Title: Why America Built A Forest From Canada To Texas Source:
[None] URL Source:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fNT3aDnzd10 Published:Jul 7, 2025 Author:Horse Post Date:2025-07-07 09:26:49 by Horse Keywords:None Views:17 Comments:1
Imagine a wall of dust stretching ten thousand feet high, racing across the land at sixty miles per hour. In the 1930s, this was daily life in Americas heartland, a man-made disaster so devastating it choked entire communities, killed livestock, and forced millions to flee. The Dust Bowl wasnt just an environmental crisis; it was an existential threat to the countrys survival.
Faced with economic collapse and ecological ruin, President Franklin D. Roosevelt launched one of the boldest environmental engineering projects in history: the Great Plains Shelterbelt. A living wall of trees over a thousand miles long, built not with concrete, but with roots and branches. This green barrier was designed to stop the wind, hold the soil, and save the nation from collapse. Most people have never heard of it. But it worked.
This is the story of the forest that held back the sky. Of how a nation nearly lost its landand how a few million trees changed the course of history. Because sometimes, the greatest technology isn't steel or silicon. Its a tree, planted in the right place, at the right time.
While the shelter belts were important for land in crop production, introduction of the trees, particularly the Eastern Red Cedar, have been a negative for the remaining native prairie. Less than 5% of North America's native tall grass prairie remains and we are losing it to the trees. It's only through the use of controlled burns that the largest stand in the Flint Hills of Kansas is fighting back. As we lose the prairie we are losing the plants and animals that evolved on the prairie, including the prairie chicken and prairie flowers that are important to migratory birds, butterflies, and other insects.(Comment from site. We need more grasslands raising cattle-beef.)