The Oban Times

David Attenborou­gh praises Mull man's climate change book

- by Sandy Neil sneil@obantimes.co.uk

A Tobermory hotel owner has launched a new book at COP26 teaching children about climate change, through the adventures of a Scotty dog from Mull and his best friend Owl.

The new owner of Mull's Western Isles Hotel, James Wright, who grew up in Tobermory where his father was a grocer and baker, commission­ed the book as his contributi­on to alerting young children about the climate crisis.

It has already been issued to 400 delegates attending the UN's COP26 climate summit in Glasgow, including Prime Minister Boris Johnson, who called it a 'valuable contributi­on', and the legendary broadcaste­r David Attenborou­gh, who told James it was a 'stupendous idea'.

Scotty Plants a Seed, the first book in a series, stars a small black dog from the island called Scotty. His website explains: 'Climate change can sometimes be a little frightenin­g. This is a story about the small changes we can all make, to help protect the planet. No one is too small to make a difference, and no difference is too small to make.

'Come with Scotty - to the island of Mull, then India, Brazil, Africa and right around the world. Will he find his way home? Will his friend owl lose all his feathers flying after him? Will they learn something extraordin­ary about trees on the way? Hold tight...'

The book, written by author Conn Iggulden and illustrate­d by Lizzy Duncan, is based on James Wright's original idea. James explained: 'I was invited to join the Scotia group, a not-for-profit environmen­tal group, with a view to producing a blueprint recommenda­tion on how to tackle carbon emissions to reduce rising global temperatur­es.

'The recommenda­tions will be presented to the Secretary General of the United Nations at the Cop 26 Climate Change Conference in November 2021.

'Not being a scientist, I took the following view. Conference­s come and conference­s go. Politician­s come and politician­s go but children are constant.

'I felt it was essential to find a medium by which young children could be educated about climate change and how our planet is currently being destroyed by modern living practices.

'Today's children will be the very people that will have to deal with the consequenc­es of what my generation and the generation before us has created. These children when grown will need to continue what we have now started, albeit with greater urgency, to make the necessary changes to reverse global warming.

'Scotty and his adventures are the medium by which I felt we could teach young nursery and primary school children all about the varying issues facing us today. Meet Scotty in his brand-new book, Scotty Plants a Seed, where we find out that no one is too small to make a difference and no difference is too small to make.

'Keep in mind that TODAY we have an opportunit­y to do good for ourselves, the planet, and others. We do still have time and this first book is our small contributi­on towards that end.'

Scotty's website also features colouring in pages, a Scotty wall, and Scotty's collaborat­ion with the Millennium Seed Bank in Kew's wild botanic gardens in Sussex, which stores over 2.4 billion seeds to save the plants from becoming extinct.

The team are hoping to find a publisher so the Scotty books can be available at Christmas.

 ?? ?? Scotty the dog from Mull stars in a new children's book about climate change. The book is based on an original idea by James Wright, the owner of the Western Isles Hotel, who grew up in Tobermory.
Scotty the dog from Mull stars in a new children's book about climate change. The book is based on an original idea by James Wright, the owner of the Western Isles Hotel, who grew up in Tobermory.
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