Peter Berg

Revegetation/Restoration Project

Collecting compost for a community garden project that Orlando has spearheaded in his neighborhood, Bellavista.

Clearing trail and digging holes for planting trees at Dr. Parra revegetation site.

Loading trees to be delivered to Punta Gorda.

Lizard hanging out near our greenhouse.

Town/RegionCountryCategoriesDate
Bahia de CaraquezEcuadorCentral and Latin America, Plants, Seeds18 Mar 2011

Bahia de Caraquez is part of the estuary of the Rio Chone where it flows into the Pacific Ocean. The hills became saturated with water during the 1997-98 El Niño heavy rains and whole hillsides came down into the city as devastating mudslides. This event was followed by a 7.2 earthquake.

Because the soil in Bahia de Caraquez and along the Rio Chone has little solid substructure, the solution has been to undertake significant revegetation projects using only native plant species, that hold the slopes of hills in place and cause rain to run off. The blades of Paja macho, a grass used in revegetating the first expanse we undertook to restore, lead water downhill and off the slope in a country whose clay soil-base holds up to three times its weight in water and, when overloaded, has created the massive mudslides that mark the Rio Chone.

For the past 11 years, PDF has been working to completely revegetate this 8 kilometer long continuous strip so that it serves as an erosion buffer and “wild corridor” of habitat for native plants and animals. (Many of the native species we plant bear fruit and provide an additional food source that residents can use for themselves and/or sell in the local market.) The work is:

• Stabilizing the eroded hillsides in Bahia de Caraquez and along the Rio Chone to prevent further severe erosion and devastating mudslides.
• Creating wildlife corridors of native dry tropical forest vegetation that link with extant forest to prevent erosion and restore ecosystems in this area. The sightings of a variety of native animal, bird and reptile species at our sites is a strong example of how hospitable revegetation can be to a wide array of wildlife even a few blocks from the heart of the city.
• Providing hands-on experience in ecologically sustainable practices so that the residents can continue working from this base and build their own sustainable businesses.
• Enabling residents to adopt more environmentally sustainable lifestyles and develop an increased, long-term commitment to participation in environmental activities and policy discussions.
• Maintaining our ongoing partnership with the people and Municipality of Bahia de Caraquez and contributing to their efforts to create Eco-Bahia, a model for other cities throughout the undeveloped and developed world.

We have accomplished a great deal but more still needs to be done.

For further information contact mail@planetdrum.org or visit www.planetdrum.org

News

Some very sad news. Peter Berg, Founder/Director of Planet Drum Foundation (PDF) since its inception in 1973, passed away on July 28th from lung cancer complicated by pneumonia. He is very much missed by all of us. The Revegetation/Restoration Project in Ecuador was very, very important to Peter and it will definitely continue.

Project Updates

Read about the latest progress of this project in the report below.

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June 201124.5 KB
August 201123.5 KB
October 201123 KB
Final Report

Read more about the activities undertaken and findings of this project in the final report below.

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Final Report711.5 KB

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