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Archive for the Q21 Have you ever hugged a tree? Category

Behold - The Bigger Picture! <> Honey Bees! <> What do you think of it so far?

The influential artist David Hockney has donated his largest work, Bigger Trees near Warter to Tate Britain, home of Stubbs’  Haymakers painting.  The landscape - 12 metres long and 5 metres tall - was first exhibited last year at the Royal Academy.

 hockneys-gift.jpg

It was painted in situ on 50 individual canvases that fit together like a jigsaw.  Trees especially have caught his imagination - we know the feeling! Oh an anagram of DAVID HOCKNEY is C KIND HAY DOVE!

Proposals to protect honey bees in England and Wales have been announced, with the Government seeking advice of 44,000 bee keepers. Numbers have fallen by 30 percent in the past 50 years. One of the main causes has been an invasion of foreign bacterial diseases which have been thriving thanks to higher temperatures in recent decades.  The Farming Minister, Lord Rucker to the House of Lords has said the English honey bee population could be wiped out within 10 years.  Sir David Attenborough recently said, “If bees and butterflies disappeared, you wouldn’t have any food on your table.”

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=niEZaD_G6PM

What do you think of it so far? Rubbish! Well plastic rubbish. The quantity of rubbish on British beaches has increased by over 100% over the past decade, and most of it is due to plastic. Not only is the rubbish ugly, its also a threat to wildlife. As Emma says, “its like living in the dark ages.”

http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/sci/tech/7339737.stm

Fire, fire! Fire, fire!

Timber washed ashore in Worthing, Sussex, from the stricken Ice Prince has caught fire. Here’s a video of firefighters tackling the blaze.  we see this as a warning of deforestation for land clearance to allow for farming and building.

http://news.bbc.co.uk/player/nol/newsid_7240000/newsid_7249200/7249248.stm?bw=bb&mp=wm&asb=1&news=1&bbcws=1

Horses for courses! <> A blooming miracle <> Sumatran tigers ‘being sold to extinction’

A striking 3o feet fibreglass sculpture of a rearing mustang has been installed at Denver airport in Colorado, USA.

 mustang.jpg

Tragically, the artist, Luis Jimenez died in June 2006 when a prototype of the work fell on him.  The sculpture will look out over the incredible purple moutains. You can view the story below…

http://cbs4denver.com/video/?id=38937@kcnc.dayport.com

We find this piece curious, as it was Albert Thorvaldsen’s intention to shape the ‘Goblin Tree’ in the shape of a horse, ‘Odin’s Steed.’   The Danish sculptor would surely have been impressed by Juis’ work.  Perhaps the mustang can serve as a warning about the need to be reasonable about our love-affair with flying?

Dark, rose coloured magnolia plants are flowering in Britain earlier than ones in their native India, due to the unseasonally warm weather.  Botanists are surprised as the flower - magnolia campbellii - normally blooms in April. Jonathon Jones, of the Tregnothnan Botanical Garden in Truro, Cornwall says, “We here about strange events in nature every day, but these magnolia are among the best I’ve ever seen.”

magnolia-campbellii.jpg

THE wildlife trade monitoring network TRAFFIC issued a wake-up call to the Indonesian authorities this week: stop the illegal trade in Sumatran tiger body parts or the species will be hunted to extinction.

 sumatran-tiger-cubs.jpg 

TRAFFIC claims to have found tiger body parts on sale in 10 per cent of Sumatran shops surveyed in 2006. It estimates that at least 23 tigers were killed that year to supply the trade. That’s down from 52 kills per year in 1999 and 2000, but TRAFFIC fears the decline is the result of the tiger’s increased scarcity, not improved law enforcement. Trade is just one factor contributing to the tiger’s decline, says Tonny Soehartono of Indonesia’s ministry of forestry. They are also being driven into conflict with humans through “land use changes and habitat fragmentation”.

Don’t forget to send a postcard <> Anne Frank’s chestnut tree

London’s Royal College of Art are displaying over 2,000 postcard sized artworks made by professionals and artists.   This is curious as ‘The Haymakers Survey’ includes an art postcard collection of it’s own too!  

In Holland, campaigners are trying to save a diseased chestnut tree - one of the few things the World War II diarist, Anne Frank, was able to see from her attic hiding place.   Strange that, as in ‘The Haymakers Survey’ Sarah was inspired by Anne’s thoughts about nature and our choice to include commentary on her by her father in our video collection.