Some of the great Art Murals at the Eden Project

There were a number of murals that captured the animism of nature. I loved them.

Some Fantastic Patterns in Leaves From the Eden Project.

I love the patterns that we find in nature and had great fun photographing them.

The Eden Project In Cornwall – Amazing Conservation!!

Incredible biomes of geodesic domes housing the most amazing rainforest plants! There were some amazing sculptures in the grounds among the plants.

Oh how we need these amazing conservation projects now that we are devastating the natural world.

Global Citizen – Stand Up For The Artic!!

U.S. monuments, landmarks, public lands, and waters are under severe threat. Just this past October, the U.S. Department of the Interior, the agency in charge of protecting public lands, announced it plans to open up 10.3 million acres in the Arctic , which will likely lead to an increase in drilling and fossil fuel development in that fragile area.

Please sign the petition!!

https://www.globalcitizen.org/en/action/nrdc-arctic-region-petition/?utm_source=Iterable&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=UK_12_Feb_2018_Environment_Arctic_USDrilling_NRDC_Petition_Alive

The Incredible Devil’s Gulch in Tasmania – Photos.

The wind was blowing up the cliffs so hard that we were nearly blown off our feet. We stood on the edge and took in the incredible view of great rock cliffs, mountains and a landscape laid out before us.

Irresponsible Logging in Tasmania

As we drove through what seemed to be lush tropical rainforest everything seemed fine. Dylan and Julia stopped to show us the lie. The logging companies had left a stand of trees next to the road. Beyond that we walked out into a scene of devastation. There were hills denuded of trees. The logging companies had stripped them bare. The wildlife was gone – either killed or banished.

The reason? These old gum trees were felled to sell to China who pulped them for paper!!

Do we really need to destroy wildlife for paper?

A Passing Thought About Rhinos

If rhino horn was so great for fertility you would expect there to be more of them wouldn’t you?

Trump’s Confusion About Global Warming and Climate Change.

https://www.globalcitizen.org/en/content/trump-interview-piers-morgan-climate-change/?utm_source=Iterable&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=UK_02_Feb_2018_content_digest_alive

Please Help Support Greenpeace and make a stand for the Antartic!

There are few places on the planet that we haven’t messed up. We’ve destroyed rainforests all over the world, polluted rivers and seas and sent thousands of species to extinction. The Antarctic is one of the few places we haven’t yet messed up. It is a pristine wilderness full of wondrous creatures.

It needs protecting. Please help make a stand.

38 Degrees – Remove Plastics From Tea Bags

38 Degrees are running a campaign to get plastic removed from tea bags. I think it needs supporting!

I don’t want plastic in my tea

Neither does the sea

Plastic is messing up our oceans, killing wildlife and ending up in our food. Plastic is filling up landfills. It is so unnecessary. We can easily create biodegradable alternatives.

Please sign the petition.

To: Paul Polman, CEO of PG Tips & Unilever

Remove plastics from tea bags

MA

Contact Campaign Creator

Campaign created by
Mike Armitage
Remove plastics from tea bags

Remove all plastic from tea bags to ensure they are fully bio-degradable/compostable.

Why is this important?

Unilever owns PG Tips, the UK’s most popular cup of tea. Let’s call on them to remove ALL plastics from tea bags – it is usually polypropylene. Teabags won’t completely biodegrade if they have plastic in them. People in Britain drink 165m cups of tea EVERY day – with 96% of those from tea bags. That adds up to billions of pieces of plastic. As a market leader and the recent purchaser of Pukkha teas which doesn’t use plastic in its tea bags, Unilever could help make a positive difference to the environment by removing plastic now.

Polypropylene is a plastic and 20% is not a small or insignificant amount when multiplied up by the millions and millions of tea bags used daily around the world. All of these plastics remains un-degraded in the environment.

There have been many campaigns to keep plastics and microplastics out of our seas, highlighting the harm they do to marine life. But the same is true of plastics on land as they can cause harm to birds and small mammals. We need to keep ALL plastics OUT of our environment.

I believe that it is possible to use another material that is biodegradable – plant or fabric based. In fact, I understand that there is already one brand of conventional teabag which is polypropylene-free made by Jacksons of Piccadilly, so it is technically and practically possible.

Let’s make our environment plastic free and fully compostable with a change to the materials used in our tea bags.