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Dirt! The Movie
Duration:
1 hour, 20 minutes and 24 seconds
Country:
United States
Language:
English
Genre:
Documentary
Producer:
Bill Benenson
Director:
Gene Rosow
Views:
4,148
(2,057
embedded)
Posted by:
plasterius on Aug 20, 2010
DIRT! The Movie takes you inside the wonders of the soil. It tells the story of Earth's most valuable and underappreciated source of fertility--from its miraculous beginning to its crippling degradation. The real change lies in our notion of what dirt is. http://dirtthemovie.org/
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- Since the beginning of time, of all the planets and
- all the galaxies of the known universe,
- only one has a living, breathing skin called dirt.
- (BILL LOGAN, Author of the "Dirt, The Ecstatic Skin of the Earth")
- All the silicon and aluminum that are the basis of the framework of this soil,
- all the carbon in the hummus, the magnesium, the sodium, the calcium,
- all of that is made in stars very different from our star very far away
- and has probably been recycled through dozens of stars before it got to us.
- We are made of the same five basic elements that the earth is made of.
- The living organisms on earth have used
- the very same molecules over and over again,
- not just the same types of molecules, but the very same molecules.
- Dirt is very much alive. Probably has in it all of the kingdoms of life,
- from the tiniest bacteria, the fungi and the algae, the slime molds.
- With the amount of species that live in a teaspoon of dirt,
- I think it’s very obvious dirt might be more alive than we are.
- DIRT! THE MOVIE
- About four and a half billion years ago,
- the earth was a fiery ball of molten rock.
- Volcanoes punched through the surface,
- showering minerals from the earth’s core,
- and spewing water vapor that turned into rain.
- For millions of years, rain pounded rock into clay,
- and formed the oceans where life began.
- Microscopic life oozed from the sea onto the land,
- where it mixed with the clay,
- creating the first living dirt.
- Countless cycles of birth and death, fertility and decay
- transformed this dirt into the matrix of life on earth.
- When we humans arrived two million years ago everything changed for dirt,
- and from that moment on, the fate of dirt and humans has been intimately linked.
- We think that diamonds are very important, gold is very important,
- all these minerals are very important, we call them precious minerals,
- but they are all forms of the soil, but that part of this mineral, that is on top,
- like it is the skin of the earth, that is the most precious of the commons.
- Our wealth is imaginary, it comes from soil.
- If we don’t take care of the soil,
- which is just the first five centimeters layer of life
- that is on the, on the earth, our future is totally condemned.
- We take the soil for granted because it’s there, it’s everywhere
- except when it, all of it has been taken by the wind or by the running water
- and then you are left with bare rock and you realize,
- you can’t do very much with the bare rock.
- A lovely mild, sweet aroma and it has so much diverse life in it.
- A handful of terrestrial dirt contains more organized information
- than the surface of all the other known planets’
- WHAT ?
- contains more organized information than the surface of all the other known planets.
- This much soil probably has in it tens of billions of microorganisms
- and they’re all living together,
- some in cooperation, some in competition,
- so they have tremendous strategies for living with each other and getting rid of each other
- and making their own space in the ground.
- The idea that, uh, they’re just micro organisms, just stupid dirt’ is stupid.
- What we often call dirt, you know, this,
- the stuff we re trying to wash off our car, or wash off your driveways,
- are really these soils and sediments that are vital to keeping our biosphere healthy,
- which is all about keeping the plants and animals and ourselves alive.
- Dirt is a really strong living word,
- it’s a word like ‘house,’ ‘wrath,’ ‘eat, ‘frck,’
- it’s a word that has flavor to it in your mouth.
- And it’s a word about relationships.
- Kids don’t go to play in the soil, they go to play in the dirt.
- As we walk through the landscape,
- not only are the birds aware and the bears and all the other animals of this forest,
- not only are the birds aware and the bears and all the other animals of this forest,
- but all the microbes in the soil are aware of our presence.
- We’re deep in the old growth forest,
- at the end of the trail that’s called Trail That Time Forgot
- and here I sit amongst these giant spruce trees that have grown over the years.
- They’re probably three to four hundred years of age, 120, to 160 feet high.
- This old growth forest comes from the soil that’s so thin beneath my feet.
- The soil was originated after the last ice age 10,000 years ago, when the glaciers receded,
- they scraped away most of the soil down to barren rock.
- Small lenses of soil survived, and in these lenses, trees and small shrubs began to grow,
- but the soil is so thin, they climaxed, they fell over and the fungi rotted them,
- the soil became a little deeper and the lens got a little larger.
- Next succession would occur, and again, and again, and again, these cycles of renewal,
- decomposition, soil building, soil becomes thick, and, as the soil becomes thicker,
- it increases in its ability to support biodiversity.
- Let me pull this back and you can see the mycelium is all underneath.
- These are the interface organisms between life and death,
- and as they decompose the wood, they generate soil.
- This cobwebby growth then erupts into a mushroom.
- Its spores spread and satellite communities appear
- distant from the mushroom from which it sprang.
- This is the way of fungi.
- All soils in the world are infused with these mycelial mats.
- This is what the entire soil is made of, it’s made of mycelium,
- and as it decomposes the wood material and plant material, it becomes dirt.
- Mycelium makes dirt.
- Even in the concrete jungle, dirt finds a way to come into being.
- I decided to write a book about dirt largely because everywhere I went in New York
- people didn’t seem to believe in it, people didn’t seem to believe that nature existed at all.
- Clive was a guy I knew really well. He was just a general handyman.
- And one day he was asked to clean the front of the Cathedral
- because there was a block that was loose in the top.
- Clive fell off the scaffold. He fell more than forty feet.
- While he recovered in the hospital, his Chevy pickup sat for months under a maple tree,
- the motor not running.
- But in the back of the truck - open to the air and the sunlight and the rain,
- nature’s motor was emphatically running,
- as fallen leaves, styrofoam cups, chinese menus and pigeon drops turned into a garden.
- The process that turns garbage into a garden is central to our survival.
- We depend on dirt to purify and heal the systems that sustain us.
- As a water doctor the repository of life that I need to heal
- are the organisms that are beneath our feet.
- That’s the basic machine that has always recycled our water.
- You know, there is no new water on the planet,
- since the planet was created, it’s always been recycled.
- So this notion that water is pristine,
- it’s that community of soil, of dirt, of critters, of trees and plants.
- It’s all of these things, including the tiniest worms in the soil that do this transformation.
- Thinking about water, this pristine stuff that we’re drinking,
- I just had a sip of dinosaur pee.
- In our earliest stories, we’ve celebrated dirt as the source of who we are
- and where we come from.
- In the Amazon jungle, it’s said that one day Sun hurled a stick rattle into Mother Earth,
- and out we came.
- Ancient Egyptians believed that the gods shaped clay into humans
- and put them in an earthly paradise.
- Jewish, Christian and Muslim traditions share the story that God scooped up dirt
- and blew in the breath of life.
- In Hebrew, the very name Adam means dirt or clay.
- And Eve means life.
- Dirt in the garden of Eden gave them, and us, everything we need to survive.
- In traditional agriculture, the soil is the mother.
- She’s the mother who gives, to whom you must give back.
- And to treat soil as the sacred mother
- is the best thing you could put in your relationship with the earth.
- In traditional agriculture, soil is recognized as the source of all fertility.
- The sacred cow is such a important part of sacred soil
- because as we feed the cows, the part of the plant that we cannot eat,
- they turn that into the real life of the soil, the cow dung.
- Indian civilization wouldn’t have lasted 10,000 years
- if it hadn’t recognized the worth of what is literally the beginning of dirt, living dirt.
- Whenever interacting with nature, you’ve got to grow food for humanity and,
- at the same time, you’ve got to grow food for nature.
- Hi, welcome to Cannard Farm.
- Plants get compounds from the air, and they get energy from the sun,
- and they use their biological systems to, to fix this stuff into the sugars.
- They use some of those sugars to put into their fruit for attraction,
- to spread their seeds with all us animals.
- About half of those sugars they secrete from their root systems
- and pump those sugars into the soil to feed the soil biology.
- Plants are absorbing moisture so there’s a tide in the soil coming to the plant.
- While they’re alive they’re utilizing their bodily wastes
- to soluablize the mineral nutrients from the raw parent material.
- This is the raw parent material. A rock, this is planet earth.
- We’re going to have tomato plants and little baby vetch plants growing up underneath them,
- and we’re going to come in and harvest the tomato plants
- and then the vetch plants will have the whole land and it will turn into a tangle of vetch
- and other weeds, and they’ll be allowed to come to full maturity
- and die of their own volition.
- They’re going to die of maturity, they’re going to be grandmas at 93, dying of contentment.
- Then that is going to offer the soil mature, durable organic matter.
- Visionary environmentalist, Pierre Rabhi, is a farmer without borders.
- He’s devoted his life to healing dirt.
- Over many years, this dirt has taught me a lot.
- God did not give us this amazing dirt to mistreat it.
- I have a relationship with this living organism.
- At times I’m Dirt’s father because I take care of it.
- At times Dirt’s my mother because she feeds me.
- And at times Dirt’s my lover because’
- we share a loving relationship.
- I take care of it and the dirt takes care of me. I feel the life within it.
- Dirt that’s alive is a community
- and that community is trees and plants, microorganisms living in the soil,
- the plants that hold it together, the mulch that’s fed by all the leaves that come,
- that’s an amazing community.
- Add the layer of human community interaction with us, helping feed, helping water, prune,
- but also exchanging the oxygen and the carbon dioxide, that necessary community exchange.
- The trees feeding us fruit.
- We live in potentially a Garden of Eden.
- I’ve got zucchini, I’ve got strawberries, carrots, yellow beans, purple beans, cucumbers,
- I mean, what more could you want?
- The coconut.
- I eat the ground.
- I will tell you that every wine growing region I’ve ever been to, which is a lot,
- Italy and Spain and France and Australia, and all these places,
- the first thing I do is put my hand in the ground and eat it.
- I don’t know what that means, so, if I’m crazy, but I’m telling you,I always feel a connection.
- The ground is what you taste. When you really break it down,
- when you’re not just drinking for casual fun, when you’re ‘nerding it up,’
- it’s the ground that really exposes the wine.
- Getting a lot of cranberries, I get a little bit of like a roasted peppers kind of thing going on,
- maybe even a little bit of cassis on the back of the Sango.
- Now, when you taste the grape, you know, maybe you’re tasting some of that berries.
- Now, going down this beautiful vine, you get into the soil and, as you dig into the soil,
- you know, you start, this is sandy soil, you start smelling it and you’re getting,
- that classic dirtiness that you, sand and dirt that you got, and maybe even a little taste.
- Every piece of land has its own flavor profile and people understand it’s all about their dirt.
- Listening to the stories of the people who’ve gone organic, who’ve gone from being,
- places that put awkward things into the land to being very clean, the wine is so much better.
- And healthy vineyards make healthy wine.
- The people who make the greatest wines in the world, they love their dirt,
- they pick it up, they coddle it, they kiss it, they put it in a jar and it sits on their mantle
- in the living room because they know, they know.
- Growing up in a country like India, in the period when I did, soil literally was your cradle.
- Everything was soil.
- My parents were highly educated, but my mother had chosen to become a farmer,
- and I remember holidays coming down to her farm
- and our most fun thing used to be the cow dung and soil plaster
- with which, on a daily basis, the floors would be plastered,
- it was like artwork, it was like being a painter.
- And for us that freedom to play with dirt,
- I think has been both my intellectual, emotional and physiological immunity builder.
- People have been building with dirt for over 9,000 years.
- Most of the world considers this a really viable building material,
- a third of the world still lives in earthen structures.
- You can dig it up right on your site, you don’t have to transport it.
- To operate heavy machinery, pull out hundreds of yards of soil,
- then haul it hundreds of miles away to dispose of it like it’s garbage just seemed ludicrous.
- We use the wonderful machine, the horse, in this case, to process our straw.
- It’s an incredibly fine fiber.
- And in that process, they’re adding enzymes and other proteins to the manure,
- which act as a natural glue.
- So, as this dries, it dries with an incredible hardness.
- And we’re just kicking it old school,
- it’s like, oh, this is how everybody’s done everything for so long.
- The mixture of mud and cow dung in our climate, has many, many uses,
- the cow dung acts as an antiseptic, so you don’t get infestations,
- and mud, compared to cement, is warm in winter and cool in summer.
- So, if you go into a house with a mud plaster, in the summer, it will be cool.
- You go into a house with cement plaster, it’ll radiate the heat.
- You get the dirt high, it’s a really different experience than VOCs and petrochemicals,
- and I’d like to think that it lasts longer,
- everybody could get it, if they got their hands dirty.
- For us, mud is not just the matrix of life in where you grow your plants.
- It’s our building structure, it is, it’s our very sense of who we are.
- Dust to dust and ashes to ashes, we are dirt,
- and we’re made of it, we’re made of clay, and to that we return.
- Everything that we see as our flesh,
- our blood, our bones, could not be here without the land.
- The DNA text of a bacterium has entire paragraphs that are identical
- to our own genetic instructions.
- So, on a physical/chemical level, we’re just not all that different from microorganisms,
- as we might think we are.
- To understand, when you look at the mountains or the lakes, or the rivers,
- and to feel that being a part of it, to feel that this flesh that’s standing here is that place.
- That I am that river, I am that mountain, I am that dirt.
- I could pick a hand of dirt and that’s, that’s what my grandmother used to say.
- She, she’d pick up a hand of dirt and she’d say, ‘this is my flesh.’
- We’re on our way to get some sacred dirt, get our souls right, cleanse.
- Maybe throw some dirt in our hair or something.
- Have a dirt bath.
- A dirt bath, but this has got the holy dirt here Chimayo, glad to be New Mexicans.
- Today we walked 22 miles, me and her did.
- We do the walk every year to come over here and stand in the pit of dirt.
- It has healing powers.
- Gives us like a good sense of the Holy Spirit.
- People from all over the world come here.
- There’s a sense that God’s continuing creative action is real close here.
- One of the meanings of Chimayo is that our connection to the earth is still sacred.
- We did the pilgrimage today for my family.
- My auntie, Mary Jane, just passed away, so that’s what sparked it up.
- The dirt from the Santuario de Chimayo, has a specific sparkle to it,
- so whenever we need it, we’ll sprinkle a little bit here there
- and it does help, it’s proved true.
- In the past I was not paying attention to the dirt,
- but when it came to this place and I met people for whom the dirt is so important
- because their lives used to depend on fields and crops and harvest.
- I truly believe that then my eyes were opened
- and I understood better the importance of Mother Earth.
- Remember, you are dirt, into dirt you shall return.
- The demand for natural resources has completely changed our relationship with dirt.
- This is a fabric of life being torn apart that can never be put back together again.
- All around the world, we are destroying dirt
- in pursuit of the raw materials we consider to be more valuable.
- There’s a practice of coal mining that’s called ‘mountain top removal,’
- it’s strip mining with a vengeance, with equipment,
- the scale of which is difficult to conceive.
- Mountains are literally cut off and leveled
- and they’re being destroyed in the name of cheap electricity.
- It isn’t cheap at all, it’s unbelievably expensive.
- The attitude toward nature that says nature is only resources to be used,
- and not for the benefit of everyone, but for the benefit of a very, very small number of people
- at a very, very thin slice of time in this human journey.
- The coal companies can come in and blast and remove
- a one-layer of what they call ‘over burden.’
- The over burden is the boulder field, which will have no water table.
- That will support no vegetation, and the mountain tops, with the things in mountains,
- the heavy metals, the lead, cadmium, selenium,
- and all that now is free to get out into the watershed.
- I was born and raised here in Los Angeles in the 1950’s.
- In fact, I was raised in the house right there with the white van in the driveway.
- Urban intensity, but I got to escape it by hiking up here every day after school.
- I’d come up with my friends, we would see the animals, the snakes.
- We’d imagine getting to fish here, hunt, but the smog was devastating.
- If you look out, you see the vastness of concrete, asphalt, homes, buildings,
- parking lots, freeways.
- The city was built and designed and has been managed for over 100 years
- as a dead piece of inert concrete.
- We put all this asphalt on top of living dirt.
- We live in this living organism, it’s dysfunctional, pathological,
- but it’s a living organism, and it’s called the Flat City.
- When you have an area paved with something black, it’s going to collect a lot of heat,
- so you get a very strong heat island effect from building a city like Los Angeles
- and, superimposed on this, of course, come the freeways,
- so the biggest way that the city, as we’re building them now, relate to climate change
- is that they put up massive amounts of CO2.
- We took the rivers and encased them in concrete.
- We paved literally two thirds of Los Angeles so that now when it does rain,
- instead of being absorbed by the soil,
- the water runs off and it’s billions and billions of gallons.
- The city of Los Angeles itself spends close to a billion dollars a year
- to bring in water from as far away as Wyoming and Utah, all over to bring it here.
- They don’t need to. They have half the water falling here now,
- but because we’ve sealed the dirt, and sent the water away,
- 20 percent of our electricity is to bring water here.
- So, when you turn on the tap, it’s a climate change event.
- Without healthy dirt, it’s difficult to survive extreme climate events
- like hurricanes, floods, windstorms and drought.
- A large part of Bundelkhand is today suffering from a very extended drought
- linked to climate change,
- and this long term drought has led to crop failure, which has led to starvation.
- You create deserts where you are, and eventually these micro deserts
- coalesce and form much bigger areas,
- and we can’t live very happily in a desert.
- And so we start fighting between farming communities and nomadic communities,
- over land that is not a desert, that still has dirt.
- Desertification, or land degradation is one good way of undermining security in any country.
- Throughout history, we’ve seen civilizations rise and fall
- based on how they treated dirt.
- The American Mid West was known as the Bread Basket of the World.
- Across the prairies, using modern industrial machinery, farmers removed native grasses
- grasses to plant a single crop over millions of acres.
- This seemingly efficient system of farming, called monoculture, worked in the short term,
- bringing record yields and profits.
- Monocultures don’t produce more, they produce less.
- Monocultures produce nothing for the soil.
- The idea that we are increasing soil fertility and agricultural productivity
- through industrial monocultures is one of the biggest lies.
- What the farmers didn’t realize was that they were killing their dirt
- by destroying its root structure.
- After years of severe drought, fierce winds picked up whatever remained of the topsoil
- and just blew it away, leaving the dustbowl in its wake.
- The Dustbowl was an event not quite on the same scale,
- but getting up to comparable to what happened after the last ice age.
- We made a really big change in the landscape just by bad farming practices.
- A third of our topsoil we’ve lost in the last one hundred years.
- It’s the problem of agriculture, it’s the way we do agriculture now.
- If you look at the landscapes today,
- we have millions and millions of hectares of monoculture of one variety
- one species, one variety.
- All these monocultures are actually going to collapse under climate change scenarios,
- especially in drought situations.
- Now genetically modified soy dominates this land.
- When you see the vast scale’ of what’s happened to the soil here in Cordoba’
- you know it’s a serious problem.
- The more we grow monocultures, the more vulnerable our systems are.
- So, we need to diversify the systems, for example,
- in the winter here sometimes, we grow broccoli with fava beans.
- If a frost comes, the broccoli dies, the fava bean remains, very resistant to frost.
- If you have corn and beans and sorghum and a drought comes, the sorghum will remain,
- everything else will collapse, so you don’t put all the eggs in one basket.
- We have this one species planted for miles and it’s an all you can eat restaurant for pests.
- So, once a pest learns to unlock the key and get into one kind of plant,
- and you’ve got that plant planted for miles around, it can open every single plant, okay?
- And so that’s how pest epidemics get going, so then we add pesticides.
- Those chemicals deplete the life of the soil.
- They take away the structure of the soil, they take away the water of the soil.
- They take away the very organisms that make for soil fertility.
- Essentially, insects and plants are so like us, physiologically, you know,
- cell to cell, gene to gene, protein to protein
- that if it’s going to kill plants and if it’s going to kill insects, it’s going to kill us, too.
- What this system produces is food empty of nutrients but loaded with toxics.
- We weren’t designed to eat that kind of diet.
- Industrial farming practices have robbed the soil of its nutrients
- and created a huge demand for nitrogen fertilizer.
- When we pump those nitrogen fertilizers into the soil,
- we’re not just killing the life of the soil--this is mobile nitrogen.
- Only about 20 percent is taken up by the plant.
- Some of it goes to water tables, and the rest goes into rivers.
- In the American Mid West, the excess nitrogen flows into streams,
- down the Mississippi River and into the Gulf of Mexico.
- The nitrogen then feeds giant blooms of algae that suffocate nearly all marine life,
- creating a massive dead zone, where only jellyfish can thrive.
- This mobile nitrogen also combines with oxygen to form nitrous oxide,
- which floats up to the atmosphere, accelerating climate change.
- 25% of greenhouse gas emissions are coming from an agriculture
- that has become a war against the soil.
- For two seasons, three seasons, they’ll get a soya harvest,
- then they’ll abandon it like a desert and cut down another 100,000 square miles.
- Trees absorb pollutants, protect topsoil,
- prevent erosion, sequester carbon and release oxygen.
- The entire Brazilian Rain Forest is being cut down for expansion of soya.
- We have always cut down forests to clear land for growing food.
- Now, to meet the global demand for lumber, paper, bio fuels and land to graze cattle,
- forests around the world are being mowed down and the dirt beneath them ravaged.
- The government and many other people see timber, they see money,
- but they do not see the diversity of life that is in those forests.
- Each year 100 million trees are turned into 20 billion mail order catalogues.
- When I see how much the Congo forest is being encroached upon,
- how it is being harvested, how it is being destroyed,
- I know that if the Congo forest goes, so does Africa.
- Behind me we have an example of ecological Armageddon.
- This is a practice currently employed by the foresters and by logging companies who,
- after they’ve cut the old growth forest, adding insult upon injury, the brush is then set on fire,
- sending carbon dioxide, as well as gases, into the atmosphere.
- If this wood had been chipped and left on the ground,
- the fungi would have recycled it, eventually building soil.
- When it rains, the water runs off and carries with it the wonderful topsoil that we need
- to sustain vegetation in these forests.
- We do not replenish the underground water, and therefore, eventually leave us dry up.
- In once productive farmland, it’s the farmers who are being ravaged
- as they struggle to pay for expensive new technologies and equipment
- they’ve been pressured into buying.
- Farmers have been pushed to buy more seed, have more tractors,
- been pushed into the loan economy.
- Now, an activity that was a zero cost activity
- suddenly becomes a 5,000 rupee activity every year, and the farmer is burdened with debt.
- I couldn’t make the payments on my tractor, so the bank took it away.
- Now I have to look for work and my family is facing starvation.
- I think we’ll have to leave.
- As farmers around the world go broke and lose their farms,
- their land is taken over by international agribusinesses
- that grow genetically modified single crops for a globalized economy.
- I just love farming.
- In India alone, the target is 600 million farmers
- should disappear in an industrial model of farming.
- No one thinks about where will the soil be, where will the soil keepers be?
- Saddled with debt they are unable to pay, farmers around the world are committing suicide.
- So far here in Bundelkhand there have been about 5000 suicides.
- I went to the fields to look for my husband’ and found him hanging from a tree.
- In India, over the last decade, an estimated 200,000 farmers have killed themselves.
- Many by drinking the pesticide they can no longer afford.
- I think the problem is this:
- When you step on a person he shouts.
- He lets you know he’s upset. The soil doesn’t.
- But in reality, the soil does scream.
- Erosion means the soil is hurt.
- It’s bleeding, It’s in pain.
- We don’t understand this.
- Because we don’t know its language.
- Soil is a living system, it’s not dead.
- That’s the problem, we treat it like it’s dead.
- Because of our activities, we should be very concerned about our future.
- If there was a united organization of organisms,
- and each organism had the right to vote, would we be voted off the planet?
- Given that our bodies reject viruses, the analogy that the earth could reject the human species
- as a virus is very apropos and has good biological precedent.
- Over the course of 30 years, taking and editing photographs,
- Sebastio and Laylia Salgado have documented
- environmental and human devastation around the world.
- When you do human photography,
- when we do this kind of photography, then you must live with people.
- Living with people, you have time to see what happens around you,
- and you start to see that there is a very strong correlation
- between human degradation and environmental degradation.
- This picture, it’s, you know,
- when we see all dry and the people, they are asking for rain.
- It’s because we have no more trees, no more forest, and the people suffer.
- This is Mali, no more water inside of this lake.
- And here I have a picture of the people walking inside what was the lake
- and that has become a desert.
- People who live on degraded lands, become very poor,
- often they will abandon their land and they will go to cities
- looking for jobs that are not available and they will end up in slums.
- For the first time in human history, more people live in cities than in the countryside.
- In the developing world, nearly 80 percent of city dwellers now live in slums.
- They are displaced people who’ve been separated from the dirt that sustained them.
- It’s lunchtime in one of Haiti’s most desperate slums, but because of rising food prices,
- this mother and her toddler now rely on a traditional Haitian remedy for hunger pangs,
- cookies made of dried yellow dirt.
- Across the planet, hungry people are rioting over food.
- The food riots are a direct consequence of the industrial model of agriculture,
- the failure of the industrial agricultural model.
- Deadly conflicts and outright wars are breaking out over our dwindling supply of fertile soil.
- The conflict in Sudan is really a conflict over dirt.
- For the first time you have corporations
- that are going to be dictating the future of the soil
- and the future of the landscapes.
- Floods, drought, climate change, even war,
- are all directly related to the way we’re treating dirt.
- We, as a human species are facing, first, the problem of ecological non-sustainability
- that we have created, toxic load, we’ve created climate change.
- Each of these problems, individually, could push the human species to extinction.
- Collectively, we can be absolutely sure, we don’t have too much time.
- Here’s this 120 year window in which we find ourselves.
- And it’s probably the most important window in the history of Homo Sapien.
- I think it’s this period that’s the most important since our walk out of Africa,
- because we’ve now got to come to the end of the extractive economy
- and figure out how to live within our means.
- We are constantly being bombarded by problems that we face
- and sometimes we can get completely awkward.
- The story of the hummingbird is about this huge forest being consumed by a fire.
- All the animals in the forest come out
- and they are transfixed as they watch their forest burning
- and they feel very awkward, very powerless, except this little hummingbird.
- It says ‘I’m going to do something about the fire.’
- So it flies to the nearest stream, takes a drop of water and puts it on the fire.
- It goes up and down, up and down, up and down as fast as it can.
- In the meantime all the other animals, much bigger animals,
- like the elephant, with the big trunk, could bring much more water.
- They are standing there helpless, and they are saying to the hummingbird,
- ‘what do you think you can do? You too little. This fire is too big.
- Your wings are too little, and you’re beak so small,
- you can only bring a small drop of water at a time.’
- But as they continue to discourage it,
- it turns to them without wasting any time and tells them,
- ‘I’m doing the best I can.’
- And that to me is what all of us should do. We should always feel like a hummingbird.
- After years of bearing witness to environmental degradation,
- the Salgados knew they could no longer simply remain observers.
- They had to do something
- Why not plant a forest? The forest we had before here?
- The first plantation we did, we did it here and there.
- When you come to Instituto Terra, you see one millions trees together
- and how big a trees that you can embrace.
- You see the birds, we have so many birds now.
- In all this land around the planet, if we started to replant,
- in ten years would be no more dead land.
- When Pierre Rabhi looks at a desert, he sees an Oasis.
- I went to Burkina Faso for the first time in 1981.
- My specialty was to keep desertification from killing dirt.
- So I proposed they practice agroecology.
- His lifelong work in Africa has been to promote agroecology,
- an organic, bio-diverse agriculture that combines scientific knowledge with traditional wisdom.
- Today there are over 100,000 farmers in Burkina Faso
- who are using the methods we suggested in 1981.
- We have estimated that Ethiopia alone, if properly cultivated,
- could feed the entire African continent.
- It wasn’t long ago that native Americans were living off this arrangement.
- They ate the prairie turn up. Course ate things out of the streams,
- and they also ate the bison and prairie elk.
- Here was what we might call an original relationship with the universe.
- To build an agriculture
- as sustainable as the ecosystems we have destroyed is necessary and possible.
- What we’re trying to do is build agriculture based on the way
- the ecosystems were ten thousand years ago.
- This prairie would be our library.
- What the soil scientists here are trying to do is to understand those dynamics
- below the surface that sustain what we harvest above.
- Just to show you in one plant,
- some of the diversity of root systems that we have.
- With a perennial it allows this plant to come back each year from its root system.
- It doesn’t have to be started each year from seed
- and it doesn’t have to grow its entire root system each year
- like an annual plant would have to do.
- Our annual crop such as this native annual wheat,
- it’s root systems are much more shallow,
- so if it rains, carrying with it nitrogen and that nitrogen ends up ten feet down,
- this wheat plant can’t get it, so we have to put on more nitrogen.
- That native perennial at ten feet is able to grab it.
- This ain’t doin it, this is.
- This root diversity below ground, green diversity above the surface,
- is going to be far more resilient to a change in the climate than the annual monocultures.
- A lot of what we’re talking about is going on below ground.
- So let’s just go below ground.
- So here we have a nice soil pit roughly six feet from the bottom of the pit up to the soil surface.
- Now not all soils are this deep obviously, but the thinner the soil
- let’s say we have bedrock right here
- the thinner the soil the more important it is to have the perennial roots to protect that soil.
- If you only have this much soil in which to grow your food
- and you lose several inches of it a year, it’s not too many years and you’re growing nothing.
- Our goal is to have soil erosion go to zero.
- That’s the first important step, as I see it,
- to begin the reconciliation for us as a species out of context.
- When I started Narvania with concern for the seed and its renewability and its fertility,
- I started it as my personal commitment.
- Not knowing how many would join,
- no matter how long I would be able to continue this commitment,
- in practicing farming that is first a service to the soil.
- What Vandana Shiva and her colleagues do here is to collect & preserve the seed varieties,
- to share them with the surrounding farmers,
- so that the entire agricultural region regains bio-diversity and is revitalized.
- The only quality food that we can ever produce
- is food that is a byproduct of our relationship with the soil.
- We will use vetch, we will use clover, and I’m going to broadcast them by hand
- and while I’m broadcasting them by hand,
- I’m going to give each seed all of the energy of my soul,
- and connect with all of my plants and my soil.
- It’s so very important that we recognize that we’re not separate from all of it.
- What’s happening here dictates what happens up here.
- And what happens up here also dictates what happens down here.
- They’re totally connected,
- the below ground and above ground are totally connected ecologically.
- A new generation is finding ways to change their relationship to dirt.
- One group of young city dwellers moved from Brooklyn to upstate New York
- to put down new roots.
- We grow $20,000 per acre per year of vegetables,
- feeding thousands of people on what was a hayfield.
- And there’s tons more of these fields all over this region.
- We have been working together for two years now.
- This is such small time, small scale,
- compared to most other farms,
- but we’re preserving the soil by doing it organically.
- It’s pretty amazing to have your hands in this matter right here and it’s all alive.
- Add a little water, add a little sunlight and tend it a little bit, and hey.
- At this point we have about 500 families who we supply vegetables to on weekly basis.
- Miriam and Benjamin have figured a way to make it work for themselves and for us.
- We have healthcare, which is pretty amazing, I mean I have healthcare.
- I haven’t had healthcare in awhile. First drop off is in Bay Ridge.
- Then we make it over to Greenwood Heights.
- Then we make it over to the Red Shed Community garden.
- Giving food, the food you grew, to people, that’s pretty awesome.
- Community supported agriculture, or CSAs,
- provide fresh produce to subscribers.
- In exchange for us providing them produce every week, they pay us a yearly subscription
- and that money allows us to grow the food:
- buy seeds, buy equipment, take care of ourselves.
- I think there are a lot people trying to make efforts, doing things like this.
- Give us a natural niche in a place that’s pretty much concrete, you know.
- So you know you do what you can.
- These are gonna be goin’ to Brownsville, Brooklyn,
- to a lot of the less fortunate families.
- Be really a good thing in the future if some of the families could actually come in,
- come here and see the whole dirt process.
- Cause a lot of times in a, you know in a city there’s actually no dirt,
- you see everything is pretty much concrete.
- You don’t have to move out of your neighborhood to live in a better one,
- but you sure do have to fight,
- if you want to reconnect your life into a more natural state
- that actually includes poor people, and poor people of color.
- So we work to create opportunities’do tree planting, to work on creating parks.
- The presence of trees and open space actually has a positive impact
- on people’s mental well-being.
- We’re in the South Bronx, on top of the house that I live in
- and what we’re standing on right now is the green roof that we planted about 7 months ago.
- A green roof is a sustainable building technique
- and it’s really simply soil and living plants,
- but it has some really amazing properties, such as storm water management.
- It actually retains about between 70-95% of the water that falls on it.
- Energy conservation, it provides an insulating layer to the floor underneath it,
- they protect the roof from sun damage
- so they actually last up to five times longer than a traditional roof.
- And it actually cleans the air as well. Isn’t that beautiful.
- Up here, that’s the down spout that goes from our green roof,
- so all the excess water goes down and then it’s carried over into this rain barrel
- and that’s connected to a drip irrigation hose, which nicely waters our tomato plants
- and our lovely pear tree and the rose bushes and there’s cauliflower.
- So this is our compost bin, so remember all the weeds that I pulled up off our green roof
- they’re going to go right in here.
- And we found some earth with a lot of clay content in it,
- and it’s really been nice to have it amended with the compost
- look at that, isn’t that beautiful?
- What we want to do is green as many areas of our urban areas as possible
- to kind of mimic what nature has already stated works.
- So many of us feel overwhelmed by the problems we encounter.
- Sometimes you feel like so what am I, what can I do? Me, little me.
- It was 1970, I was 15 and the Forest Service told us that smog was killing the forest.
- They said they found that there were some trees that were smog tolerant
- but no one was planting them and it was up to us kids if we were going to save the forest.
- So what we did was take a piece of our camp that had been turned into a parking lot,
- we peeled back a four inch layer of tar and oil and let the dirt come back to life.
- So it really got started out of your concern for what was happening with the trees
- and kind of grew and the volunteers joined and...
- ... and other people who thought it was a good idea joined in.
- Tens of thousands of young people come here to learn about how nature works in cycles
- and they learn how those cycles were broken, causing damage to the eco-system.
- They learned their profound power and their role as the healers of that cycle.
- How long would that take to, to grow with proper care to a fairly good size, 4 or 5 feet?
- Two or three years.
- And this is gonna be a Redwood?
- It’s already a Redwood.
- Oh, excuse me.
- You look across any school yard in Los Angeles mostly it looks like a parking lot.
- That very same process of attacking a parking lot is what’s happening in school yards and neighborhoods all over.
- A prominent reporter said,
- well if you remove the asphalt, where are they gonna play?
- Well, that really reveals how far we’ve come from nature.
- It’s really amazing what started happening
- as students started to remove the asphalt and green their campuses.
- This place used to be all concrete,
- just like down there at the basketball courts. We planted an edible landscape.
- That is very good !
- It’s, experiencing nature is so comforting to these kids
- who have never had their hands in the ground before.
- They just need to be here, they want to be in the garden.
- Well, I think we should all get our hands in the dirt,
- and pick the vegetables ourselves
- and bring them into the kitchen and make them into these beautiful soups.
- - Sure! - Thank you!
- Our whole lunch is actually made out of dirt
- Thank you, dirt. Thank you very, ... for the salad.
- Salad, sandwich, milk and lunch...
- Yes, dirt you made my lunch.
- Yes, dirt you made my lunch.
- All our prayers are ancient prayers from the beginning of the agricultural season.
- Begin with, I know I have to take something from you, Mother Earth,
- to feed myself, to feed my family,
- But I promise I will I return as much as I can.
- This is compost. We just cultivated a bed
- so we put compost all over it
- and then layered it with some newer soil.
- There’s no such thing as waste until it’s wasted.
- Compost is the black gold that keeps dirt healthy.
- I really think of this compost pile as a giant casserole
- say a lasagna.
- Cause all these things are going to start cooking.
- That’ the way compost works:
- basically you need two thingsyou need stems of plants or chopped up leaves, something like that,
- and then you have the moist green ingredients, and that’s things like weeds or old cucumbers
- or anything like that that’s leafy matter.
- And the dried brown is the fuel, the moist green is the fire.
- when you add nitrogen and carbon together you get this wonderful combustion
- aided by our little friends the bacteria and the fungi
- that are in here making it all work.
- and it turns into something resembling the best soil you ever saw.
- We got a call from the state of Maine that they had a fish waste crisis.
- They were dumping fish waste out at sea
- and EPA was beginning to crack down.
- And I said lets bring all the waste onshore and compost it.
- But guess what we had to deal with?
- We had this kind of material here. Take a, take a whiff of that.
- Holy smoke!
- That’s um, that’s pretty strong isn’t it? That’s pretty strong.
- Yeah. As soon as we started composting it everybody said
- Oh, that’s what the Indians used to do.
- We’re combining it with, with a carbon source.
- And the traditional carbon source for making compost is soft wood sawdust,
- but this is really step, step one.
- Not bad. This is about one turn too early.
- You can pick up a slightly ammonia smell with this
- and that kind of gives me away that I’m rushing this just a little bit
- The next step up, we’ve turned it four more times.
- At this point you can smell it, no ammonia smell at all,
- that’s a good sign, that’s a real good sign that we’re right on track.
- It has a real earthy smell, smells just like dirt right out of your garden at this point.
- And this is their final product, look at that. (Wow)
- That, all it took was about eight months of composting.
- It’s beautiful!
- There was a neighbor no more than a couple of miles away
- who had a business shucking clams,
- and if we turned up at his operation at 3:30 when he quit work every afternoon
- he would dump all of these barrels of clamshells into the back of my trailer.
- We would bring them back and spread them on the fields and rototill them in.
- It was a pretty interesting thing because the local extension agent came by one day
- while I was doing that and he looked at this and he said,
- Well that’s foolish Eliot, they won’t break down for a hundred years.
- And I said, Great! You mean I have a steady supply of calcium
- for the next hundred years?
- And it was just these two ways of looking at it.
- He wanted it today,
- I was thinking of long term fertility and something that would be there for the future.
- As of late people are realizing that soils and sediments actually contain
- a fair amount of energy, and energy that you find is tied up as organic matter, right?
- So soils, sediments, ah, waste water, right, the things that you may throw out of your kitchen,
- as food scraps or the tremendous amount of organic-rich waste that comes out of industry,
- you know, we would just dump that somewhere and ignore it,
- and now we’re beginning to realize that we can harness energy from it,
- and to that end we’ve been looking a lot at these microbial fuel cells
- which are devices that harness energy from the naturally occurring cycles that take place in soils.
- The basic premise is that you have microbes that live in soils and sediments
- and they eat the organic matter in the soil,
- and to generate energy from that they have to move electrons off of that
- through their bio chemical pathways and stick those electrons onto something.
- By using a microbial fuel cell that you would put into the soil
- you can do things like turn this landscape light on.
- So what you see here is our landscape light being powered by energy that we harness from microbes
- which you could have in your home, in your backyard,
- or we could use these to illuminate parks and public spaces.
- And our hope is that we’ll be able to find ways
- to use microbial fuel cells to power,
- maybe outdoor landscape lighting, or even bring lights to rural remote regions of the U.S.
- and of course, to help those people in the developing world improve their quality of life.
- Rikers Island in New York City, one of the largest prison complexes in the world,
- offers inmates the opportunity to work in the Greenhouse Program.
- When we talk about dirt, we’re not just talking about dirt,
- we’re talking about the spiritual as well as the physical attributes of one’s life,
- and I think that’s what people relate dirt to after they come from jail into the gardens.
- It’s no longer dirt, it’s a metaphor for a healthy life.
- I grew up in Brooklyn, NY.
- I have a three year old. I actually had my 20th birthday here. A fight brought me here.
- You know, reality smacked me in my face, you know, being here,
- and at the same time, I’ve, I’ve found something I like to do.
- I notice when people come through the gates,
- you know they’re hunched over, they’re feeling the impact of what’s like being locked up.
- All of a sudden as they start moving through the garden,
- you can kind of almost see their chest cavity expand and their shoulders go out.
- Yeah, when I come out the doors I said wow, it’s so beautiful.
- Then the first thing I see is my friends:
- Donald and the guinea fowl are my favorite birds, and I love them to death.
- They’re so serene and beautiful.
- It’s something that one, a person would have to feel for themselves,
- that’s behind those closed doors.
- In the period of time that it takes to mix soil, to dig into the soil,
- I see this transformation.
- And it really comes with that first exploration into the world of dirt.
- It’s really amazing what started happening
- as students started to remove the asphalt and green their campuses.
- Principals have reported that kids
- are playing more cooperative games and less aggressive.
- This is really cool.
- Digging is magical. Everybody loves diging.
- You have to get on your knees and you have to dig through that dirt.
- Living things work together to make life a better place.
- It’s a good thing. God made dirt and dirt don’t hurt.
- The Dirt Program is great. It’s just another way to get back to society.
- I’m actually helping people, feeding the homeless.
- I would love to work with flowers and dirt,
- now that I conquered my fear. I’m not scared what comes from it.
- At some point we fall in love with the whole thing,
- and it can either be an activity or it can be a plant they connect too
- But they connect.
- I like the cactus. I really do.
- Things might want to come and eat off it, and can’t cause it’s tough on the outside and protects itself.
- It’s sweet inside. I would say this is me.
- When you’ve got a prison industrial complex and one that, you know, supports our GDP as much as this one does,
- then, if we build a jail it will be filled.
- What we wanted to do is show that there is another way,
- if you’ve got a bunch of guys and gals who are planting trees,
- who are installing green roofs, those are actually paying the city back,
- in terms of storm water management costs, in terms of energy conservation costs.
- The Green Team is an opportunity for inmates leaving Rikers
- to continue building the skills they learned.
- And it also offers them a way to get paid.
- When I came out, I started workin’ the next week.
- You know so I won’t get back any trouble or anythin’ like that.
- I felt that if I kept continue programming positive you know I’ll stay out.
- Our re-conviction rates of people
- who’ve joined the Green Team are extremely low.
- Then you get the wire first...
- These green collar jobs are jobs that can’t be outsourced,
- so when you’re working to restore a wetland,you’re working to put on a green roof,
- even putting on solar panels, you’re not going to send your house to China to have that done.
- It really is a nice way to bring together the three traditional parts of a person,
- their physical moving part and their intellectual part and their emotional part.
- People getting their hands in the dirt and actually knowing the power
- that they have to tend to something, another living thing, I mean
- that’s really powerful to folks who have been told all of their lives
- that they have nothing to contribute.
- Guide it in.
- This is a lot about team building too.
- And these projects benefit the whole community.
- All of this concrete and stuff don’t need to be here.
- You don’t have to leave the concrete jungle as is.
- A lot of people they ashamed to touch the dirt and get ands dirty.
- But dirt is what you’re made of, so it’s good.
- Kids really get their power
- when they’re learning and they’re dreaming combined.
- In a number of neighborhoods where we’ve given the kids those sledge hammers,
- and they’ve busted the concrete, many of them were gang kids.
- After they got done with planting the trees,
- they voluntarily went and painted out the graffiti.
- There’s nothing more moving
- to see tough kids have their hearts opened because they did the work.
- And they learned where the real difference is.
- And they see and feel the real difference they make.
- And they see and feel the real difference they make.
- and I’d be like, it’s just dirt, grandma. Dirt ain’t alive.
- She goes, it has oxygen and everything in it, and minerals and vitamins.
- And how do you think the plants grow, and the food is good,
- And you, literally goes in one ear and come out the other.
- But now that I’m older I understand more how it’s very important to help the environment
- because sooner or later if people don’t really wake up and see
- what’s going on with global warming and all of this, it’s gonna be too late.
- It’s gonna be really too late.
- Even though what you are doing may be very small,
- may be very insignificant as far as you’re concerned,
- collectively, if so many of us, we are doing the same thing,
- we would accomplish a lot.
- It really does start at home.
- Sometimes we can’t change things on the grandest scale,
- but if you start to change yourself, and your friend starts it,
- and your friend starts it, pretty soon a lot of people are doing something different.
- The good news is that we don’t need to start from scratch,
- we can learn a lot of valuable lessons from the wisdom of nature.
- Put on the skin a dress,
- a green dress, like trees, like vegetation.
- And then when the earth is covered with green, the vegetation,
- with the trees, with the forest, it looks very beautiful.
- And in this age of climate change,
- can you imagine how happy the planet would be?
- What we give to the soil, what we give back to the soil,
- how we recycle our waste, back into the soil, is what’s going to sustain us.
- We have great friends out there. We have biological allies.
- Underneath, in the soil, are soil builders, which are the earthworms.
- We’re selling worms. You can get worms to go.
- Darwin said at the end of evolution’s history, they will be recognized
- as the most important species, because they build the soil.
- Oh there’s one, there, see, go get him.
- What we’ve destroyed, we can heal.
- When we have the trees like this going, going, going, going,
- we see, now we can do more.
- I may feel insignificant,
- but I certainly don’t want to be like the animals watching as the planet goes down the drain.
- I will be a hummingbird. I will do the best I can.
- Oh that smells so good, it really does.
- God made dirt, and dirt don’t hurt.
- Put it in your mouth and let it work.
- Dirt !
- When nature works on her own, she only creates living soils.
- But the moment the human being enters,
- they can either work like nature and rebuild the life of the soil with every action,
- or take it away.
- The choice is desertification or fertile and living soils like these.
- Of the billions of planets in all the galaxies of the known universe
- only one has a living, breathing skin called dirt.
- ----------------
- CREDITS ROLL
- BILL LOGAN Author of the "Dirt, The Ecstatic Skin of the Earth"
- VANDANA SHIVA Physicist, agriculture activist
- FRITJOF CAPRA Physicist and writer
- JOHN TODD Biologist and eco-designer
- GARY VAYNERCHUCK Winemaker and TV presenter
- WANGARI MAATHAI Nobel laurate
- MIGUEL ALTIERI Entomologist of UCA, Berkeley
- JEREMY NARBY Antropologist and writer
- PETER GIRGUIS Biologist, Harvard University
- PAUL STAMETS Mycologist
- ANDY LIPKIS Founder-president of TreePeople
- BOB CANNARD Farmer
- PIERRE RABHI Farmer and environmental ativist
- KEVIN ROWELL Bioconstrutor
- MARISHA FARNSWORTH Bioconstrutor
- DAVID ORR Professor of the environmental sciences
- JEANETTE ARMSTRONG Spokesperson of the Okanagan Indians
- JUAN VICENTE SANCHEZ Professor of agriculture, Argentina
- SEBASTI’O SALGADO Photographer and co-founder of the Instituto Terra
- LELIA SALGADO Co-founder do Instituto Terra
- WES JACKSON Founder, The Land Institute
- JERRY GLOVER Soil scientist, The Land Institute
- BENJAMIN SHUTE Co-owner of the Hearty Roots
- MIRIAM LATZER Co-owner of the Hearty Roots
- DANNY PERCICH Farmer, Hearty Roots
- MAJORA CARTER, Founder, Sustainable South Bronx
- ALICE WATERS Chief founder of Chez Panisse, founder of Edible Schoolyard
- WILL BRINTON founder of Woods End Laboratory
- WES KINNEY Owner of the Kinney Compost
- ELIOT COLEMAN Organic farmer
- JAMES JILER Director of the Greenhouse Program
- End ! ! !


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