This is the second workshop I've listened through of his. I'm truly enjoying the marriage of science, nature, and the unknown. I just can't seem to get enough. Bravo!
Thank you Dan!! I also watched the whole series, (just finished) and Such a wealth of information with great insights, tips, and interesting conversations and questions discussed. Thanks for your passion and knowledge and resources of books and names which you site.
On the bit at 1:19:00-1:22:00, there was some research about trees have evolved an incredible method to create exponents of gravity to push water all the way up to the top leaves. If I remember correctly it was in the 1000s of PSI.
And for 1:23:00, Allan Yoeman Keyline... Check out what they were doing in the middle east for 1000s of years, particularly in Oman where the current culture is much more in touch with the old world and eager to talk to people about what they're finding out about their forefathers.
BionutrientFoodAssoc BionutrientFoodAssoc I should do that. Out of curiosity do you guys have an Atlanta chapter yet? Really impressed watching these videos hearing references to Gerald Pollack's work, The Heart is Not a Pump, Zach Bush's work (that guy is brilliant!), there were some other things you were hinting at that suggested you might have been referencing some other work that's a bit more fringe but accurate and potent none the less. I wasn't really expecting to find an approach that factored in knowledge from so many (seemingly) unrelated research topics. Oh, I've been trying to find any references to that woman (I think you said her name was Maria Thune) who planned radish seeds every 15. I'm trying to find some detailed info on what she discovered in case I can apply any of it. I've turned up nothing on Google, sadly. Do I have her name right?
No Atlanta chapter yet--haven't done a Biological Systems course there yet. Also looking for the radish seed planting details for you. So glad you found our channel!
I believe Allan Yeoman`s books are available from the free library at soilandhealth.org and it works by slowing down the mad rush of water and moving it horizontally, not so much moving it uphill I don`t think.
Project Malus - THANK YOU, for mentioning this site! (I rarely use all caps, but it in this case I feel it is appropriate) What a resource that website appears to be!
Dan's comments about Native Americans are a little off. True, they harvested only what they needed to thrive and never thought about harvesting billions of bushels etc to ship out to the rest of the world. But, they were prodigious users of fire to redisturb the soil and recyle the minerals, especially in the Midwest.