How These Circles In The Sahara Help Farmers To Grow Crops In The Desert

Sdílet
Vložit
  • čas přidán 19. 08. 2023
  • What are these strange circles dotted for miles across this moon like landscape, what is going on here in this harsh environment, in this video we are going to find out!
    To first understand what the holes are we need to get a picture of their location. Just sixty miles off the coast of the Sahara the largest hot desert on earth, there are a small cluster of islands despite, with similar arid conditions, despite the fact these islands called the canaries are so close to Africa, they are actually the territory of Spain, 2000 km away, geographically it seems a bit bizarre that these islands have anything to do with Spain at all and because of this they are actually quite different to mainland Spain, except that the official language spoken is Spanish.
    🔔 SUBSCRIBE
    @LeafofLifeWorld
    @LeafofLifeES
    @LeafofLifeMusicOfficial
    ✍ ENQUIRES contact: leafoflifefilms@gmail.com
    _________________________
    💚 SUPPORT THE CHANNEL
    Support our on the ground impact work at: www.leafoflife.news
    Help us share more regenerative stories:
    / leafoflifefilms
    One time donation:
    www.paypal.com/paypalme/Leafo...
    _________________________
    This video is for education and research purposes
    If you are the owner of any of the images please contact us an we can credit or remove the image, THANK YOU
    FAIR USE COPYRIGHT NOTICE
    The Copyright Laws of the United States recognizes a “fair use” of copyrighted content. Section 107 of the U.S. Copyright Act states:
    “NOTWITHSTANDING THE PROVISIONS OF SECTIONS 106 AND 106A, THE FAIR USE OF A COPYRIGHTED WORK, INCLUDING SUCH USE BY REPRODUCTION IN COPIES OR PHONORECORDS OR BY ANY OTHER MEANS SPECIFIED BY THAT SECTION, FOR PURPOSES SUCH AS CRITICISM, COMMENT, NEWS REPORTING, TEACHING (INCLUDING MULTIPLE COPIES FOR CLASSROOM USE), SCHOLARSHIP, OR RESEARCH, IS NOT AN INFRINGEMENT OF COPYRIGHT.”
    THIS VIDEO AND OUR CZcams CHANNEL IN GENERAL MAY CONTAIN CERTAIN COPYRIGHTED WORKS THAT WERE NOT SPECIFICALLY AUTHORIZED TO BE USED BY THE COPYRIGHT HOLDER(S), BUT WHICH WE BELIEVE IN GOOD FAITH ARE PROTECTED BY FEDERAL LAW AND THE FAIR USE DOCTRINE FOR ONE OR MORE OF THE REASONS NOTED ABOVE.
    IF YOU HAVE ANY SPECIFIC CONCERNS ABOUT THIS VIDEO OR OUR POSITION ON THE FAIR USE DEFENSE, PLEASE CONTACT US IN THE COMMENTS OR SEND AN EMAIL SO WE CAN DISCUSS AMICABLY. THANK YOU.

Komentáře • 93

  • @LeafofLifeWorld
    @LeafofLifeWorld  Před 9 měsíci +11

    🌳 Support our project to bring back the threatened Laurel forests: www.leafoflife.news/water-harvesting
    🎥 Support our video work, helping us to improve our videos, upgrade our equipment & share more informative videos like this one here: www.patreon.com/leafoflifefilms
    💚 Make a one time donation here: paypal.me/leafoflifefilms (make sure to change "what is payment for?" to paying friends & family)
    Thank you 🙏

  • @jakthebean9989
    @jakthebean9989 Před 9 měsíci +72

    Hey Leaf of Life. I am always shocked by how well put together these mini docs are and how much info they pack. Please keep it up. You are amazing. Thank you.

  • @kolakevicius
    @kolakevicius Před 8 měsíci +26

    The only way to listen to your videos is at 1.25x speed.

  • @knucklessg1
    @knucklessg1 Před 8 měsíci +26

    The bright green trees are an absolutely stunning contrast to the black sand. I love how human engineering can heal the land

    • @alattapnhamky3774
      @alattapnhamky3774 Před 2 měsíci

      Hình ảnh thu nhỏ trong video là những hố gần núi lửa, nơi có rất nhiều khoáng chất được hoạt động của núi lửa đẩy ra khỏi lòng đất, không liên quan gì tới sa mạc hết. Về cơ bản, nó gần giống như phân bón vô cơ, chỉ cần có đủ hơi ẩm, những loài chịu hạn như cây nho sẽ phát triển rất tốt.

    • @fincaboyz9766
      @fincaboyz9766 Před 2 měsíci

      Lanzarote is a piece of shit when it comes to ecology unfortunately! I am trying to do agroforestry there to grow a food forest in the dry nothingness there;)

  • @user-cn2me4ci1d
    @user-cn2me4ci1d Před 4 měsíci +5

    Кыргызтандан салам🇰🇬🍊🌲👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍

  • @SennaCrow
    @SennaCrow Před 8 měsíci +19

    I have a lot of notes here that might help, I think....
    This reminds me of the porous clay pots that cool water naturally by up to 15 degrees Fahrenheit. I wonder if Arizona and other places dealing with heat could create similar with the clay pots?
    Also, for the place in this video, if they increase water capture by just digging curled channels, it'll help get the ground to hold the water longer. Berms and swales help retain moisture and direct it, and part of that build involves planting trees on the berms. Tree roots strengthen / hold the soil in place and provide the initial part of a new habitat. (If you instead dig a straight channel, water will erode it badly. That's why a curling channel is so important, with deeper areas designed to catch larger amounts of water, and rocks set in certain places to slow the current and/or redirect it gently or with a specific effect in mind. Lining the bed of the shallower areas you wish to hold runoff will ensure slower drainage into the soil, too. This is done with the newspaper zai holes concept currently being used in West Africa. And adding sun-dried 1- to 2-year-old waste to certain areas helps increase biodiversity because of the nutrients that enrich the soil. Pair that with the "three sisters" technique, you'll be able to triple food and plant life by enriching nitrogen with one plant, and then doing other things with other plants. Dandelions here are considered a weed, but they pop up in droves when the soil is low in certain minerals. Most people where I live have forgotten that before and during the Great Depression, clover and dandelions and other ground cover / grasses were used because they were either edible by us or by our animals.....Dandelion is edible and healthy. Helps the liver as well as the land.)
    Anyway, back to water retention via berms and swales...
    Once the water retention is going nicely and a good number of the trees have grown a bit, import something like beavers (or the natural equivalent for that area). Those animals will restore a LOT of the land in a quicker, shorter time, and you don't have to pay them overtime or workers comp, lol. Beavers will continue to naturally channel the ground and water, working through the night. They'll dig their own curling spirals into the land, outward from the larger bodies of water they help to dam up, which keeps rain and running water from eroding huge swatches of sandy ground, instead forcing it into smaller and smaller channels that the beavers dig outward from the main body.
    Further, there are bits of technology that can help, too, in capturing water from even the driest air. An old one is the fog net. I think that's an old Ireland trick, collecting water from an upright net. It drips into a container to be collected. There are newer versions that work on a nano scale. Some collect up to 160 liters a day depending on the moisture in the air and the size of the net.
    There are also other machines they're working on that I have no real clue HOW they work, but those capture air moisture, and that moisture drips down into a collection system, which is immediately drinkable and also useful for agriculture. There's a guy called Moses West who built his own version of the machines about 10 years ago and has deployed them to places overseas for the US military, for FEMA responses to hurricane catastrophes, and even as at home in the US, in places like Flint Michigan, after a train derailment poisoned all the water and ponds there. His company takes orders for building more machines, and there are other companies who have built similar machines or are crossing the technology with other tech so they can automate farming & re-greening. Moses West's machines are solar-powered and collect a LOT of water. I believe it was about 200 gallons a day or more...? I can't remember the minor details, but it was quite a bit. And as you empty the tank, it just refills.
    There are arguments that taking moisture from the air would negatively impact the environment, but....even the Sahara has a lot of moisture in the air that can be captured. And earth is over 70% water. With global warming, more water is getting into the air than ever before....if anything, this an be an argument of how we're fixing and normalizing the climate worldwide.
    A tip on helping to spread tree seed across a burnt area of land, or a somewhat more barren place, if you've got good soil that seed can grow in? Utilize a dog with a backpack full of various types of seeds for trees and other types of plants. Let the dogs run loose so they have fun going rampant for part of the day. They return after a few hours with bags empty or mostly empty---all that seed has been distributed across anywhere from a mile to a few miles. Then repeat. A simple GPS tracker would show everywhere the dog has gone so you can ensure wider coverage. I saw a documentary on a couple who did that after their forest burnt. The seedlings that had sprouted were EVERYWHERE five years later. Best part? No hard labor, no over time, nothing. Just a few dogs having a blast exploring, and the owners riding four wheelers to certain sites to deploy / pick up the dogs.
    Oh! And last thing I just recalled. UV damages plants just like it damages us. Clear plastic canopy helps them to double in size and produce more food because it blocks the UVs but allows other light through. That's not only used with the De lux zai holes in East Africa, but a lot of farmers here in the US also use it on smaller farms and gardens.
    When you begin to consider building types that improve the land, looking to ancient techniques used in the Middle East and elsewhere is also a very, very good place to go. Dovecotes are buildings constructed for birds to roost & poop in. The poop is nitrogen-rich, and it is shoveled out a few times a year & put into the land to be used for farming or plant growth. The birds are very low maintenance: just build the shelter and provide water (which would be the water catching system), and the birds will come. Better yet, they help with pests and anything they eat that has seeds will be deposited near the water, or farther from it. Thus, helping to naturally spread the greenery.
    My last note here is on farming trees for wood (once they're getting established, that is.) Coppicing is a technique that will keep the land from being deforested while also providing sustainable wood for fuel and mulching and other uses. Japan uses the technique to keep from deforesting their land. It creates giant healthy root systems that sprout huge, very straight trunks that are amazing for building or other uses. In Italy, there's a tree that's over 4,000 years old that's been burnt and chopped over and over using this technique. It's still alive and extremely healthy because of how it's maintained. Instead of chopping down trees to thin them, you prune them and make a cut to the trunk or base to encourage new growth. Certain stems are selected for early removal (to be used for anything from mulching to fuel to building material), while other stems are allowed to grow. New cuts are made periodically to encourage new stems, while certain of the older stems are selected for cutting a few years down the road. Usually 2 to 10 years, depending on the species. This means the roots stay alive for years and years, always supplying new shoots without being overburdened in trying to support a massive tree. It also means the tree provides a rotational wood crop that is sustainable and can be farmed over and over on a rotating schedule. I've seen the Japanese trees in a documentary, and the root systems are......incredible. I was speechless and in awe. HUGE root systems, sprouting nearly a miniature forest of their own. And the trunks that were rotated for cutting were anywhere from 50 to 100 feet tall (perhaps taller, I couldn't more accurately guess the actual scale from the video).

    • @MahaMtman
      @MahaMtman Před 8 měsíci +2

      Yes?
      Let's Network and change the world from destruction to construction!

    • @SennaCrow
      @SennaCrow Před 8 měsíci

      💖 All I can do is offer knowledge I've found in very random places. @@MahaMtman

    • @itzakpoelzig330
      @itzakpoelzig330 Před 5 měsíci

      Is that documentary on youtube? I'd love to see those Japanese trees.

  • @ghulamabbasawan7175
    @ghulamabbasawan7175 Před 2 měsíci +1

    Such an informative channel. I can't understand this low count on subscribers.
    Subscribed.

  • @Noni448
    @Noni448 Před 18 dny

    This reminds me of the city of Petra and their desert farming techniques

  • @insidertimes
    @insidertimes Před 9 měsíci +6

    In one word amazing! Thank you Leaf of Life for sharing all these incredible videos about how we can repair our planet. And in simple ways too!

  • @philippbobkaufmann4004
    @philippbobkaufmann4004 Před 7 měsíci +5

    Just as a correction: Juba II was king of Numidia and Mauretania in the *first* century BC.

  • @PlasticBubbleCosplay
    @PlasticBubbleCosplay Před 19 dny

    Those circles remind me of part of the Great Green Wall project in the Sahel area of Africa.

  • @sumakwelvictoria5635
    @sumakwelvictoria5635 Před 8 měsíci +4

    Biochar pit and compost scraps, brush, leaves in there?
    It will build up soil again. And it will retain even more moisture...

    • @SennaCrow
      @SennaCrow Před 8 měsíci +1

      Depends on the type of plant and what it needs. Some plants being used for brush will inhibit growth in other plants because of their tannins and other molecular compounds as they break down. However, it is a heck of a starting point.
      Dovecotes are a very easy way to get nitrogen-rich biowaste. Build it, make sure there is a water source, and the birds will come, lol. That gets shoveled out a few times a year and thrown into the garden.
      Newspaper zai holes and De lux zai holes (used in East and West Africa for re-greening right now) are another item that helps tremendously. Paired with half-buried terracotta pots that have miniscule holes in the bottoms and lids to keep the water from evaporated or contaminated also help. (Those are half-buried very close to the plants so the root systems grow close to the pots & receive ample supply of water).
      Another technique is to get the mulch material from coppicing, which means you never cut down the full tree, which would kill it. Instead, you partially cut it down, and let certain sprouts take over. There's a tree in Italy that's about 4000 years old that has been coppiced over that full time period by a certain family. It's massive. Has been burnt and cut for that entire period of time and is still alive, because it has been managed with this technique. (Some species of trees can't be coppiced, tho). Coppicing means the roots remain, the stump remains, several parts of the tree are allowed to grow for a period of time before being selected for removal, and the other parts of the tree are allowed to now grow for their selected period of time before being chopped, etc. It's a rotating farm of stems from one root system. The Japanese do this with a lot of their trees, too. It keeps the forests maintained, encourages very tall, straight trunks, and constant growth / renewable wood farming without deforestation.

  • @Deltakitty32780
    @Deltakitty32780 Před 3 měsíci

    I love that strategy wow😮

  • @Palanisankari2010
    @Palanisankari2010 Před 2 měsíci +1

    அருமை

  • @albertoo5444
    @albertoo5444 Před 2 měsíci +1

    Ese tipo de hoyos se llaman Gerias y como bien comentas en el vídeo, sirven para atrapar y retener la humedad, gracias al picón

  • @shanshonagon
    @shanshonagon Před 3 měsíci +2

    Lanzarote’s climate is far different from the draugh of Sahara. As an island, is crossed by oceanic humidity retained by night and early morning lower temperature. Not so clear to replicate in the Sahara costline. But, why not to try?

    • @alattapnhamky3774
      @alattapnhamky3774 Před 2 měsíci

      Bạn quên là đất núi lửa là loại đất tốt nhất sao. Nó tốt vì thành phần của nó là các khoáng chất được đẩy ra khỏi lòng đất, có tính chất gần giống với các loại phân bón vô cơ, ngoài ra nó còn chứa gần như các loại vi lượng cần thiết cho cây trồng, chỉ cần có đủ độ ẩm, cây trồng sẽ phát triển cực kỳ mạnh. Sahara thì khác hoàn toàn, vì lớp bề mặt chỉ toàn là cát, hợp chất chứa silic không tan, nếu bạn muốn trồng cây trên cát, bạn bắt buộc phải bón phân và tưới nước cho nó.

  • @pallawichhabra1666
    @pallawichhabra1666 Před 4 měsíci

    Such documentaries are like a silver lining at the end of the tunnel

  • @stefanschleps8758
    @stefanschleps8758 Před 9 měsíci +3

    Well done. Thank you!
    New sub.

  • @edbollett9083
    @edbollett9083 Před 9 měsíci +5

    Kind of amazing at some of the places where human occupancy is forbidden to protect delicate ecosystems as well as the wildlife they support. Several islands where human entrance is strictly forbidden. Strictly places where man is forbidden to rearrange everything under the sun..

  • @manaing2420
    @manaing2420 Před 29 dny

  • @waynejones750
    @waynejones750 Před 7 měsíci +1

    This is fascinating 😊

  • @Blaqjaqshellaq
    @Blaqjaqshellaq Před 8 měsíci +6

    If they found dogs on the islands, that must mean that earlier people came there and introduced them...

    • @SennaCrow
      @SennaCrow Před 8 měsíci

      Not necessarily. Could mean many things.

  • @4kpliter791
    @4kpliter791 Před 4 měsíci

    🙌🙌

  • @user-hc5oc5kp3c
    @user-hc5oc5kp3c Před 19 dny

    Plant trees for clouds and more water

  • @aelfredrex8354
    @aelfredrex8354 Před 3 měsíci +1

    How to collect dawn condensation.

  • @nneichan9353
    @nneichan9353 Před 5 měsíci +1

    so interesting!

  • @DRamos-jr8xg
    @DRamos-jr8xg Před 23 dny +1

    Just to be historically fair, the population of the islands was "assimilated into the ground" and literally killed out in an all-out war with the invading Spaniards. Now the Islands are Spain; that's just history, it ain't or shouldn't be apologetic.

  • @mdemory
    @mdemory Před 2 měsíci

    Lol those volcanic pics are of hawaii 😂

  • @JonathanReynolds1
    @JonathanReynolds1 Před 8 měsíci +2

    I’ve walked through the forest of Garajonay at the centre of the Canary Island of La Gomera.

  • @GemelBebot
    @GemelBebot Před 2 měsíci +3

    Africa not Spain ……period

  • @mrgrumpy5116
    @mrgrumpy5116 Před 9 měsíci +3

    impressive

  • @catholic3dod790
    @catholic3dod790 Před 9 měsíci +3

    Who were ancient civilization before Spanish arrived?

  • @Picci25021973
    @Picci25021973 Před 5 měsíci +1

    Visited Lanzarote last summer, close to Timanfaya volcano park. Looks like the moon, but they produce fine "volcanic malvasia" wines. The proof man can be the most powerful regenerative force of the planet, instead of the most destructive

  • @user-hc5oc5kp3c
    @user-hc5oc5kp3c Před 19 dny

    It is widely known volcanic soil is very fertile for crops Hawaii is a volcanic landscape implementing this for food crops also planting trees diminishes deserts plant food and trees you have water clouds and food🧠

  • @k.h.6991
    @k.h.6991 Před 16 dny

    What does this have to do with the Sahara desert?

  • @jhonPriego-dp5fd
    @jhonPriego-dp5fd Před 5 měsíci +1

    IN THE SAHARA HOW COOL

  • @raystevens687
    @raystevens687 Před 10 dny

    I wonder if you could grow pineapple 🍍 in that area.

  • @jeetsinh2651
    @jeetsinh2651 Před 3 měsíci +1

    Canary Islands is not part of Sahara desert.

  • @user-hc5oc5kp3c
    @user-hc5oc5kp3c Před 19 dny

    🧠

  • @marginbuu212
    @marginbuu212 Před 3 měsíci

    Huh. So the Canary Islands are named after dogs, not birds.

  • @mitamitamitamita9776
    @mitamitamitamita9776 Před měsícem

    Who not using mashine ???????

  • @AF-zk9vr
    @AF-zk9vr Před 2 měsíci

    First is not spain but portugal and after spain settlment

  • @tahanlaoboy
    @tahanlaoboy Před 8 měsíci +1

    Wowwww

  • @archangelgabriel5316
    @archangelgabriel5316 Před 8 měsíci +1

    Shia LaBeouf is digging.

  • @pablogarcia4191
    @pablogarcia4191 Před 4 měsíci

    this look like is Lanzarote and not Africa

  • @MahaMtman
    @MahaMtman Před 8 měsíci

    Hello Leaf of Life!
    Mushroom farming on the horizon?
    Beautiful exact opposite of the wars
    = Eviil + death
    Now features as entertainment on popular media.

  • @melvinbarnett1910
    @melvinbarnett1910 Před 12 dny

    A bunch a baloney about the Canary Islands.

  • @MrTotalAhole
    @MrTotalAhole Před 8 měsíci +1

    Giant antlions but designed to catch humans.

  • @dutchcorners
    @dutchcorners Před 4 měsíci

    People be living in Solsthine 🤣

  • @erickwilliams6147
    @erickwilliams6147 Před 4 měsíci +2

    Why do this lady sound winded, Making me sleepy.

    • @olin777
      @olin777 Před 4 měsíci +2

      Probably Artificial intelligence

  • @JS-jh4cy
    @JS-jh4cy Před 6 měsíci +1

    Pissing pit stops in the desert journey

  • @victorsantiago886
    @victorsantiago886 Před 2 měsíci

    The annotator does not pronounce well and is difficult to understand.!

    • @LeafofLifeWorld
      @LeafofLifeWorld  Před 2 měsíci +1

      Despite speaking in an English accents from England and speaking in a neutral accent??? Maybe use the captions or take a trip to England and immerse your self in the original English

  • @MistressOP
    @MistressOP Před 4 měsíci

    this isn't new. it is new world farming. mayan, and a few other natives did this. also a few places in land africa.

  • @lenard6910
    @lenard6910 Před 8 měsíci +7

    The Canary Islands are African islands that were colonized by Spain

    • @padredemishijos12
      @padredemishijos12 Před 6 měsíci +2

      Spain is significantly closer to Africa than the Canary Islands. Moreover, Canarias are Spanish/Catholics and not Arab/Muslims. There are two urban centers on the African coast, Melilla and Ceuta that are Spanish/Catholic with a small Muslim population. Gibraltar is a English colony where the population is overwhelmingly Spanish and Catholic.

    • @lenard6910
      @lenard6910 Před 6 měsíci +1

      @@padredemishijos12 : via rape and colonization

    • @lenard6910
      @lenard6910 Před 6 měsíci +4

      @@padredemishijos12 the Canary islands are closer to Africa than to Spain.
      Colonization and rape are the only reasons Catholics or Spanyards are in either.

    • @padredemishijos12
      @padredemishijos12 Před 6 měsíci +1

      @@lenard6910 That’s a lie. Proof? The Canaries had same rights as a the people of Spain unlike the English.

    • @juanjoseleonvarea2495
      @juanjoseleonvarea2495 Před 5 měsíci

      @@lenard6910 Of course, because Muslim Africans never invaded Europe and specifically what is now Spain and Portugal for the same reasons as the rest of civilizations. Or is it wrong because we are the ones who did it? And let's not talk about the Protestants, they are all little angels too.

  • @sannykurmal8074
    @sannykurmal8074 Před 3 měsíci

    Sahara desert me green karoge toh nature k saath khilvad toh nahi ho ra

  • @crapisnice
    @crapisnice Před 2 měsíci

    canary people "asimilated to general population", what a digusting sentence and fallacy when its rather the contrary and spain is a colony of france-germany-italy which are colonies of jerusalem
    lanzarote is a disaster full of destruction, excess and contamination filling macrohotel pools with fresh water etc, and nobody grows nothing there and less cares for the environment
    lanzarote is an aberration of exploitation and spoiled people where few grow some grapes to sell wine for premium alcoholics
    and thats dew agriculture using volcanic ash as thermal storage for condensation