Mossy Earth

Mossy Earth

🌲 Our team at Mossy Earth shares a passion for the outdoors and the preservation of our natural world. As such, we work with one mission in mind, to restore wild ecosystems, support wildlife and biodiversity and help fight climate change.

On this channel you will find the stories behind our efforts to protect and restore wild areas. Our work covers a wide range of ecosystems from the mountain tops to the bottom of the ocean, every ecosystem and species is worth fighting for.

You can become a member and start restoring nature with us here: mossy.earth/

Пікірлер

  • @420Khatz
    @420KhatzСағат бұрын

    I would love to see a collab between Mossy Earth and Rare Earth.

  • @420Khatz
    @420KhatzСағат бұрын

    The fact that this massive stretch of endangered rainforest was only $185k makes me wonder why people with the means don't snatch rainforest up as protected "property".

  • @420Khatz
    @420Khatz2 сағат бұрын

    omg girl use mosquito repellent before you get West Nile lmao there's literally no reason to go out there unprotected with bug repellent, even safe organic bug repellant, exists and is very cheap.

  • @MdYousuf-xt3hm
    @MdYousuf-xt3hm3 сағат бұрын

    Great work friends

  • @stevenlevasee6742
    @stevenlevasee67424 сағат бұрын

    120 cm is about 3 feet

  • @williamwallin-noyes4380
    @williamwallin-noyes43804 сағат бұрын

    Add beavers you won’t regret it

  • @pisstinpete4700
    @pisstinpete47006 сағат бұрын

    Better than scotch thistle

  • @cobyhoyle1086
    @cobyhoyle10867 сағат бұрын

    We need to abandon youtube for dailymotion. the ads are getting out of fucking control

  • @lillyrose1414
    @lillyrose14147 сағат бұрын

    I absoulutely adore the work your team does. I am too poor to help out financially, but is there any way i could every get out on the ground to help with any hands-on work?

  • @Orang315
    @Orang3157 сағат бұрын

    They could be what the Arctic could use to save the ice and do the woolly mammoths job if they knock down trees

  • @Orang315
    @Orang3157 сағат бұрын

    They look like the prehistoric bison found in ice

  • @tomsin1417
    @tomsin14178 сағат бұрын

    the best is let it grow in place that is deserts but keep it away from native plants simple.

  • @TheBrightestBeacon
    @TheBrightestBeacon8 сағат бұрын

    From the bottom of my heart, thank you 🙏 💚

  • @yabaniyasam4280
    @yabaniyasam42809 сағат бұрын

    İnşallah türkiyede de yabanilestirme çalışmaları olur.

  • @DrHuxley-
    @DrHuxley-10 сағат бұрын

    Oh no, more plants

  • @Lawrenze
    @Lawrenze10 сағат бұрын

    this land will be well protected if you people get out of there 😂

  • @marketteers
    @marketteers10 сағат бұрын

    Ground water?

  • @jjwwqq
    @jjwwqq11 сағат бұрын

    A veritable fools errand.

  • @admdubya2107
    @admdubya210711 сағат бұрын

    RE Datura…you don’t have to eat a large amount of it that’s part of the problem…there isn’t really a lower lethal dose. It’s all over the place and just super dangerous. Even if it doesn’t poison you which it probably will… the hallucinogenic effects are powerful enough that you’ll likely do some *serious* self harm. There are no good datura stories. Do not eat Datura.

  • @raymondthompson8729
    @raymondthompson872911 сағат бұрын

    In 2001, the Kent Wildlife Trust with the Wildwood Trust and Natural England imported two families of Eurasian beavers from Norway to manage a wetland nature reserve. This project pioneered the use of beavers as a wildlife conservation tool in the UK. You should see if you could get some for this project. Also in July 2022 saw the good news that beavers in England will be given legal protection!

  • @ahsenserhat9270
    @ahsenserhat927011 сағат бұрын

    15:33 Amazing shot, like in a movie. Immediately hit me. Maybe the composition got me...

  • @raymondthompson8729
    @raymondthompson872911 сағат бұрын

    One word. beavers! They do this for FREE.

  • @fernandobraz966
    @fernandobraz96614 сағат бұрын

    Eu amo tremoços, muito obrigado por me ensinar algo sobre =)

  • @tosche774
    @tosche77414 сағат бұрын

    Not sure about this. Either the plants are native or they are not. If they are not native don't plant them. The goal is to restore the habitat. Not too enhance it over what it originally was. Its like going to the desert and trying to convert it to a rainforest. That's not the goal. A desert also has its own intrinsic value. And if the work is done in Iceland there are penty of other sitea that need restoration. So no need to overrestore one site for too long with unnessecary species.

  • @harrypeterson9287
    @harrypeterson928714 сағат бұрын

    How do you "rewild" a naturally existing biome?!? What's next, digging holes and damming rivers to "save the wetlands"? 😂

  • @that1dude__
    @that1dude__15 сағат бұрын

    Icelanders got into hardmode

  • @cresentiae
    @cresentiae18 сағат бұрын

    Thank you #SaveSoil #Consciousplanet

  • @ashtonwyss9757
    @ashtonwyss975720 сағат бұрын

    this is so exciting!!

  • @LisaOuwersloot
    @LisaOuwersloot20 сағат бұрын

    In the Netherlands we now have four herds, and they are all thriving. Some can be visited with a ranger, one herd is free to visit. All are in fenced but large areas.

  • @TonyTrupp
    @TonyTruppКүн бұрын

    I did a tour with mandari panga last year down the tiputini river to yasuni national park. It was a great trip, tons of wildlife. I highly recommend them.

  • @davidcupples7622
    @davidcupples7622Күн бұрын

    Mossy crew ate awesome

  • @davidcupples7622
    @davidcupples7622Күн бұрын

    Are awesome

  • @CausticLemons7
    @CausticLemons7Күн бұрын

    Any updates to this project?

  • @tonedeaf7672
    @tonedeaf7672Күн бұрын

    so pretty

  • @LinKongDa
    @LinKongDaКүн бұрын

    This whole arguement is stupid. Nothing on island is NATIVE. it grew from the sea as a volcano lifeless rock island. Plants. animals and humans are brought to it by air and sea. EVERYTHING is FOREIGN. that include the Humans. The challenge of ICELAND is it is very hostile to life. Anything that can survive and thrive on the island should be welcome not shunt.

  • @paras891
    @paras891Күн бұрын

    Can people just stop doing this "As a...."

  • @gouthamkumar1750
    @gouthamkumar1750Күн бұрын

    Restoring wetland is easy Just survey the property for low ground regions if none is available dig one, measure water to be drained and flaten the land to divert water into the low ground

  • @luluobi8565
    @luluobi8565Күн бұрын

    The fuck were they doing bombing an ice river LMAOOO

  • @charles2521
    @charles2521Күн бұрын

    Yet they talk about environmental issues in other countries. Just like Norway used to talk about whaling in Japan when they and the Falkland Islands are by far the ones that do the most whaling.

  • @jakexake2940
    @jakexake2940Күн бұрын

    The animals that were killed in the flooding were not mentioned. The sites altered from nearby areas not mentioned because of migration into this area. You play with nature, there are consequences beyond our grasp

  • @WaiveXGD
    @WaiveXGDКүн бұрын

    Bro chill

  • @DCking14682
    @DCking14682Күн бұрын

    i would join the discord and contribute but i doubt you want someone with 1488 in his name to help yall out lol

  • @LLu-xc9kf
    @LLu-xc9kfКүн бұрын

    Is that a bluebonnet Plant tx plant

  • @markschuette3770
    @markschuette3770Күн бұрын

    don't leave the stump! the us Forest service is clear cutting huge areas of the national forest around Bend, Oregon (for fear of wild fires) and its soooo shocking and ugly and take a lifetime to recover!!!!!! also use hemp or a natural rope and NOT metal - we don't want to see metal rope in our natural areas!

  • @FEEFS.
    @FEEFS.Күн бұрын

    This reminds me of Project Kamp

  • @nashyielding971
    @nashyielding971Күн бұрын

    Love most of the strategies featured here, but leaving wire behind creates a future hazard for both wildlife and human visitors. If you really need a tree to stay in a particular place, use a hinge cut, rocks, or multiple driven stakes. Don't tie it with wire-which will eventually rust, break, or work loose as the wood it's attached to rots. Then there will be bits of sharp metal to step on that will persist in the environment much longer than they were useful in keeping the logs in place.

  • @user-rk1bf4eh2p
    @user-rk1bf4eh2pКүн бұрын

    We have it all over New Jersey and Pennsylvania

  • @HellBot-gi5si
    @HellBot-gi5siКүн бұрын

    It interesting but some species you can eat the seeds as well.

  • @johngalt9737
    @johngalt9737Күн бұрын

    That is habitat son Natural situatulion tree gets broken off or uprooted, mimic that and you will be successful. Go to an undisturbed old growth forest in Oregon and that is what you see

  • @Shaythegay13
    @Shaythegay13Күн бұрын

    This is so cool. As an “environmentalist” (I hate that word but can’t think of a better one rn), I have always loved rivers and streams and the biodiversity they support. I didn’t realize that the presence of wood in a river/stream would have so many benefits to the ecosystem! Great work!!!

  • @KevinLuna
    @KevinLunaКүн бұрын

    Omg! So true! Every wild river and creek I walked through had tons of trees inside the rivers.

  • @devinguy
    @devinguyКүн бұрын

    The only reason that invasive species get a bad rap, is they usually upset the balance in an already thriving ecyosystem. In this case, they may actually be encouraging further diversity in the future, providing they don't just choke any new contenders out of their chances.

  • @HellBot-gi5si
    @HellBot-gi5siКүн бұрын

    This was a smart move by Iceland because it puts nitrogen back in soil so that they can re-plant trees again.

  • @chantaltulliez8066
    @chantaltulliez8066Күн бұрын

    Fantastic 👍🙏🏼🙏🏼🌸great job 🦋💝greetings from Australia 🇦🇺💕