Water Harvester: An Invitation to Abundance

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  • čas přidán 24. 07. 2022
  • #Tucson resident @Brad Lancaster believes that cities around the world can live off #rainwater. This is the story of how he transformed his neighborhood by experimenting with #waterharvesting, worked with the city to legalize those methods, and empowered others by proving that abundance rooted in sustainability is possible.
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Komentáře • 61

  • @monicacruz4407
    @monicacruz4407 Před rokem +8

    If every city had a few Brad Lancasters….good to see something being done at policy level in Tucson. Spain is desperately in need of rain harvesting, the multiple challenges of massive, extraction agriculture, mass tourism with lots of water used in swimming pools and thirsty lawns plus erosion and run off, it all adds up to further climate change. When a fire comes along it’s disastrous. Pockets of regenerative agriculture/permaculture/syntropic farming etc, but no will at government level. As Brad says, you have to be the change you want to see instead of complaining. Me saco el sombrero caballero 😎👏🌱🌱🌱

  • @carldupoldt9260
    @carldupoldt9260 Před 4 měsíci +1

    Excellent video

  • @charlesanderson32
    @charlesanderson32 Před rokem +7

    All States and Counties should implement these systems! ASAP

  • @SolidGoldShows
    @SolidGoldShows Před rokem +4

    Inspirational. Thank you Brad

  • @HarvestingRainwater
    @HarvestingRainwater Před rokem +16

    If you all would like to see more of my (Brad Lancaster) work, be sure to check out my website www.HarvestingRainwater.com (where I have many image galleries, videos, case studies, resources, and more), the new full-color editions of my books "Rainwater Harvesting for Drylands and Beyond" (available at deep discount direct from me at my website), and www.NeighborhoodForesters.org (where you'll get a lot of the info on our rain-irrigated neighborhood native food forestry work).

  • @gogreenlocally
    @gogreenlocally Před dnem

    This is excellent! Thanks for taking the time and resources to cover Brad's story and work, and do it so well. We absolutely need to learn from, be inspired by, and follow Brad's lead across the planet!

  • @tthappyrock368
    @tthappyrock368 Před rokem +6

    What a great way to show how small changes can make a big difference in our environment and in the efficient use of readily available resources!

  • @outingsforoldladieswhoaren7664

    A great man of our time.

  • @CristalPNL
    @CristalPNL Před měsícem

    ❤ from 🇧🇷 it’s so good to see that people around the world 🗺️ are doing something to help heal the planet 🌍

  • @Freshbreath100
    @Freshbreath100 Před rokem +6

    From the suburbs north of phoenix here. I bought brads book, have done a ton of research on the subject matter and watched almost all the videos ft him. I'm implementing a rainwater harvesting basin at my house with the help of roof runoff, panting a cottonwood, native wildflowers, etc etc its turning out really well.

  • @ruthgardner-loew8467
    @ruthgardner-loew8467 Před rokem +7

    This video is an incredible teaching tool. If seeing is believing, then everyone should be sharing and re-sharing this story as often as possible. I'm studying Permaculture Education with the goal of teaching people how to live more sustainable, fulfilled lives that are in harmony with the environment. Brad Lancaster's story demonstrates how and why this goal is attainable and why it's worth striving for.

  • @joshuaedwards6903
    @joshuaedwards6903 Před rokem +4

    What a fantastic film about inspiring ideas!

  • @teresaprice5070
    @teresaprice5070 Před rokem +6

    I am so blessed to have attended several of Brad's workshops, since I moved to Cochise County, Arizona, 20 years ago...I've long believed, as he does, that we can live quite abundantly without depleting--even reversing--the water table, and I routinely drive through Dunbar Spring Neighborhood, simply to be reminded of that vision and to be re-inspired in my efforts towards it. I'm unashamed to call him a hero!! 🥰🤗

  • @jameskniskern2261
    @jameskniskern2261 Před rokem +3

    I was stationed in Tucson from 1991 to 1994. I recognize the city in the flashback photos.
    It looks like a different place in those neighborhoods!

  • @VR-kp2rv
    @VR-kp2rv Před rokem +6

    This is fantastic! Seeing before and after photos is helpful. Genius. Really really amazing. I WISH these concepts were taught in school...instead of so much of the useless rubbish my children learn now. This is sustainable living! Living with intention. Unselfish life. What a BEAUTIFUL life!! And you are sharing it.....so others can experience a better life....simply beautiful!

  • @MichaelBrown-be7vn
    @MichaelBrown-be7vn Před 10 měsíci +2

    Brad, you are amazing! I have followed your work for years and have incorporated it into my landscape here in Ohio.... what I love is your disregard for idiotic reactionary mindsets....I have encountered that...in ways that cannot be expressed publicly.... inspirational.

  • @wildlifegardenssydney7492

    I have watched Brad Lancaster since the beginning. He is masterful. Such a great example. Such a great educator. Great practical examples for everyone to follow. Water = life!

  • @karenjarling7730
    @karenjarling7730 Před rokem +4

    Thank you for sharing more about Mr Zephania Phiri Maseko's own story along side your own. An elegant and valuable clip as always Brad. 🙏

  • @karlettachief3512
    @karlettachief3512 Před rokem +10

    Inspiring work Brad. I grew up with my family harvesting rain water and melting snow in and outside the house. It is wonderful that Tucson is open to changing their ordinances to include ways to harvest the rain.

  • @arialblack87
    @arialblack87 Před rokem +4

    I highly recommend the books! They are an easy read yet packed full with great information. Diagrams, drawings, full-colour pictures. I only wish there was a volume 3!

  • @greywateraction1346
    @greywateraction1346 Před rokem +6

    Very inspiring video! There is so much potential to have beautiful, beneficial landscapes sustained by rainwater. Thank you, Brad, for all your work sharing this knowledge.

  • @tonyswatermaker3158
    @tonyswatermaker3158 Před 10 měsíci +2

    Sharing your prooved knowledge is an unprecedented work for our generations to come. You remind me of John the Baptist; "A voice of one crying out in the wilderness". Hopefully people will start to listen. Keep up the good work. 👌👍👋👋

  • @simonemarques8014
    @simonemarques8014 Před rokem +4

    Everyone can do better. Thanks for inspiring us (all over the world).

  • @mightyprotong
    @mightyprotong Před rokem +5

    This is amazing, thank you.

  • @jamiesomma2566
    @jamiesomma2566 Před rokem +2

    Brad, was great to get to interview you in 2015 on Matt’s Permaculture Tonight podcast. Was sharing your book with new friends in Kenya suffering through drought. Perfect timing for the web conference as I was able to share this video right after they attended the ECHO Symposium in Arusha TZ last week. You and Zephaniah are still my heroes! Vaya con Dios, amigo!

  • @ModestMaker
    @ModestMaker Před rokem +3

    Thank you for helping us see through the fog- mission accomplished.

  • @melissacano5663
    @melissacano5663 Před rokem +3

    Love this! Love Tucson!

  • @ronniemcmaster8657
    @ronniemcmaster8657 Před rokem +3

    I live in Boise where we get maybe one inch of rain more than you and would love the chance to prove these techniques in landscaping. Sadly, we have developers from California who build on a model of waste, where the water goes down drainage ditches and everyone has their sprinklers running. They design in nice greenbelts for people to walk around their communities, but they're designed to require irrigation. That irrigation is usually happening during the prime time for walking, so people avoid it to not get sprayed. I would love to be the guy they hire to fix this. Thank you for your books and videos! They're priceless!

  • @1MonthNoRegrets
    @1MonthNoRegrets Před rokem +2

    epic film. Shows how EVERYONE can reverse drought and restore their local ecosystem by capturing water. There are no excuses for not capturing rainwater everywhere- in every city, on every street, farm, forest. This is how we create an oasis of life.

  • @vidamace6230
    @vidamace6230 Před rokem +4

    Every state in the country can do this, it’s called abundance of water. A gift we aren’t using

  • @matthewcain2880
    @matthewcain2880 Před rokem +2

    That Friday Folding bike is badass

  • @zanewalsh1812
    @zanewalsh1812 Před rokem +2

    Time well spent. Thanks Brad for being one of the pioneers in showing us about this important path forward
    🌎🌏🌍☮️

  • @negrotski
    @negrotski Před rokem +3

    Nice one thanks 🙏

  • @b_uppy
    @b_uppy Před rokem +7

    Was hoping for how Brad's rainwater harvesting helps farmers and ranchers on a larger scale. That's as much a part of the equation as urban rainwater harvesting.
    It's all important.
    Check out his current editions on Rainwater Harvesting in Drylands and Beyond.
    Was hoping to see a milk sheep.
    The Whoo Hoo! at the end.
    Brad Lancaster 1, Al Gore 0...

  • @atomicsmith
    @atomicsmith Před rokem +2

    Beautiful video.

  • @keeparizonawild156
    @keeparizonawild156 Před měsícem

    Brad is da man

  • @POVNatka
    @POVNatka Před 19 dny

    Brilliant

  • @mischevious
    @mischevious Před 8 měsíci +1

    “We have this.. temporary luxury of being able to purchase our way out of a dilemma for a little while longer.”
    Just wanted to repeat that in print, with emphasis on the last few words.

  • @kenhunt5153
    @kenhunt5153 Před rokem +3

    Now there is talk of sending Mississippi River water to the West.
    There is talk in the Utah Legislature of a pipeline from the Pacific Ocean to the Great Salt Lake to replenish the Lake.
    Yet, my State, Utah has the second highest water use per person the Country. We have the lowest water rates in the Country.
    Utah is the 2nd driest State in the Country.

  • @stevenmansfield5772
    @stevenmansfield5772 Před rokem +3

    They gotta make a statue of you in Arizona

    • @Pam501
      @Pam501 Před 3 měsíci

      with a self-cleaning fountain! ❤

  • @litafenton4795
    @litafenton4795 Před rokem +1

    That's awesome. I need help as d ideas to get my place where I want

  • @rezayaseri2790
    @rezayaseri2790 Před 22 dny

    💙💚💙💚💙💚

  • @atruefreethinker1944
    @atruefreethinker1944 Před 9 měsíci +1

    something that is not addressed is that ALL that greenery is a filtration system to convert CO2 into O2. which is something many forget that plants do that.

  • @darthchingaso3613
    @darthchingaso3613 Před rokem +2

    It’s interesting to see traditional practices of the region re-emerge decades after being deemed so primitive they needed to be forcefully ended and made to assimilate to the capitalist lifestyle…

  • @AnthonyMinhNguyen
    @AnthonyMinhNguyen Před rokem +2

    20:14 Is that Thomas Meixner? Wow

  • @litafenton4795
    @litafenton4795 Před rokem

    Lived in Tuscan as a child

  • @andresamplonius315
    @andresamplonius315 Před 5 měsíci

    Ever tried planting Vetiver grass? Maybe you would like it.

  • @mizjulio
    @mizjulio Před rokem +1

  • @IowaKeith
    @IowaKeith Před rokem +17

    If water harvesting techniques were enforced at a federal level our rivers and lakes would run clean, and we would bring back water to the west. If the west were to be revegetated, the weather patterns in the country would return to normal, the mountains would regain their snowcapped, and it would put a permanent end to climate change as other countries followed suit. The fact that the government doesn't enforce this tells you everything you need to know about governments worldwide.

    • @matthewcain2880
      @matthewcain2880 Před 7 měsíci +3

      Have you got involved with your local city council?

    • @user-mt6qh2rl5z
      @user-mt6qh2rl5z Před 2 měsíci

      No federal involvement. Keep the government out of our business. Out of our lives. A tax credit is far more beneficial for the Citizens and the Cities. Rain water is Life. And water after your initial investment is reclaimed by saving in Your Water Bill. If you are not Harvesting your water you are not saving money. And in a Shit Hits the Fan sarnario you have water when everyone else dies from lack of water. Be safe be vigilant in everything you do.advice from the Specialist List. Look for us coming soon

  • @user-mt6qh2rl5z
    @user-mt6qh2rl5z Před 2 měsíci +1

    If the City of Tucson would give the home owners that do water harvesting a tax credit by giving them tax credit towards Property Taxes. To pay back the home owners for the cost of water Harvesting. It would not cost the city any money up front but the water crisis this will keep Tucson from drying up. And losing population because people move because of lack of water this could be done all over the country. Providing the home owners provide proof of the installation of the Rain water Harvesting system . D I Y of installed by a handyman or contractor.

  • @leedza
    @leedza Před 4 měsíci +1

    Zephaniah's legacy has been taken the furthest by Brad. The likes of Zephaniah and Yacouba Sawagodo are the Bill Mollisons of Africa.

  • @glenminnick3724
    @glenminnick3724 Před rokem

    I lived in Arizona for many years, convince me !

    • @ModestMaker
      @ModestMaker Před rokem +4

      Take a walk through his neighborhood- convinced 👍

  • @nanjefrederickdimson4900
    @nanjefrederickdimson4900 Před 4 měsíci

    Name of the book 📚, please

    • @Tronamovie
      @Tronamovie Před 4 měsíci +1

      Rainwater Harvesting for Drylands and Beyond by Brad Lancaster

  • @chriscritchell5115
    @chriscritchell5115 Před rokem

    Too many adverts.