reforestation

Reforestation in Haiti - Can the Young Lead the Way?

By Bryan Schaaf on Sunday, May 11, 2008.

art of living Jule Hanus from the Art of Living Foundation sent us a video clip featuring a Youth Leadership Training Program which incorporates music, dance, yoga, and environmental preservation.  Take a look at it by clicking here.  Even when the Haitian government (someday) releases a strategy and appeals for funds to support nationwide reforestation communities will do the heavy lifting. In a country, where almost half the population is under fifteen years of age, there are many opportunities to involve the young in reforestation.

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Reforestation Has Yet to Take Root in Haiti

By Bryan Schaaf on Saturday, March 1, 2008.

The South Florida Sun Sentinel ran an article concerning the failure of reforestation efforts in Haiti.  While little progress has been made to date, there have been small successes.  We can learn a great deal by examining the programs which are doing well,  asking ourselves why, and then replicating them.  Read more »

One Billion Trees Planted in 2007 - But How Many in Haiti?

By Bryan Schaaf on Wednesday, November 28, 2007.


According to the United Nations Environmental Program, more than one billion trees were planted worldwide.  Mexico and Ethiopia led the way.  Ethiopia, not exactly a model of good governance,  illustrates that when a government has the political will and when communities are aware of the importance of the environment, motivated to preserve it, and the resources to do it, social change can happen rapidly. 

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Foundation Seguin Bamboo Advocates

By Matt Marek on Thursday, November 16, 2006.

On 2 recent visits through the mountaintop village of Seguin, I passed through a patch of Haiti's dwindling pine forest. According to a long time resident of Seguin this area is one of the country's 3 main watersheds, the othertwo being Marmelade and Macaya in the North and the South respectively. Read more »

Environmental Innovation Could be Haiti's Salvation

By Bryan Schaaf on Friday, April 21, 2006.

Burn 1 Anyone who has been to Haiti knows that its environment has been devastated. In fact, one of the first things a visitor notices when flying into Haiti are sandy, rocky mountains that used to be covered with trees. The erosion not only makes the soil less productive, but it also makes villages more susceptible to flooding, mudslides, and other natural disasters. Read more »