I have found that some people, not least many nature lovers, find the very idea of keeping pets, even fish, at home, abhorrent. To me, however, the desire to create a niche of nature, be it an aquatic garden or a cove of orchids on one's balcony, speaks of man's innate need for the sense of release, growth and spontaneity that only other living beings can bestow on himself. There are of course, ugly sides to it, from the craven likes of many red-neck luohan keepers in the recent year to the unsatiable greed of rare orchid hunters in Florida, but the sheer popularity of aquaria and HDB corridor gardening indicates an unexpressed wish to escape the mechanical drives of a regimented life alienated from a time when people could feel the earth and its bountry closer to their feet.
Nature is by no means an angel and promises no idylls. But I fear that the further this generation departs from an understanding of even the creatures that dwell at their doorsteps (with children who have never even seen a live chicken and cry blue murder at the sight of a dog or lizard), the more likely are they to take a path where they neither know what they will lose, nor why.









Reply With Quote


Bookmarks