I think this experience is what we are lacking in the U.S. and that’s why we aren’t successful. That connection to the earth is missing. When I think of cinnamon, I don’t think of that tree, I think of the stick I buy at the store. When I think of vanilla, I think of the bottle of vanilla extract I have in my cabinet, not the plant. I don’t believe this is ignorance; I knew vanilla came from a plant. But until I saw it, smelled it and touched it, that connection that vanilla comes from a plant was missing. I think a lot of conservation programs are missing this basic step. They assume people know; they assume this connection is there. You can’t assume that a person who’s bought milk from the store their whole life is going to care about the cow they’ve never seen. They tell you ‘be green, save water, don’t litter.’ But until you make that connection that a tomato comes from a plant and not the supermarket, you’re not going to understand the need to protect the environment.
The people of Costa Rica understand this. They know if they don’t take care of the environment, that vanilla plant in their backyard is going to die and they won’t have vanilla. I think it would be interesting to start a program where kids can have this kind of connection with the earth, where they can go to a farm and touch the plant/tree, its flowers, its fruits and understand the whole cycle. Then once that connection is there, couple that with ways to be green. This would be more successful than just telling them ‘don’t litter.’ I know this sounds very basic but I truly feel like this is what we are missing.
I looked into farms that people can visit in South Florida and I came across The Little Farm. The owner says that, “Kids have no idea. When I ask them where milk comes from, notoriously, someone will answer ‘the man at Publix or Winn-Dixie.’ ” This is exactly what I thought. I think it’s like Confucius said, “Tell me and I’ll forget. Show me and I'll remember. Involve me and I'll understand.” Until we get the kids involved, they’re not going to understand the need for conservation.









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