diff --git a/content/protection/img/mbweni_mangrove.jpeg b/content/protection/img/mbweni_mangrove.jpeg new file mode 100644 index 0000000..a5b2be9 Binary files /dev/null and b/content/protection/img/mbweni_mangrove.jpeg differ diff --git a/content/protection/img/mbweniruins1.jpeg b/content/protection/img/mbweniruins1.jpeg new file mode 100644 index 0000000..6c6ba89 Binary files /dev/null and b/content/protection/img/mbweniruins1.jpeg differ diff --git a/content/protection/img/mbweniruins2.jpeg b/content/protection/img/mbweniruins2.jpeg new file mode 100644 index 0000000..65b9a0a Binary files /dev/null and b/content/protection/img/mbweniruins2.jpeg differ diff --git a/content/protection/img/mbweniruins3.jpeg b/content/protection/img/mbweniruins3.jpeg new file mode 100644 index 0000000..ff94d08 Binary files /dev/null and b/content/protection/img/mbweniruins3.jpeg differ diff --git a/content/protection/img/mtoni4.webp b/content/protection/img/mtoni4.webp new file mode 100644 index 0000000..67c7f76 Binary files /dev/null and b/content/protection/img/mtoni4.webp differ diff --git a/content/protection/index.md b/content/protection/index.md index b566919..8f16f5b 100644 --- a/content/protection/index.md +++ b/content/protection/index.md @@ -24,7 +24,7 @@ By creating our own paradise we have a responsibility to the planet. {% end %} -{% row(bgColor="#FFFFFF" margin="moderate" padding="top" id="Invest") %} +{% row(bgColor="#FFFFFF" margin="moderate" padding="both" id="Invest") %} ### Chumbe Island @@ -52,33 +52,37 @@ Zanzibari community members from neighboring fishing villages will also gain kno -{% row(bgColor="#F2F2F2" margin="moderate" padding="top" id="ruins") %} +{% row(bgColor="#F2F2F2" margin="moderate" padding="bottom" id="ruins") %} -![Ruins](img/ruinsprotection.png#large) +![Ruins](img/mbweniruins3.jpeg#large) + +
+ +![Ruins](img/mbweniruins2.jpeg#large) ||| ### Mbweni Ruins

The Historic Ruins of the Mbweni School for freed slaves founded in 1874, with associations with Sir John Kirk, Zanzibar’s first scientific botanist. Kirk (1832 – 1922) was also instrumental in the ending of the East African Slave Trade. He was resident in Zanzibar for 20 years from 1866-1886.

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Near Mbweni Ruins is St John's Anglican Church, another thought-provoking reminder of the colonial missionary era. The caretaker-guide is a direct descendant of a freed slave who became the UMCA's first African deacon (junior priest).

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Our aim is to restore the ruins to their old glory and revive it as an education center. We will also integrate the old church.

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{% end %} -{% row(bgColor="#FFFFFF" margin="moderate" padding="top" id="botanical") %} +{% row(bgColor="#FFFFFF" margin="moderate" padding="bottom" id="botanical") %} ### Mbweni Botanical Garden & Restoration Project -

The gardens around the Mbweni ruins are beautiful, and they are being revived to become even more majestic. The garden is mature, with a wide variety of fine tree specimens and other interesting plants, including coral rag forest on the cliff and mangroves on the shoreline. Its mature and jungle atmosphere is only found in a few other places in Zanzibar and Pemba.

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The gardens around the Mbweni ruins are beautiful, and they are being revived to become even more majestic. The garden is mature, with a wide variety of fine tree specimens and other interesting plants, including coral rag forest on the cliff and mangroves on the shoreline. Its mature and jungle atmosphere is only found in a few other places in Zanzibar and Pemba.

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Some of our planned activities include general maintenance and cleaning of the gardens, creating a space for local flora and fauna, creating a space for quiet learning about the history of the garden and what is needed to be nature positive, creating a space for art, installations, and performances related to the history of the garden, and sharing knowledge of good plant care and management with other landowners and hotels.

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Together we will deliver research, design and planning, carrying out a comprehensive survey of plants in the garden to create an up-to-date plant list, training Mbweni gardeners in immediate garden recovery and the importance of key species, a garden map, vision and plan for the future, and more.

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Some of our planned activities include general maintenance and cleaning of the gardens, creating a space for local flora and fauna, creating a space for quiet learning about the history of the garden and what is needed to be nature positive, creating a space for art, installations, and performances related to the history of the garden, and sharing knowledge of good plant care and management with other landowners and hotels.

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Together we will deliver research, design and planning, carrying out a comprehensive survey of plants in the garden to create an up-to-date plant list, training Mbweni gardeners in immediate garden recovery and the importance of key species, a garden map, vision and plan for the future, and more.

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The team is led by Robert Wild and John Ndege. They will source mapping skills and support labor.

||| @@ -98,17 +102,24 @@ Zanzibari community members from neighboring fishing villages will also gain kno ![Mbweni Mangrove Beach](img/mangrove_beach.png#large) +
+ +![Mbweni Mangrove Beach](img/mbweni_mangrove.jpeg#large) + + ||| ### Mbweni Mangrove Beach -​

​5200 Seedlings of Mangroves Replanted at Mbweni.

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​5200 Seedlings of Mangroves Replanted at Mbweni.

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This effort helps the Wanawake Mazingira Group and a number of partners in assuring the desired goal of 10,000 Mangroves for 100 years of carbon offset.

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Mbweni Mangrove forest is a vital periurban forest just at the edge of Dar es Salaam and Coastal region, and there is a degraded area as a result of El Nino of the late 1990s, where a lot of waterlogged at the mangroves and nearly 2 acres died.

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We are restoring the degraded part of Mbweni mangrove forest with 10,000 Mangrove seedlings through community-based restoration, since March 2018 and up to the moment we have restored 5200 seedlings.

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This effort helps the Wanawake Mazingira Group and a number of partners in assuring the desired goal of 10,000 Mangroves for 100 years of carbon offset.

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Mbweni Mangrove forest is a vital periurban forest just at the edge of Dar es Salaam and Coastal region, and there is a degraded area as a result of El Nino of the late 1990s, where a lot of waterlogged at the mangroves and nearly 2 acres died.

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We are restoring the degraded part of Mbweni mangrove forest with 10,000 Mangrove seedlings through community-based restoration, since March 2018 and up to the moment we have restored 5200 seedlings.

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{% end %}