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Dropping the Fences (episode 6) - DESPAIR & PRAYER 

Savory Institute
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** Visit the Savory Institute's website to learn more about how we're regenerating grasslands around the world: savory.global **
El Nino brings some farmers in South Africa's northern Cape to despair and prayers but Veronica and her team press on with the grazing plan and, after some late and limited rain, the veld bounces back beyond their wildest dreams.
ABOUT THE SERIES:
In this six-part documentary series, Emmy-nominated and Television Academy Award winning filmmaker, Clifford Bestall follows the story of the two families as they face an uncertain future after seven years of drought and how they chart a new course with Holistic Management and herding, against many odds.
ABOUT THE FILMMAKERS:
Clifford Bestall is a South African documentary filmmaker who, over the past 40 years, has made award-winning, exposé, historical, and investigative films. Among them: Killers Don't Cry (2001), the first film to win two Grierson Awards (British Guild of Producers); Apartheid's People (co-director), that won a Peabody Award; and The Long Walk of Nelson Rolihlahla Mandela, a documentary series that was nominated for an Emmy. He later collaborated with Oscar winner Morgan Freeman on the acclaimed The 16th Man (2010), his fifth documentary on Nelson Mandela, that received an Academy Award. In 1985 he was named Television Cameraman of the Year by the Royal Photographic Society. Over the course of his career he has directed films for the BBC, PBS, ESPN and Al Jazeera English. His wife Michele, a medical doctor, worked with him as the scientific director on Lifelines, an eight part series for Aljazeera on the Quest for Global Health.
ABOUT THE FARM:
N’Rougas Farm is a 8,800-hectare sheep farm in the heart of South Africa’s arid Bushmanland region south of the Orange River. Once a diverse savanna, supporting great migrations of springbok and abundant wildlife, the land became degraded and desertified with the onset of sheep farming. On this farm, a profound change is now underway, with a project of renewal and hope to rejuvenate the veld and restore bio-diversity. But, being pioneers in the region, things sometimes go wrong and Veronica and her team don't always have the answers. There are false starts and missteps as the team sets out with one thing in mind, having to adjust when it becomes another. The inevitable and rich process of learning.
Visit the farm’s website: www.nrougas.co...

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30 сен 2024

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Комментарии : 17   
@petereldracher5660
@petereldracher5660 3 месяца назад
How do we make this go viral. People need to start thinking in this way, farming for good food and a future, not just for money
@annieconway8998
@annieconway8998 3 месяца назад
Well done for starting and persevering during such a difficult period.
@peterclark6290
@peterclark6290 3 месяца назад
Are they attempting any air harvesting (condensing humidity with fine mesh)? Combining it with the kraals (as a base to hold them perpendicular to the ground). These move around the farm which might accelerate their progress. One chess square at a time.
@johnp9975
@johnp9975 3 месяца назад
Inspirational!
@TrinityMentality
@TrinityMentality 3 месяца назад
May I suggest chickens on the kraal sites. Just to help work dung into the ground
@williamturner3082
@williamturner3082 3 месяца назад
I’m on your side it’s the only way to go
@oceanwonders
@oceanwonders 3 месяца назад
That was overall pretty good.
@tommybreen9677
@tommybreen9677 3 месяца назад
Wonder why the krall sites never greened, could be sheep don’t have the weight required to break up the hard capped soil?
@peterclark6290
@peterclark6290 3 месяца назад
Rodger Savory says even heavy cows only impact compaction layers when they are agitated (herd effect) and not very deeply. That thick cap needs (a) a Yeoman's plough and (b) an understanding of Keyline when planning amendments.
@tommybreen9677
@tommybreen9677 3 месяца назад
@@peterclark6290 it seemed to impact the rest of the veldt in a good way though. Or was those site’s picked because the ground was so hard i wonder
@peterclark6290
@peterclark6290 3 месяца назад
@@tommybreen9677 Can't tell but as the farm has a known history it is most likely typical. The land can't support cattle yet so I would recommend a plough set shallow (5 inches max) would do the job.
@tommybreen9677
@tommybreen9677 3 месяца назад
@@peterclark6290 you probably right, hopefully we get another episode soon to see what’s happened. Brilliant series
@SavoryInstitute
@SavoryInstitute 3 месяца назад
Here's the message Allan sent to them after watching the film: "Be patient with the kraal site that did not respond as expected. Every site here reacts differently depending on timing of rain and god knows what, but particularly actual rain timing. Most sites used late growing season (ours here being unreliable but probably more so than Veronica's) do not respond at all till the next season. Or if there is a response we see it in flushing of woody coppus growth on the kraal site while all else seems dead and starts oxidizing."
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