Showing posts with label #insects. Show all posts
Showing posts with label #insects. Show all posts

Wednesday, 2 September 2020

A walk in the park

 The past weekend, on the last sunny summer Sunday afternoon, I had decided to go for a run. But the balmy weather instead inspired me to take a walk in Botaniska, the Gothenburg botanical garden, which is located a mere 2 km from the city centre. Botaniska is embedded in a nature reserve, with a fluid border between the two. I’m glad that I decided for a walk, because it gave some important insights which I would not have been able to pickup, had I as planned been running through the same surroundings.


 
The first insight I got from looking at the explosive colour choreography exhibited by the Dahlia flowerbeds. There, the extraordinary shapes and neon colours made the flowers look “unnatural”, even though they were merely expressing some of natures ability to excel in form and fragrance. Nature itself in the form of bees were intensely attracted to flowers, loading up pollen to bring back to the hive. 




The second insight I got walking along the winding paths in the rock garden. There I could observe a more subdued form of nature, with moss and leafs covering the stones. To see the hidden beauty there, I had to look down, to slow down to take in and appreciate what I saw.




This brings me to my third insight which is intrinsically linked to the Corona time we are living in. To stop the virus from spreading we are trying to give each other physical space and social distance. Therefore, I had to step aside to let others pass and someone else needed to wait for me. This creates a common possibility to slow down, something we should appreciate and keep even when the pandemic has gone away.

As I left Botaniska and ventured out into the nature reserve, I started to see the 30-40 year old manboys on their MTBs, cycling determinedly and with head down through the forest. I wanted to yell at them “Hey, slow down, step off your bike, take of your helmet and be here, instead of speeding to your next goal”. But they kept whisking by.

There are hard times ahead, with the ongoing Corona crisis, the accelerating climate crisis and the political crisis with rise of right wing nationalists. To meet these challenges and prepare for a better and more just world, we have to understand that we need to be in the nature, that we are a part of nature. We need nature to survive as much for our minds as for food. We are still natural biological beings, despite all the technological gadgets we carry around,

Accepting oneself as a being a part of nature will be difficult for those who have been attracted the fake news promoted by some politicians but also to the synthetic and technological world where nature is something to be subdued and conquered. It takes courage to shut down the lights and take a walk in the dark. When I slow down I find new paths and new directions even in this forest where I have been running so many times. I can put away my phone and see the details around me and listen to the silence. 



Nature is now in its recharge time, when both plants and animals are filling up their reserves to sustain the winter and be ready for the coming spring. So while the dwindling evening light and the cooler evenings may make us sad, we should take this as a personal inspiration to recharge mentally and physically. There will be hard fights ahead if we are to keep our civility and our connection to each other.  

Gathering strength for the coming winter also means to be prepared, be mentally as well as physically prepared but also to be organised. To be organised and connected was the core message in a recent @GaslitNation podcast. We need to be prepared, we must not be caught off guard. 

Nature is resilient when given space and time. We need to find our own pauses to be as resilient.

 
 
 
 
 
PS

Thanks to Bar La Lune for good pause environment

Saturday, 1 July 2017

Rena rutor

Splash! Ännu en insekt kraschade på vindrutan och lämnade kletiga streck under vindrutetorkarens blad. Så minns jag sommarens bilturer när jag fick körkort för över 40 år sedan. Att ha spår av insekter på rutor och strålkastare efter en kvällstur var så självklart att jag inte ens reflekterade över det.

Men någonstans på vägen försvann denna självklarhet. I kväll har jag kört ut till sommarstället och rutorna rena och fina, inte en enda gång behövde jag jag använda vindrutetorkarna. Smidigt för mig när jag kör bil, men ett tecken på att något är fel. För min observation är inte unik, både privatpersoner och insektsforskare har lagt märke till denna utveckling. Det finns många studier som visar på dramatiska nedgångar i mängden insekter, både i arter och antalet individer. En tysk studie har tex visat att fyra av fem insekter har försvunnit sedan slutet på 1980-talet. 




Vem sörjer detta kanske du undrar? Det är väl skönt att slippa flygfän på sommaren, stickande mygg, irriterande flugor och bitska bromsar. Men insekter är mycket mer än så, de är livsnödvändig mat för våra fåglar och oundgängliga för att tex våra äppelträd skall bära frukt. Dessutom om inte länge fjäril vingad syns på Haga så förlorar vi en bit av vår kultur och vår själ.


Dirzo, R., Young, H. S., Galetti, M., Ceballos, G., Isaac, N. J. B., & Collen, B. (2014). 
Defaunation in the Anthropocene. Science, 345(6195), 401–406. http://doi.org/10.1126/science.1251817

Kanske kan vi klara oss utan att glädjas åt en fjärils vinglande flykt mellan blommor eller surret av humlor runt rhododendronbuskenvs blommor. Men bristen på insikter är ännu ett tecken på att våra ekosystem är ur balans. “We are popping rivets”. Jag återkommer till detta begrepp i kommande bloggtexter.