Thursday, June 13, 2013



We Protect Our Nature

Nature is a wonderful and awesome creation of God. The beauty of nature mesmerizes every human being. That's why when you see a beautiful scenery or a greenery filed, mind just forgets all other thoughts, eyes never avoid looking at it and you will enjoy that pleasant nature to the maximum extent. Beautiful greenery of trees, extraordinary heights of mountains of ice and rocks, various cute colors & structures of flowers, growing agriculture forms, gardens, banks of rivers and oceans, panoramic views of beaches, amazing sunrise, sunset, moon light, fully covered fog, drifty clouds in the sky, various seasons, gestures and unique features of birds & animals and so on…which are incredible and can't explain in words.



                           
Nature is not only pleasant and beautiful in appearance; it is also a proven and fabulous doctor which gives natural medicine. Ayurvedic medicine treatment was ancient and the only methods of curing the diseases before allopathic and other pharmaceutics were invented. Still ayurvedic treatment has the same demand because of no side effects with the medicine and it is completely made up of natural resources.


Nature Is Our Life

Life and nature are similar concepts because nature is the study of how life acts and interacts within the circle of existence. When we take the time to examine the beauty of the world around us, we are able to see parallels within our own lives. One who is attuned with nature is attuned with the practice of living. All of nature moves in a spiral as do our personal lives. It is important to spend time in nature because in this way we can become attuned to its wisdom.



Protect Our Environment

love care humanity make world batten this time our nature in dangers forest are so less most of animals have no place to live we destroying our beautiful nature if it continue happen some day we lost everything and cant get it back




To protect our natural environment we must work for systemical cultural changes both big and small.  There are many things you can do to help.  No one can do it all, but each of us can do something. Here are some practical strategies for developing partnership relations with our natural world: at home, at school, at work, and in the community.



At Home

  • Recycle and reuse when possible.
  • Buy biodegradable soaps and pesticide-free produce.
  • Use nontoxic methods of pest and weed control.
  • Use energy-efficient light bulbs and drive a car that has fewer emissions and better gas mileage.
  • Call phone-in talk shows and counter the lack of information in the media.
  • Write editorials for the mainstream press.
  • Vote for government officials who support funding for family planning both at home and abroad.
  • Work to get those who oppose this funding out of office.
  • Invest in stock from socially and environmentally responsible businesses.
At School

  • Support Partnership Education that includes environmental education.
  • Ask your school district to replace diesel school buses with natural gas, or better still, with electric school buses. 



                                  
                                     Benefits Of Natural Environment

  • Water quality protection. Proper landscaping reduces nitrate leaching from the soil into the water supply and reduces surface water runoff, keeping phosphorus and other pollutants out of our waterways and preventing septic system overload.

  • Reduced heat buildup. Trees in a parking lot can reduce on-site heat buildup, decrease runoff and enhance night time cool downs. Tests in a mall parking lot in Huntsville, Ala. showed a 31 degree difference between shaded and unshaded areas.

  • Reduced soil erosion. A dense cover of plants and mulch holds soil in place, keeping sediment out of lakes, streams, storm drains and roads; and reducing flooding, mudslides and dust storms.
  • Improved air quality. Trees, shrubs and turf remove smoke, dust and other pollutants from the air. One tree can remove 26 pounds of carbon dioxide from the atmosphere annually, equaling 11,000 miles of car emissions. One study showed that one acre of trees has the ability to remove 13 tons of particles and gases annually. • 2,500 square feet of turf absorbs carbon dioxide from the atmosphere and releases enough oxygen for a family of four to breathe.
  • Lower attic temperatures. Trees shading homes can reduce attic temperatures as much as 40 degrees. According to the EPA, urban forests reduce urban air temperatures significantly by shading heat sinks such as buildings and concrete and returning humidity to the air through evaporative cooling.
  • Natural resource conservation. By using trees to modify temperatures, the amount of fossil fuels used for cooling and heating is reduced. Properly placed deciduous trees reduce house temperatures in the summer, allowing air conditioning units to run 2 to 4 percent more efficiently. The trees also allow the sun to warm the house in the winter.
  • Green roofs cool urban hot spots. Led by cities such as Chicago and Toronto, as well as a number of universities, evidence is mounting that green roofs (i.e. roofs totally or partially covered with vegetation) can play an important role in saving energy, reducing the urban heat island effect and adding more green space to a built environment.
  • Cooler summer days. Lawns will be 30 degrees cooler than asphalt and 14 degrees cooler than bare soil in the heat of summer.
  • Natural resource conservation. Homeowners can “grasscycle” by leaving grass clippings on the lawn when mowing. The clippings quickly decompose and release valuable nutrients back into the soil to feed the grass, reducing the need for nitrogen by 25 to 50 percent. Modern mulching lawn mowers make “grasscycling” even easier, and homeowners can reduce their mowing time by 30 to 40 percent by not having to bag clippings.

  • **Reduced pollution. ** Trees naturally remove pollutants from the air, so every tree that’s subtracted from a city’s ecosystem means some particulate pollution remains that should have been filtered out. In Washington, that amounts to 540 extra tons each year.

  • Rainfall retention. A healthy, sodded lawn absorbs rainfall 6 times more effectively than a wheat field and 4 times better than a hay field.

  • **Natural storm water management. **A big tree removes 60 to 70 times the pollution than a small tree.
  • Reduced temperatures. In Atlanta, temperatures have climbed 5 to 8 degrees higher than surrounding countryside where developers bulldozed 380,000 acres between 1973 and 1999, according to NASA. Scientists fear the heavily developed corridor between Boston and Washington could be the next big hot zone.

    

                                               Nature

Have you seen the Sunset and Sunrise
And the Horizon that's a prize
How the colors mix and melt
And look as soft as felt
How they float away into black 

As you wish them back



When I was a young boy
We used to play
Out in the field
Of flowers all day
There were roses and daisies
And lilies too
We used to trade them
Saying from me to you