Yorkshire Post

‘Nation is looking to nature’, says Prince

Prince’s messsage on threat to nature

- PAUL JEEVES HEAD OF NEWS ■ Email: paul.jeeves@jpimedia.co.uk ■ Twitter: @jeeves_paul

HEALTH: The role of plants in health and wellbeing has become ever more crucial as the nation looks to nature to help deal with the intense pressures of modern life, the Prince of Wales says.

Prince Charles said many people have reconnecte­d with nature at home in recent weeks during the lockdown.

THE ROLE of plants in health and wellbeing has become ever more crucial as the nation looks to nature to help deal with the intense pressures of modern life, the Prince of Wales has claimed.

Prince Charles said many people have reconnecte­d with nature at home in recent weeks during the coronaviru­s lockdown, gained a heightened appreciati­on of their local green spaces and discovered a new love of gardening and food production.

The heir to the throne, who is a long-time advocate of climate action, also said that healthy plants and trees are “vitally important” in mitigating climate change by storing carbon.

Speaking in a message for the first ever virtual edition of the Chelsea Flower Show during this week, he warned that just as the world has realised the importance of plants, “we have managed to engineer a global plant health crisis”.

And he urged visitors to the online Chelsea Flower Show to take simple actions themselves to prevent the spread of plant pests and diseases.

The Prince said: “In recent weeks the coronaviru­s lockdown has highlighte­d the critical role plants play in our own health and wellbeing and quite a few of us will have had the opportunit­y to reconnect with nature at home.

“I know many people have discovered a heightened appreciati­on for their local green space and a new-found love for gardening and food produce.”

He claimed that was a “welcome

outcome from this desperate situation”, and added: “I also know I’m not alone in feeling plants and trees play an utterly valuable and indispensa­ble role in our lives.

“And, in the midst of this tragic health crisis, it’s easy to forget the worsening climate crisis, the catastroph­ic effects of which have

Our current situation shows just how quickly diseases are spread.

Prince of Wales, in a message for the virtual Chelsea Flower Show.

been dramatical­ly felt in recent months, with floods and fires wreaking havoc on communitie­s around the globe.”

In the online video message, he said government­s around the world had unveiled plans for tree planting and restoring wetlands to store carbon emissions.

“From every angle plants play an absolutely vital role in our existence, but the ultimate irony is, just as we are realising this, we have also managed to engineer a global plant health crisis,” he said.

He pointed to the loss of millions of elm trees, the spread of ash dieback, increasing awareness of threats to oaks and xylella threatenin­g herbaceous plants.

And the Prince said: “Our current situation shows just how quickly diseases and pathogens of all types are spread around the planet due to the hyper-connected nature of today’s world, and with such tragic effect.”

Speaking during the internatio­nal year of plant health, he said greater caution and vigilance are needed to ensure pests and diseases do not spread.

And gardeners can take their own actions to protect plant life, he added.

These include cleaning their tools, buying plants from reputable British growers and which have ideally been grown here, resisting the urge to buy plants while travelling abroad, and reporting anything unusual in their own garden.

Prince Charles’s video message forms part of the virtual Chelsea Flower Show, which is taking place online this week in place of the physical event which was cancelled due to the coronaviru­s pandemic.

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