Mulloon Institute: Difference between revisions
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== Allan Savory == | == Allan Savory == | ||
Excerpts from [[Allan Savory]]'s speech in 2020: | Excerpts from [[Allan Savory]]'s speech in 2020<ref>https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rNxOduPZESY</ref>: | ||
<blockquote>My university training as an ecologist had taught me that burning grasslands was essential. Every year we burnt millions of hectares to provide a green flush for the animals and to keep the African savannas healthy. In fact, we managed the landscape with fire – much as Aborigines did for thousands of years.</blockquote> | <blockquote>My university training as an ecologist had taught me that burning grasslands was essential. Every year we burnt millions of hectares to provide a green flush for the animals and to keep the African savannas healthy. In fact, we managed the landscape with fire – much as Aborigines did for thousands of years.</blockquote> |
Revision as of 14:06, 31 March 2023
Tony Coote AM Memorial Lecture
General Michael Jeffery
Excerpts from General Michael Jeffery's speech in 2019:
Allan Savory
Excerpts from Allan Savory's speech in 2020[1]:
My university training as an ecologist had taught me that burning grasslands was essential. Every year we burnt millions of hectares to provide a green flush for the animals and to keep the African savannas healthy. In fact, we managed the landscape with fire – much as Aborigines did for thousands of years.
(In the Rhodesian War) I fought for twenty years and commanded a tracker combat unit – and so I spent literally thousands of hours tracking down my fellow countrymen.
I lecture today from a position of no expertise in climate change.
Rather than reinvent the wheel, I solved the problem by using 300 years of European military experience of planning in immediate battlefield situations. What they had worked out for complicated fast changing situations, I simply adapted and developed as a grazing planning process.[2]