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Drought. It hasn't rained at the Edge of the Gaj for almost three months, temperatures are reaching 28 degrees, and there's a strong wind, and we have a huge drought. Our raspberries have almost completely dried up, currants, gooseberries, goji berries, haskap berries, blueberries, quince are barely alive, and it's hard to tell if there's a sea buckthorn. I've undertaken a rescue mission. I've decided to dig everything up (except the raspberries) and transplant them into a rescue substrate. Additionally, the neighbor's chemical spraying has meant that we have to rethink our garden organization so that our food isn't in the zone of herbicides, fungicides, and insecticides. 00:00 - introduction, drought, rescue operation, everything has dried up 01:20 - chemical attack zone 03:31 - we dig up bushes, what the dried-out root ball looks like 04:57 - goji berry, root ball in peat 07:07 - currant, dried-out small roots 08:42 - rescue substrate - what the soil for saving dried-out plants consists of 14:12 - why the box doesn't have drainage holes 15:19 - we put our dead bodies in rescue soil and water them 16:48 - what problems will you encounter when cultivating the soil for the first time