Video Description from Youtube:

HydroTerra are very excited to once again welcome Luke Peel. Luke is the Research Manager of The Mulloon Institute (TMI). He has over 30 years in agriculture, landscape regeneration and natural resource management.

In this webinar, Luke will be speaking to us about Landscape Rehydration and how it is providing a mechanism to improve agricultural and ecosystems resilience to climatic events: improving the security of water and food production whilst providing significant improvements in environmental outcomes. TMI has implemented numerous property and catchment scale landscape rehydration projects with regional partners across Australia that cover a range of farming enterprise and environmental outcomes. These operations in conjunction with research findings from the Mulloon Rehydration Initiative research site are providing robust evidence on the efficacy of the approach. In addition, NSW scale modelling currently in progress will provide an evaluation of the cost benefit of landscape rehydration actions.

The Mulloon Rehydration Initiative (MRI) is jointly funded through the Mulloon Institute and the Australian Government’s National Landcape Program and is supported by the NSW Government’s Environmental Trust.

More Videos

Managing water use efficiency on farms by managing the small water cycle -Phil Mulvey

July 14, 2023

In this HydroTerra webinar, Phil Mulvey discusses the small water cycle and how maximising vegetative cover and soil organic matter through regenerative practices helps to mitigate drought and improve water use efficiency during bad seasons.

Smart Grazing That Cut Costs and Improved Profit

April 4, 2026

How do you grow profit, ground cover and drought resilience without more infrastructure? On this farm, one major grazing change improved pasture cover, reduced labour and helped reshape the whole landscape.

Boosting Pasture Resilience and Soil Security: The SOILKEE Approach

February 27, 2026

This webinar brings together scientists, innovators, and farmers to explore how multispecies pasture cropping and the SOILKEE System can build soil health, improve pasture performance, reduce seasonal feed gaps, and support resilient dryland grazing systems, particularly in cold-season conditions.