7
Comments
Nature is our friend |
---|
On January 31, Miriam Gathigah wrote "Too hungry to play, hundreds of starving children in Tiaty Constituency of Baringo County instead sit by the fire, watching the pot boil, in the hope that it is only a matter of minutes before their next meal. Unbeknownst to them, the food cooking inside the pot is no ordinary supper. It is actually a toxic combination of wild fruits and tubers mixed with dirty water, as surrounding rivers have all run dry. Tiaty sits some 297 kilometers from the capital Nairobi and the ongoing dry spell is not a unique scenario. Neighbouring Elgeyo Marakwet and Turkana County are among the counties spread across this East African nation where food security reports show that thousands are feeling the impact of desertification, climate change and rainfall shortage."
Under the scorching sun of Africa, cropping systems in some agricultural communities are bound to fail. At the same time there is a confinement to agriculture as the primary source of livelihoods and subsistence for the same people in those agricultural communities. Betrayed and failed by the weather in their farming endeavors, it is only inevitable for communities to resort to and seek alternatives and among them what nature and its biodiversity has to offer. From fruits up above the ground to roots and bulbs down in the depths of soils, children and women climb and dig to get a meal. But what happens then, when these gifts of nature are exhausted, or when they are not sustainably harvested for example the cutting down of a big fruit trees as a resolve to reach to its fruits that cannot be accessed through climbing? It sounds far-fetched to many but here in Africa we have seen it happening. The moment the tree is cut down, is the same moment the future benefits from that tree are cut down with it. These are the minor hidden wars being fought in parts of Africa. Insignificant they may seem when we count one tree or a small forest, but when we count the number of those affected by climate change leading to food insecurity, the significance can then be seen. Our duty therefore, to which a lot of our energy would have to be sacrificed, would be to preach the message of nature, that nature is our friend, and that we ought to give back to it as it gives to us. That in the absence of symbiotic beneficiation, one will fall and the other in the relationship will follow. |
|
7 Comments
Thanks for sharing :D yeah we already have good messages coming from you, hope that can spread around your community as well :D
Posted 28-02-2017 08:54
Hey Ali, I loved the way you started your report.Indeed, we can even day that nature is our BEST friend. Thanks for sgaring
Posted 25-02-2017 16:24
Respecting nature is ensuring our survival. Well shared.
Posted 16-02-2017 21:01
nature cannot live without us likewise we too. lets save nature :)
Posted 16-02-2017 11:59
Thanks for sharing, Saymore!
Posted 15-02-2017 16:09
Well stated article. Indeed nature and us are two sides of same coin. We cannot exist in the absence of any one.
Posted 11-02-2017 12:28
Message very well articulated. Nature is indeed our best companion and we should all live in harmony with nature rather than ¡°conquering & ruling over¡± nature. We should remember that NATURE DOES NOT BELONGS TO US, WE BELONG TO NATURE. It's our responsibility to protect it, safeguard and love it. Thanks for the report.
Posted 10-02-2017 19:57