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Green Planet Films is a non-profit distributor of Nature, Environment, and Human Ecology Films. Their mission is to advocate environmental education, with an emphasis on film, to an evolving global audience. They connect and engage viewers with filmmakers dedicated to documenting the precarious relationships between nature and humanity. Sample topics include deforestation,
water resources, ocean conservation,
sustainable fishing, renewable energies, climate change and other issues that affect humanity in the context of itself and nature.
In California and other regions affected by drought, agriculture is suffering from a lack of water and farms are being abandoned at an alarming rate. But some people have developed solutions to capture the rains that DO fall. In this state and in many other dry regions around the world, land restoration helps water penetrate healthy soils and in turn increase crop yields.
Even in dry areas, water which typically might run off, can be harvested and stored in tanks, ponds and swales. By using gabions, biodiversity, mulching, pioneer
trees, wild and domestic animals,
swale systems, check dams, fruit forests, keyline plows,
compost teas and many other methods, it is possible to restore the soil and design new productive landscapes.
This film explores the work of Eric Ohlson,
Geoff Lawton and other growers,
permaculture designers and educators, showing how intentional design can benefit both humans and nature.
LOCATIONS: northern and southern California, Arizona and Jordan.
Directed and Edited by Jocelyn Demers
Produced by Monde Films
2015