How to grow a forest in your backyard Shubhendu Sharma

This is a man-made forest.

It can spread over acres
and acres of area,

or it could fit in a small space –

as small as your house garden.

Age of this forest
is just two years old.

I have a forest in the backyard
of my own house.

It attracts a lot of biodiversity.

(Bird call)

I wake up to this every morning,

like a Disney princess.

(Laughter)

I am an entrepreneur

who facilitates the making
of these forests professionally.

We have helped factories,

farms,

schools,

homes,

resorts,

apartment buildings,

public parks

and even a zoo

to have one of such forests.

A forest is not an isolated piece of land
where animals live together.

A forest can be an integral part
of our urban existence.

A forest, for me,

is a place so dense with trees
that you just can’t walk into it.

It doesn’t matter
how big or small they are.

Most of the world
we live in today was forest.

This was before human intervention.

Then we built up our cities
on those forests,

like São Paulo,

forgetting that we belong
to nature as well,

as much as 8.4 million
other species on the planet.

Our habitat stopped being
our natural habitat.

But not anymore for some of us.

A few others and I today make
these forests professionally –

anywhere and everywhere.

I’m an industrial engineer.

I specialize in making cars.

In my previous job at Toyota,

I learned how to convert
natural resources into products.

To give you an example,

we would drip the sap
out of a rubber tree,

convert it into raw rubber

and make a tire out of it – the product.

But these products can never
become a natural resource again.

We separate the elements from nature

and convert them
into an irreversible state.

That’s industrial production.

Nature, on the other hand,
works in a totally opposite way.

The natural system produces
by bringing elements together,

atom by atom.

All the natural products
become a natural resource again.

This is something which I learned

when I made a forest
in the backyard of my own house.

And this was the first time
I worked with nature,

rather than against it.

Since then,

we have made 75 such forests
in 25 cities across the world.

Every time we work at a new place,

we find that every single element
needed to make a forest

is available right around us.

All we have to do is to bring
these elements together

and let nature take over.

To make a forest we start with soil.

We touch, feel and even taste it

to identify what properties it lacks.

If the soil is made up of small particles
it becomes compact –

so compact, that water cannot seep in.

We mix some local biomass
available around,

which can help soil become more porous.

Water can now seep in.

If the soil doesn’t have
the capacity to hold water,

we will mix some more biomass –

some water-absorbent material
like peat or bagasse,

so soil can hold this water
and it stays moist.

To grow, plants need water,
sunlight and nutrition.

What if the soil doesn’t have
any nutrition in it?

We don’t just add nutrition
directly to the soil.

That would be the industrial way.

It goes against nature.

We instead add microorganisms to the soil.

They produce the nutrients
in the soil naturally.

They feed on the biomass
we have mixed in the soil,

so all they have to do
is eat and multiply.

And as their number grows,

the soil starts breathing again.

It becomes alive.

We survey the native
tree species of the place.

How do we decide what’s native or not?

Well, whatever existed
before human intervention is native.

That’s the simple rule.

We survey a national park

to find the last remains
of a natural forest.

We survey the sacred groves,

or sacred forests around old temples.

And if we don’t find anything at all,

we go to museums

to see the seeds or wood of trees
existing there a long time ago.

We research old paintings,
poems and literature from the place,

to identify the tree species
belonging there.

Once we know our trees,

we divide them in four different layers:

shrub layer, sub-tree layer,
tree layer and canopy layer.

We fix the ratios of each layer,

and then we decide the percentage
of each tree species in the mix.

If we are making a fruit forest,

we increase the percentage
of fruit-bearing trees.

It could be a flowering forest,

a forest that attracts
a lot of birds or bees,

or it could simply be a native,
wild evergreen forest.

We collect the seeds
and germinate saplings out of them.

We make sure that trees
belonging to the same layer

are not planted next to each other,

or they will fight for the same
vertical space when they grow tall.

We plant the saplings close to each other.

On the surface, we spread
a thick layer of mulch,

so when it’s hot outside
the soil stays moist.

When it’s cold,

frost formation happens only on the mulch,

so soil can still breathe
while it’s freezing outside.

The soil is very soft –

so soft, that roots
can penetrate into it easily,

rapidly.

Initially, the forest doesn’t
seem like it’s growing,

but it’s growing under the surface.

In the first three months,

roots reach a depth of one meter.

These roots form a mesh,

tightly holding the soil.

Microbes and fungi live
throughout this network of roots.

So if some nutrition is not available
in the vicinity of a tree,

these microbes are going to get
the nutrition to the tree.

Whenever it rains,

magically,

mushrooms appear overnight.

And this means the soil below
has a healthy fungal network.

Once these roots are established,

forest starts growing on the surface.

As the forest grows we keep watering it –

for the next two to three years,
we water the forest.

We want to keep all the water
and soil nutrition only for our trees,

so we remove the weeds
growing on the ground.

As this forest grows,
it blocks the sunlight.

Eventually, the forest becomes so dense

that sunlight can’t reach
the ground anymore.

Weeds cannot grow now,
because they need sunlight as well.

At this stage,

every single drop of water
that falls into the forest

doesn’t evaporate back
into the atmosphere.

This dense forest condenses the moist air

and retains its moisture.

We gradually reduce and eventually
stop watering the forest.

And even without watering,

the forest floor stays moist
and sometimes even dark.

Now, when a single leaf
falls on this forest floor,

it immediately starts decaying.

This decayed biomass forms humus,

which is food for the forest.

As the forest grows,

more leaves fall on the surface –

it means more humus is produced,

it means more food so the forest
can grow still bigger.

And this forest keeps
growing exponentially.

Once established,

these forests are going to regenerate
themselves again and again –

probably forever.

In a natural forest like this,

no management is the best management.

It’s a tiny jungle party.

(Laughter)

This forest grows as a collective.

If the same trees –

same species –

would have been planted independently,

it wouldn’t grow so fast.

And this is how we create
a 100-year-old forest

in just 10 years.

Thank you very much.

(Applause)

这是一片人造森林。

它可以散布在数
英亩的土地上,

也可以放在一个小空间里——

就像你家的花园一样小。

这片森林的
年龄只有两岁。

我家后院有一片森林

它吸引了大量的生物多样性。

(鸟叫)

我每天早上醒来,

就像迪士尼公主一样。

(笑声)

我是一名企业家


专业地促进这些森林的建设。

我们帮助工厂、

农场、

学校、

家庭、

度假村、

公寓楼

、公园

甚至

动物园拥有这样的森林之一。

森林不是
动物生活在一起的孤立土地。

森林可以
成为我们城市生活中不可或缺的一部分。

对我来说,森林

是一个树木茂密的地方
,你根本无法走进去。

不管
它们有多大或多小。

我们今天生活的世界大部分地区都是森林。

这是在人为干预之前。

然后我们在这些森林上建立了我们的城市

比如圣保罗,

忘记了我们也
属于大自然,

就像
地球上的 840 万种其他物种一样。

我们的栖息地不再是
我们的自然栖息地。

但对我们中的一些人来说不再是了。

今天,我和其他一些人
专业地制作这些森林 -

任何地方和任何地方。

我是一名工业工程师。

我专门做汽车。

在我之前在丰田的工作中,

我学会了如何将
自然资源转化为产品。

举个例子,

我们会
从橡胶树上滴下树液,

将其转化为生橡胶

,然后用它制造轮胎——产品。

但这些产品永远不可能
再次成为自然资源。

我们将元素与自然分离

,并将它们
转化为不可逆转的状态。

那是工业生产。

另一方面,大自然
以完全相反的方式运作。

自然系统
通过将元素

逐个原子地结合在一起而产生。

所有的天然产物
再次成为自然资源。

是我在自家后院造林时学到的。

这是我第一次
与自然合作,

而不是反对它。

从那时起,

我们
在全球 25 个城市建立了 75 个这样的森林。

每次我们在一个新的地方工作时,

我们都会发现
建造森林所需的每一个元素

都在我们身边。

我们所要做的就是将
这些元素结合在一起

,让大自然接管。

要造林,我们先从土壤开始。

我们触摸、感受甚至品尝它,

以确定它缺乏哪些特性。

如果土壤是由小颗粒组成的,
它就会变得致密——

如此致密,以至于水无法渗入。

我们混合了一些当地
可用的生物质,

这可以帮助土壤变得更加多孔。

水现在可以渗入。

如果土壤
没有容纳水的能力,

我们将混合更多的生物质——

一些吸水材料,
如泥炭或甘蔗渣,

这样土壤就可以容纳这些水
并保持湿润。

为了生长,植物需要水、
阳光和营养。

如果土壤中没有
任何营养怎么办?

我们不只是将营养
直接添加到土壤中。

那将是工业方式。

它违背自然。

相反,我们将微生物添加到土壤中。

它们
自然地在土壤中产生养分。

它们以
我们混合在土壤中的生物量为食,

因此它们所要做的
就是进食和繁殖。

随着它们数量的增加

,土壤又开始呼吸。

它变得有生命。

我们调查了当地的原生
树种。

我们如何决定什么是原生的?

好吧,
在人类干预之前存在的任何东西都是原生的。

这就是简单的规则。

我们调查了一个国家公园,

以寻找
天然森林的最后遗迹。

我们调查

古老寺庙周围的神圣树林或神圣森林。

如果我们什么都没找到,

我们会去

博物馆看看很久以前那里存在的树木的种子或木头

我们从这个地方研究古老的绘画、
诗歌和文学,

以确定
属于那里的树种。

一旦我们了解了我们的树木,

我们将它们分为四个不同的层:

灌木层、子树层、
树木层和树冠层。

我们固定每一层的比例,

然后我们决定
混合中每种树种的百分比。

如果我们正在建造果林,

我们会增加
结果树的百分比。

它可能是一片开花的

森林,一个
吸引大量鸟类或蜜蜂的森林,

或者它可能只是一个原生的
野生常绿森林。

我们收集种子
并从中发芽。

我们确保
属于同一层的

树木不会彼此相邻种植,

否则它们会
在长高时争夺相同的垂直空间。

我们种植的树苗彼此靠近。

在表面上,我们铺
了一层厚厚的覆盖物,

所以当外面很热时
,土壤会保持湿润。

当天气寒冷时,

霜冻只发生在覆盖物上,

因此土壤
在外面结冰时仍然可以呼吸。

土壤非常柔软——

如此柔软,以至于根部
可以轻松、迅速地渗透进去

最初,森林看起来并没有
在生长,

但它在地表下生长。

在前三个月,

根的深度达到一米。

这些根形成网状,

紧紧抓住土壤。

微生物和真菌生活
在这个根系网络中。

因此,如果
树附近没有一些营养,

这些微生物就会
将营养带到树上。

每当下雨,

神奇地,

蘑菇会在一夜之间出现。

这意味着下面的土壤
有一个健康的真菌网络。

一旦建立了这些根,

森林就开始在地表生长。

随着森林的生长,我们不断地给它浇水

——在接下来的两到三年里,
我们给森林浇水。

我们只想为我们的树木保留所有的水
和土壤营养,

因此我们清除了
生长在地面上的杂草。

随着这片森林的生长,
它阻挡了阳光。

最终,森林变得如此茂密

,以至于阳光再也无法
到达地面。

杂草现在不能生长,
因为它们也需要阳光。

在这个阶段

,落入森林的每一滴水

都不会蒸发
回大气中。

这片茂密的森林凝结了潮湿的空气

并保留了它的水分。

我们逐渐减少并最终
停止给森林浇水。

即使没有浇水

,森林地面仍然保持湿润
,有时甚至是黑暗的。

现在,当一片叶子
落在这片森林地面上时,

它立即开始腐烂。

这种腐烂的生物质形成腐殖质

,是森林的食物。

随着森林的生长,

更多的树叶落在地表——

这意味着产生了更多的腐殖质,

这意味着更多的食物,因此森林
可以变得更大。

而这片森林一直
呈指数级增长。

一旦建立起来,

这些森林将
一次又一次地自我更新——

可能永远如此。

在这样的天然林中,

没有管理就是最好的管理。

这是一个小型丛林派对。

(笑声)

这片森林是集体生长的。

如果相同的树——

相同的物种

——被独立种植,

它就不会长得那么快。

这就是我们如何在短短 10 年内创造出
具有 100 年历史的森林

非常感谢你。

(掌声)