Please thank the wildlife rangers here
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The 21st May 2021 is Endangered Species Day.
Thousands of people worldwide take part by celebrating, learning about and taking action to protect species who are threatened and endangered.
Most of the events will be online or consist of digital actions but there will also be nature hikes, garden plantings and litter clean-ups!
The day is organised by the Endangered Species Coalition. Their mission is “to stop the human-caused extinction of our nation’s at-risk species, to protect and restore their habitats and to guide these fragile populations along the road to recovery.”
They work to safeguard and strengthen the Endangered Species Act. The law means every citizen can act on behalf of threatened and endangered wildlife and the wild places they call home.
For a start, there’s a Pollinator Party, a Chalk Art Event and a Youth Art Contest. And there are other events around the world, too.
The Coalition is a network of organisations and hundreds of thousands of individuals, all dedicated to protecting the US’s disappearing wildlife and remaining wild places.
They help protect the Canadian lynx, Gray Wolves, Grizzly Bears, Mexican Gray Wolves, the beautiful Monarch Butterfly and Wolverine.
image © Endangered Species Coalition
You can help the Endangered Species Coalition:
If everyone reading this blog took one (extra) action to help endangered species, imagine how many actions that would be!
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Want to improve your wellbeing? How about doing some gardening?
At the start of National Gardening Week (which starts on 26 May 2021), the RHS is calling on us all to get our dose of Vitamin G!
New research suggests that it can have the same positive impact as exercise such as cycling or running.
Those who garden every day have wellbeing scores that are 6.6% higher and stress levels that are 4.2 lower than those who don’t garden.
And gardening two to three times a week can lead to better wellbeing and lower stress levels too!
The RHS Wellbeing Fellow and lead author is Dr Lauriane Chalmin-Pui, who said "This is the first time the 'dose response' to gardening has been tested and the evidence overwhelmingly suggests that the more frequently you garden - the greater the health benefits.”
As we garden, we are distracted by the nature around us which moves our focus from ourselves and our stresses. Gardening restores our minds. It reduces negative feelings.
Why garden?
The research looked at why people get into gardening.
5,766 gardeners and 249 non-gardeners responded to a survey that was distributed electronically in the UK.
Gardening can boost mental health; those with health problems said that gardening eased episodes of depression (13%), boosted energy levels (12) and reduced stress (16%).
Why do I garden?
I’ve never met anyone who says “I’m going to improve my health and wellbeing by going out and doing some gardening” in the way you get people who say “I’ve been to the gym” with the specific purpose of getting fit, keeping fit, losing weight etc. I don't garden because I want to get fit.
People I know who garden just do it because they love doing it, spending time with nature, seeing immediate results from their endeavours – even if it’s just planting seeds and knowing there will be a few weeks or months before they come up.
The fitness benefits are an added benefit.
Maybe that’s why it’s easier to keep gardening than going to the gym for so many of us?
And could it be because nature doesn’t answer back; she listens, she is kind and giving (except on those days when the wind blows all your flowers down, or a lack of rain is killing everything off).
In short, gardening is a very gentle activity, good for the body and mind. It doesn’t feel as strenuous as going to the gym. It can be done at home without the journey there, unless you’re working on an allotment or community garden.
All I know is that it makes me feel happy, relaxed, less stressed – and that I can look forward to sitting in the garden with a cup of tea and piece of cake, or a glass of chilled white wine, listening to the birds tweeting and chirping away, watching the bees and butterflies flutter here and there, drinking in the beautiful colours of my flowers and just being at one with nature.
Gardening can benefit wildlife too!
If we make the choice, we can garden to help wildlife which can bring its own extra benefits. You could end up with your own nature show that you can watch from your arm chair! Wildlife watching can give you a whole new interest of its own and it's amazing how involved you can get in creating habitat for wildlife and a garden in which they can thrive!
The RHS says the key things to do to help wildlife in your garden are:
Find out more about helping the wildlife in your garden here.
The research was conducted by the RHS in collaboration with the University of Sheffield and the University of Virginia.
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The is working hard to buy 110 acres of Colombian tropical forest.
The Rainforest Trust is on the verge of purchasing and protecting 110 vital acres of Colombian tropical forest.
The tropical forests are endangered themselves as farms expand and other developments take place. They are the only place on the planet where you'll find cotton-top tamarins - whose numbers have gone down 80% in just 20 years.
Help the Rainforest Trust save 110 vital acres of tropical rainforest in Colombia
Please donate here
As well as cotton-top tamarins, the area is also home to spider and howler monkeys, a critically endangered turtle species and scarlet macaws.
Local organisation Fundación Proyecto Tití is working hard to protect the whole area.
They have blocked the creation of a clear-cutting cattle ranch.
Now they are working with the Rainforest Trust to secure more land. The land is critical becuase it will give the animals safe passage - a corridor - between protected areas. It will give the animals the vital space they need to recover and survive.
We can all help the Rainforest Trust achieve this goal.
Find out more from the Rainforest Trust and donate here.
You can donate to this project through SumofUs who partner the Rainforest Trust
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Four Paws want to rescue Cam the bear.
He is trapped in a tiny cage of 1.5 metres in a bear bile farm in the Hai Phong province in Vietnam.
Four Paws visited Cam and found him pacing around the cage. He was climbing up and down and biting the bars. In short, he was doing everything he could to escape his environment.
Please help me, says Cam the bear
Cam is a pretty young bear. And Four Paws want to get him out to their Ninh Binh sanctuary. There he can feel the grass under his paws, and enjoy the sort of life he deserves.
They need help - so if you can donate to get Cam to the Ninh Binh sanctuary, please do so.
Donate to help Cam the bear here.