Saudi Arabia turning the desert into farmland again.

 

For hundreds maybe even thousands of years the Bedouin tribes moved across the Arabian peninsula they followed the rainfall and they created pasture essential for their animals. The Bedouin settled in the 1950s and then they had to change their way of life which caused overgrazing and the gradual disappearance of all this native pasture. A new scheme is recreating this way of farming. When the rain is full there is usually a flash flood and the water runs off so a new project of building rock terraces and check dams slows the water so that it has time to sink into the ground. In 2012 a project moved drape resisting trees into the area and some did manage to survive providing a partial green landscape for some animals and improving the soil. Gradually the rains of 2018 and 19 have sprouted new life into the landscape and the arid desert land is starting to become a much richer and green land. Plants are now thriving including fruit and nut trees and hopefully this project at Al Baydah will be translated to other areas.



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