This 600 Year Old Japanese Technique! #Shorts

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Discover the incredible ancient Japanese technique of Daishugi, where trees provide sustainable wood without being cut down! 🌳✨ This fascinating method, dating back to the 14th or 15th century, allows one tree to grow multiple straight branches, harvested while keeping the trunk alive. By pruning new shoots and maintaining the tree's unique shape over 20 years, Daishugi showcases a harmonious blend of human needs and nature's resilience.

Join us in exploring this eco-friendly practice that inspires sustainable living. If you love nature and innovative solutions, like and share this video!

#Daishugi #SustainableLiving #EcoFriendly #JapaneseTraditions #NatureConservation #SustainableWood,#AncientTechnique #JapanTradition #WoodHarvesting, #GreenLiving, #YouTubeShorts #Shorts #ViralShorts #short #shortsfeed #information #knowledge #facts #didyouknow
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In England is called polarding. When you cut close to the ground it's called copicing.

MrGalpino
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This is why i can't understand why people and councils have such a problem when it comes to eart homes knowing it cuts down the carbon footprint of a home

Laurie-simp
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Did you really use people wearing generic “European Medieval” costumes to represent the 14th or 15th Century IN JAPAN?

MsLemon
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It's not "daishugi"... it's "daisugi (台杉)"

crime_cat
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This is just polarding. This was invented in prehistory and is first written in historical records at around the 1st century in Rome and has been a norm in the continental old world for millennia, likely long before anyone decided to write about it.

Side note, 600 years is not ancient. If it were, then copyrights would be ancient.
You need about 2500-5000 years before anything can be considered ancient.

Please don't go spreading false information.

Thor.Jorgensen
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