Rolf,
I agree; I was a hydrogeologist in southern Masaailand -now Kiteto District-
in the 70's, in Tanzania) and water from the long rains would take more than
a day to dry up. Alan must be referring to land that still has some
productivity left to it, not full-on hard pan scrub. This is way
Dick, good point.
Savory left out the details of how animals would be managed Rolf just added
question about seed stock in depleted land too..
Richard
On Mar 31, 2013, at 2:27 PM, Dick Gallien wrote:
Great Ted Stanley. Seems he attributed the dense herding that was essential to
manurize
a rather alternate approach to restoring damaged ecosystems - both of the
approaches are getting discussed in detail in my corner of the world
http://youtu.be/YBLZmwlPa8A
On Mon, Apr 1, 2013 at 4:19 PM, Richard Stanley rstan...@legacyfound.orgwrote:
Dick, good point.
Savory left out the
Virtual fencing. I downloaded a paper on it a few years ago from New
Mexico State University. Here is a recent interview on the subject:
http://v-e-n-u-e.com/Invisible-Fences-An-Interview-with-Dean-Anderson
___
Stoves mailing list
to Send a Message