This is an excellent demonstration of the benefits. Regarding the number of views, I'm gonna find environment videos with high views and comment about this video with the link. I want millions to see these videos.
This is an amazing video showing the speed end effect of recovery - sad that it has so few views. This actually more convincing than most. What a great potential!
It is so very exciting to see the results of this traditional symbiotic relationship between animals and plants rether than just trying to STOP carbon production, which is just not going to work. THIS SYSTEM OF MANAGEMENT WORKS.
At Sonneleiten farm at 7:14, I am curious how they did it. There was nothing to eat, so did they give the cattle brought-in feed in a certain fenced-in area, let them dung and urinate, then move them on to a new patch and letting nature take its course.Or would they just rest it for a while in the hope some vegetation would return and then move animals over it for a short period of time. This would be interesting to know for our regenerative projects in South Africa. We have quite a bit of bare ground as well.
This is an excellent demonstration of the benefits. Regarding the number of views, I'm gonna find environment videos with high views and comment about this video with the link. I want millions to see these videos.
This is an amazing video showing the speed end effect of recovery - sad that it has so few
views. This actually more convincing than most. What a great potential!
Can't get enough of these beautiful fenceline photos
It is so very exciting to see the results of this traditional symbiotic relationship between animals and plants rether than just trying to STOP carbon production, which is just not going to work. THIS SYSTEM OF MANAGEMENT WORKS.
Agree
Good Day!!Thank you for sharing this with us..
Lots of great information.
At Sonneleiten farm at 7:14, I am curious how they did it. There was nothing to eat, so did they give the cattle brought-in feed in a certain fenced-in area, let them dung and urinate, then move them on to a new patch and letting nature take its course.Or would they just rest it for a while in the hope some vegetation would return and then move animals over it for a short period of time. This would be interesting to know for our regenerative projects in South Africa. We have quite a bit of bare ground as well.
beautiful
Is that a waterfall in the background?
Is the speaker in this video Char O'Brien?