Comments to Mark Hodges "Raining Forests"

I am writing to you because our NGO has also been working for the last
ten years in the same general idea I watched yesterday in the ‘Raining
Forests’ program at the Discovery Channel. First of all I want to
congratulate you and all of the people involved with the show for a
wonderfully entertaining and illustrative production. I am really
sorry you did not get the results you were expecting but I am certain
you are on the right track.

Commenting your experiment outcome (and probably you already have
arrived at the same conclusion), l think you should revise the drop
altitude and type of container that were selected. At first look, it
seems that the chosen combination was fatal because of the resulting
mass, terminal velocity and consequent violent deceleration might have
crushed and destroyed the seeds cellular cytoskeleton, effectively
‘killing’ them.

We think a seeded hydro-mulch mix approach from a much lower altitude
could better replicate the natural aerial reforestation process that
has been successfully going-on since the beginning of time, yielding a
superior result. A bottleneck in this alternative would be getting a
large enough native seed stock to do the job with hydro-mulch on a
sufficient grand scale (only in Mexico, we are talking of more than
one hundred million acres). But we think it is not that difficult to
build the necessary scheme and infrastructure to solve that particular
problem in the same manner you propose, that is, by getting indigenous
communities to participate and benefit.

Going straight to the point, I want to ask you if you could get in
touch with the Discovery Channel people and get them to change some of
the “Critics Voice’s” assertions 'they' make on the corresponding Web
page for the ‘Raining Forests’ program, which are quite wrong and
could by-chance hamper arduous and longstanding lobbying efforts.

In order of appearance, it is stated there that the necessary flights
carbon-footprint would be too large and, for that reason, subject to
condemnation. Well, that could probably be true if helicopters were
the chosen aircraft for the job but it’s not the case for large Single-
Engine Air Tankers that can fly slow and low enough for an accurate
drop with very big loads. For instance a Bell 212 helicopter like the
ones I think are used on your experiment consume 115 GPH while a large
SEAT does 70 GPH. But that is not all; a SEAT can load almost 9000
pounds of seeds while the Bell 212 could do only half that load
safely. So for that matter, a SEAT would “yield” 130 pounds of seed
per gallon of burned fuel, while the helicopter would only yield 40
pounds of seeds per gallon. That is a 3.25 to 1 productivity ratio;
or, in this case, 70% less carbon-footprint per pound of seeds.
Furthermore, the same SEAT “fleet” might be utilized in a better
wildfire firefighting strategy during the fire season, effectively
offsetting any aerial reforestation carbon-footprint and much more.

I think is futile to fight the senseless SOP argument and, most of
all, the people who defend it; so let that be. But what we cannot in
any way let pass is the bold, inaccurate and careless final statement
that “Aerial reforestation would, of course, be hugely expensive.” If
anything, Ag-aviation has been demonstrating for the past 70 years to
the world and without contest that there is no cheaper way of sowing
seeds. The direct operation costs of aerial seeding, is in the cents
per acre figure. And there is no way that manual reforestation can
beat that. Seeds for aerial reforestation also are infinitely less
expensive to produce than the seedlings needed for manual
reforestation.

Please help us by making sure that the Discovery Channel fixes those
substantial mistakes. We are not against debate nor do we run away
from a good honest polemic but in that tenure, if Discovery Channel is
going to publish those “Critic’s Voice’s”, the least they could do is
give an equal opportunity for refutations.

Fundación Vuelo Verde, A.C.


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