ECO HVAR: AIMS AND ACTIVITIES OF THE CHARITY

Environment

Eco Hvar's aims for environmental protection, and related articles.

Read more...

maria lidija

Health

Eco Hvar's ideas for encouraging positive health, plus related articles

Read more...

Animals

Eco Hvar's aims for protecting animals and improving animal welfare, plus related articles

Read more...

Trees and Hvar's Youngest Eco-Warrior

Trees are among Hvar's major assets. They need nurturing and protecting. Taliah Bradbury (7) is preparing to take on the task.

Conifers by the sea in Vitarnja Conifers by the sea in Vitarnja Vivian Grisogono

The abundant conifers which spread over the island create Hvar's year-round greenness. The autumn-winter cycle of leaves turning red and falling as autumn turns into winter exists mainly in the vineyards. The evergreen trees add to Hvar's image as a place of eternal sunshine, if not perpetual summer.

Locals tend to take the trees for granted. Many see them only as a source of fruits, firewood and Christmas trees. If they don't serve these purposes, they may be good for providing shade. If none of these applies, trees are often seen as a nuisance, blocking the view or creating a mess if they drop fruit, nuts or leaves on the ground. Once a tree is deemed a nuisance, it is usually mercilessly removed by chainsaw or even poison. Apart from human intervention, many of Hvar's trees have been lost to forest fires over the years, leaving swathes of bare land.

Seven-year-old Taliah Bradbury is in her first year at school, and already aware of the more wide-reaching importance of trees. Her interest was stimulated by learning about the rainforests of the Amazon, and the amount of damage being done by deforestation. She knows that the loss of the rainforest threatens the world's oxygen supply, so it's a danger to our very lives. She is determined to do something about it, even though she knows the bad people who are responsible for cutting down the Amazon's trees might try to harm her for her efforts. She's preparing to defend herself by practising judo. Taliah's older sister Hannah is also a young eco-warrior and judoka. Her particular interest is in animals, from dogs to elephants.

 Taliah's eco-actions have already begun at home. She is aware of the importance of keeping the environment clean, and tries to set an example to her classmates, especially those who have not yet learned the practical side of protecting the environment for the good of everyone.

Litter is a blight. Many people ignore it as if it didn't exist, but not young Taliah. She knows that the proper place for rubbish is in the bin.

As a Christmas present in 2015, Taliah received a most welcome gift - a lime tree of her own to plant, cherish, enjoy and protect!

 

An even greater surprise treat was a present related to the Amazon rainforest: five trees have been planted in her name in Ecuador, and she received a bar of chocolate from an indigenous tribe of coca-growers in the Peruvian Amazon, whose traditional way of life in their forest home is being preserved through their trade in chocolate.

Taliah's family made sure their Christmas celebrations followed sound environmental principles. Taliah was delighted to report to Eco Hvar that they had planted a proper tree with roots in a big pot, so that it would thrive year after year, and not just be thrown away after a few days like most people's Christmas trees.

Saturday January 16th 2016 saw the first eco-action of reforesting the slopes above the village of Svirce with Dalmatian black pines (crni borovi) which are considered to be a threatened species, and so are protected. A small band of about 20 people, including Taliah's dad Paul - following in his daughter's footsteps - set to work digging holes in the steep stony hillside. The project, organized by Irena Doric, founder of the local charity Odrzivi Otok, gave all the workers a chance to marvel at the resilience of Hvar's earlier generations who created and tilled their fields among these unforgiving rocks.

Taliah intends to be on hand to protect the trees her dad helped to plant as soon as she is big enough. Her enthusiasm is infectious, and Eco Hvar has every hope that many of Taliah's friends will join her as Hvar's budding eco-warriors.

© Vivian Grisogono 2016  

You are here: Home Nature Watch Trees and Hvar's Youngest Eco-Warrior

Eco Environment News feeds

  • Group banned plants ‘removed from habitat’ from its shows – causing uproar from enthusiasts

    A furious row has blown up in the UK’s leading succulent society over the practice of taking desirable specimens from the wild, with the chair resigning in protest over the behaviour of his fellow enthusiasts.

    Succulents have risen in popularity in recent years: they are attractive and hardy.

    Continue reading...

  • Open letter calls for green policies that empower farmers, after months of protests jeopardise future of flagship biodiversity deal

    The EU’s nature restoration law will only work if it is enacted in partnership with farmers, a group of leading scientists has said, after months of protests have pushed the proposals to the brink of collapse.

    In an open letter, leading biodiversity researchers from across the world said that efforts to restore nature are vital for guaranteeing food supplies – but farmers must be empowered to help make agriculture more environmentally friendly if the measures are to succeed.

    Continue reading...

  • Soiled seas and huge shareholder dividends: where has the £64bn borrowed by firms since privatisation gone?

    So that’s how they do it. I’d been wondering how, when more sewage has been entering our rivers than ever before, some of the water companies have managed to improve the ratio of the sewage they treat v the sewage that pours untreated from their storm overflows into our rivers and the sea. Now we know.

    It’s called “flow trimming”. Sounds innocuous, doesn’t it? What it means is that sewage is diverted into rivers and ditches upstream of the water treatment works. By reducing the amount of sewage entering the works, the companies can claim to be dealing responsibly with a higher proportion of it.

    George Monbiot is a Guardian columnist. Join him for a Guardian Live online event on Wednesday 8 May at 8pm BST. He will be talking about his new book, The Invisible Doctrine: The Secret History of Neoliberalism. Book tickets here

    Do you have an opinion on the issues raised in this article? If you would like to submit a response of up to 300 words by email to be considered for publication in our letters section, please click here.

    Continue reading...

  • Researchers also find zebra finches 20% less likely to hatch from eggs if exposed to noise pollution

    Noise pollution from traffic stunts growth in baby birds, even while inside the egg, research has found.

    Unhatched birds and hatchlings that are exposed to noise from city traffic experience long-term negative effects on their health, growth and reproduction, the study found.

    Continue reading...

  • Global warming and international trade offering increasingly hospitable environment

    Some are small and jumpy; others are large and intimidating – if you’re a humble housefly. Exotic spiders are flourishing in Britain as international trade offers ample opportunities for spider travel and global heating provides an increasingly hospitable climate.

    A jumping spider new to science has been identified living on the Penryn campus in Cornwall, home to the University of Exeter and Falmouth University. The nearest known relative of the 3-4mm-long Anasaitis milesae is found in the Caribbean, making it highly likely that this tiny species – alongside 17 other non-native jumping spider species – found its way to Britain from distant climes.

    Continue reading...

  • Sewage pollutes our waterways, species face extinction. We must act fast to halt the decline – and we will

    • Steve Reed is shadow environment secretary

    We must not be the last generation to have the opportunity to marvel at nature.

    When I was growing up, I took for granted the excitement of climbing trees in the local woods at the end of our road, sleeping under the stars at Scout camp, and exploring the micro-worlds of seaside rockpools on holiday in Cornwall. Our children and grandchildren deserve to be astounded by the magnificence of our landscapes and coastlines, mesmerised by the beauty of a robin’s song, and to splash about in the local river.

    Steve Reed is the MP for Croydon North, and shadow secretary of state for environment, food and rural affairs

    Continue reading...

  • EV sales have plateaued across the world but the newfound glut of vehicles may just be temporary

    Elon Musk became the world’s richest man by evangelising about electric cars – and delivering them by the million. Yet in recent months his company, Tesla, has struggled to maintain its momentum: sales have dropped this year, and so has its share price.

    Those struggles have become emblematic of a broader reckoning facing the electric vehicle (EV) industry. After the soaring demand and valuations of the coronavirus pandemic years, the pace of sales growth has slowed. The industry has entered a new phase, with questions over whether the switch from petrol and diesel to cleaner electric is facing a troublesome stall or a temporary speed bump.

    Continue reading...

  • Rain in Kenya, Tanzania and Burundi kills at least 90 people and damages farmland and infrastructure

    Eastern Africa has experienced heavy rain in recent weeks, with flooding in Kenya, Tanzania and Burundi. About 100,000 people have been displaced or otherwise affected in each country, with 32 reported deaths in Kenya and 58 in Tanzania, alongside damage to farmland and infrastructure.

    There are also fears that large areas of standing water could give rise to outbreaks of waterborne diseases.

    Continue reading...

  • The best of this week’s wildlife photographs from around the world

    Continue reading...

  • Video series launched in which comics translate climate science into down-to-earth language

    Scientists can struggle to get their message across about the climate crisis to the wider public, so now comedians have been brought in to help cut through the science jargon and get widespread attention. In a series of videos, titled Climate Science Translated, scientists are paired up with various comedians who express climate science in down-to-earth language that pulls no punches.

    In one of the videos, Prof Mark Maslin, of University College London, explains: “The climate crisis is progressing faster much faster than anticipated.” This is translated by the comedian Jo Brand as: “We’re still going to hell, but we’re getting there faster.”

    Continue reading...

Eco Health News feeds

Eco Nature News feeds