Lovely sustainability poem from Trevor Parsons we filmed a few years ago.
Lovely sustainability poem from Trevor Parsons we filmed a few years ago.
Rhinoceros means ‘nose horn’, and these massive animals are one of the largest species in the world. There are only around 29,000 rhinos left in the wild, compared to 500,000 at the beginning of the 20th century. Some species are critically endangered. They have no natural enemies but us – the main threat to them is illegal hunting. Their horns are worth a lot of money, weight for weight more than gold, because they can be sold at a very high price to make ‘medicine’, which will never work. Rhino horn is made of a substance similar to finger nails.
Here is my rhino poem:
.
Rhino
.
Who am I,
in the dust
dripping blood,
built like stone
from elephant grass,
and cooled by mud?
Who am I,
dripping blood
down my chin,
shot through my
shields of
mosaic skin?
Who am I,
dripping blood,
face hacked and sawn?
Who am I,
who am I,
without my horn?
.
© Liz Brownlee
Image by Todd on Flikr by CC license.
Start of Spring day and time to talk about bees and butterflies! Many of Britain’s bees, including rare wild bees, and also butterflies are becoming fewer, because of intensive farming and building on flowery meadows where they feed. Bees are vital because they fertilise all our food crops, but they are also affected by air pollution, pesticides, herbicides, and parasites such as the verroa mite.
But you can help by planting a wildflower patch in your garden, and leaving dandelions in the spring as they are an important food source for the first bumble bees.
Wildflowers help the rarer bees in trouble as they tend to prefer our native flower species.
However any flowering plants which have pollen-rich flowers will help the bees in your garden, especially if you take the trouble to:
Choose different flower shapes and flowering periods from early spring to late autumn, as different bumblebees have different length tongues – long-tongued bumbles love honeysuckles and foxgloves. It is wonderful to see a quivering foxglove bursting with bumble.
Try not to get plants which have many petals or ‘double’ flowers as bees and butterflies find them difficult to get pollen from – some even have no pollen or nectar.
Ask you neighbours if they have any cuttings of good bee and butterfly attracting plants, and try collecting seeds to share from your own.
Ask at your nearest garden centre for bee and butterfly-friendly plants!
And if you don’t live in the UK but do live in Ohio, US, Jefferson County Pollinator Action Group and Liz Brownlee (yes, same name as me!) from the Oak Heritage conservancy are hosting a plant sale this spring, and residents from around southeast Indiana are invited to participate.
Lastly, never, ever use herbicides or insecticides. Insects like greenfly can be removed in all sorts of plant and bee friendly ways, including soapy water.
This is a poem from Reaching the Stars, Poems About Extraordinary Women and Girls (by me, Jan Dean and Michaela Morgan), about Rachel Carson, who was born in 1907 in America. She foresaw the harm that chemical insecticides would cause, and the books she wrote helped get DDT, a very harmful pesticide, banned. Her writing also sparked the beginnings of the environmental movements.
.
For the Beauty of the Earth
.
She wrote with love
of all creation,
the need for nature
conservation,
and showed that
nature is a ring,
relying on every
living thing,
the foxglove
where the bee is heard,
the glittering bug
that feeds the bird,
the beetles that
break down the dung
so cows can graze
where grass has sprung;
The spraying of pests,
Rachel foresaw,
would kill their
predators and more.
Imagine this –
a silent spring
no creature stirs,
and no birds sing.
The bees don’t buzz
no flowers thrive,
she warned that
those bugs left alive
after spraying
by poison war,
would be much stronger
than before,
weevils, woodworm,
caterpillars,
needing much
more toxic killers.
Rachel Carson,
scientist,
the world’s first
environmentalist.
.
Poem and image © Liz Brownlee
We didn’t have room for all the poems we wrote for our new book, so here is one that was left out! It’s Global Recycling Day, so this seems appropriate:
.
Small Questions to Save the World
.
Was it made here?
Or was it flown in?
Will I use this again?
Or go in the bin?
Will this recycle?
Am I wasting food?
Can I mend this instead
of buying one new?
Can I walk to school
and get fit and trim?
Does it need plastic wrap?
Does it have palm oil in?
Can I give this away
when I’ve finished with it?
Or make something else
if I take it to bits?
Shall we make it at home
rather than carry-out?
Do I need it or want it?
Can I do without?
.
© Liz Brownlee
Image © Personal Creations, Flikr, by CC License, www.personalcreations.com