FMNR смотреть последние обновления за сегодня на .
more information: 🤍 or 🤍 Farmer Managed Natural Regeneration (FMNR) is a simple and low-cost method to regreen degraded drylands and improve livelihoods of small-holder farmers and pastoralists. Images and texts in this video where used from FMNR hub (🤍 The website provides lots of informational resourses about the FMNR methode. This video is inspired by the YouTube video „How to do FMNR - pruning for natural regeneration“ Watch the original video here: 🤍 FMNR can be practiced through the following steps: 1. Observe the land: Tree-stumps that have been cut down and sprout new growth are usually mistaken for small bushes and therefore ignored. 2. Select stumps: The number, type and use of trees varies from person to person - the decision always depends on individual needs. 3. Remove shoots except 3-5: To stimulate the growth of the tree, cut away all shoots except three to five of the strongest ones. 4. Protect and care: A small red ribbon signals that the desired shoots should not be removed. In addition, new branches are pruned every two to six months. - video produced by AwakenTrees - ! special thanks to video creator Rodion Belousov ! Let's regreen the earth together!
This video offers a step-by-step guide on how communities can implement the Farmer Managed Natural Regeneration (FMNR) approach so as to increase tree cover on their farmlands. This helps to boost the fertility of degraded lands, leading to bumper harvests and increased pasture that improves livestock production. Farmers that have embraced the FMNR technique can also get additional income from tree and non-tree-based products such as charcoal, firewood, fruits, pasture, beekeeping and medicine from medicinal trees.
This film provides a short introduction to FMNR, the adaptation strategy Farmer Managed Natural Regeneration. In FMNR systems, farmers use pruning to encourage the growth of trees and shrubs that regenerate the soil and enhance crop yields. Furthermore, the growth of trees and shrubs can help to prevent soil erosion and, therefore, serve as a flood protection. It can also increase the amount of shade and deliver valuable by-products for food and fodder production. It is based on the results of the “Climate Risk Analysis for Identifying and Weighing Adaptation Strategies for the Agricultural Sectors – A Study at District Level in the Upper West Region in Northern Ghana”. The study was conducted by the Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research (PIK) in cooperation with the Deutsche Gesellschaft für Internationale Zusammenarbeit (GIZ) GmbH and on behalf of the German Federal Ministry for Economic Cooperation and Development (BMZ). This film was produced by Barbara van Rijn from BvR Producties in cooperation with Francis Jarawura from the University of Development Studies (UDS) in Wa, Ghana, the Ghanaian Ministry of Food and Agricultura (MoFA) and the GIZ project Resilience Against Climate Change (REACH). For more information, please visit: 🤍agrica.de
What is FMNR? This step-by-step guide demonstrates how to practise FMNR (farmer managed natural regeneration), from selecting the right tree species to prune through to protecting regrowing trees. FMNR can achieve land regeneration and restore barren land, reducing food insecurity for subsistence farmers. This video is one of five FMNR training videos available on the FMNR Hub website. 01) FMNR - Everything is connected 🤍 02) FMNR - Tony Rinaudo: "The Niger I came to" 🤍 03) FMNR - Pruning for natural regeneration 🤍 04) FMNR - Fire prevention 🤍 05) FMNR - Income opportunities 🤍
This video offers a step-by-step guide on how communities can implement the Farmer Managed Natural Regeneration (FMNR) approach so as to increase tree cover on their farmlands. This helps to boost the fertility of degraded lands, leading to bumper harvests and increased pasture that improves livestock production. Farmers that have embraced the FMNR technique can also get additional income from tree and non-tree-based products such as charcoal, firewood, fruits, pasture, beekeeping and medicine from medicinal trees.
01) FMNR - Everything is connected 🤍 02) FMNR - Tony Rinaudo: "The Niger I came to" 🤍 03) FMNR - Pruning for natural regeneration 🤍 04) FMNR - Fire prevention 🤍 05) FMNR - Income opportunities 🤍
In a balanced ecosystem, people and animals thrive. But when trees are cut down and land is burned, that balance is lost. Deforestation effects include soil erosion and a reduction in biodiversity. Through farmer managed natural regeneration (FMNR), World Vision programs empower farmers to reverse land degradation. The simple act of pruning tree regrowth and managing land sustainably can turn small shrubs and stumps into mature trees, promoting soil restoration and increasing crop yields, firewood and livestock fodder.
A low-cost and innovative afforestation approach known as the Farmer Managed Natural Regeneration (FMNR) is helping farmers to effectively tackle the adverse effects of #ClimateChange (such as long dry spells) and to establish alternative sources of income in Kenya. The FMNR approach promotes the growth of trees from already existing tree stumps or naturally occurring tree seeds.
Farmer Managed Natural Regeneration (FMNR) is a low-cost land restoration technique used to combat poverty and hunger amongst poor subsistence farmers by increasing food and timber production and resilience to climate extremes. In practice, FMNR involves the systematic regrowth and management of trees and shrubs from felled tree stumps, sprouting root systems or seeds. The regrown trees and shrubs – integrated into crops and grazing pastures – help restore soil structure and fertility, inhibit erosion and soil moisture evaporation, rehabilitate springs and the water table, and increase biodiversity. Some tree species also impart nutrients such as nitrogen into the soil. As a result, FMNR can double crop yields, provide building timber and firewood, fodder and shade for livestock, wild foods for nutrition and medication, and increase incomes and living standards for farming families and their communities. Learn more about FMNR: 🤍 Learn more about Tony Rinaudo: 🤍 Learn how you can get involved: 🤍 #climatechange #farmermanagednaturalregeneration #fmnr #tonyrinaudo #reforestation #climateaction #climate
The Building Resilience to A Changing Climate and Environment (BRACCE) project has been has introduced Farmer Managed Natural Regeneration (FMNR) to local communities. World Vision Australia and World Vision Timor-Leste have partnered to promote sustainable natural resources management and positive results have already been achieved. This documentary will be presented to the participants of the "Renew The Land" conference in Dili on 7-8 April 2014. For more information visit: 🤍fmnrhub.com.au
We are losing forest each year in an alarming pace. World Vision is regreening large areas with the FMNR method (farmer managed natural regeneration). The method even works in arid areas. In this film Tony Rinaudo explains how farmers can use the FMNR method to regreen their environment. More info: 🤍
How the Sahara Desert is Turning into an Agriculture Oasis The Sahara Desert occupies a generous portion of northern Africa. Its radius is 3,000 kilometres. The Sahara Desert is encircled by the Atlantic Ocean, Atlas Mountains, Mediterranean Sea, Red Sea, and the Sahel. Between moist savannas and the Sahara lies an area known as the Sahel. The Sahara's expansion is threatened by droughts, overgrazing, and land usage in the semiarid Sahel. Things are quickly becoming worse. The loss of agricultural land exacerbates several social problems, including hunger, poverty, unemployment, forced migration, conflict, and severe weather. Niger has achieved extraordinary agricultural success in the African Sahara, converting deserts into arable land. 2.5 million Nigerians have profited from planting two hundred million trees on five million hectares of land. The average annual rainfall in the US is around 6.5 inches. The Niger River inspired the name of the landlocked Republic of Niger. The Sahara Desert occupies 80% of the country. Because of the Sahel's poor soil, erratic rainfall patterns, and extended droughts, crops there are challenging to grow. Farmers lost a lot of trees throughout the 1970s and 1980s due to a shortage of cropland and a rise in demand. Wind erosion was a factor in several crop failures. More than 700 million square kilometres of degraded land may be restored in Africa, despite the continent losing four million hectares of forest each year. Farmers may decide to rehabilitate damaged land rather than a clear new forest to accommodate Africa's expanding population. Rural farming areas benefit socially and economically. Several methods are used to convert this area of the Sahara into a field for agriculture. Keep watching this video with us. First, we may explain the Farmer-managed natural regeneration (FMNR) approach, which promotes the growth of trees and plants from tree stumps, roots, and seeds on degraded soils, such as those used for farming and caring for them once they do. Agroforestry, or growing trees and crops together in this fashion, benefits farmers, crops, the environment, and animals in many ways. In Niger, where FMNR has operated, five million hectares of agriculture that was once treeless are now green once again. The FMNR method aids in regaining trees and plants from stumps, roots, and seeds found in agriculturally used soils and other degraded soils. After the trees and bushes re-grow, they must be maintained. The soil's fertility and moisture are improved for crops cultivated with them after these new woody plants have taken root in agricultural fields. Agroforestry is the term for this. The news from Niger gave people optimism that a low-tech, low-cost approach would succeed after many years of unsuccessful tree planting initiatives. Researchers discovered that FMNR improved the environment, lifted incomes, and increased grain yields by 30%. The second is the creation of crops in sub-Saharan desert half-moon holes. Instead, a breakthrough water-trapping technique has enabled one of sub-Saharan Africa's most hostile regions to flourish. Nigeria has five hundred millimetres of rain per year in the south and two hundred millimetres in the north. Retaining the water in a form that plants may easily utilize is tough. Demi-lunes are a remedy for this issue. Small earthen embankments known as demi-lunes are built by hand akin to a swale. On the bare ground, a semicircle is drawn using an A-frame that has been rotated. Pickaxes are used to pierce the ground's surface, while spades are used to remove the soil. Little earthen bunds (dikes) are built around the semicircle's arc. The demi-lunes, which have been covered with manure and compost, are seeded inside and outside. Demi-lunes perform best when built on slopes with less than a 2% gradient. The bunds' capacity to retain run-off water helps the demi-lunes when it rains. The percolating water from the reservoir is used for subsurface irrigation. Demi-lunes are used to cultivate sorghum, millet, and animal feed. Additionally, they could support the growth of nearby trees. They may be created fast and easily maintained with only a few hand tools. In Niger, a few non-governmental organizations (NGOs) are working on demi-lune construction projects and paying their workers with food. Similar water collection practices, such as Zai planting trenches, are used throughout West Africa and other continent regions. Zai pits, smaller than demi-lune pits in size, may be used to grow and maintain trees, shrubs, and subsistence crops. If you liked the video, please SUBSCRIBE, Hit the bell button🔔, like, comment and share. Stay safe and all the best. - ▶️ Please Subscribe! : 🤍 ▶️ Support our channel and get special perks by pressing the "JOIN" button, Thank you it means a lot :) -
FMNR brings hope to men, women and children. It gives them hope that their once degraded land can be productive and able to sustain their livelihoods. Through FMNR, vulnerable families in Kenya are now able to sustainably provide food for their families, fodder for their livestock and get an extra source of income. #CRIFSUP
Farmers in rural Kenya reap benefits from the Farmer Managed Natural Regeneration Approach (FMNR) that encourages the growth, survival and effective management of indigenous trees on farmlands.
🤍awakentrees.org more information: fmnrhub.com.au video by Josef Ertl ( originally produced for the Forest Changemaker Competition of the World Forestry Congress 2022 in Korea) This video is about Farmer Managed Natural Regeneration / FMNR , a low-cost and simple method to restore degraded drylands and improve livelihoods of small-holder farmers and pastoralists.
Australia has a lot of droughts but we've never had a famine. Now imagine if we could equip farmers to drought-proof their land. It would be a BIG win in the fight against poverty and climate change. And with the help of supporters like you, World Vision has already developed a solution: Farmer Managed Natural Regeneration. It's simple and it works. Join our call for the Australian Government to scale up our proven, nature-based solution and help small-hold farmers drought-proof their land. Head to worldvision.com.au/actions-for-justice/climate-crisis to sign the petition today! #climatecrisis #drought #FMNR #climatechange
This video clearly showcase the process where we can use Farmer Managed Natural Regeneration to help us fight the impact of climate change while increasing the household income. The indigenous trees are used as forest cover and then you plant a fruit tree so that they can co-exist.
By popularizing the concept of Farmer Managed Natural Regeneration (FMNR), World Vision Australia has changed how thousands of farmers manage their land, helping them cultivate buried root systems or "underground forests," in degraded landscapes, over time restoring productivity. Over the last 20 years, World Vision has trained thousands of farmers in FMNR, resulting in the restoration of thousands of hectares in West Africa and beyond. In recognition for their work, World Vision Australia has won the 2013 Land for Life Award. 🤍
Australian agronomist Tony Rinaudo is turning African deserts into forests. Implementation of FMNR Research has shown that tree-based farming systems store carbon in above and below ground biomass and organic matter contributing to reduced greenhouse gas emissions. 3 In semi-arid regions on farmland, regenerated trees are sequestering around one ton of CO 2 per hectare per year, while in more humid, forest settings, regenerated forests are sequestering approximately 15 tons CO 2 per hectare per year. There are also multiple cobenefits, including provision of ecosystem goods and services such as increased soil fertility, pollination, pest predation and improved microclimate. “Before there were no trees, it was bare degraded land and temperatures were very high. After protection, the trees started growing fast, wild life started coming back, the temperature has gone down, and rainfall is getting better.” – Child Members of Environment, Club Humbo, Ethiopia - World Vision has demonstrated ongoing experience implementing FMNR in over 27 countries. Link 1. 🤍 Link 2. 🤍
80 minutes with Right-Livelihood Award Winner Tony Rinaudo, the founder of FMNR and one of the most succesful international development anti-poverty efforts on the African Continent. FMNR has tripled some farmer's incomes while leading to the reforestation of millions of hectares of land, starting in Niger and spreading through the Sahel Region and E. Africa.
I found this video interesting - an inspiring story of community development to rehabilitate farmlands in Africa. Leave a comment about initiatives in your area. like. Share. Subscribe.. Now is a great time to learn about alternative ways to farm...Remember its always a tree planting DAY somewhere ..... Green Africa - plant a tree today The time of taking farming as a retiring hobby is over! It can be a very serious business The youth, their parents and the whole community can benefit from such initiatives and fight food shortage and increase income in practical ways. Government assistance and programmes can go a long way! What other collaborations and partnerships can be introduced in our communities to fight climate change, enhance food production and bring restoration. Leave a comment below.
Where supposedly nothing can grow out of a defertiled soil, with the FMNR method amazing outputs are possible. Trunks of trees and bushes are being pruned, so that only the strongest shoots can grow. Thus gradually nature can grow back again. This way the farmers have the means to gain a living and even send their children to school. FMNR ist a way for nature and humans to alike. - - - - - - - - - - ❤️ Willkommen auf dem World Vision Deutschland e.V. channel! Unser Anliegen ist es, die vielfältige Arbeit von World Vision sichtbar zu machen, Menschen zu inspirieren, sich für Kinder auf der ganzen Welt einzusetzen. Wir glauben fest daran, dass wir gemeinsam die Welt zu einem besseren, schöneren, lichtvolleren Ort für Kinder machen können. - - - - - - - - - - ► Abonnieren & die Glocke aktivieren 🔔 🤍 Wie hilft World Vision genau? - alle Informationen dazu findet ihr hier: 🤍 Vieles, was wir als World Vision an Hilfe und Unterstützung für Kinder auf der ganzen Welt leisten können, verdanken wir Spenden. Wollt ihr eine Patenschaft für ein Kind übernehmen? Hier erfahrt ihr, wie ihr das tun könnt: 🤍 Wollt ihr etwas spenden? Mehr dazu findet ihr hier: 🤍 Folgt uns auch auf unseren Social Media Kanälen für aktuelle Infos & News zu den World Vision Projekten und Aktionen: ➡️ 🤍 ➡️ 🤍 ➡️ 🤍 ➡️ 🤍 ➡️ 🤍 #
Da alles miteinander verbunden ist und sich in einem volatilen Gleichgewicht befindet, von den Tieren, über die Pflanzen bis hin zum Menschen, leidet alles, wenn es aus dem Gleichgewicht gerät. Wenn der Boden trocken und ausgelaugt ist und kein Leben mehr hervorbringen kann, folgen Erosionen und Überschwemmungen und der Verlust an Biodiversität. In der Konsequenz leiden die Menschen. 🌳 FMNR - Farmer Managed Natural Regeneration kann den Boden wieder beleben. Dabei werden die Triebe aus Baum- und Buschstümpfen zurückgeschnitten, bis auf den kräftigsten Trieb. Dieser wird stehen gelassen und davor geschützt, von Vieh gefressen zu werden. Die herabfallenden Blätter werden auf dem Boden gelassen, schützen diesen vor Austrocknung und bilden Nährboden für Mikroorganismen. So kommt das Leben nach und nach zurück. - - - - - - - - - - ❤️ Willkommen auf dem World Vision Deutschland e.V. channel! Unser Anliegen ist es, die vielfältige Arbeit von World Vision sichtbar zu machen, Menschen zu inspirieren, sich für Kinder auf der ganzen Welt einzusetzen. Wir glauben fest daran, dass wir gemeinsam die Welt zu einem besseren, schöneren, lichtvolleren Ort für Kinder machen können. - - - - - - - - - - ► Abonnieren & die Glocke aktivieren 🔔 🤍 Ihr wollt selbst zum Waldmacher werden? Mehr dazu findet ihr hier: 🤍 Folgt uns auch auf unseren Social Media Kanälen für aktuelle Infos & News zu den World Vision Projekten und Aktionen: ➡️ 🤍 ➡️ 🤍 ➡️ 🤍 ➡️ 🤍 ➡️ 🤍 #FMNR #FarmerManagedNaturalRegeneration #TondyRinaudo
Können aus kargen Böden wieder Bäume sprießen? Ja, das geht mit der sogenannten FMNR-Methode. WAS IST DIE FMNR-METHODE? Hinter dem Kürzel FMNR verbirgt sich der Begriff Farmer Managed Natural Regeneration. Das wiederum steht für eine natürliche Wiederaufforstungsmethode, die der australische Agrarökonom Tony Rinaudo erfolgreich in 25 afrikanischen Ländern umgesetzt hat. Dabei werden unter der Erde verborgene Wurzeln von Bäumen genutzt, die einst gerodet wurden. Diese sprießen nach einiger Zeit wieder und werden davor geschützt, von grasendem Vieh gefressen zu werden. Außerdem werden die Sprösslinge sorgsam beschnitten und auf diese Weise wieder zu lebensfähigen Bäumen herangezogen. So kann selbst in wüstenähnlichen Gegenden, frisches Grün wieder wachsen und gedeihen. Mehr Infos zu FMNR gibt es hier: 🤍 - - - - - - - - - - ❤️ Willkommen auf dem World Vision Deutschland e.V. channel! Unser Anliegen ist es, die vielfältige Arbeit von World Vision sichtbar zu machen, Menschen zu inspirieren, sich für Kinder auf der ganzen Welt einzusetzen. Wir glauben fest daran, dass wir gemeinsam die Welt zu einem besseren, schöneren, lichtvolleren Ort für Kinder machen können. - - - - - - - - - - ► Abonnieren & die Glocke aktivieren 🔔 🤍 Wie hilft World Vision genau? - alle Informationen dazu findet Ihr hier: 🤍 Vieles, was wir als World Vision an Hilfe und Unterstützung für Kinder auf der ganzen Welt leisten können, verdanken wir Spenden. Wollt Ihr eine Patenschaft für ein Kind übernehmen? Hier erfahrt Ihr, wie Ihr das tun könnt: 🤍 Wollt Ihr etwas spenden? Mehr dazu findet Ihr hier: 🤍 Folgt uns auch auf unseren Social Media Kanälen für aktuelle Infos & News zu den World Vision Projekten und Aktionen: ➡️ 🤍 ➡️ 🤍 ➡️ 🤍 ➡️ 🤍 ➡️ 🤍 #FMNR #FarmerManagedNaturalRegeneration #Klima #TonyRinaudo
Transforming Household Resilience in Vulnerable Environments (THRIVE) uses the Farmer Managed Natural Regeneration (FMNR) model to promote restoration and improving agricultural, forested, and pasture lands. This video shows the impact of FMNR among farmers in the Eastern and Northern parts of the Country.
This short video is 2018 Right Livelihood Award winner, Tony Rinaudo explaining the simplicity and benefits of 'Farmer-Managed Natural Regeneration' or FMNR. The clip is taken from our award-winning film, 'ETHIOPIA RISING: Red Terror to Green Revolution'
In Timor-Leste, deforestation is occurring at an alarming rate. Land degradation and deforestation effects are highly problematic for subsistence farmers, who depend on the land for their food and livelihoods. World Vision Australia’s Tony Rinaudo looks at how farmer managed natural regeneration (FMNR) is improving life for farmers like Manuel.
This lecture on Farmer Managed Natural Regeneration, the case study of Mali is part of the lecture series prepared for the University of Bangor in Wales.
A majority of East African Countries, including Kenya, rely on agricultural and livestock production as their main source of livelihood. Yet, these sources of livelihood are adversely being affected by environmental degradation and climate change. World Vision is helping communities to address this challenged through a low-cost tree management and revival technique known as the Farmer Managed Natural Regeneration (FMNR) approach.
Wälder und baumreiche Landschaften sind von globaler Bedeutung – für den Erhalt der biologischen Vielfalt, den Klimaschutz und den Kampf gegen Armut. Doch Bevölkerungswachstum, der steigende Bedarf an Nutz- und Energieholz und die Ausweitung von Agrarflächen für die Landwirtschaft sorgen weltweit dafür, dass der Waldbestand zurückgeht und trockene und öde Flächen hinterlässt, die wirtschaftlich nicht nutzbar sind. Farmer Managed Natural Regeneration (FMNR) ist eine kostengünstige und wirksame Form, Baumvegetation wiederherzustellen. Sie wurde vor allem durch den australischen Agrarökonom Tony Rinaudo (World Vision) und seine Erfolge in Niger bekannt. Der FMNR-Ansatz nutzt in der Erde liegende Wurzeln und fördert den Stockausschlag an Stümpfen lebender, aber stark geschädigter Bäume. In Zusammenarbeit mit lokalen Landnutzungsgruppen (Kleinbauern und Viehhirten) werden die unterirdischen Wurzelsysteme so betreut, dass sie sich wieder zu Bäumen entwickeln können. Die so wiederhergestellten Baumbestände schützen die Böden vor Erosion und unterstützen die Wasserregulation. Zugleich liefern die Bäume langfristig bewirtschaftet den Bauern Brenn- oder Bauholz sowie Futter für ihre Tiere. Rinaudo, auch bekannt als „der Waldmacher“, hat für sein erfolgreiches Engagement 2018 den Alternativen Nobelpreis („Livelihood Award“) erhalten. Das BMZ unterstützt Waldprojekte wie die von World Vision weltweit. Damit leistet es einen Beitrag zur Umsetzung internationaler Ziele wie der Afrikanischen Initiative AFR100, die sich zum Ziel gesetzt hat, 100 Millionen Hektar Wald wiederherzustellen.
Sven Plöger ist bekannter TV- Meteorologe und auch im Kuratorium von World Vision. Vor Ort in Äthiopien erklärt er die Zusammenhänge von Klima, Wetter und was die Wiederbegrünung mittels FMNR bringt. Die FMNR-Methode - Farmer Managed Natural Regeneration - sorgt dafür, dass bestehendes Wurzelwerk unter der Erde wieder austreiben kann und Wald entsteht, wo zuvor nur vertrockneter Boden war. FMNR UND SEINE LANGFRISTIGEN EFFEKTE Die wachsenden Bäume spenden Schatten und dämpfen die Hitze. Auch die Aussaat ist erfolgreicher und die Erträge fallen höher aus. Dadurch haben sie ein größeres Einkommen, wovon die Kinder der Bauern profitieren. Denn die Familien können sich nun Schulbücher leisten. FMNR bringt damit nicht nur den Wald wieder zurück, sondern ist auch ein Mittel, um den Hunger auf der Welt zu bekämpfen und Kinder Schulbildung zu ermöglichen. - - - - - - - - - - ❤️ Willkommen auf dem YouTube-Kanal von World Vision Deutschland e.V.! Unser Anliegen ist es, die vielfältige Arbeit von World Vision sichtbar zu machen, Menschen zu inspirieren, sich für Kinder auf der ganzen Welt einzusetzen. Wir glauben fest daran, dass wir gemeinsam die Welt zu einem besseren, schöneren, lichtvolleren Ort für Kinder machen können. - - - - - - - - - - ► Abonnieren & die Glocke aktivieren 🔔 🤍 Wie hilft World Vision genau? - alle Informationen dazu findet ihr hier: 🤍 Vieles, was wir als World Vision an Hilfe und Unterstützung für Kinder auf der ganzen Welt leisten können, verdanken wir Spenden. Wenn ihr uns unterstützen wollt, könnt ihr hier spenden? 🤍 Folgt uns auch auf unseren Social Media Kanälen für aktuelle Infos & News zu den World Vision Projekten und Aktionen: ➡️ 🤍 ➡️ 🤍 ➡️ 🤍 ➡️ 🤍 ➡️ 🤍 #FMNR #SvenPlöger #Klimaschutz
Farmer Managed Natural Regeneration (FMNR)
World Vision through the Central Rift Farmer Managed Natural Regeneration Scale-Up Project (CRIFSUP) aims to strengthen food security and livelihood resilience for smallholder farmers and pastoralists in Kenya through FMNR and other restoration techniques. Through the Farmer Managed Natural Regeneration (FMNR) approach we can improve the lives of communities and the state of our environment. FMNR will increase tree cover, reverse land degradation, transform our economies, societies and most importantly create harmony with nature. We have only one earth and so we must protect it with all we've got. Video Edits and Voice-Over by Hellen Owuor, Communications Officer, World Vision Kenya Copyright 🤍 2022 World Vision Kenya
The Farmer Managed Natural Regeneration (FMNR) Project seeks to improve and sustain food security and resilience amongst the people in the Kassena Nankana District. World Vision through the project established a communal field where farmers would conduct periodic practical pruning and other tree/shrub management practices such as thinning and lopping as a way to regenerate the land. Background Music: Alogit OhO
World Vision Zambia National Director, John Hasse, interacts with Peter in Mpika on the impact of THRIVE's Farmer Managed Natural Regeneration (FMNR) during his monitoring visit in Muchinga Province.
01) FMNR - Everything is connected 🤍 02) FMNR - Tony Rinaudo: "The Niger I came to" 🤍 03) FMNR - Pruning for natural regeneration 🤍 04) FMNR - Fire prevention 🤍 05) FMNR - Income opportunities 🤍
Sustainable fodder production and environmental conservation by restoring degraded lands through Farmer Managed Natural Regeneration (FMNR) in Mandera County #Mandera #EnvironmentalConservation #FMNR #DisasterRiskReduction #Drought #Floods #Sustainabledevelopment