“Aye ah can see yer in the glaur plantin mangroves tae restaur the environment and gaird agin the effecks o changin sea levels and as a penance for imperialism but ah still need tae tak a swatch at yer passport an visa – NOO. Wiv a global war oan agin terrorism ye ken.”
glaur: soft sticky mud, ooze.
“Yes I can see you’re in the mud propagating mangrove trees to restore the environment and to mitigate against the effects of sea levels rising and as a penance for imperialism but I still need to see your passport and visa – NOW. We do have a global war going on against terrorism you know.”
The majority of campaigns fail.
This is due to not looking into the history of what caused the problem in the first place and if that same cause is still there.
Another obstacle is not winning the hearts and minds of the local population and ensuring that they can see that there are sustainable benefits to be had from the campaign, both environmentally and financially.
Success is better if they are well informed and have the power themselves to fix, manage and control their own situation directly.
The best locations are on gently sloping hill bottoms that are above mean sea level and flooded by the tides less than one-third of the time.
More information on ways to ensure successful mangrove restoration campaigns can be found here.
Also American mangrove secrets here.
I wonder what the benefits would be if we funded a global war on poverty that matched the funding of the global war on terror?
Your options: Above the illustration and meaning of each Scottish word you can choose previous or next or search for a word. You also have the options to go directly to the very first word or very last word or choose to view an illustrated word chosen at random. You can subscribe to the RSS feed here too. You can choose to view the words as just words grouped by year in the archives section. or select from this collection of thumbnails of words done for Illustration Friday. There is a pull down category list in the left column of each word pages where you can sort the words by category creating a list of caption excerpts, thumbnails, word and meaning. Why Scottish Words gives an overview of this site's purpose, its beginning and why Scottish words were chosen as a topic to illustrate define and translate. There you can also access some information about me and information in using the phonetic alphabet to help with pronouncing the words. There is a site map here of this site. If you like a challenge you can try the Scottish word quizzes and you can buy and wear a T-shirt of mine from spreadshirt.com - helping to support this site. You can also view my favourite links or my collection of public links at delicious.com - these are mainly for illustrators, designers, animators and artists.
If you have any suggestions for anything you think I should add to the stooryduster site you can leave a comment or contact me directly through my contact page. Naturally all the cartoons are my copyright so if you want to use any please let me know. It's surprising how accommodating many artists are with the use of low resolution versions of their images providing you are not making money or other capital from them and the author is credited. But you must ask. Enjoy and thanks for visiting. Alan.
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I love it, especially the little crabs defending their glaur!
This is very, very funny and the drawing style is great.
Great illustration. I really like how you did the horizon.
Commenting on your comment, Little boxes, little boxes…made out of ticky tacky… written by Malvena Reynolds and made famous by Pete Seegar and Peter Paul and Mary, (my husband’s good at trivia). That was what was playing in my head when I did my piece! Very intuitive of you.
Also, I’ve met crabs like those on the beach and I always thought they wanted to fight me, not surrender.
Great illustration! You have a really fun style!
..funny illustration..great style..thanks for visiting my blog..
the crabs are key. nice work!
I love the crabs too