TIGblogs TIG | TIGblogs GROUP TIGBLOGS LOGIN SIGNUP
daateku's Blog
daateku's Blog
« previous 5


Nairobi Arboretum is 36500 days old!
Related to country: Kenya


This year the Nairobi Arboretum is 100 years old. After the first tree (Cupressus torulosa) was planted in 1907 the area has expanded to one of the most spectacular tree gardens (arboreta) in the world. Monthly lectures around the topic of forestry and trees are being held with the next one being in two week’s time on Thursday 26 April at 5pm.

Take a stroll around the arboretum this weekend - you won’t be disappointed. The whole of Western Europe has 250 native species of tree – whereas the Nairobi Arboretum boasts more than 350 different species of planted tree.


April 12, 2007 | 6:54 AM Comments  0 comments

Tags:


EARTH HOUR. MAKE IT HAPPEN !

Earth Hour is a fabulous opportunity for you and your family to do something about climate change. On one night, in one hour, more will be done, more will be demonstrated, and more will be learned than through a hundred 'talk-fests'. And you can help make it happen.

What is Earth Hour?
It sounds simple, but it is very, very dramatic. At 7.30pm on March 31st 2007, we will be encouraging companies, government departments,
individuals and families to turn off their lights for just one hour. If we meet our objectives during the first Earth Hour, the savings in green
house gas emissions will be the equivalent of taking 75,000 medium sized cars off the road for one whole year! Now that's something worth doing.

Why?
The facts are alarmingly clear:
* The climate is changing! The 10 hottest years on record have occurred since 1990. In fact 2005 was the hottest year since record keeping
began.
* More than 95% of the Great Barrier Reef will have been destroyed by 2050 if carbon dioxide emissions aren't reduced. (WWF-International)
* One million species worldwide are facing extinction due to climate change.

But not everybody listens to the facts. Earth Hour is your opportunity to demonstrate how a simple change in our way of life could change, and
help save, our planet.

The goals of Earth Hour:
Households : Most of us use unnecessary electricity. Appliances on standby, old style light bulbs, lights left on when we're not using
them. Earth Hour will help us all to realise just how simply we can make a dramatic impact upon global warming (and our own power bills). We will see it in action.

Companies : We want companies to be involved. If every company turned off its lights when the buildings weren't in use, and combined it with energy saving technology, we would save between 2 and 4 million tonnes of greenhouse gasses every year. Earth Hour will show companies just how easy that is.

To make it an annual event : Out of the 8,766 hours in a year, let's give one back to the earth.

What you can do:
Sign up to Earth Hour and Pledge to turn off your lights on March 31st from 7.30pm to 8.30pm by logging onto www.earthhour.org .

You will receive all the information you need to make Earth Hour a great success (and to cut your own energy bills in the long term). Pledging is free.
Get off standby : Turn off all the electronic equipment and appliances in your home that are not being used or are on standby. Computers,
televisions, stereo equipment, phone chargers, DVD or video equipment.
Tell a friend : Spread the word about earth Hour by involving your friends, family and workmates. Get them to pledge at earthhour.org and
most importantly, turn off the lights at 7.30pm Saturday 31 March 2007.

Spread the word - Once you have signed up for Earth Hour tell a friend; spread the word at work; tell your boss; mention it at school, at your
local sports club or society group, you can even run it past your neighbours!

Make it an event. Get your family and friends to switch off their lights as well; Take some binoculars and look at the stars; sit and talk by candlelight; Explore your backyard by torchlight; Have fun with sparklers; or just do something non-electric as a family; Have a picnic-at-dusk; pretend you are camping; or have a candlelight dinner.
For more info on Earth Hour, check out www.earthhour.org

March 29, 2007 | 8:07 AM Comments  0 comments

Tags:


Bravo Youth Organizations.

I sense a renewed confidence and determination throughout the youth organizations. Confidence to face the challenges, overcome them, and thrive in a world of fast-paced change.

It’s quite encouraging to see the youths engaging themselves in different organizations projects they have formed, most of these projects have almost the same mission or objectives: eradicate poverty and hunger, tackling HIV Aids pandemic issues, taking care of the environment, curb unemployment etc.

I appreciate that by achieving most of our missions or objectives we are also contributing towards the realization of some of the objectives of MDG.I also appreciate that different organizations projects have got different capacities towards achieving their goals.

The challenge however is capacity building. This can be achieved by the coming together of the youths who have the same mission or objectives from different organizations projects with an agenda of brainstorming so as to form a formidable combination of intelligence and determination to strategically produce the best way towards fulfilling these goals effectively without duplication of tasks in the same region hence utilizing the scarce resources efficiently.


In conclusion, I want to express my utmost appreciation to all the youths who are participating in this challenging journey. Without you our common dream of achieving our objectives and changing the world for the better can not be realized. I believe that your ideas and the support you put in your different organization projects does count globally. This is our joint process as youths. Let us all embrace it. If we do, a new and reinvigorated world with opportunities for all will be the inevitable result.



March 27, 2007 | 4:31 AM Comments  0 comments

Tags:


War of greens: counting of food miles concept, is it a good idea?

Food miles can be defined as the distance traveled by a food product from its source to the consumer’s plate. The longer the distance, the more pollution caused by the food on its transit- a combination of the fuel emissions and packaging and technology required to put the food fresh.

The term has grabbed the popular imagination, as a relatively easy concept to understand the complicated, scientific debate surrounding climate change and some environmental campaigners have come up with some nice figures to help, for example, they say flying green beans from Nairobi to London, about 6,804km ,releases at least 340 grammes of carbon dioxide in to the air.

The pack of such products will soon be faced with an aero plane symbol, telling that the product has been transported by air to the supermarket. Although this makes them a lot fresher than many other products on offer, that’s not the point .Rather; the supermarkets want to remind their customers that this product has caused more pollution on its way to the store than products delivered from the next country or locally.

The campaign is raising concern of the future of horticulture, which earns some African countries billions and employs millions of people.



March 21, 2007 | 8:06 AM Comments  0 comments

Tags:


The Billion Tree Campaign.


On the occasion of the 12th COP of Climate Change Convention, UNEP with a range of partners launched the Plant for the Planet: Billion Tree Campaign. Under the auspicious patronage of Prof. Wangari Maathai (Nobel Peace Prize Laureate) and Prince Albert II of Monaco, this campaign will encourage the pledging, planting and caring for one billion new trees globally. The World Agroforestry Centre is proud to provide the scientific support to this initiative.

Plant for the Planet: Billion Tree Campaign is part of humanity’s collective gift to subsequent generations. It is a superb initiative to link people, trees and the environment. Planting trees is great, although using appropriate scientific knowledge to plant the right tree in the right place is even greater. Our individual priorities for tree planting may differ from habitat conservation to rural income enhancement to renewable industries, but without greater tree planting we may forego all those opportunities.

To get into the website, click http://www.worldagroforestry.org/billiontreecampaign

What have you done to support the billion tree campaign? Plant a tree on your free time this year whether timber, medicinal, fodder, fruit, oil or any other .That’s the only way your contribution will be noticed towards this campaign.

I have already planted 285 trees since last year November when the campaign was launched.150 fodder, 100 timber, 20 medicinal and 15 fruits.

” If you’re not part of the solution- you’re part of the problem. Join us now!!!”


March 19, 2007 | 5:10 AM Comments  0 comments

Tags:


« previous 5


Ateku Dickens Alubaka's Profile


Latest Posts
Warning: Selling...
28 Unique Bits of...
How To Save Your...
How To Work Less and...
Tainting Kenya's...

Monthly Archive
March 2007
April 2007
May 2007
June 2007
July 2007
August 2007
September 2007
February 2008
March 2008
April 2008
May 2008
June 2008
July 2008

Change Language


Filter By Type
News
Travel
Topics

Links
Billion tree campaign
Earth Observatory
Science Development Network
world agroforestry center


23911 views
Important Disclaimer