Welcome to the home of Mother Nature. Mother nature is a personification of nature that focuses on life giving and nurturing aspects of nature by embodying it, in the form of the mother. Aotearoa NZ are proudly joining forces with our global family members in the development and growth of the one thing we all rely on. Todays facts calculate that the rainforest is to become instinct in just 100 years. That’s a family of three generations. Some of us are lucky enough to witness that. Let’s build mother nature back together.
The nested-interdependencies model of sustainability, reflects their interdependent reality. It shows that society and the economy are wholly-owned subsidiaries of the environment. The environment is our holding company. If it goes out of business, we all go out of business. We have a 200 year future proof goal, 12-15% growth increase for the next 200 year plan for generations with the growth increase. Working together as a collective for the children of the globe.
Mother Nature teaches us
Patience
The change of seasons and the slow growth of plants remind us that everything happens in its own time.
How to give
Generously.
Before a plant or tree grows, a seed cracks open and breaks to give way to roots and sprouts.
Boundaries
Her frontiers and laws are non-negotiable.
Nurturing
Nature allows us to live our lives by nourishing us, while also pushing us to grow through adversity and challenge.
Adaptability
Flora and fauna change constantly, finding ways to adapt to new circumstances.
Hope
Nature provides a model for hope in her ability to regenerate.
Imperfection
The water cycle and the healing of soil and the change of seasons all take place in a non-linear, imperfect progression.
National Parks protect country’s most scenic landscapes. Often it is a reserve of natural, semi natural, or developed land that a government declares or owns. Although individual countries designate their own national parks differently, there is a common idea: the conservation of ‘wild nature’ for posterity and as a symbol of national pride. National parks are almost always open to visitors.