Friday, July 27, 2007

Hindu feature on our last year's Chief Guest

Dears,
The Hindu report on Greenvision 2006 chief guest Sri. Bal Pandiyan. The original story is available in this link: http://www.hindu.com/mp/2006/06/10/stories/2006061001260200.htm
A feather in his cap
Pal Pandian explains to RAJEEV G.R. how Koonthakulam was turned into a haven for birds



BIRD MAN Pal Pandian points to birds at Koonthakulam at an exhibition of nature photographs organised by Greens

Even in the early 1990s, anyone killing birds or stealing eggs at Koonthakulam had their heads tonsured and was ostracised for the transgression. Others may call it crude, but for the villagers, it is their love for the birds that had made them resort to such methods.

After the Tamil Nadu Forest Department made the village, about 150 km from Thiruvananthapuram city, on the Nagarcoil-Tirunelveli road, a bird sanctuary, such practises have ended.


Love for birds


Showering love on the birds, which come from foreign shores and various parts of the country, is a tradition at Koonthakulam.

Leading the villagers in this endeavour is Pal Pandian, now a birdwatcher with the Forest Department in the sanctuary. Pandian was in the city this week to inaugurate World Environment Day celebrations of Greens (Group Endeavour for Environment and Nature Sustenance), an environmental organisation of Secretariat employees.

Fame sits lightly on this unassuming man, whose eyes glint when speaking about the feathered creatures. Back home, he has asked his wife to take care of the birds in his absence.

Nurturing the birds is a fulltime passion for him. To enable this, he left a steady job in Mumbai and sold his wife's ornaments. "The birds are like children to us," he says.

The village stands in sharp relief against nesting grounds abandoned by the birds owing to pollution and encroachment of wetlands. If the birds find Koonthakulam hospitable, the credit goes to the villagers, for whom protecting weaker species is a divine call. Even the village temple abjures firecrackers and loudspeakers so that the birds are undisturbed.

When fledglings fall in their first flights, Pandian and other villagers rush to them and nurse them till wings flutter again.

Birdwatchers have been flocking to this idyllic village, and Pandian has been kindling their interest with his chemistry with the birds. Even flamingos from the Rann of Kutch had been spotted here, which is unusual, he says.

Pelicans, storks, ibises, cormorants and egrets warm the hearts of bird lovers at Koonthakulam. Ground nesting birds such as lapwings and plovers are also seen. Migratory birds flock to the sanctuary from November to April.

Pandian lavishes praise on wildlife photographers and birdwatchers from Kerala for helping this sanctuary gain attention worldwide.

Tuesday, July 24, 2007

The Hindu on Greenvision 2006

Following is an article published in The Hindu on Saturday, Jun 03, 2006 as curtain raiser for the Greenvision 2006 by GREENS. The original is available here http://www.hindu.com/mp/2006/06/03/stories/2006060301890200.htm

Bouquet of events

Greens is organising programmes on Neelakurinji


MYSTICAL FLOWER Neelakurinji blooms only one in 12 years

With the mountain ranges near Munnar and the Nilgiris blossoming in the blue and white of Neelakurinji (Strobilanthes kunthiana), Greens (Group Endeavour for Environment and Nature Sustenance), an environmental organisation of Secretariat employees, is holding a bouquet of programmes on this mystical flower, which blooms only once in 12 years.
The events start at V.J.T. Hall on World Environment Day on June 5. Bal Pandiyan, a saviour of migratory birds at Koonthakulam, a haven of feathered visitors, near Valliyoor, on the Nagarcoil-Tirunelveli road, will inaugurate the Environment Day programmes at 10 a.m.
Accepted entries to a nature photography contest organised by Greens will be on display from Monday.
A World Environment Day conference will be held from 5 p.m. on the inaugural day. Chief Minister of Kerala V.S. Achuthanandan will inaugurate the meeting. Sugathakumari, poet and environment activist, and M. Baba, Director of Centre of Earth Sciences Studies, will participate.
Fresh from a `Save Kurinji Campaign' in Munnar in May to conserve the shola forests, held along with a few other environmental organisations, activists of Greens are organising a `Kurinji Sandhya' on June 6.

A carpet of flowers

Earlier that day, an exhibition of photographs, taken since 1982, will show glimpses of these flowers weaving a carpet on the mountains. Pictures taken since 1982 will be on show.
Munnar Divisional Forest Officer will inaugurate the `Kurinji Sandhya.' Jomy Augustine, faculty member from St. Thomas College, Pala, will speak on Neelakurinjis and their impact on the ecosystem. Dr. Augustine has directed documentaries on eco issues, such as `Kerala - a Garden of Eden.' K. Kunhikrishnan, who teaches at University College, will give a demonstration on Neelakurinjis and Shola forests with the help of slides.
The final day of the Environment Day celebrations will see a gathering of representatives of green organisations from all over Kerala discussing the threats to the environment in the State.
"We will even the discuss the Koodamkulam nuclear power project in Tamil Nadu, which will have an impact on the environment of the southern districts of Kerala. Another topic is `Deserts and desertification,' the theme of World Environment Day 2006," says K. Muraleedharan Nair, president of Greens.
A painting contest will be held for lower and upper primary school children on June 5. The contest will be held for high school students the following day.
The valedictory programme will be inaugurated by Minister for Forests Benoy Viswom.

G. RAJEEV

Monday, July 23, 2007

Dear bloggers,

The Application form and Rules and Regulations of Greenvision 2007 is displayed below:
Those who need pdf format, please send email to greenskerala@gmail.com. Those who want Printed form, please inform your postal address.
















Thursday, July 19, 2007

Greenvision 2006 Winning Photographs


GREEN VISION 2006

3rd ALL INDIA NATURE PHOTOGRAPHIC COMPETITION

RESULTS




Bat approaching Feed

FIRST PRIZE : (ONE) RS.5000/-

Sri. Santhosh Kumar Jana
VILL - Kalyachak,
Heria (PO) Midhapur (E) District
West Bengal-721 430


Tigress with cub at Kanha Park /Forest
SECOND PRIZE: (ONE) RS. 3000/-


Dr. J.S. Murthy
Mission Compound,
Napier Town,Nabalpur,
Madhya Pradesh - 482 001


CONSOLATION PRIZES (FIVE) RS:IOOO/- EACH




Sindhu Valley

Sri. Prithwiraj Dhang
Jagannath Ghat Lane, Babugunge (PO)
Hoogly, West Bengal- 712 10309433137289





Colours of Nature


Sri. Anindya Majumdar
Nirmalya, Noapara,
Main RoadSonarpur, Kolkata,
West Bengal-700 150




Small Green Barbet Feeding


Sri. R.K. Madhu, AFIP
788/41, Ninth Cross, Ramanuja Road
Mysore , Karnataka - 4



Top of the World


Sri. Joydeep Mukherjee
183 B, Kalfuhath Road,

KolkataWest Bengal- 700 026



Nature Danseuse


Sri. Sali Palode
Deepthi, Dilshed Nagar Colony
Pacha (PO), Palode

Thiruvananthapuram

Kerala

Tuesday, July 17, 2007

Green Vision 2007

Under the title ‘Green Vision’, three day long nature photo/ poster exhibition and National Level Nature Photography Competition are being conducted annually. The photographs and posters in GREENS’ collection are also exhibited in the programmes conducted in colleges, schools and residence associations in Kerala as part of the awareness campaigns.

The competition carries a prize money of Rs.5000 for first place, Rs.3000 for second, Rs.1000 each as consolation prize for five persons and 5 certificates of merit. All winners will be awarded with a magnificent citation.

Closing Date : 7th September 2007
Judging Date : 9th September 2007
Exhibition : 16, 17, 18 September 2007
Return of entries : 10th October 2007

The details will be published soon.

Please note that the competition is conducted only for Indians. Prizes will not be sent outside the country. The entry form will soon be published in this site or be sent to you on request.