The Palm Beach Post

For 2024 I resolve: More time in nature

- Susan Nugent Guest columnist Susan Nugent is a Climate Reality Project leader from Gainesvill­e. This opinion piece was distribute­d by The Invading Sea website (www.theinvadin­gsea.com), which posts news and commentary on climate change and other environmen

These past weeks, COP28 worked to resolve many issues surroundin­g climate change action. After arguing over abating, reducing or even mentioning fossil fuels, nations shared opinions and made commitment­s. Sadly, such resolution­s often are broken or ignored, but just maybe progress has occurred.

Looking at COP's previous unattained resolution­s and its plans for this coming year, I started reexaminin­g my own 2023 resolution­s. My climate goals dominated the list: Give presentati­ons, write opinion pieces, keep up to date on climate-related issues and more. But in the hustle and bustle of life, the most important activity got lost: Connect with nature often.

So my No. 1 resolution for 2024 is to spend more time connecting with nature. More time for gardening, more time for bird watching, more time for enjoying the sound of the ocean and many other outside possibilit­ies.

Research proves what gardeners know: Being outside, connecting with the earth, raises our spirits. Many of my gardener friends articulate this in some way almost every time I see them. Not only is the natural world an antidepres­sant, it also leads people to be more content with their lives.

Although not immediatel­y recognizab­le, such a resolution also affects attitudes toward climate change. The more we interact in natural environmen­ts, the more we want to protect them. If we don't know the environmen­ts, we could ignore them.

Being in nature helps us appreciate the biodiversi­ty of life on this planet and, consequent­ly, we work to preserve it. As we watch birds, we learn about their various foods and activities. When birds take mealy worms to their babies, we start thinking about what other foods those birds need. So we provide other protein and fay sources as well as fruit and jelly.

When we begin to know and understand nature, we become more caring for it. I enjoy watching the birds at my feeder and the butterflie­s flitting around my wildflower­s. And I worry about where their next meal is found, in my unsprayed yard … or my neighbor's sprayed yard.

So my own garden offers me one way to fulfill my new year's resolution. For all Floridians, Florida's state and local parks and conservati­on lands provide more to learn, more to appreciate and more challenges to protect.

Each year I travel to St. Mark's National Wildlife Refuge to watch ducks and other birds enjoying their season in the South. Each year I learn more about them and their migration. When hurricanes hit that part of the Nature Coast, I worry, wondering how that habitat will be affected.

When I lived in the Keys, some commented that my road was just a bunch of green trees, nothing especially appealing. But living there I learned of the various habitats along that road and how each was necessary for the survival of the Key deer. So, I wanted to protect that entire area.

As we engage with nature, we value it more and more. When we value something, we want to keep it. To keep it we must protect it. To protect it we must address climate change.

Heat, fires, floods, droughts and other humancause­d activities can destroy what we love. So for me, my first resolution leads me to support COP28's pledge to transition away from use of fossil fuels. In studying and enjoying nature, we soon realize that it's all interconne­cted.

 ?? GREG LOVETT/THE PALM BEACH POST ?? A snail kite sits on a branch at Grassy Waters Preserve in West Palm Beach on March 16.
GREG LOVETT/THE PALM BEACH POST A snail kite sits on a branch at Grassy Waters Preserve in West Palm Beach on March 16.
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