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Thinking Like a Coconut

An article by W.J. Nichols PhD

http://www.wallacejnichols.org/wallacejnichols/Blog/Entries/2009/8/23_Thinking_Like_a_Coconut.html

J.CoconutAugust 23, 2009

On a small island you’ve never heard of, in a small group of islands you’ve never heard of, in the South China Sea, native coconuts grow. Green sea turtles climb the beach at night. They lay their small round eggs in a narrow, deep hole they carved in the sand with their rear flippers. Then they go back to the sea, across the reef, to wait for another night.

It’s like this on thousands of islands, night after night. The turtles bring their eggs and the coconut trees grow.

Left to automatic nature, eggs become hatchlings become turtles, which make more eggs. The trees make coconuts from rain and sun, growing in sand made of time-crushed shells and coral.

Turtles grow up slowly on distant reefs, travel the oceans for decades, and may find themselves another beach or return home to nest. Coconuts fall from their heights and may drift to a distant
island or grow in place.

The coconut is perfect. A waterproof outer layer and a thick husk. Inside is the pure water, isotonic, with natural sugars, electrolytes, and no fat. There’s no waste–the husk and shell biodegrades or can be used as fuel. The container’s lining, the meat, can be eaten or squeezed to make milk and oil. Trees grow tall, fast and have strong wood.

Now on this isolated island where sea turtles live and coconuts grow, countless plastic bottles and bags wash up. The leftovers of packaged, processed sugar drinks and snacks. Sea turtles climb over and dig through the plastic to make their nests. They eat plastic bags and fragments at sea, confusing them for food.

Plastic in the ocean and on the beaches is an eyesore, it shouldn’t be there. It’s certainly an inconvenience for the turtles to climb over the stuff on the beaches. And sometimes eating it or getting tangled in it kills them.

Who is responsible? Those who invented the wasteful packaging? Those who manufactured it? Those who brought it to these islands to sell without a disposal strategy? Those who dropped it? Everyone?

Can we think like a coconut? Can we make food and drinks in biodegradable or waste-free packages? Can we evolve our systems to allow for clean oceans and plastic-free beaches? Of course we can. It will take personal and political will to make the changes, along with creativity and innovation.

The examples exist in nature. All we need to do is pay attention.

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4 Comments so far (Add 1 more)

  1. Great post! thanks for sharing your experience.

    1. Kevin on January 6th, 2010 at 1:41 am
  2. Thanks Wallace,

    economy at the expense of ecology (just won’t work….glad we can agree now lets “see things differently” before too late.

    where do I post your new COCOTAP?

    best wishes,
    Paul

    2. paul richardson on January 5th, 2010 at 8:28 pm
  3. To moderator: Please only consider the edited version of my comment for inclusion. I edited the first paragraph badly.

    Thank you for this essay by Dr. Nichols

    3. Beth Charette on January 5th, 2010 at 12:27 pm
  4. Edited version:

    This is a wonderful piece, although if one looks at it realistically, we are always going to have a problem.

    Just statistically, one out of every ten human beings does not enjoy being subject to a government or rule of law of any kind, and at least 1% will never abide by even the most basic social rules.

    With six billion of us on the planet, that means at any one time there are at least 10 million of us who will never listen to an authority or act in a responsible way.

    If just 1/2 of these use a plastic bottle each day, that’s five million bottles that will not be disposed of responsibly. FIVE MILLION.

    Five million of these per day, not to mention the containers that the rest of humanity, intentionally or not, will burden the environment with.

    We can legislate, jail, even kill law breakers, and the result will be the same.

    As we rejoice with every new child born, one out of one-hundred of those cannot wait to get older so he or she can add to the waste products accumulating under the coconut trees.

    And, this mathematical scenario is the BEST scientists and sociologists say we can expect from human society.

    Infestation is not too strong a word to use for the 1% of us who will never learn or, having learned, never care.

    4. Beth Charette on January 5th, 2010 at 12:25 pm

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