shows it's coming from exclusively.
      Tras de ladrón, bufón.

    • @DrCrabfingers
      @DrCrabfingers Před rokem

      Your point is entirely valid.

  • @iammelvadixon5164
    @iammelvadixon5164 Před 2 lety +5

    I’m in Miami Beach fl right now and there are massive amounts of it washed up on shore right now!!!

  • @jamesb.9155
    @jamesb.9155 Před rokem +8

    Leaving Brazil to safeguard uniquely valuable land and forest environments is like letting a roulette wheel decide the world's future.

  • @GWills-ys6rd
    @GWills-ys6rd Před 2 lety +9

    The world has lost the battle with Sargassum. They may be able to contain it, but you can't escape the smell.

    • @ShakaZoulou77
      @ShakaZoulou77 Před rokem

      I think Nature doesn't care about smell, neither the living organism thriving on it. Nature found an away to capture wasted fertilizers and CO2, without the need of carbon taxes.

    • @GWills-ys6rd
      @GWills-ys6rd Před rokem

      Tourists need to be aware of this.

  • @tjtampa214
    @tjtampa214 Před 5 lety +5

    It washed up in Tampa in some high water ditches a couple of years ago. I was shocked when I saw it and didn't know what it was.

  • @Scottielargo
    @Scottielargo Před rokem +7

    I live on an island south of Key West that was recently washed over by Ian. The hurricane washed out a lot of shore line structure, Mangroves, Grape Seed, and Palm trees. I look forward to the arrival of this weed. It helps give the sand on the shoreline the organic matter it needs to regrow these trees especially Mangroves. These trees help protect against storm wash. For a feel good, instead of going to the beach, go to the shoreline and pick some plastic, it's everywhere. After you are done you will feel good. Then tell your neighbor about it.

  • @varietasVeritas
    @varietasVeritas Před 5 lety +5

    Lead and arsenic? Where did they come from?

  • @noneyours3237
    @noneyours3237 Před 5 lety +15

    It happens every year on my native island of Martinique in the Caribbean.

    • @huverdoose
      @huverdoose Před 5 lety +2

      The day after Irma, the beach near me in Antigua was buried in the stuff.

  • @ChelseaSierraK.
    @ChelseaSierraK. Před 5 lety +11

    It's toxic, but you keep grabbing handfuls of it,
    and walking around in it barefoot.

    • @Christina_320
      @Christina_320 Před 5 lety +1

      Chrisara xo Ikr 🙄🙄

    • @DrCrabfingers
      @DrCrabfingers Před rokem +4

      It contains heavy metals that are released as it degrades....I guess you wouldn't want to walk around barefoot in it when it was rotten pulp. It also contains a lot of compounds that have been found to be enormously beneficial however.

    • @NBflame
      @NBflame Před rokem

      And if you clean it you can eat it. The seaweed is food, an ecosystem, fertilizer, people use it in beauty products, ect. They are saying it is toxic to keep people away from this wonderful resource! Do your own research people!

  • @deaconguidry3514
    @deaconguidry3514 Před rokem +10

    Nature's filtering, it's not toxic, they just want the locals to think it's toxic. It can be rinsed and turned into compost or put into a container, after a good rinsing, add water and cover container. In a few months you will have some of the best fertilizer you have ever seen. Your plants will grow stronger and bigger than ever before. We are being told there is a shortage of fertilizer? Why...

    • @untermench3502
      @untermench3502 Před rokem +1

      This is a good example of recycling: Fertilizer grows plants, which people and animals eat, their waste goes into the ocean, the sargassum uses the waste and winds-up on the beach to make more fertilizer.

    • @susiea1419
      @susiea1419 Před rokem

      Well said. Humans are so wasteful!

  • @MR-op3mo
    @MR-op3mo Před rokem +5

    Sargassum has arsenic, isn't that unhealthy to make bricks with them to build homes?

  • @neanderthaloutdoors5299
    @neanderthaloutdoors5299 Před 5 lety +15

    There have to be an economically viable use for this.

    • @geraldsutton9981
      @geraldsutton9981 Před 5 lety +1

      Somebody ought to try composting it. I hear sea weed has a lot of nitrogen in it.

    • @Sweetearth1958
      @Sweetearth1958 Před 5 lety +16

      @@geraldsutton9981 It's full of toxic metals, no you don't want to farm with it.

    • @geraldsutton9981
      @geraldsutton9981 Před 5 lety +2

      @@superstopmotionstoryperson2172 Will not burning it, release the toxic metals into the air, to be breathed in...????

    • @jamalcole1985
      @jamalcole1985 Před 5 lety

      @@geraldsutton9981 Somebody has a green thumb.

    • @alisonstrieker4181
      @alisonstrieker4181 Před 4 lety +1

      @@geraldsutton9981 did you not hear the part where there is arsenic and heavy metals in this seaweed?

  • @darthvader5300
    @darthvader5300 Před 3 lety +5

    BIOGAS! Harvest the sargassum seaweeds and put them into biogas fermenters to produce methane rich biogas.

  • @brendaseigler3923
    @brendaseigler3923 Před 5 lety +9

    Lake Champlain in New York and Lake Erie in Pa. has the problem as well. It is blue and toxic.

    • @Conservativeblackman
      @Conservativeblackman Před rokem

      Not the same species and that particular algae bloom is from pollution from those Democrat controlled cities in the Northeast.
      The people who keep blaming it on global warming are the same nasty people who throw their trash on the ground and dump their trash in the rivers. Look at your Liberal run cities and the Truth comes out.

    • @micahgelfand8282
      @micahgelfand8282 Před rokem

      It's not the same thing. But yes toxic algae blooms are an increasing big problem

  • @Ish4MyIggans
    @Ish4MyIggans Před 5 lety +8

    Sarcasm is deadly.

  • @LarryCleveland
    @LarryCleveland Před 3 lety +10

    I was just there. The stench was nauseating when I got into Playa Del Carmen. I got used to it. We are masters at polluting ourselves out of a home and don't even bat an eye lash.

    • @Conservativeblackman
      @Conservativeblackman Před rokem +4

      It's not pollution, it's a reoccurring event that's been happening forever.
      It's the best fertilizer to mix in the soil of your garden and it's not from global warming as some scientists suggest.
      That's just another drum for climate change. The reason for the smell is all those valuable nutrients that are being released as the decomposition happens. My family has been using sargassum to fertilize our gardens for years and once it's mixed into the soil, the smell disappears. Embrace what you don't understand because it's actually a gift if you use it beneficially.

    • @staticbuilds7613
      @staticbuilds7613 Před rokem +1

      @@Conservativeblackman More like it's been happening for a little over a decade now and gets worst each year, speeding to area where it has never reached before

  • @Enviotonin85
    @Enviotonin85 Před 5 lety +4

    Its funny how people throw inland waste into the ocean and ocean waste onto land.

  • @summerrain3251
    @summerrain3251 Před 5 lety +4

    Holy shhh that’s a lot of seaweed 🙀

  • @nigelhinds7356
    @nigelhinds7356 Před 5 lety +3

    same problem here in Jamaica

    • @brendaseigler3923
      @brendaseigler3923 Před 5 lety +1

      We have it starting up in fresh water & salt water in the U.S.A.

  • @bowlampar
    @bowlampar Před 2 lety +5

    Sargassum busting ship is deployed by Mexican Navy to counter its invasion. Wow! Really amazing. 😮

    • @bowlampar
      @bowlampar Před rokem +1

      @pa_2600 You can't actually bomb 'Sargassum' into extinction, you need cleaning crew ship not Navy warship. 😁🤣😁

  • @crazychicSHENA
    @crazychicSHENA Před 5 lety +7

    The earth seems sick 😐

  • @nenettesilver
    @nenettesilver Před rokem +1

    If they can make good use of the sargassum seaweeds, it is a useful way of eliminating and controlling the sargassum from invading the clean beaches of MX.

  • @HappyFunnyCute
    @HappyFunnyCute Před 2 lety +2

    so 2021...pretty much the ocean cleaning up the mess, and giving it back to the perps...that is all

  • @szacharyf
    @szacharyf Před 5 lety +2

    It *IS* on Florida beaches!! Not like this but we are experiencing way more than normal. Beaches are polluted with this seaweed and the cities can’t afford to clean it up!

    • @ShakaZoulou77
      @ShakaZoulou77 Před rokem

      Right, lagae that capture wasted fertilizers and CO2 is pollution now, just because some turists can enjoy to work for tan.

  • @hayward022
    @hayward022 Před 3 lety

    We need more.

  • @timeWaster76
    @timeWaster76 Před rokem +2

    As food
    Japanese cuisine as well as Chile have traditionally consumed Sargassum, known as hijiki, although it contains high amounts of arsenic, part of the arsenic cycle from groundwater, waterways, into oceans and back to land. There are methods to process and greatly reduce arsenic from this genus of seaweed, potentially making it a nearly inexhaustible food supply for animals or people.

    • @scottprather5645
      @scottprather5645 Před rokem

      Interesting it would certainly be ideal if the sargasm could be utilized for food source

  • @egyptson9428
    @egyptson9428 Před 5 lety +4

    the ocean said.... take back your lead!

  • @saave47
    @saave47 Před rokem

    thanks

  • @benjamindejonge3624
    @benjamindejonge3624 Před rokem +1

    It make great pellets for the stove and garden

  • @malsprower
    @malsprower Před 3 lety +3

    Humans won't listen and learn until everything and everyone is dead, we are that dense as a species.

  • @yeezusybarra
    @yeezusybarra Před 5 lety +34

    Just wait until mother natural has enough of us all & destroys human kind

    • @xs_17gh88
      @xs_17gh88 Před 5 lety

      Satan Ybarra fAkE nEwS

    • @bhoney1988
      @bhoney1988 Před 5 lety

      @@xs_17gh88 it's coming a lot sooner than people realize

    • @xs_17gh88
      @xs_17gh88 Před 5 lety +1

      B Honey you know I was being sarcastic right

    • @bhoney1988
      @bhoney1988 Před 5 lety

      @@xs_17gh88 I'm not sure anyone can tell these days🤣

    • @bhoney1988
      @bhoney1988 Před 5 lety

      @Mag you wouldn't want to live through it

  • @1980process
    @1980process Před 5 lety +20

    THE PATTERN OF THE SEA WEED IS THE SAME PATH HURRICANES TAKE WHEN THEY HEAD TOWARDS THE U.S . THIS PROBLEM IS 100% MAN MADE

  • @SkyPilot54
    @SkyPilot54 Před 5 lety +1

    Excellent fertilizer

  • @rorytennes8576
    @rorytennes8576 Před 5 lety +4

    so the seaweed collects lead out of the water. that would be a good thing.

    • @johnengland8619
      @johnengland8619 Před rokem +1

      Until it shows up on the beach, that's a bad thing

  • @snuggleskie
    @snuggleskie Před 3 lety +3

    This interviewer seems so condescending to the locals.

  • @nicolahudson1213
    @nicolahudson1213 Před 5 lety +2

    We better get on it quickly on better ways to stop polluting the environment

    • @ShakaZoulou77
      @ShakaZoulou77 Před rokem

      Leave sargassum to thrive and capturing wasted fertilizers and exccess CO2, is the way Nature is taking care of pollution. Nature doesn't care you can't work to your tan.

  • @woabeatz9717
    @woabeatz9717 Před 5 lety +2

    Can we use as fertilzer...

  • @rorytennes8576
    @rorytennes8576 Před 5 lety +1

    is it alge or seaweed ? there is a differnce.

  • @michelbisson6645
    @michelbisson6645 Před 7 měsíci

    I need it all

  • @mikeletterst9882
    @mikeletterst9882 Před 3 lety +2

    Feed it to our politicians

  • @jaridkeen123
    @jaridkeen123 Před 5 lety +3

    We have to stop using Fossil Fuels!

  • @JayJay-xr8ds
    @JayJay-xr8ds Před 5 lety +2

    "Nobody really knows what to do with it" But you just saw a dude built a house...

  • @Lu-cho
    @Lu-cho Před rokem +1

    😱😱😱
    I'm WATCHING this 2023
    FLORIDA.
    Was thinking this is 2023 Report/news.
    😬😬😬

  • @jamesthomas7928
    @jamesthomas7928 Před rokem

    If it's spread out and rain washed it is the most potent fertilizer.

  • @mcox8829
    @mcox8829 Před 5 lety +3

    I thought sargassum was supposed to be funny?

  • @saywhat951
    @saywhat951 Před rokem

    Johnny Go Hut is the best way to describe the smell for 6 months of the year its not the Riviera Maya its the Riviera Sewage!!

  • @mariafarfan3398
    @mariafarfan3398 Před 4 lety +1

    Why?????

  • @edwardfoehring8827
    @edwardfoehring8827 Před 5 lety +1

    What can we use it for ? Fuel base stock fertilizer, has to be somthing !

  • @vicfrom47
    @vicfrom47 Před 5 lety +1

    Very sargasmic

  • @Yoona_lim_husband_potus

    I'm happy

  • @andrewvillanueva3722
    @andrewvillanueva3722 Před rokem

    Looks best to put out nets in front of the beaches to get before it gets to land.

  • @IamINERT
    @IamINERT Před 3 lety

    Can they have any alternative use?

    • @healingv1sion
      @healingv1sion Před 2 lety

      I wonder if the toxic metals can be removed for industrial use. They are toxic to us but could be useful elsewhere in society

  • @dadsonworldwide3238
    @dadsonworldwide3238 Před 5 lety

    It was nothing like this when i was in cancun .but even then they went out about 4 am and used machines to clear the beach fof the day.

  • @williamcuttsii8606
    @williamcuttsii8606 Před 5 lety

    I was just there it's so bad

  • @infiniteadam7352
    @infiniteadam7352 Před rokem

    They need a cotton module builder. That way they could pack it into a cube, much more efficient to move.

  • @tr7b410
    @tr7b410 Před rokem +1

    Warmer waters+fertilizer,s create a perfect environment for these sea-weeds to proliferate.

  • @user-hp6se6uf6b
    @user-hp6se6uf6b Před 5 lety

    It's already everywhere in America especially down south

  • @richardatchison5296
    @richardatchison5296 Před rokem +1

    Can it be used as fertilizers

    • @raopsepol
      @raopsepol Před rokem

      it has poisonous heavy metals like arsenic. so no it cant.

  • @michaeld954
    @michaeld954 Před 5 lety +10

    Its kind of good because the seaweed is cleaning the ocean if it collecting the heavy metals, just have to built a disposal plant to remove the toxins and burn the seaweed off or load it onto boat's and ship it out to someone who can do it

    • @christianmandigo5108
      @christianmandigo5108 Před 5 lety +8

      It’s toxic and it’s estimated at 22 million tons. I’m sorry my friend this is the beginning of “global warming” aka Gods Judgment

    • @DrCrabfingers
      @DrCrabfingers Před rokem +5

      I think drying it and using it for bio-fuel could be an answer....the toxins can be removed during combustion, we already have that technology.

    • @tawanaturner8854
      @tawanaturner8854 Před rokem +2

      @@christianmandigo5108 EXACTLY!!!! 2023 ITS HERE NOW.. BIG TIME!!!!

    • @iamedyson
      @iamedyson Před rokem

      ​@@DrCrabfingers I didn't know that information. That's cool! Spread the word.

  • @noname_0057
    @noname_0057 Před rokem

    1. Stop dumping trash into the ocean.
    2. Stop spilling oil into the ocean
    3. The seaweed should be incinerated in an incinerator that has a filter system to filter out the toxic smoke from burning and turn it into non toxic steam.

  • @nodatastored684
    @nodatastored684 Před rokem

    So, it is migrating north... In the tides

  • @Cresent-city
    @Cresent-city Před 5 lety

    If it's too, what would it do if u live in it.

  • @brendatenorio5721
    @brendatenorio5721 Před rokem

    Smart woman.

  • @jamalcole1985
    @jamalcole1985 Před 5 lety +1

    Mother nature. It is what it is

  • @bitbugsbyte
    @bitbugsbyte Před 5 lety +2

    Are we thinking this is from fertilizer runoff? Why does the Ocean have so much new fertilizer? Where are the heavy metals coming from?

    • @dondroc1
      @dondroc1 Před 5 lety

      Recent floods in the grain belt of USA washed all the newly applied fertilizers down the drain.

  • @podocrypto6072
    @podocrypto6072 Před rokem

    This is from all the phosphates and nitrogen used in agriculture in South, Central and North Americas, whereas the products are used in farm fields and even grassy plains, including residential lawns, and then run offs from the rains wash it into the oceans and causes these huge algae blooms, which include Sargassum, Red Tide and Blue-Green algae.

  • @publiccharge3847
    @publiccharge3847 Před 9 měsíci

    The guy making bricks is impressive. They need to process it in multiple ways.

  • @Spiderman-tg9ke
    @Spiderman-tg9ke Před rokem +1

    Like the man said it's necessary for the Ocean's ecosystem but too much is too much. Too bad it's not distributed by itself all over the oceans and not on shores

    • @ShakaZoulou77
      @ShakaZoulou77 Před rokem

      Who decide that is to much. Turism sector which are losing revenue. Nature isn't complaning, just compare the quantity of living organisms thriving on it against sandy beaches empty of sargasso

  • @clarenceawalker1873
    @clarenceawalker1873 Před rokem

    If there's a how there's a way to dispose of it or actually use it to our advantage. Something has to be done about it.

  • @katieg3461
    @katieg3461 Před 5 lety +1

    We all need to take care of our home, planet 🌎

    • @brendaseigler3923
      @brendaseigler3923 Před 5 lety +1

      We should of been doing that !

    • @christianmandigo5108
      @christianmandigo5108 Před 5 lety +1

      It’s too late the world is crying out. Blame the worlds leaders, prepare for the end my friend

    • @katieg3461
      @katieg3461 Před 5 lety

      Josh Smith no can do. There are always miracles. I wish you a wonderful life. 💐

  • @anonymousjoker946
    @anonymousjoker946 Před 5 lety +3

    It makes oxygen

  • @josemilian4167
    @josemilian4167 Před rokem

    like that man found use for it. I'd read that wind carries soil from northern Africa into ocean as well, promoting growth of certain plants wonder if it's also a contributor of this problem.

    • @aaabbbccc985
      @aaabbbccc985 Před rokem

      We have a lot of problems that come from Africa

  • @Bob-bm1fk
    @Bob-bm1fk Před rokem

    It helps restore the beaches. Blowing sand is trapped in it. Buiiding dunes.

  • @BigAdam010606
    @BigAdam010606 Před 5 lety

    DANG

  • @sammyvh11
    @sammyvh11 Před 5 lety +2

    Mexico has a navy.....wow

    • @jogmas12
      @jogmas12 Před 5 lety +2

      sammyvh11 they always had a navy, where you been, cave?

  • @mikerockwood4475
    @mikerockwood4475 Před rokem

    What can the seaweed be good for ?

  • @Toaster-v1z
    @Toaster-v1z Před rokem

    Looks nasty. You definitely don't want to vacation somewhere that's hitting.

  • @johnfink69
    @johnfink69 Před 5 lety

    I can’t wait until someone says we can pay to fix this with no results! Again?

  • @ReneChewbaka
    @ReneChewbaka Před rokem +1

    I'm hoping a billion tons of it washes up on Florida's coastlines and knocks some sense into that state..

  • @ninehundreddollarluxuryyac5958

    Its removing carbon from the atmosphere and also cleaning all that lead and heavy metals out of the ocean.
    There must be quarries and old mines that represent big holes we've dug and need filling in. Why not search for sites like that close to the beaches where you want to get rid of seaweed? Its something to fill in that big hole, and after a while, it will rot down a bit, making room for more.

  • @ArtstradaMagazine
    @ArtstradaMagazine Před rokem

    looks like a new energy resource. use it

  • @JayyFromTheGrip
    @JayyFromTheGrip Před rokem

    I thought I time traveled 😮

  • @babyblue7798
    @babyblue7798 Před 2 lety +4

    soooo sad! i remember cancun beaches so clear and turquoise colors. I remenber i cried when i had to leave to go back home because it was so gorgeous!

  • @jenniferlorence1950
    @jenniferlorence1950 Před 4 lety

    This is SAD.

  • @ezmoney6341
    @ezmoney6341 Před 5 lety +5

    Give it some time Im sure the McDonald’s can find a way to incorporate this into the food chain. If they can make a bottom feeding fish with eyes on one side of its heads into a delicious sandwich anything is possible.

    • @fleaflicker1451
      @fleaflicker1451 Před 5 lety

      Awww but halibut is delicious! 🐟

    • @edwinsutton5076
      @edwinsutton5076 Před rokem

      Woah! God made flounder and I doubt it has ever been in a mickyD sandwich. One the size of a plate sells for $25 on the beach

    • @edwinsutton5076
      @edwinsutton5076 Před rokem

      And I've never seen a fisherman sell even one they catch.

  • @bobbleheadmoe
    @bobbleheadmoe Před rokem

    Can they burn it? The home idea is awesome !!!

  • @Joedoeswhat
    @Joedoeswhat Před 5 lety

    If its toxic contaminated and has no use for now use incinerators has to be cheaper then a long draw out clean up that will cost 10x the amout

  • @msain427
    @msain427 Před 5 lety +1

    @4:37 passed out on beach? Nice tan but forgot to roll ovrr?

  • @cooterswift916
    @cooterswift916 Před 5 lety +5

    this reporter is kinda annoying

  • @maradoria
    @maradoria Před 5 lety +5

    Sargassum, toxic!? Here in Portugal anciant farmers used yo fertilize the fields, and still do!!

    • @LarryCleveland
      @LarryCleveland Před 3 lety

      Then you just ingest the heavy metals. Not smart. We are toast.

  • @byranmoore2257
    @byranmoore2257 Před 5 lety +1

    use it for plant soil to grow things on land plz

  • @veganwinter2090
    @veganwinter2090 Před 5 lety +1

    Purification of Earth Waters is a big need, as such, and our Veganic bodies also benefit from seaweed in diet to purify.
    Indo-seaweed system could tell us more when we find it...perhaps showing us how to end paralysis and other moral backbone needs with greater degrees of purity and Veganic and better diet/lifestyles. Indo-...

  • @daviddalby9699
    @daviddalby9699 Před rokem

    Use it for compost ???

  • @maxxxxximiliano
    @maxxxxximiliano Před 5 lety +1

    The planet is beautiful 😍