#121

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  • čas přidán 8. 09. 2024

Komentáře • 907

  • @zodiacbrave13
    @zodiacbrave13 Před měsícem +288

    lol, "look there's an animal here", and then thrusts the camera directly into the water
    salamander was like "oh shit just hold still" o_o

  • @pereirarfc
    @pereirarfc Před měsícem +425

    Hi guys, that's what we call a "tanque" or "poça", usually there were 3 purposes for it:
    - washing the clothes
    - watering the plants
    - give water to the animals.
    The hole in the bottom usually was closed using dirt and grass or in some cases there was a large faucet which was called "passador".
    Usually this kind of structure was built against the wall were the "nascente" water spring is, only the back wall should have ground touching it.

    • @meredithwhidden8712
      @meredithwhidden8712 Před měsícem +6

      That's really interesting, I was going to suggest it was used for watering a garden

    • @karenwimberley5033
      @karenwimberley5033 Před měsícem +5

      Since it is fresh spring it would have been also used for human consumption.

    • @mariosergiogs
      @mariosergiogs Před měsícem +19

      @@meredithwhidden8712 thats exactly what it does. Once a day the "tanque" was opened in the bottom and the water would flow using gravity, through channels in the ground, irrigating wathever crop was on the field at the time (potato, wheat, rye, onions, etc..).. or at least, thats what I used to do with my grandfather in the North of Portugal when I was a kid.
      There are also "tanques" used for washing clothes, but in those you will see the stones to scub the clothes on.

    • @mariosergiogs
      @mariosergiogs Před měsícem +4

      I'm thinking that the pipe may have pulled water to a house or some animal pen 🤔
      Saudações Pereira

    • @DreaMeRHoLic
      @DreaMeRHoLic Před měsícem +6

      @@mariosergiogs true, but in the end it's just water storage that doesnt prevent the water from going into the ground, but you also have some controll over it and good access. The "lagoon" has the same function but for more water. It's not that much different from raised beds in south america (not the boxes that we build in the west now) or the way egypt usedcontrolled flooding of the channels. Humans regulate the waterflow since ancient times.... if you scale it up even more you would get a dam for a hydroponic powerplant, but to know the original name is cool.

  • @snorresrstrnen9391
    @snorresrstrnen9391 Před měsícem +187

    Project Kamp: Removing the new shoots by hand would be too labour intensive for us.
    Also Project Kamp *proceeds to do labour and resource intensive methods in order to rot the stumps*
    I mean by this point just get the goats already

    • @mikewood8680
      @mikewood8680 Před měsícem +22

      Haaaa haaa. Exactly. lol. Stumps rotting can take years! This one was painful to watch.

    • @maurice2572
      @maurice2572 Před měsícem +20

      @@mikewood8680 Only this one???? You didn't watch last week's video, did you?

    • @MeiSdeep
      @MeiSdeep Před měsícem +19

      @@maurice2572 at first and second season i was like "yeah they are smart if they do something like this", and now im watching it and im thinking "are they f**king stupid or something. Dont take me wrong i like what they do. But they do dangerous things without thinking about it.

    • @hurleyvonlost
      @hurleyvonlost Před měsícem

      @@MeiSdeep what is dangerous?

    • @DiGertsi
      @DiGertsi Před měsícem

      @@MeiSdeep absolutely agree. It starts to become some eco-warrior/protective project over some solid ways how to do things. Leaving trees in the firezones and stacking the cut down trees in big heaps in firezones.... I really am like: WTF, you don't understand the principle of a firezone? Leaving all that dried material is just plain dangerous. I thought they'd have realised by now you need big machines to maintain a land as big as they have, instead they start using methods you use in a small garden and do it in a very dangerous way. WHat happened to all the money they crowdfunded for the digger? Just buy a local digger and get ahead with things.... Like for example using super poor protective gear when using a chainsaw etc. It literally is waiting for the episode it goes wrong. So sad to see.

  • @ammelovmokum7346
    @ammelovmokum7346 Před měsícem +333

    Great going people, but please get a few pairs of sawpants and sturdy shoes(safetysneakers are available:-)). Chainsaws dont care and make horrible accidents, don't ask how i know

    • @TempleGuitars
      @TempleGuitars Před měsícem +57

      It amazes me how they have this amazing resource of knowledgeable viewers, and week after week they totally ignore them.

    • @PangTVP
      @PangTVP Před měsícem +28

      @@TempleGuitars I feel like either the owners are stingy with money and don't want to buy it. Or they pre-record all these videos so any chance or tip from the viewer won't show until a couple of months. Wich is a bad way to have engagement from your viewers.

    • @billgoldberg1377
      @billgoldberg1377 Před měsícem +28

      @@PangTVP It is exactly that, mostly pre-recorded for a couple of months. At least twice in this video they talk about fully draining the water basin when the summer comes, while posting in August. with most of Summer gone.

    • @juha-mattikoponen1625
      @juha-mattikoponen1625 Před měsícem +6

      I have been thinking this exact thing! My friend got a nasty gash on his leg from a kick back even when wearing sawpants and designated shoes. And my grandma would have lost her leg back in the day if not for the pants!

    • @svampus88
      @svampus88 Před měsícem +9

      Yes! Chainsaws are good tools but one small trip or snag with the blade and your are done. Always were chainsaw-pants, boots and helmet!

  • @TheAzbestec
    @TheAzbestec Před měsícem +83

    In Poland we use special mycelium which decomposes the trunk, we smear the trunk with mycelium and cover it with leaves. After 1-3 years the trunk miraculously disappears :)

  • @nonhodie2172
    @nonhodie2172 Před měsícem +224

    That ending on the basin is clearly something they used to wash their clothes back in the day.
    It's very common in Portugal to have those lines to make the whole washing clothes process easier on the hands and arms.

    • @dadoVRC
      @dadoVRC Před měsícem +2

      Same in Italy

    • @amm9387
      @amm9387 Před měsícem +3

      it totally is! I had one even bigger at my house in my hometown (that is very near from Project Kamp)

    • @snakey319
      @snakey319 Před měsícem +1

      they are usually not far from a main house too.

  • @donaldauguston9740
    @donaldauguston9740 Před měsícem +243

    I cannot imagine any of these methods to kill-off stumps are worth the time and effort. You have hundreds and hundreds of these stumps. Either nail in a copper nail (which will be VERY time consuming also), or grind them out. The grinding will destroy the stump and aerate the soil to allow you to plant immediately. I am not understanding why there are always large piles of wood debris after you cut-down mimosas. They should all be chipped and the chips spread on the soil. This will help the soil retain rain water and protect the area from burning down. Those piles are very dry and a great place for critters (including snakes) to make their home.

    • @bellezayverdad
      @bellezayverdad Před měsícem +76

      It may well be a sign of "eco-dogmatism". They have good intentions but when someone tries to follow an ideal to perfection, he ends up creating a tiny amount of good. In order not to harm what they see as nature, they go for methods so inefficient that it is impossible to apply them at any meaningful scale, which will be worse for the land in the long run. I hope they will eventually realise that.

    • @dreidu
      @dreidu Před měsícem +16

      They don't have a tool for grinding. They already explained that when they need it he neighbors comes and helps but I guess it's not so easy. Eventually they will buy one with the tractor. It was in the plans last year on the website. They needed 3k for it

    • @LegendLength
      @LegendLength Před měsícem +10

      It's good to experiment with cheap techniques because grinders are expensive.
      It's not hard to cut a few lines in a stump.

    • @Kyu_97
      @Kyu_97 Před měsícem +3

      ​@@bellezayverdad Your comment is so spot on, my thoughts exactly:/

    • @sadjaxx
      @sadjaxx Před měsícem +8

      They need a wood chipper or 2. Part of their "Tools for Clearing the Land" list.

  • @vaalrus
    @vaalrus Před měsícem +61

    Digging stumps can be very aggressive when you’ve cleared an area with saws… We’ve found the most effective way to clear trees, *especially* trees that spread via roots, such as poplars, is to push them over and pluck them with an excavator, where you can shake them and leave most of your soil behind and removed the whole root ball, then the excavator (if you have a thumb attachment) can stack the trees for later handling. True, the soil is somewhat torn up, but it seems to recover quite quickly when all the biomass is left behind, and it hasn’t been bull-dozed clear.
    This can be effective even with very large trees. We had to reclaim a farm yard + garden area that had been abandoned for 20 years, where the poplars had overgrown everything and even large spruce near the margins had reached the end of their lifespan. We cleared about 3 acres, with the excavator pushing/pulling the trees up, and a skid steer loader to remove the trees and stack them for later use as firewood. After the trees were removed, we took a small tractor with a landscape rake to remove a lot of the smaller branches that broke off, and smoothed out the soil. The next year native grasses had covered the whole area, and now most of it is pasture for horses and donkeys. No plowing or excessive digging. Later was was some seeding of forage crops for the horses.

  • @schmitty8225
    @schmitty8225 Před měsícem +308

    Should look in to getting a stump grinder. You can get a walk behind model for like $1800 USD new. They have ones that can connect to a excevator also.

    • @maurin1899
      @maurin1899 Před měsícem +50

      For the ammount of stumps its definitely worth it

    • @joopjosvanzuiderwijk5850
      @joopjosvanzuiderwijk5850 Před měsícem +27

      Indeed and the tested methods take waaaay to much time, maybe a good solution foe one tree stump but the time it will take to get all those stumps covered takes so long a new forrest has grown.

    • @mexdek2061
      @mexdek2061 Před měsícem +15

      based on their budget style a rootaxe or a splitting axe, would already be an inprovement on their current plans

    • @TheLokibringer
      @TheLokibringer Před měsícem +3

      ​@joopjosvanzuiderwijk5850 and as long as they're using the waste as mulch/compost, it's not even super damaging or wasteful.

    • @Kuno490
      @Kuno490 Před měsícem +16

      Or a digger....which you anyway want. This pice by pice with drilling holes and covering etc lead to nothing in this scale.

  • @jeffreysachs3423
    @jeffreysachs3423 Před měsícem +71

    Use an old garden hose to create a siphon to drain the water. Try it in the upper part behind the brick wall to dry out lower areas to reseal the basin. Add sealed water faucets to various heights to raise or lower the water level.

    • @standardnerd8691
      @standardnerd8691 Před měsícem +3

      I second the idea to use a siphon!

    • @user-ce4qp4dv6e
      @user-ce4qp4dv6e Před měsícem +4

      Yeah im not sure what happened with that. They basically personified Ned Flander's parents "We tried nothing and we're all out of ideas!"

    • @UKsystems
      @UKsystems Před 27 dny

      The issue is you have to control the flow rate so it sucks out the same amount, but it goes in otherwise it will get air in it and stop

  • @buzypk89
    @buzypk89 Před měsícem +52

    08:17 that metal thig it is called "sickle" meant for cutting grass or thin vegetation. Keep it up guys!

  • @thalesvondasos
    @thalesvondasos Před měsícem +47

    17:05 (kind of a continuation from last week) In principal it's a good idea to not wear shorts when working with the chainsaw, but a pair of pants like that will _not_ stop the chain. Like, at all. I would highly advise getting a pair of chainsaw pants or chaps!

    • @jamesbenton6532
      @jamesbenton6532 Před měsícem +5

      As someone that use to work in forestry, shorts with chaps was the go to for most of the guys on the saws, shorts allow for quick movement and chaps for protection. I am unsure if they know what chaps are in the sense of forestry. Chaps are more versatile then the pant option as they are adjustable which as a group with many people helping out seems like the better option. A good pair here in NZ goes for around $300 so would expect them to be able to find a set for around 150 euro, which for something that could easily save someone's life or limb, a pretty good investment.

    • @thalesvondasos
      @thalesvondasos Před měsícem

      @@jamesbenton6532 Where I'm from, the cheapest class 1 pants from the local hypermarket cost ~60€, while a pair of quality workwear ones is ~130€ (e.g. from Strauss). Stihl sells chaps on their website for 100€. Should definitely be in the budget.
      I wonder what the (legal) consequences of a serious accident at Project Kamp would be.

    • @UKsystems
      @UKsystems Před 27 dny +1

      It is mostly the case he has ordered some as quality ones can take a while to get

    • @perstaffanlundgren
      @perstaffanlundgren Před 20 dny +1

      What I understand real saw protection pants is to recommend for longer sessions with chainsaw. And of course saw protection shoes to that the shapps are for short temorary shain saw work. Yes I gets a little varm and moist but ,a saw cut in the leg with no protection tends to get a little "wet "also.

    • @jamesbenton6532
      @jamesbenton6532 Před 19 dny +1

      @@perstaffanlundgren Chaps cover 3/4th of the leg, yes a good set of boots is always recommended, but pant or chaps is more of a preference as if your putting the saw between your legs and then cutting your doing it wrong in the first place. Moist and sweaty one can deal with if you are doing it for a short time but as we worked 9 to 10 hours a day on the end off a saw, that can create real problems. The problem is to do with the restriction on the legs from pants when it coming to moving quickly it will slow you down more than the chaps. One has to remember that you have to manage the risk as it can not be eliminated when using saws.

  • @dillonhurley7759
    @dillonhurley7759 Před měsícem +74

    creating so much extra work with the stumps lol, just get a walk behind stump grinder, it will be worth it especially with how many mimosas are on the property...

    • @fjkelley4774
      @fjkelley4774 Před měsícem +11

      A stump grinder would be great, but often the land is on a slope and using one would be difficult, even dangerous. That said, the dangers of a kickback or saw chain breaking when used to cut the pattern in larger mimosas is huge. I know there is a lot of concern expressed in these comments about how they are using the saws and I agree. I would hate to see anything happen to them because of that. To make it worse, I really, really like everything else they are doing and always like to see it.

    • @user-fh9ul7bk4b
      @user-fh9ul7bk4b Před měsícem +1

      They need a muncher head for the digger they want to get. They could mulch that forest in no time

    • @Matzes
      @Matzes Před měsícem +9

      Wait but that's too "agressive" on the soil 😂😂 these people live in some kind of bubble. Soil recovers from fire, volcano eruption, hurricane, asteroid impact and anything else. But a small man made machine is too aggressive? Come on, get real

    • @fjkelley4774
      @fjkelley4774 Před měsícem +2

      @@Matzes My assumption would be that they are concerned about the rains in winter and erosion. Erosion, sometimes quite severe, caused by negligent agricultural practices does happen. Annoying as they are, retaining the root systems of the mimosas while other things develop is a more sustainable practice. Especially with all the wood chips they could be using.

    • @UKsystems
      @UKsystems Před 27 dny

      @@Matzes however the ecosystem has changed after these drastic events

  • @Cymindis
    @Cymindis Před měsícem +49

    yay! thanks for sharing. couple of ideas.. that you probably already know! wool makes EXCELLENT insulation for all your buildings. also the soil from cleaning out ponds like that would be fabulous to put around the base of all the native trees you are trying to encourage to grow.

    • @MarcoReekers01
      @MarcoReekers01 Před měsícem +2

      Except you'll have to treat the wool somehow. If not you'll be smelling a funky sheepsmell whenever you'll be inside that building.

    • @Feeoryne
      @Feeoryne Před měsícem

      @@MarcoReekers01 Treating the wool would defeat the whole purpose....

    • @MarcoReekers01
      @MarcoReekers01 Před měsícem

      @@Feeoryne Why? Is your wool sweater not warm?

    • @UKsystems
      @UKsystems Před 27 dny

      @@MarcoReekers01 it is possible to clean it thoroughly, but he is a bit labour-intensive once that’s done they shouldn’t be much of anything

  • @_TheDudeAbides_
    @_TheDudeAbides_ Před měsícem +43

    Protection against the 0 venomous water snakes of portugal but lacking PPE vs chainsaw :-D

    • @cosmostammer
      @cosmostammer Před 29 dny +1

      Newsflash snakes dont have to be "water" snakes to go in water

  • @thenotoriuosbg7372
    @thenotoriuosbg7372 Před měsícem +14

    You should collect the wool, wash it and use it as sustainable building insulation for your next builds. if you don't remove the oils its water resistant and also anti-bacterial. Also agree with the other comments, get a wood chipper and stum grinder. if you had to do the salt methods for all the trees you cut down surely the salt would wreck the soil.

  • @karenwimberley5033
    @karenwimberley5033 Před měsícem +8

    If you continue to use chain saws like they are hand saw, sawing back and forth you will continue to break them. The chain moves so you DO NOT have to saw back and forth. Also, sharpen the chains, and make sure to keep chain oil in chain oil revisor. If you don’t know what I talking about look up PROPER USE and CARE of chainsaw. Hope this helps.
    Also PILA or water revisor , water tank. To capture and contain clean spring water. To be used anyway you want to.

  • @danielafonso11
    @danielafonso11 Před měsícem +10

    as a brazilian it's always interesting to hear the conversations with the portuguese neighbours
    and it's always funny seing you guys mixing some spanish into it hahaha but you're doing good!

  • @meganelise277
    @meganelise277 Před měsícem +40

    It would be super cool to see some wool processing in camp! Cart it, spin it into yarn, and make clothing 😄

    • @deannarose2424
      @deannarose2424 Před měsícem +2

      and blankets and bags maybe too! filling for seat cushions, all sorts of things!

    • @ulyanadyudina6980
      @ulyanadyudina6980 Před měsícem +2

      felting is a fantastic art

    • @lelacchio
      @lelacchio Před měsícem

      Kids are not interested in methods that involve animal exploitation.

  • @darlingicarus
    @darlingicarus Před měsícem +13

    my favourite episodes are when you are uncovering something on the land. it's like an archaeological dig! I look forward to seeing what others secrets and treasures the land has in store for you.

  • @manieldueller1525
    @manieldueller1525 Před měsícem +11

    We proceed as follows with the mimosa:
    Where we want a road, we remove everything with the excavator.
    Where we want to establish a new native forest, we cut the thousands of finger-thick mimosa with the brush cutter (with the chopping blade, bring it up to full speed, release the gas and then chop off the trunk). We peel the larger trunks first and let them dry out (see here: 3 x w invasoras pt/pt/planta-invasora/acacia-dealbata). However, we also leave some standing and cut them off waist-high. They sprout again and provide protection for the newly emerging forest. We cut them back again and again and use them as mulch (preferably with a chopper, otherwise just cut them and put them on the ground, e.g. around the cork oaks). If we no longer need them as protection after 3-4 years, we also peel them before we cut them off completely. A good chopper would really be an important investment. The mimosa can also be seen as valuable biomass. They fix a lot of nitrogen in the soil. I wouldn't plant them here, but now that they're here I make the most of them. Cork oaks are best planted directly with the seeds. Cut a 5/4 inch irrigation pipe at an angle. You can use it to poke a hole in the ground and put cork oak seeds in during the rainy season.

    • @sandrinakeffufal6008
      @sandrinakeffufal6008 Před 24 dny

      I wonder if the mimosa will be fixing nitrogen in the soil if they don't have right bacteria for the symbiosis since they aren't in their native country?

  • @nielpatrickmascarinas8845
    @nielpatrickmascarinas8845 Před měsícem +15

    Can't help but notice how good the video editing was.

    • @ephemerics
      @ephemerics Před měsícem +2

      @@nielpatrickmascarinas8845 me too. It was really well done. Music worked like a charm too.

  • @Schnickelfritz
    @Schnickelfritz Před měsícem +12

    FWIW, I cleared a 5 acre, about 2hectares, of natural meadow that was overgrown with an invasive buckthorn. I simply laid my chainsaw flat on the ground, cutting the buckthorn as close to the ground as possible, leaving a stump about 2-3cm from the ground. This allows me to simply mow over the whole meadow now, thus cutting down any buckthorn shoots that pop up. Over the past 5 years the grass slowly takes over and the buckthorn dies off!

    • @FullSpeed_only
      @FullSpeed_only Před 16 dny

      Good Tip, but even in difficult Terrain it should be possible to use the Trimmer they’ve shown in Use around the Water Reservoir?
      How many Times can you go over the Area with a Trimmer to cut the Sprouts until it’s the same Effort as the other Methods?

    • @Schnickelfritz
      @Schnickelfritz Před 16 dny

      @@FullSpeed_only It seems that about 50% of the buckthorn doesn’t grow back after the initial cutting. Of the rest, some I do string trim because I can’t get to it with the mower and after a couple years it seems to die off. It also helps tremendously that I have a bunch of wild deer also eating fresh buckthorn shoots, so, I think the Kamp crew would do well to fence their lot in and let goats and/or sheep do what they do best and eat everything as soon as it grows. Just like my buckthorn eventually gives up and dies, I’ll bet their invasive mimosa will also eventually die.

  • @fredromanski5737
    @fredromanski5737 Před měsícem +55

    1. Stump grinder! You have to make the land safe and hospitable so that your experiment can continue.
    2. Build a brick wall to wall up your water source. Pump out and scrub the water tank lining it with mismatched odds and ends of ceramic tile. Build a screen over the top to keep leaves out of tank…tear down the brick wall after tiles installed. Trace other pipe which obviously was meant to handle overflow.

    • @RCake
      @RCake Před měsícem +4

      As a temporary barrier in a confined space with defined shape like the narrow part of the reservoir, you can cut a wooden board that nearly fits (by 0.5cm or so), and then put a bicycle tube around it and inflate, filling the gap and making it watertight. You need a support or two to keep the board from moving, otherwise it will "roll out" the tube.

    • @jeremybird5739
      @jeremybird5739 Před měsícem +1

      Instead of a pump try a syphon. You would only need a hose

    • @ElAdri1999
      @ElAdri1999 Před měsícem +1

      @@jeremybird5739 the issue with syphons is they dont usually auto start, so someone would have to go and re-start it every once in a while

    • @UKsystems
      @UKsystems Před 27 dny +1

      Buying expensive machinery requires the funds to be able to do so

  • @alfawavesgrowth
    @alfawavesgrowth Před měsícem +27

    That's a tank to wash clothes. The bit that fell when you touched is used to wash fabric, that why the texture in squares

  • @SchnoogansMcDuff
    @SchnoogansMcDuff Před měsícem +3

    Whenever I've removed stumps I just got a metal fire ring (normally a 55 gallon drum with the bottom cut off. Then I would just make a fire in the barrel on top of the stumps. Not sure if this is an option where ya'll are located. But it definitely works.

  • @TheBuffaloSamurai
    @TheBuffaloSamurai Před měsícem +23

    Methinks a siphon hose is much easier than using a bucket to bail water out the reservoir. Glad you found the out-pipe at some point though.

    • @novampires223
      @novampires223 Před měsícem +1

      Me thinks it would plug up quickly, ask me how I know😂

    • @UKsystems
      @UKsystems Před 27 dny

      It’s mucky water so it would not be the best

  • @brennanlangless8912
    @brennanlangless8912 Před měsícem +11

    If you’re still looking into getting a excavator for various projects around the kamp I recommend going with a good tractor that has a good connection joint in the back that would allow you guys to build out various types of equipment attachments as needed

  • @t0mt0mt0m
    @t0mt0mt0m Před měsícem +48

    Everytime I hear “spikey booshes” I smile a bit. 😂

    • @vijay20
      @vijay20 Před měsícem +3

      omg same!!! i don't know how they caught on to the meme??

    • @MemphisMG86
      @MemphisMG86 Před měsícem +2

      100%

    • @LiefTheDroid
      @LiefTheDroid Před měsícem +3

      @@vijay20 In one video they said that if a comment saying "we want spikey booshes merch" got more than a thousand likes, they would make some merch. The rest is history haha

  • @nekoDan
    @nekoDan Před měsícem +10

    Fun as always. You guys are very creative and adventurous. I really loved the quote from the sheep farmer “Without trying nothing can be done”. That really sounds like the motto of Project Kamp! 😀

  • @jeanhawken4482
    @jeanhawken4482 Před měsícem +7

    I hope you take out the last tree around the well. Without competition it will have a lovely time getting its roots into the well. The research is so good.

  • @peterkitts8815
    @peterkitts8815 Před měsícem +7

    Someone else is bound to have said this but if you run a pipe from the temporary dam to the drain hole at the other end and you can have the water bypass the main part of the tank

    • @apveening
      @apveening Před měsícem +2

      Excellent suggestion.

  • @rhovincent6855
    @rhovincent6855 Před měsícem +15

    I love the synchronisation of music while emptying thé basin... so cooool 😊

  • @LeVilainCam
    @LeVilainCam Před měsícem +15

    there is a technique for removing tree stumps consisting of making a tripod out of 3 steel mason props and using a chain hoist attached to the tree stump to slowing lift it out of the ground. It works very well and doesn't require much physical force. There are some youtube videos showing how it works ;)

  • @santomuro
    @santomuro Před měsícem +1

    If you've got natural mint there, the soil is probably very fertile! I'd love to see Project Kamp become a regenerative food forest. You can easily and cheaply make some seedballs filled with carefully selected seeds. Low groundcover, sprawling groundcover, flowers, herbs, tall grasses (corn), beans, climbing vines, fruit trees, and tall nut trees could all be scattered strategically to boost diversity and ecosystem health. Plus a lot of productive crops to forage for!

  • @suzetteperkins1089
    @suzetteperkins1089 Před měsícem +5

    Another good line for yr t-shirts,” Not sure I’m ready for another pipe saga”.

  • @Neicorr
    @Neicorr Před měsícem +2

    Wool is also excellent for insulation. It needs to be washed to remove the lanolin (body oils) and is fire resistant. I have used this in a shack that my family built to live in while building our main house. It works!

  • @revminTphresh
    @revminTphresh Před měsícem +27

    sheep's wool makes a great insulation material

    • @mej6519
      @mej6519 Před měsícem +1

      yep, its one of the best natural insulators.

    • @sometea4741
      @sometea4741 Před 26 dny +2

      I insulated my 188 Sq ft tiny house with sheep wool..rinsed it..stretched it dried it put it in the wall.
      It's like a cozy sweater for my house. Sound proofing too. Best thing I did for my house..it gets -20 where I am.

  • @miperso
    @miperso Před měsícem +3

    The metal thing found in the bassin is an old sickle! Those things can be found everywhere and some can be extremely old.

  • @wglee010
    @wglee010 Před měsícem +6

    25:19 Be careful when you are doing this part because if the chainsaw chain goes in the soil it will blunt it a lot and make it more prone to kickback. You should definitely have some protective gear, not just normal trousers, they will not help much. Spending a few hundred euros on protective gear is definitely a good investment as it could save you from serious injury, vision loss/damage (from things flying into eyes) or even death (from bleeding out from femoral artery (you could loose all your blood in a matter of minutes)).
    Also chainsaw chains should be sharpened and replaced routinely.

  • @Floranova13
    @Floranova13 Před měsícem +5

    I've heard of another technique to speed up the rotting process of stumps. It starts the same as the Epsom salt technique with drilling holes, but instead of salt you add "compost starter", which is a mix of saprophyte bacteria and fungi. A little compost from a compost heap that is heating up nicely would probably do the same.

  • @thespanishinquisition8628
    @thespanishinquisition8628 Před měsícem +10

    Please please please get some safety equipment for everyone using the chainsaws!

  • @c.thompson9771
    @c.thompson9771 Před 24 dny +1

    Had a roof.. a low roof. It kept most things out.. run cube wire around the sides from the low roof edge, to the top of concrete rim. Keeps errant critters from contaminating supply, and allows easy water checkups. Congratulations on such a monumentally important farm find!

  • @Niche.S
    @Niche.S Před měsícem +103

    "Watch this half hour video to see us fix a basin and remove roots"
    That was a half hour well spent

    • @klm20079
      @klm20079 Před měsícem +1

      its usefull info, if you cant replace the soil with new soil to minimize damaging the aoil by removing the stomps with machine. I will still remove them with machine and put alot of new compost soil on it

    • @lelacchio
      @lelacchio Před měsícem

      Technically, the basin is still broken, but oh well. The important thing is that Dave was there.

    • @Niche.S
      @Niche.S Před 24 dny

      ​@@klm20079They didn't do the two things they said they were going to do. Maybe you got something out of it but I sure didn't

  • @onearth...
    @onearth... Před měsícem +9

    fungi VS mimosa - i think the easiest way to remove the mimonsa (stumps) will be to spread a fungus. Fungal spores are introduced for breeding in the same way as the salt in your experiment. Maybe you can find fruiting bodies on your property that have already infested such stumps or dead wood. You can then usually propagate these on wood chips and then introduce the mycelium onto/into the stumps. The fungus Fusarium oxysporum, often referred to as Fusarium wilt, is particularly dangerous for mimosa trees as it clogs the water and sap-bearing tissue of the tree. It could be in your interest to establish this type of fungus. However, I would recommend researching this further.

    • @speckbretzelfan
      @speckbretzelfan Před měsícem +2

      Spread Fungi? Someone wants to turn The last of us into reality!

    • @UKsystems
      @UKsystems Před 27 dny +1

      That would work, but the roots would not be in the soil anymore

  • @framegrace1
    @framegrace1 Před měsícem +16

    Spikey Bushes may be a mess. But a trove of blackberrys in summer. Never saw you do anything with them. Blackberry jam is delicious.
    Also that triton in the water meants is potable an high quality.

    • @noracox6567
      @noracox6567 Před měsícem +2

      Gorse don't make blackberries. But yes, if there are berries they could be exploited.

    • @urbanurchin5930
      @urbanurchin5930 Před měsícem +3

      I have asked questions - in the past - about keeping bees for honey . Honey can be used to brew mead - blackberries add a nice berry note to
      many fermented beverages , including mead . I am a former brewer and beer historian . A small farmstead brewery has significant history by
      giving the farm workers a refreshing ( low alcohol ) refreshment during the hot work day .

  • @vimfuego9738
    @vimfuego9738 Před měsícem +17

    Hello, I enjoyed the timelapse of the stakes being driven into the ground, where the stakes appear to be moving without being struck by the hammer. +1 to the video editor(s)!

  • @jimfree0
    @jimfree0 Před měsícem +29

    I appreciate your efforts to exhaust every possible method of root/stump extraction without relying upon the only proven effective method (excavator). I'm totally the same kind of cat - handcuffing myself for inexplicable reasons.

    • @johannwolf1
      @johannwolf1 Před měsícem +3

      Lol... they are indeed so 'cautious' ... it's funny to anyone who owns jungle.

  • @michaellenihan4193
    @michaellenihan4193 Před měsícem +1

    If you want to drain the reservoir completely and keep it dry while you work on it, you can set up a siphon with a garden hose. One end in the pool you made with the little dam, and the other below the in a bucket below the big reservoir. make sure the top of the rim of the bucket is below the bottom of the big reservior, and all the water will flow through this bypass. I did this all the time to drain a hottub, and vacuum out the bottom

  • @onearth...
    @onearth... Před měsícem +10

    20:54 if you use fresh wood from mimosa to use as stakes, these can grow like cuttings for propagation

    • @apveening
      @apveening Před měsícem +4

      These looked pretty dry, but you are correct. There are two ways to prevent that though (besides using dried stakes) and that is peeling them and making sure the top end goes in the ground, best to combine all three.

    • @onearth...
      @onearth... Před měsícem +1

      @@apveening I agree - but here 26:02 they look fresh. furthermore, i recommend all the solutions you suggest.

  • @rafaelv9957
    @rafaelv9957 Před měsícem +14

    All that wool could be turned into great project kamp merch.
    Would give the local economy a boost
    Bring in 1-2 people on site to help make/spin wool OR could hire a local company to do it.

    • @helenvann3506
      @helenvann3506 Před měsícem +5

      Wool preparation is big undertaking, and not all wool is useable. It’s not like you can just pick up the fleece and start working on it. Also it takes quite a lot of specialised skills and equipment to make a usable item, and most people these days don’t know how of have the time of inclination, to look after woollen clothing and household items. Just from the look of the fleece on the ground it seems like a fairly short staple which is more difficult to work with even for experienced spinners. Speaking here from 40+ years of spinning experience

    • @rafaelv9957
      @rafaelv9957 Před měsícem +3

      @@helenvann3506 thanks for educating me, I didn’t know that.

    • @helenvann3506
      @helenvann3506 Před měsícem +2

      @@rafaelv9957 it’s an incredibly specialised craft and also unbelievably time consuming. I’m knitting myself a pullover from yarn I spun from pre-prepared wool and I probably would already have spent a week on it and still have a long way to go

    • @UKsystems
      @UKsystems Před 27 dny +1

      Actually, no there would not be enough orders to facilitate hiring people as there has to be a lot of work done and to have an affordable price whilst covering costs no one will buy it

  • @TwoBaze
    @TwoBaze Před měsícem +16

    the never ending pipes 😂

  • @dianeb5380
    @dianeb5380 Před měsícem +18

    Are there reasons that you aren't using goats to help clear the land? It seems like that method would be faster. Some species of pigs are good for clearing the overgrown timber areas as well. Also, pigs tend to urinate in the same spots over and over, generally at the base of a tree, which is known to kill the tree. I don't know but I would guess human urine would do the same thing. An endless resource , if it worked.
    Animals require fencing but there's really good solar powered electric fencing available. Contain the animals to small areas to clean up the overgrowth and rotate as needed.

    • @carddamom188
      @carddamom188 Před měsícem

      Aren't eletrical fences a fire hazard?

    • @UKsystems
      @UKsystems Před 27 dny

      @@carddamom188 no you can touch one. It will really hurt by safe and safe for fire, they could spell something I like, but it’s rare

  • @noahfrazier4813
    @noahfrazier4813 Před měsícem +4

    A potential sixth method: one or two layers of cardboard with a wheelbarrows worth of woodchips on top to weigh it down.
    This has worked very effectively to block out sun and trap moisture encouraging rot. Could use anything like plywood or metal sheet or even plastic tarp but cardboard is safest and readily available and usually free

  • @cherylstraub5970
    @cherylstraub5970 Před měsícem +3

    Something my father did to get rid of stumps was to run an electric fence around the lot he wanted to clear and using a piece of rebar he would bury acorns around and under the stumps he wanted gone. Then turned hogs loose in the lot. The pigs will root up the stumps to get to the acorns.

  • @jorgeadelprado
    @jorgeadelprado Před měsícem +4

    me watching you guys putting salt on the stomps thinking "Cartago delenda est!"

  • @charliespeegleokliving8595
    @charliespeegleokliving8595 Před měsícem +3

    Love watching the progress. When using the chainsaw place the bulk of the chainsaw against the surface to be cut. You'll notice some large teeth(probably 3 or 4), those are to hold the chainsaw securely against the tree. The chainsaw will cut better and last longer if it isn't bucking(jumping around) while cutting. You will also last longer, do more work and not get as tired when you aren't wrestling with it.

  • @stantheman5163
    @stantheman5163 Před měsícem +3

    The salt method without cover worked to kill our honey locust trees. At first they survived and started sprouting again, but a second dose did the job. The stumps have been dormant now for over 5 years. It also worked on apple, cherry and cottonwood tree stumps. We live next to a natural forest and trees from the forest come up all over our yard. We are into propagating only native plants and trees so we try to get rid of the invasive species.

  • @sciglassblower
    @sciglassblower Před měsícem +2

    First I want tp help you. Never allow the chainsaw chain to touch dirt or even very small rocks. When sawing into stumps be careful to not break out of the stump to the dirt. it dulls the chain and destroys the bar etc. Try Drilling fairly large holes. Then pour Epsom Salt into the stump. If you have a lot of smaller stumps you can just use a Pick Axe like I do at 67yrs old, great exercise.

  • @SuperSrjones
    @SuperSrjones Před měsícem +3

    For killing off tree stumps i put a steel can over the stump to block the light. The tree stump wastes its latent energy trying to push up shoots which without light do not replace the lost energy coming out of the roots. Use soft drink or food cans, 1 or 2 litre coffee cans, 20 litre metal Paint drums and 200 litre metal fuel drums

    • @ephemerics
      @ephemerics Před měsícem +1

      @@SuperSrjones good idea!

  • @zimrasawyer1881
    @zimrasawyer1881 Před měsícem +8

    You could use the wool for insulation during the winter, in some of the buildings, if they're not going to use it and just throw it away...

  • @dl2688
    @dl2688 Před měsícem +4

    I love the way you guys think / act, but please, get a stump grinder. The trees are growing faster then you guys clean up stumps this way 🙂

  • @JohnnyRempit
    @JohnnyRempit Před měsícem +6

    With a large pool of diverse talented young people that you have, I think it is such a waste to have them do a lot of manual labour. I understand that using modern machinery may not be to your liking but time is also a resource that is valuable.
    With a good plan, a 2-3 week back breaking job by a small team can be done in 2-3 days by a hired pro with machinery. It would cost money, yes. But with the time saved, you can channel all those talented young people to do more productive things that would really challenge them instead.
    Don't get me wrong. A few days working outdoors, using your hands, under the sun is good for the soul. But doing only that, when a good time and labour saving alternative exist just doesn't make sense. And I sense that it is frustrating for some of your team too.
    Just a thought.

  • @richardwalton5369
    @richardwalton5369 Před měsícem +60

    A copper nail in each stump will kill the stumps and stop re-growth, once dead you can get the nails back.

    • @toddberkely6791
      @toddberkely6791 Před měsícem +4

      how large do the nails have to be

    • @datagrl
      @datagrl Před měsícem +3

      Great idea. Google says you use nails that are 3” long and 1/8” in diameter. The copper robs the tree of nutrients and water, killing the stump over time.

    • @toddberkely6791
      @toddberkely6791 Před měsícem +4

      @@datagrl so 3" is enough.

    • @onearth...
      @onearth... Před měsícem +1

      I have to be honest and say that I'm afraid the mimosa will grow far too quickly for this method

  • @Morndenkainen
    @Morndenkainen Před měsícem +2

    If you had a small tractor you could get and auger attachment and completely drill out and mulch those stumps in seconds. Much safer, faster, and easier than using a stump grinder and you won't end up flinging stuff everywhere.
    Alternatively, you could get a steel barrel, cut off the top/bottom, put it around the stump, and burn it out. Just not in the dry season...

  • @maxejnar9934
    @maxejnar9934 Před měsícem +4

    also you could just cut it close to the ground and then give it a few deep cuts down into the stump so that the cuts will hold water and make the stump rot.

    • @ephemerics
      @ephemerics Před měsícem +1

      @@maxejnar9934 i think mimosa will still sprout from that.

  • @blurfs3763
    @blurfs3763 Před měsícem

    In Texas, also called a "tank."
    Think about using the wool for textile production...carding, spinning, weaving. That is a great resource for PK.

  • @parkewellman8364
    @parkewellman8364 Před měsícem +2

    Yes stump grinder is the way to go. With the amount of stumps you have it would take years upon years to eradicate.

  • @maura423
    @maura423 Před měsícem +1

    I'm hoping for the wood chip method 🤞
    No sourcing epsom salt, wool, or twine, no messing with drilling or grinding, and on a large scale, no fussing with logs and stakes. Chip up the trees you just cut down (it looks like you're doing that anyway) and spread them thickly over the area. Makes a decent walking surface, protects the soil, fire-resistant once it is damp from rain/groundwater, breaks down into compost. Easy peasy!

  • @Wewilo
    @Wewilo Před měsícem +3

    I love to think one of the editors is just whistling that track and adding on in post hahaha
    Also for your little basin situation you build a slamm dam like already and put a waterpump down in there so push all the water somewhere else temporarily. alternatively, you build a little dam over a pipe and run the pupe outside the basin to move the water trough before its able to start building up :)
    Also you can get stump remover tools :D

  • @jean-marievennin8405
    @jean-marievennin8405 Před měsícem +1

    At T.C. : 12.40mnts, it seems that it is a SOURCE which justifies the reservoir and hoses and the animal. It is a great opportunity in a country where water is so rare. Great chance!!!!😀😀😀
    Mimosa roots : In some old episode you have cut the mimosa at around 1.5metre up on ground and you have remove all bark on each trunc.
    After few months what is going on on the squelette trunc with out bark????? Do the roots are alive??????
    Bon courage and stay safe.

  • @jeffreysachs3423
    @jeffreysachs3423 Před měsícem +2

    Use an old hose to siphon to clear the water from the basin. Try the siphon in the top spring area to keep bottom part dry so you can seal the basin and add faucets at different heights to drain water or direct the overflow.

  • @ixtmituulitilixam
    @ixtmituulitilixam Před měsícem +7

    Wow, what timing!, I just got home from my first day of school to see this came out fifteen seconds ago!

    • @ElenaNoiia
      @ElenaNoiia Před měsícem +1

      You start school the first week of August? Damn where do you live, that sounds like hell

    • @sytchnoth
      @sytchnoth Před měsícem +1

      ​@@ElenaNoiiaDepending on the situation, this may be the right decision. But otherwise it's cursed.

    • @onoca3861
      @onoca3861 Před měsícem +2

      @@ElenaNoiia They also start their summer break a month earlier than others, hence the "early" start

  • @poljenol6868
    @poljenol6868 Před měsícem +7

    Put a pump in front of the dam in your water reservoir. Lower level keeps pressure on the dam lower, so less leaking.
    A piece of that tarp could help make the dam quite waterproof.

  • @bodeshockley1786
    @bodeshockley1786 Před měsícem +1

    Salamander had perfect camouflage! Highlight of the video for sure

  • @xavery7842
    @xavery7842 Před měsícem +3

    It's enjoyable to see Dave getting dirty. I know everyone there is busy doing things there each and every day. You have a pretty good following, but, I believe you'd have more with two episodes per week. I know it may take from the goals on hand though. Otherwise, I wish I could be there to help you all with those projects.

    • @deusvult8808
      @deusvult8808 Před měsícem

      I think that other members of project wouldn't like that much. They like their privacy

    • @xavery7842
      @xavery7842 Před měsícem

      @@deusvult8808 It's not as if I'm talking about live webcams placed around the camp where people can watch 24 hours a day.

    • @deusvult8808
      @deusvult8808 Před měsícem

      @@xavery7842 Watch last q&a (last episode ending with 8) and someone asked same question. I am sorry I mixed things, because someone asked for 24/7 live camera, and I mixed their answer to it and their answer to more videos.

    • @lelacchio
      @lelacchio Před měsícem

      I can't remember the name of that tough-as-nails blonde from Project Kamp. She's awesome, just like Adrian and Dave

  • @alanpower2470
    @alanpower2470 Před měsícem +3

    Would you think of getting some goats to help with the overgrown brambles.....and pigs to dig and Root the tree roots.

  • @insAneTunA
    @insAneTunA Před měsícem +3

    For your basin you can use a product that is called liquid rubber for pond sealing, there are several brands. It is extremely strong, non toxic, and you can brush it on the inner walls and the cracks from the basin. They also sell reinforcement patches which you can apply at larger cracks. There are videos about liquid rubber. If stones are missing it is best practice to fill those large gaps first with some cement. And after that you can apply the liquid rubber, then apply a reinforcement patch, and then brush the patch again with the liquid rubber product. It can stretch about 200 times before it punctures. You can also repair the holes from the bulkhead fittings with the same product. Again, it is extremely strong and durable and UV resistant and non toxic, and it is made for this exact purpose. It will not leach toxic solvents. It will last forever, and it is very easy to apply.
    If you want to have a dry basin you can pump the water away in front of the small dam that you made. You can also use a pond vacuum cleaner. It can handle some level of mud. I recently bought one from Aquaforte. It is not too expensive and it works really well. You can also do dry vacuum cleaning, and indoor and outdoor wet vacuum cleaning with the same cleaner, so it is multi functional.

  • @dhavaldave17
    @dhavaldave17 Před měsícem +1

    in India still some community use sheep wool for warm clothes like winter jacket if they have plenty of them you can as insulation

  • @raymascetta
    @raymascetta Před měsícem +8

    Probably want to add some water to speed up the mulch breakdown/ helpful bacteria funghi growth. 💫 Would also love a deep dive on the spikey booshes: what species do you have to contend with?

  • @UC-MhWg4sxP4bGw8beCJFx8w
    @UC-MhWg4sxP4bGw8beCJFx8w Před měsícem +1

    You could try another method: (based on a random youtube video I saw in the past)
    1) build a campfire on top of a tree stump, with water nearby just in case
    2) light the campfire and use it to cook some food for your enjoyment
    3) when the campfire is done, store the ashes and use them for something else
    the tree stump should be dead

  • @Matzes
    @Matzes Před měsícem +4

    I dont understand why, after cutting the mimosa there is always a bunch of dead trees laying arouns. Thats a a fire hazard, wasnt that the whole purpose in the beginning?

  • @suzetteperkins1089
    @suzetteperkins1089 Před měsícem +1

    All that muck you dug out is such GOOD compost for your veggies and fruits trees

    • @takix2007
      @takix2007 Před měsícem

      They have no veggies...

  • @Palemagpie
    @Palemagpie Před měsícem +3

    Im surprised you guys never erected a water tower.
    An oil tank for home heating, run you maybe 450 euros. For a thousand litre container.
    Hoist it up on a scaffold.
    1000 litres isnt as much as people might think but between that and your well, could help during the drier seasons.
    Even just putting the tank on a particularly high bit of ground near your water source would be sufficient.
    Plus even if you don't want to use it for cooking or cleaning.
    Really wouldnt be difficult to rig up a small hydro-electric system. Use the tank as a gravity battery for clean environmentally friendly power storage.

  • @samael335
    @samael335 Před 23 dny

    Haha the sound the camera made (7:05) was the most clear and vivid description of that muck.

  • @mrmattbassett
    @mrmattbassett Před měsícem +6

    Please update your safety gear with the chainsaw. I would hate to see a horrible accident.

  • @user-rf6ec6hx3f
    @user-rf6ec6hx3f Před měsícem +1

    Felting wool is a fairly simple process, certainly easier than carding, spinning & weaving. Maybe useful for rugs or insulation

  • @lilfaded247
    @lilfaded247 Před měsícem +4

    Put one copper nail in a mimosa

    • @ephemerics
      @ephemerics Před měsícem +1

      @@lilfaded247 i’ve never heard of this! That would be a great experiment for hem to try

    • @lilfaded247
      @lilfaded247 Před měsícem +1

      @@ephemerics alters the trees ph balance and will kill the tree

  • @SixPackDan
    @SixPackDan Před měsícem +1

    With the amount of mimosa trees you have and the amazing amount of chips you can make. Have you considered running a boiler? hot water, small steam turbine for power. Heat with radiators? many many possibilities.

  • @peterkilvert2712
    @peterkilvert2712 Před měsícem +3

    Hello Dave, regarding the water cistern. If you need to know what's it all about ask someone who knows, maybe one of your lovely neighbours. Regarding the tree stumps, just wait until you get a digger and up-root them. Best Wishes Pete

  • @Irilia_neko
    @Irilia_neko Před měsícem +20

    The digger doesn't have a bad effect in the long term, if the dirt is not compressed, you also have to nourish the dirt with compost and mulch after, but. Otherwise the nature is really resilient 😉

  • @tutekohe1361
    @tutekohe1361 Před měsícem +1

    That curved metal thing you found in the water is a Sickle, a hand tool for cutting grass and small plants.

  • @brokenmeats5928
    @brokenmeats5928 Před měsícem +7

    I love ALL Project Kamp videos!

  • @ChumBasket
    @ChumBasket Před měsícem +1

    alot of those spiky bushes were wild roses by the way. might be a native. could take a small clump for the garden yall have. having a full understory and mid-story of native diverse plants and ground covers would help suppress the invasives and in time assist you guys in keeping the land clear and help keep land moist and recharge the aquifer.
    also on my land, when i gotta deal with stump clusters i use large branches or logs around in an alternating pattern , no need to steak or support the walls , the soil and plants will do that. and then fill with dirt, top off with mulch and you have a new raised bed garden . havent had any come up, but my log retaining walls sometimes do, so maybe dont use fresh logs for the walls
    roots from plants, worms, soil and water will break that stump apart and you can plant and protect a native plant in its own garden bed.

  • @javiermolinos-mw3vl
    @javiermolinos-mw3vl Před měsícem +3

    You need animals.... permaculture....
    Every element needs to 2 or 3 uses atleast....
    The edges are the richest part of the systemss...
    Diseño para ver las conexiones en conjunto.
    Great great Work always un gustazo ver los avances.
    Abrazos

  • @meredithwhidden8712
    @meredithwhidden8712 Před měsícem +2

    You could plant your garden downhill from the tank, and run a few pipes from the tank to the garden

  • @KeithRowell
    @KeithRowell Před měsícem +4

    If you leave the trees to shade the water, it will prevent algae.

  • @matteodelorenzi4282
    @matteodelorenzi4282 Před 25 dny

    If you can access into the water source, you should drain it as much as you can as it will most likely fill up in the next day or two. Dry out and clean the water storage completely, then pour concrete to water a water tight seal. The pipe inside that stands up is an overflow pipe it can be proped up to any certain level that you want the water at. During summer, when the water table drops, it would be ideally when you should do the repairs. As you have said, it would be dry and allow you to work without worrying about water flow affecting the drying concrete. With the holes, I would suggest making a wooden plug to gently hammer into the pipe to seal it.

  • @MoutinhoNuno
    @MoutinhoNuno Před měsícem +18

    That ledge inside the tank was used for washing clothes. Hope that helps.

  • @adb7834
    @adb7834 Před měsícem

    Alana is great! I'm enjoying the amateur scientific experimentation and her clear explanations!
    Also love seeing another salamander! Please ensure there is still plentiful habitat for them, if not more, with all the work you're doing!