Saturday, May 9, 2020

Is Coronavirus healing the Earth?


This month for New Forest Forest Church, rather than a video, we felt that it would be nice to all go out in our local area at 4 o’clock on Sunday May 10th, when we would usually be gathering, so that we are all out at the same time, even if we aren’t together, and as we walk to contemplate how the current lockdown is affecting the planet and the natural environment.



As you walk slowly and quietly and absorb the natural environment near you and the Divine presence within it, contemplate what impact your life has on the planet, and what the current situation shows us about the affect Western culture is having on the earth.

Below is some information to help your thoughts. Perhaps you could find out more information.

Following your time out contemplating, why not come back here and write your thoughts and comments so that we can share together in our experiences?

While the world grapples with the coronavirus pandemic, the slowdown in human activity is having some unexpected, but positive impact on our planet. To combat the rapidly spreading virus countries have put a lockdown resulting in limited travel and industrial activity.
Across the globe wildlife and plant life and aqua-life has been reported as increasing in its health and activity. Limiting travel has led to a reduction in vehicle emissions and cutting the amount of industrial activity has led to a drop in the number of harmful particles put in the air and water.
According to Lauri Myllyvirta, an analyst at the Centre for Research on Energy and Clean Air in Finland, the restrictions contributed to a 25 percent drop in China's carbon dioxide emissions over four weeks beginning in late January, compared to the same time last year.
Myllyvirta's analysis also found that industrial operations were reduced by 15 percent to 40 percent in some sectors and that coal consumption at power plants fell by 36 percent.
In San Francisco, which is under shelter-in-place orders to control the spread of the coronavirus, the average concentration of fine particulate matter — tiny particles in the air that are dangerous because they can be breathed deeply into the lungs — over five days was almost 40 percent lower than the previous year; in New York City, there was a 28 percent drop over the same period of time, and the Seattle-Tacoma-Bellevue saw a 32 percent decrease.
Air pollution levels in the UK dropped significantly in the first two weeks that the country went into lockdown to stop the spread of coronavirus. Some UK cities saw nitrogen dioxide (NO2) levels fall by up to 60%, analysis shows. NO2, released from car exhausts, is a serious air pollutant and also indirectly contributes to the warming of the planet.
Researchers who study the Earth’s movement are reporting a drop in seismic noise — the hum of vibrations in the planet’s crust — that could be the result of transport networks and other human activities being shut down. Data from a seismometer at the Royal Observatory of Belgium in Brussels, show that measures to curb the spread of COVID-19 in Brussels caused human-induced seismic noise to fall by about one-third.

Watch this video to learn more: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hxy5sBe2o5k

3 comments:

  1. Having returned from a wonderfully windy walk in the Forest I have to say that, like many of us, my mind tends to linger in the types of things we were to contemplate today - how my life affects the earth; how western culture disturbs and destroys the planet. So it didn't feel particularly inspirational. However, I watched the video again just before going out and one thing from it stuck in my mind. The statement that more people in China have been saved from air pollution based death than have died from the virus.
    My contemplation was - if this is so, then why don't the world governments respond with the same passion to save these lives as they have done to save lives from COVID-19? And what can I do/change in tbe way I live to help save these lives, like I have changed the way I live currently to stop the spread of Coronavirus?

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  2. I have loved this Spring more than any since my youth. Covid19 spurred me to treat this last Spring as if it was my last - in case it was. But adding beauty to pragmatism was the fresh, untrammelled sky free of contrails and the green, jewelled verges uncut, unsprayed and humming with insects.

    I took my walk this morning. Laddie agreed to sit still by me, not sniffing for pheasants, in exchange for dog treats. It meant I could write, untroubled by pheasant empathies.

    This is the resulting rumination...

    RUMINATION

    In the company of birch
    I sit, silent,
    listening.

    The grey wind softly sighs
    through canopies
    of freshly minted leaves.

    Whether its a sigh of wonder,
    pleasure or nostalgic longing
    for the long lost woods of memories,
    I cannot say.

    But what I say is this.
    The bracken, elegant, uncurls;
    spreads its fractal fronds towards the sun.

    The insects creep, or crawl or run,
    or stitch the air with humming wing.

    The hidden voices of the forest sing,
    fine treble on the wind's soft bass and
    silent counterpoint of Earth.

    My soul sings too,
    a wordless song I seem to know
    from long before my birth.

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  3. I love your poem, Alistair. Mike and I walked the streets of Poole and through the park last Sunday, as the wind blew stronger than it had done for a while. I thought about the struggle I have with the wind, it being my least favourite weather, and wondered about that. Wind disturbs, it ruffles, it changes the position of things.That day we were awaiting an announcement from the government about the potential lifting of some of the lockdown arrangements, and the wind represented change, which I realised for me was unwelcome. There is certainly a sense that we have rediscovered something in lockdown, reconnected with that 'wordless song' as you describe it, Alistair. And I was aware that change seemed to threaten that. However, hope lies in a sense that we are learning new skills, new ways of connecting, that can be carried with us into the new normal, on the wind which ushers in the next season.

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