Text BoxWhy Plants Matter: "Transforming Your Understanding of Plants™"
Welcome To Our Botanic Gardens:
For as long as humans have been creating gardens, gardens
have most always begun with one person's vision. That is likely as true of the
garden in your backyard as it is true of the grandest gardens in the world.
While no one person can be deemed responsible for the actual creation and
continued existence of a garden, its' initial envisionment can most often be
attributed to one person.
That is true of The Botanic Gardens at Kona Kai Resort.
Our Gardens are the result of the work and contributions of many people, but
the vision for that Garden is attributable to one individual. The individual is
not important, but the vision of that individual is - and that is what I hope
this "Directors Corner" will be all about.
I believe, if you know the why and wherefore of a garden,
you are that much more likely to appreciate and support that garden. Public
botanic gardens, such as The Botanic Gardens at Kona Kai Resort, also
oftentimes evolve from one individual's financial support, yet those public
gardens end up requiring the financial support of many to survive.
Public botanic gardens serve many purposes but their primary
purpose is increasing humanities
understanding and awareness of plants: - their beauty; their value to
humans and other living creatures for economic, medicinal, food, clothing,
shelter, et. al.; as well as for conservation and scientific research. As the
21st Century advances, perhaps a botanic gardens greatest contribution will
become that of increasing the public's understanding of the function of plants
in of our biosphere - or put more simply, the living parts of our planet, for 'without plants there is no life.'
So over time, as founding visionary of The Botanic
Gardens at Kona Kai Resort, I will be sharing my thoughts with you in this section
of kkbg.org. I hope by sharing my thoughts about our Garden and it's mission
you will better understand not only our Garden but all gardens throughout our
world, conceived by human or mother nature.
March 11, 2011 Joe C. Harris, Jr., Executive Director, Key Largo, Florida © 2011 - 2016
For further reading:
BGCI: The Role of Botanic Gardens
The History and Functions of Botanic Gardens, Arthur W. Hill, M.A., F.L.S., Assistant Director, Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew.
kkbg.org - Germinating an idea . . . . Almost every botanic garden
has a nursery where they grow plants from seeds collected by their botanists,
or botanists from other botanic gardens - a healthy collaboration. In the last century, collection, cultivation and conservation of plants became a major mission of botanic gardens
around the world. The result has been many magnificent botanic gardens with incredible
collections of rare and unusual plants - living museums for all to see and enjoy.
This remains a major mission of many of the worlds botanic gardens
today. Here at The Botanic Gardens at
Kona Kai we've do not have the opportunity to germinate and cultivate plants; our
space for plants is too limited and our access to botanists restricted by a
lack of funding. However, we believe
we're doing some of the most important germination work of the 21st Century -
because we're germinating an idea, a vital new way of exposing our visitors to the important role plants play in our biosphere, through our TYUP.™ Founded on the principal that we would educate our visitors about the value of plants, we started an ethnobotanic tour aimed at exposing our visitors to all that plants do for people. We quickly came to realize how little our visitors knew how important a role plants play in our daily lives. Our [botanic] vision, "Transforming
Your Understanding of Plants," is based on the premise that until humans
understand the true value of plants in their lives, they will continue to look
at plants as landscape decoration, as elements of design and beauty, when they
should primarily look at plants as our partners in life's evolution
here on earth. While climate change, or as we at kkbg.org prefer, climate evolution, has become a widely accepted
reality, it remains a struggle to find people who accept the scientific fact
that 'without plants there is no life' on earth. Here at kkbg.org we believe
teaching that reality is the role of botanic gardens in the 21st Century and
have thus coined the term, "TYUP; transforming your
understanding of plants." There's lots of science behind our TYUP™ and we're indebted to all those whose research and writings have led us to our concept of "TYUP, Transforming Your Understanding of Plants." We owe the idea of our TYUP™ to scientists, artists, architects and writers including, Francis Hallé, Matthew Hall, Daniel Chamovitz, James Wandersee and Rene Cleary, Michael Pollan, Daniel Nocerra, Stefano Mancuso, Stefano Boeri, Patrick Blanc, Henry Moore, and Henri Bergson, to name but a few. Our small garden serves as an experimentation and demonstration site for our concept - a concept that involves everyone who would, or could, go to a botanic garden. It is accepted philosophical
theory that when people understand something they are more likely to accept,
perhaps even love, it that much more. A "TYUP'd" person is more
likely to have transformed their view of the plants, and thus, in fact, the
entire biosphere around them. By transforming a person's view
of plants we transform their view of our biosphere; altering the way they look at
and understand everything in our
world. Our TYUP™ is based upon a
21st Century Scientific view of the world: consider the terms,
"phylogenetic," "eukaryota," and "biomorphic."*
Once a person understands these things, it's likely their worldview will evolve from an anthropomorphic
to a biomorphic view., which is a prerequisite for their accepting the changes needed if we are to successfully overcome the man-made ecological threats facing us today. The Botanic Gardens at Kona Kai Resort are the laboratory for this hypothesis - and we're demonstrating that
"TYUP™" does alter one's Linnaean view of the world around them. Every
day, with both children and adults, here at The Botanic Gardens at Kona Kai
Resort we are evolving and modernizing people's
understanding of our biosphere. For "environmentalism," to be a
success, people need to think biomorphically rather than
anthromomorphically. But one Garden is not enough.
History demonstrates how humanity's understanding changes over the
years. That change, oftentimes sparked by one simple idea, does not occur
until many players have enhanced that single vision. Thus, it is
our hope that before the decade is over, every botanic garden in the world is
"TYUP-ing" each and every one of their visitors. In doing so, botanic gardens might just
help save our biosphere from destroying the only habitat in which we humans
can survive.
* more on these terms
in future commentaries here in my Director's Corner.
December 6, 2014 Joe C. Harris, Jr., Executive Director, Key Largo, Florida © 2011 - 2016
Please continue exploring this topic by reading this commentary by our resident botanist, Emily Magnaghi: http://thebotanicgardensatkonakai.blogspot.fr/2014/12/the-importance-of-our-transforming-your.html
CLIMATE CHANGE - COP20 & COP 21, Lima, Peru (2014) and Paris, France (2015) World leaders met in Peru in 2014 and then again in Paris in 2015 to discuss global warming, climate change or, as we prefer to say, global climate evolution. Science acknowledges that climate evolution is now affected by more than nature; humankind is playing a major role in climate evolution. Both conferences were significant, and the Paris 2015 conference was decisive with the USA leading the charge. If Congress does not get in the way our nation's leadership could prove to be a signifiant turning point in the way governments manage climate threats. But world leaders cannot legislate what humanity needs to do to make sure that as the climate evolves, we the people, evolve and survive with it. Human survival is up to each and every one of us. We need to change our ways if we are to survive natures on-going evolution. We need to comprehend what we've done and what we now need to do! Botanic Gardens can help each of us understand both the why and the what, for Plants Matter, and plants are the business of botanic gardens! Some of us still need reminding that Plants are the essence of life on earth and that plants are our pathway to reconciling our differences with nature. At the close of the COP20, attendees were treated to this important 3 minute video, produced by Lyn Davis Lear and directed by Louie Schwartzberg: 3 minutes for you to consider what you need to do next:
Here at The Botanic Gardens at Kona Kai Resort, we're working to show our visitors Why Plants Matter. Please visit us the next time you are in Key Largo - reserve a space on our 90 minute guided TYUP™ tour and help change our world, our only biosphere, for the better - one person at a time.
December 12, 2014 Joe C. Harris, Jr., Executive Director, Key Largo, Florida © 2011 - 2016
WHY?
Since opening our Garden in
2011, I find myself asking that question every day. Why did I do this? Why am I
still doing this? Why am I sacrificing my time, energy, money and more, to try the
impossible? The answer is still somewhat elusive, but an answer has slowly
become apparent.
It was in 2014, when here at The Botanic Gardens at Kona Kai Resort, we first began using the term TYUP™
that I comprehended part of the "why." TYUP™ is my invented acronym
for "Transforming Your Understanding of Plants."
After 6+ years of struggling
to "invent" our botanic gardens, I first realized I had been
completely transformed by my growing understanding of "Why Plants
Matter." Yet it was only just the other day, while reading an op-ed piece
written by author and entomology professor Douglas Tallamy, that my
"why" became clear to me. In that New York Times op-ed,
Professor Tallamy writes: "Plants are as close to biological
miracles as a scientist could dare admit.
...you might think we gardeners would value plants for what they do.
Instead, we value them for what they look like."
Boing!
Suddenly it became clear that over the last 6 years I have come to value plants
for 'what they do!' And, my evolving understanding of what plants do has had a
profound effect on how I view our world and how and why we fit into it. I have
come to value nature, our planet's biodiversity, and all the incredible things
that are here for us, over all the incredible things we have made for
ourselves.
Now,
I'm not suggesting that electricity, engines, agriculture or medicine are not
incredible and not to be appreciated. [All those things depend on plants for
their source material.] It's just that I now understand the potential price we
might be paying— the wonder and beauty we might be sacrificing — for our
wonderful agricultural, industrial and technological advances. I've come to understand
we must balance nature and our biosphere with our creations; we must not let
our creations supersede the incredible magnificence that was here on planet
earth before we arrived.
Furthermore,
I've come to believe that through gardens and understanding plants we will find
our key to understanding our part in nature. That understanding has changed my
perspective about almost everything. I realize we cannot, and should not, stop
what we humans call "progress." But, I also know through a better
understanding of plants we can better manage our progress and not misuse nature
to build upon "progress" in any of our endeavors. By understanding
plants we will work harder to incorporate and preserve nature into our
progress.
Last
year I also encountered the term "plant blindness™"
for the first time. I was enthralled, because what had become so apparent to
Professor's Wandersee,
Schussler
and Clary, through their research, was a revelation to me. So, understanding
"plant blindness™" furthered my understanding of "why" am I building
this garden. Now I can explain why the gardens and the mission we have created
here at The Botanic Gardens at Kona Kai Resort is so very important and
I've come to realize we are a gem of a little garden with a diamond of a
mission!
Today
I am also a better citizen of nature. I am far from perfect and aware I will
not become perfect, nor will our Garden. But, by understanding what plants do
for us — actually for all living things — I have come to a clearer
understanding of the fact that we need nature but nature does not need us.
Furthermore, the world needs The Botanic Gardens at Kona Kai Resort and the
world needs our "TYUP™!"
I
am now respectful of everything living. I now do my best not to waste or
overuse whatever resources I need to live my life — all because over the past
6+ years, as Executive Director of a fledgling botanic garden that some say is
laughable, I have been "TYUP'd - transformed by my understanding of plants!"
And,
that is why The Botanic Gardens at Kona Kai Resort exists. That's why our
Gardens want to TYUP™ everyone; why I
want every botanic garden in the world to offer a TYUP™ tour such as ours — a
tour that will "Transform Your Understanding of Plants."
March 20, 2015 Joe C. Harris, Jr., Executive Director, Key Largo, Florida © 2011 - 2016
PLANTS ARE THE KEY TO ALL LIFE ON EARTH . . . or WHY PLANTS MATTER!
Plants have been around, surviving and adapting to
environmental events, for some 4 billion years. So, perhaps one should conclude
that Plants are both smart and experienced! Science makes it clear that: 'without plants there simply is no life!'
Those are just two of the many reasons plants
matter! Consider the possibility that plants are even more important than
energy, politics, peace or whatever. By understanding the value of plants, all
the other issues facing us today become clearer, more understandable and
manageable.
While we need plants, we've mostly ignored plants and mostly ignored what we might learn from them. That's one reason why in September of 2014 UNESCO
held a
world conference on plants and botany.* Speaking at that conference, then BGCI
Chairman, Dr. Stephen Blackmore, cited chemist's James Lovelock's Gaia hypothesis
making the point that: "Without
plants we cannot overcome any of our global challenges, [while] with plants we
can achieve a ... sustainable and equitable future."
As an individual, and as Executive
Director of The Botanic Gardens at Kona Kai, I believe teaching "Why
Plants Matter" to each and every botanic garden visitor, and to each and every
person worldwide, is THE KEY to our future.
Plants produce and store energy yet,
unlike we humans, plants create only
biodegradable waste. Plants have figured out how to do all this, efficiently! To
survive this century, we need to learn to do the same. Rather than simply using
plants as a energy source, we need to learn from
plants.
Learning from plants is just one more reason "Why Plants Matter." Proffering this
belief is the reason The Botanic Gardens at Kona Kai was born. Our mission of
Education-Transformation-Restoration has been at the core of our public TYUP™
and our UKFC in-school environmental education program since 2011.
In getting to know the botanic world over these last 5
years, it's become clear to me that botanic gardens do a fantastic job with plant
collection, conservation and restoration. However, in my view, most botanic gardens are
not truly confronting our future. Only by Transforming
Your Understanding of Plants™ will botanic
gardens fulfill their 21st Century responsibility to humankind and all other life
here on earth.
Botanic Gardens primarily appeal to people who see beauty in plants, but even many of those people cannot truly tell you "Why Plants Matter." Botanic gardens attract less than 10% of their potential visitors, by not appealing to the rest of us. Yes, of recent, botanic gardens have employed fashion shows, art exhibits, wine and food festivals and more to attract people to their gates - and it has worked in bringing more people into the gardens. By TYUP™(ing) those very visitors, more and more people would come to understand "Why Plants Matter." And those people will tell
others ,who will then also visit botanic gardens, and tell even more people who would come to botanic gardens. In this one simple way, botanic gardens
can help humanity overcome "plant
blindness," a problem that most of us don't even realize is a serious disorder causing many of our environmental problems. By focusing on the future, explaining to old and new
visitors alike, "Why Plants Matter," botanic
gardens would make a huge difference in humankind's understanding of and thriving
in the 21st Century. Once people learn that plants are much more than pretty
green things with flowers decorating people yards, nurseries and flower shops,
they will come to understand "Why Plants Matter." So, botanic gardens can help us
confront our future by offering their own TYUP™. This is why this, the 21st Century, as UNESCO has suggested, is
the century of the botanist!
And, by better understanding the role plants play in our biosphere, more
individuals in other disciplines, such as technology, engineering, physics and chemistry would focus on studying plants for what they can teach
us about producing, storing and recycling energy, unlocking important keys to our
future.
Visit the About
21st Century Botany and the Increase Your Knowledge
sections of our website to grow your knowledge; you'll be surprised how much fun it is learning "Why Plants Matter." Coming soon, watch for our new
"12 Points" TYUP™
section on this website, so you too can carry the message about "Why Plants Matter" to
friends and family. Do it for yourself; do it your family; do it for your friends and do it for our future.
March 10, 2016 Joe C. Harris, Jr., Executive Director, Key Largo, Florida © 2011 - 2016
*visit https://sites.google.com/a/kkbg.org/mobile-shop/books
to read a summary and full details of that very important BGCI worldwide conference. Scroll through the page until you come to "Botanists of the 21st Century." Click on the .pdf and link for the full report.
The link to "plant blindness" is this: http://bioscience.oxfordjournals.org/content/53/10/926.full
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