Leaf of Life

Leaf of Life

The Leaf of Life team (not A.I generated, we are a human led!) dedicated to creating informative videos about inspiring and life changing stories that can make a positive difference to the world. We also love to report on a wide range of topics, from new innovations, to sustainable initiatives and ancient mysteries through the context of science, history & geography.

We also support regenerative projects across the world, such as turning degraded land back into native forests, installing edible gardens in schools and working with indigenous custodians to preserve nature. You can support the work that we do by becoming a member here: www.leafoflife.news

If you have a story you would like to share with us, feel free to contact us via social media (links below)



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  • @khamen723
    @khamen7233 сағат бұрын

    Southern California could look like this if their leaders cared more about people than the delta smelt 😢

  • @creamrisesup
    @creamrisesup4 сағат бұрын

    What a beautiful story.

  • @BrettFloren
    @BrettFloren4 сағат бұрын

    Space Shuttle launches? lol

  • @kaptynssirensong2357
    @kaptynssirensong23576 сағат бұрын

    This woman is inspiring! I will do my BEST to be a part this… Subbing for hope..

  • @johanna006
    @johanna0067 сағат бұрын

    So, basically a chimney then. In Malaysia, we use a turbine ventilator, which allows hot air between the roof and ceiling to escape.

  • @vairiankingkade6120
    @vairiankingkade61207 сағат бұрын

    ❤❤❤❤❤

  • @sammieg8641
    @sammieg86418 сағат бұрын

    I’ve seen so many of these that turn out to be scams. You’d have to truck in a ton of soil bc the desert has a low mineral count. Then there is the water that would have to be trucked in… unless you are doing this on a daily basis in the long run it’s just not sustainable. Even the one in Sahara has proven to be a scam

  • @gilgoofthegrove5072
    @gilgoofthegrove50728 сағат бұрын

    i am realizing that it is in fact embarrassingly simple

  • @JesseCase
    @JesseCase8 сағат бұрын

    Definitely aliens! 👽

  • @SantoshChavan-xc6oe
    @SantoshChavan-xc6oe8 сағат бұрын

    Can i work with you 💐 i am from india

  • @andresbonifacio484
    @andresbonifacio48411 сағат бұрын

    Awesome Beaver

  • @TheAnarchitek
    @TheAnarchitek14 сағат бұрын

    You mention the water "streaming off the mountain" (I think I got that right), and the ancient inhabitants built the "wells", or possibly "cisterns", and I had a thought. As I said in another comment, water and oil, and a host of toxic chemicals were coming off that hill, so the tribesmen who lived there, at the time, built those structures to clean the water. Running water over stone is a time-honored method of removing most contaminants, and the water would easily "run" away, at the bottom, over more stone, and be collected downhill.

  • @Christopher-be1qc
    @Christopher-be1qc14 сағат бұрын

    Thank you angel of GOD

  • @nckc8933
    @nckc893314 сағат бұрын

    Florida, land of the grifters land of the swamp. A pure shithole!

  • @Letsgofishing911
    @Letsgofishing91115 сағат бұрын

    One more Florida is the only place in the world 🌍 that has 131 registered springs, save Florida from the people that destroyed there states there here then they'll go destroy somewhere else.carpetbagers

  • @Letsgofishing911
    @Letsgofishing91115 сағат бұрын

    Screw big sugar we can buy it from somewhere else.

  • @Letsgofishing911
    @Letsgofishing91115 сағат бұрын

    There keep burning the dump at lake Panasoffkee Florida and want to put a doodoo plant right at the water flow of shady Brook in the lake we're all the springs are stop the villages from building one more home.

  • @Letsgofishing911
    @Letsgofishing91115 сағат бұрын

    Out law air-conditioning and shut the border of Florida off .

  • @jds1275
    @jds127519 сағат бұрын

    Personally, the only thing I care about with this is not wasting resources that I do not have to. I find it annoying that our modern architecture isn't only ugly and utilitarian but designed to waste resources like electricity. If every home was built to maintain a comfortable temperature range year round, then we would be able to keep more of our own money. If we collected our own rainwater with tanks large enough to store a years worth of water for the average house and had home filtration systems and septic systems, we would save a lot on water. Even electricity could be done at the scale of the individual homes. Eliminating the grid would save a ton of money and resources. That money could be used for more important things like say building wealth at the individual level.

  • @abpccpba
    @abpccpba23 сағат бұрын

    Cameo picture is fake.

  • @romanhollow2985
    @romanhollow2985Күн бұрын

    Space shuttle launches??? Not for years and years.

  • @TobiasDuncan
    @TobiasDuncanКүн бұрын

    This is your best one yet. Really enjoying watching this channel improve and do such important work. Thank you

  • @LeafofLifeWorld
    @LeafofLifeWorld22 сағат бұрын

    Wow, thank you!

  • @KingEst87
    @KingEst87Күн бұрын

    She needs her own show

  • @LeafofLifeWorld
    @LeafofLifeWorld19 сағат бұрын

    Please go and check out her YT in the description you should write to her and encourage her to start posting, I've told her she should get back on there posting

  • @Zeero3846
    @Zeero3846Күн бұрын

    Anyone notice the llama cactus at 0:12?

  • @damonchampion823
    @damonchampion823Күн бұрын

    💚

  • @Thetruepredictor
    @ThetruepredictorКүн бұрын

    Reminds me of the dome/Firmament over our stationary Plane realm/world we live in. God really is the master designer.

  • @JOHNDANIEL1
    @JOHNDANIEL1Күн бұрын

    For over 100 years California's wealthy leftist took all the water for their swimming pools, grass yards and waste, so much for "green lies from them". Now, decades later with all the Left suing to stop it, this was a agreement from Donald Trump and Mexico that every Californian politician screamed Drumpf, Hate, RUSSIA and Orange man bad, We live in a insane time.

  • @johnpeymann2783
    @johnpeymann2783Күн бұрын

    I just want to know... How much has the Sea level risen in the last twenty years? Because I live about 20 feet from a canal that runs directly into the Gulf of Mexico which is about 100yards away... It hasn't risen an inch since I've lived here except for the normal tide change and I have never worried about a flood problem... EVER. The Sea level is NOT rising... Just stop it with the nonsense.

  • @kunalrajverma
    @kunalrajvermaКүн бұрын

    Thank you for making this informative video for us.

  • @richardwartton3775
    @richardwartton3775Күн бұрын

    Legend.

  • @hugoCVll
    @hugoCVllКүн бұрын

    I was born in Baja California Sur and that's my goal. Create a forest, but of native trees such as mesquite, palo verde, torote, palo adan, cactus and other local species. On my land I have visits from local wildlife ranging from birds to deer and I want to provide them with that area of food and water.

  • @user-um8tq1tz7m
    @user-um8tq1tz7mКүн бұрын

    That's not the Mexican desert omg that's California

  • @DavidWenzel-lo8cs
    @DavidWenzel-lo8csКүн бұрын

    Propaganda

  • @DavidWenzel-lo8cs
    @DavidWenzel-lo8csКүн бұрын

    Dont forget the painted sticks with rocks on them.

  • @janelserrano496
    @janelserrano496Күн бұрын

    MEXICO LOOKS NOTHING LIKE THIS NOW THANKS TO CORTEZ THE COLONIZER! YET MEXICANS NAME THEIR CHILDREN AFTER THEM. SO SAD. YALL NEED TO WAKE UP! SLAP IN THE FACE TO OUR INDIGENOUS ANCESTORS!!!! NAMING YOUR SON AFTER SOMEONE WHO RAPED OUR GREATEST FOREFATHERS. WE ARE HERE TODAY BECAUSE OF THEM! THEY WERE SURVIVORS AND SHOWED THEY TRUSTED THE REAL SAVAGE NARCISSIST WHICH WAS A NAIVE MOVE, US LATINOS CAN KEEP BEING A SLAVE TO THE COLONIZERS OPPRESSION OR..... OR, GO KEEP STRAIGHTENING YOUR HAIR AND BLEACH YOUR HAIR BLONDE.

  • @georgepearson3659
    @georgepearson3659Күн бұрын

    Interesting at 4 minutes 15 seconds they show a shot of the room and what looks like a mini split shows on the right side. You can also see a fan in the corner.

  • @LeafofLifeWorld
    @LeafofLifeWorldКүн бұрын

    Sure ac can be also used for heating it gets cold in the desert at night for some people

  • @shubbar
    @shubbarКүн бұрын

    Are you suggesting that those bricks that defy gravity do not also defy thermodynamic laws?

  • @ornamentaltreesthailand7507
    @ornamentaltreesthailand7507Күн бұрын

    Words cannot explian

  • @cowspoopmagic
    @cowspoopmagicКүн бұрын

    With all respect, the Dutch

  • @bque9444
    @bque9444Күн бұрын

    A bit hard to hear you, esp with lower pitch.

  • @TheAnarchitek
    @TheAnarchitekКүн бұрын

    It is hard to tell where you are. A more accurate description would be nice. I found the shoreline, but where you went, within 5 seconds is a mystery. The area was subjected to a lot of erosion, an interesting idea, since there are few places on the planet dryer than the Iranian Desert. What I find interesting is the channels that seem to have carried large quantities of water did not did into the basin of the gulf, as they did, elsewhere. The "mountains", in this region, were mostly raised by electrical discharges, a feature common around the Earth, bearing out another of my theories about the region.

  • @LeafofLifeWorld
    @LeafofLifeWorldКүн бұрын

    Hi, thanks for the feedback, I think I will make an update giving the coordinates, it maybe a pin post on the top of this video or community post, look out for it, i'm working on it!

  • @TheAnarchitek
    @TheAnarchitekКүн бұрын

    @@LeafofLifeWorld It looks like a piece of crust was turned edgewise, while the rest of it was slammed against the upturned portion, again, and again, then large amounts of water passed over, without reaching the sea, far south. I suspect a lot of the water was trapped underground, with all that oil, such as Libya recently found.

  • @TheAnarchitek
    @TheAnarchitekКүн бұрын

    @@LeafofLifeWorld It looks like Nayband Gulf on the right, at 00:02-00:05, but you would have to be going southerly, to have it on the right, and it is far from Siraf. There is no body of water that matches your opening description, and the Nubo-Sindian Desert stretches along that coastline, from Iraq to the Strait of Hormuz, offering no insight.

  • @TheAnarchitek
    @TheAnarchitek21 сағат бұрын

    @@LeafofLifeWorld This region, from Afghanistan to the far shores of the Red Sea, and all of the Sahara, experienced dramatic changes at some point in the not-so-distant past, with large amounts of water (liquid, at least) running off, here, into the Gulf, leaving great gouges in an earth heavily marked by volcanic ash, and countless chemicals. Whatever happened, it wasn't a pleasant experience, although none of today's inhabitants lived anywhere close to it, at the time. Whoever did, didn't survive the experience, judging by its appearance on Google Earth. Probably when all that oil was deposited, somewhere around an "ocean", if not more, all over the region, carving great, but narrow, gullies. I suspect the region "burned" for centuries, completing the process. I found the area, finally. The center of the area with the "wells" is at 27°N40' 52°E20', with a major arroyo coming down the hillside (these are not "mountains", those are behind the valley on the other side). Whatever else, the region was torn, tattered, and frayed, at some point, twisted, rotated, and the pieces slammed against one another. No one alive survived. The "water" I mentioned was likely Noah's Flood, or Gilgamesh, whomever, it's unimportant, except that it happened, if not exactly as we're told), pouring off the land masses, finally, carving those gullies, wadis, and intricately-carved slopes. Nothing else leaves the land looking that way, only massive amounts of water (and in this case, billions, if not trillions, of barrels of oil).

  • @judas_cobane
    @judas_cobaneКүн бұрын

    I live in New Jersey, and when I tell you, the majority of people who move *FROM HERE, MOVE TO FLORIDA* no where else really 🤣

  • @jayanthpatki7845
    @jayanthpatki7845Күн бұрын

    More than agriculture, it is the use of fossil fuels that has resulted in climate change. Agroforestry can reverse deforestation.

  • @Saldrath13
    @Saldrath13Күн бұрын

    well that's not a baobab tree, it's a ceiba, and it is not rare in this region. source: I'm local to the region in question.

  • @WeAretheWorld89
    @WeAretheWorld892 күн бұрын

    US: China is overcapacity.

  • @barbarazanini7124
    @barbarazanini71242 күн бұрын

    Ma allora c'è speranza per l'umanità! Grazie❤

  • @tim2024-df5fu
    @tim2024-df5fu2 күн бұрын

    Kuddos for creating a forest but bringing in plants from Africa to Central America isn't a good idea. Invasive species are a thing.

  • @LeafofLifeWorld
    @LeafofLifeWorld2 күн бұрын

    It is talked about in the video how she manages invasive species. Did you watch that?

  • @clarestucki5151
    @clarestucki51512 күн бұрын

    Everybody knows an irrigated desert is the very best and most productive place to grow food. The only problem is finding the water to do it!

  • @timzitzelsberger3200
    @timzitzelsberger32002 күн бұрын

    Stop having babies and stop moving here that's how you will save Florida

  • @festungkurland9804
    @festungkurland98042 күн бұрын

    another Boondoggle ? ya dont say

  • @Jared_Albert
    @Jared_Albert2 күн бұрын

    I see condensors on the roof and air handlers in the building what a crockl thumbs down