Drone’s Aerial Perspective: Revolutionizing Land Management 🚁

Drones revolutionize land management!  Explore how they transform deserts, control pests, and boost farming. See the future of conservation & precision agriculture. Click to learn more!

Drones Take Flight: A Bird’s-Eye View of Land Management Revolution 🚁

From desolate deserts blooming with life to precision land mapping and even aerial pest control, drones are transforming how we interact with and manage the land. This curated collection of YouTube videos offers a fascinating glimpse into the diverse and innovative applications of drone technology in land management. We’ll explore how these unmanned aerial vehicles are providing invaluable data, increasing efficiency, and offering solutions to age-old challenges. Join us as we take to the skies for a closer look at this high-flying revolution!

Key Insights from the Drone Front Lines

The Drone Horizon: What’s Next in Land Management?

The rapid evolution of drone technology suggests an even more impactful role in land management in the coming years. We can anticipate advancements in sensor technology, autonomous flight, and data analysis, leading to further refinements in precision agriculture, environmental monitoring, and conservation efforts. Imagine drones equipped with advanced AI capable of identifying individual plants needing attention, or swarms of drones collaborating on large-scale reforestation projects. The possibilities are truly sky-high!

Ready for Takeoff? Explore the Videos Below!

We’ve compiled highlights from these insightful YouTube videos to provide a comprehensive overview of drones in land management. Scroll down to watch the videos and delve deeper into this exciting frontier. You’ll be amazed at what you discover!

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Continue below to watch the videos

How He Turned Desert Sand Into Fertile Farm Land In 3 Months! Leaf of Life
1,592,254 views | 34,566 | January 1 2024 16:04:01 (1,492 comments)[ Read more … ] John Graham is a specialist in desert farming who has taught hundreds of farmers how to run profitable organic farms. He has 30 years experience creating farms out of arid sand in Mexico’s desert region of Baja California, successfully transforming sand into fertile soil to cultivate a large variety of vegetables. He worked for many years as an organic farm inspector and co-founded Baja’s organic market that’s been running for two decades.

Watch the video about John’s 2 friends who he founded the organic market with: https://youtu.be/MFADnpUXxUQ

John’s home garden is a highly abundant paradise of fruits and vegetables and although he has been in a wheelchair for 25 years after a road accident, he has constructed a system of ramps and paths all around his property so he can access his incredible garden.

John is currently helping a local co-operative of farmers on a new farm producing organic food for the local market, restaurants and a delivery service. @LeafofLifeWorld met up with John to find out about the techniques he uses to transform desert sand into fertile soil, as well the different methods he uses instead of chemical pesticides, herbicides and fertilizers.

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The Credit Pros
Shooting the sand. Land management based aerial shooting Australia FVR375
2,978,031 views | 28,795 | February 27 2023 05:14:36 (2,178 comments)[ Read more … ] Aerial shooting of feral pigs in sensitive riparian zone / river country in Northern Australia.

These animals are declared vertebrate pests and legally are required to be destroyed by landholders. They cause significant environmental damage and represent a biosecurity risk as a disease vector.

If you do not like seeing animals humanely destroyed ( this means killed) do not watch this video.

If you like fast accurate aerial shooting then this is for you.

Rifle is a Wedgetail Industries WT25 308 Winchester semi automatic. (AR10). Shotgun is a Benelli M4 12 ga ( John Wick approved).

All activities undertaken by pilot and marksman are fully legal with correct endorsements and accreditations in place.

Enjoy!

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Use Drone To Drag A Scrap Tank Forming Shallow Trench Avoiding Water Ponding In Unleveled Farmland ! Wisdom Pouchannel
4,778,309 views | 19,140 | May 13 2024 01:06:13 (29 comments)[ Read more … ] Wisdom Tips Tools Machines Easy Easyway Easywork !

Agricultural field 1. Farmland monitoring Drones play an important role in farmland monitoring. They can be equipped with a variety of sensors to detect soil moisture, temperature, nutrient levels and more. This data helps farmers better manage their fields, achieve precision agriculture, reduce resource waste, and increase yields. 2. Crop spraying Agricultural drones can also be used for crop spraying. The drone is equipped with a pesticide or fertilizer spraying system that can be applied precisely according to demand, reducing the excessive use of pesticides and fertilizers and reducing the impact on the environment. 3. Remote sensing and monitoring With multi-spectral and infrared sensors, drones can perform crop remote sensing and monitoring. This helps identify crop health problems early, provide timely management measures, and reduce crop losses.

Mapping and geographic information 1. Map making Drones can be used to make and update maps. They can capture high-resolution images of large areas in a short time for use in urban planning, land management and resource management. 2. Environmental monitoring In terms of environmental monitoring, drones can fly over hard-to-reach areas to monitor natural disasters, forest cover, lake water quality and more. The scientist provided valuable data that helped in environmental protection and natural resource management.

Transportation field 1. Traffic supervision In traffic regulation, drones are used to monitor roads and traffic flow. They can help police and traffic authorities identify traffic violations and improve traffic safety. 2. Transportation logistics Drones are used in logistics and transportation. They can quickly deliver medical supplies, emergency relief supplies and consumer goods, especially in remote areas or in emergency situations.

Security and privacy considerations While drone technology has potential in multiple areas, it also comes with some security and privacy concerns. For example, flight restrictions, privacy violations, and flight safety all need to be properly addressed. Government, industry standards and technological innovation are actively addressing these issues to ensure the safe and legal use of drones !
Why So Much Land In The West Is Owned By The Federal Government Geography By Geoff
363,815 views | 6,841 | January 30 2023 22:00:23 (757 comments)[ Read more … ] πŸ“ Substack: https://geographybygeoff.substack.com/ πŸ“· Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/geographybygeoff/ 🌎 Podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/show/what-if-geography orΒ @WiGPodΒ 

The United States federal government is the largest land owner in the entire country. In particular, most of its current land holdings exist within the western half of the contiguous United States, with very little in the eastern half. This might seem odd, but there’s a very real reason why the federal government has held on to so much of the west…

Photos and videos come from Pexels, Pixabay. Attribution below:

Alex Garcia Alex Kad Alex Radelich Aric Shelby Arthouse Studio Dean Diemert Fernando Latorre Get Lost Mike Haakon Birkeli Kelly Lacy Musko.io Peter Fowler Pressmaster Roger Holzberg Taryn Elliott Thomas Downs Zlatin Georgiev
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Land management and #conservation #shorts Jack Out The Back
10,693 views | 291 | April 29 2023 03:04:52 (5 comments)[ Read more … ] #pastrolist Jack Out The Back discusses the importance of land managers in protecting and conserving the unique #outbackaustralia #rangelands and how we can protect #endangeredspecies
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From Deserts to Gardens: Indigenous Land Management Techniques Explained | Lyla June Sustainable Human
4,297 views | 255 | March 2 2023 13:59:25 (18 comments)[ Read more … ] In this powerful video, Dr. Lyla June challenges the idea that humans are a burden to the Earth and argues that we actually belong here and can be a critical piece of the ecological puzzle. Drawing from indigenous land management techniques, the speaker explains how native people have been active agents in shaping the land for thousands of years, becoming a keystone species and refining keystone cultures over time. Rather than trying to control the Earth, indigenous people have tapped into and aligned themselves with the forces of nature, creating non-human centric systems and intentionally expanding habitats. Dr. Lyla June makes the case that if we applied these strategies today, we could transform dead systems to living ones and protect and augment life on a holistic regional scale. When we become allies with the Earth, we can live within her processes and become a part of her system as we were born to be.

For more on the speaker Dr. Lyla June: lylajune.com Check out the original talk: youtube.com/watch?v=eH5zJxQETl4

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0:00 – What If I Told You That We Belong Here? 1:04 – The Environmental Impact Of The Pandemic 1:59 – Aligning With The Forces Of Nature 2:54 – Intentional Habitat Expansion 4:02 – Create Nonhuman-Centric Systems 6:14 – Healing Our History 7:08 – Becoming Earth’s Ally

Transcript:

What if I told you that we belong here? What if I told you that the Earth needs us? What if I told you I’ve seen my people turn deserts into gardens.

For tens of thousands of years, native people of this land constructed beautiful gardens all around them. We were active agents in shaping the land to produce prolific abundance. We expanded and designed grasslands and forests for the benefit of all life. We became what the world calls a keystone species, or a species upon which entire ecosystems depend. And our cultures became keystone cultures, refined over time.

Now, much was made about the positive environmental effect of the pandemic. As more people stayed home, pollution levels dropped, animals began to reclaim habitat, and the logical leap that many observers seemed to make was that the Earth would be better off without humans. I reject that leap. The Earth may be better off without certain systems we have created. But we are not those systems. We don’t have to be at least. What if these human hands and mines could be such a great gift to the earth that they sparked new life wherever people and purpose met?

I’d like to share important indigenous land management techniques in hopes that they might inform and inspire us today. The first is to tap into and align ourselves with the forces of nature. Why try to control the earth when you can work with her? In southwest deserts, native farmers have leveraged the pre existing topography of the land. They placed their fields at the base of watersheds to catch every drop of the monsoon rains and the nutrients that flow down with them carried down from upland soils. This alluvial farming technique requires no outside fertilizers or irrigation because all of this comes with the rain.

#Lyla June #IndigenousWisdom #LandManagement

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