Beach Clean Up

Language(s)
29 November 2021
Grace Easteria

After working hard to get their diving licenses, the women ended their week with a community beach cleanup, at the nearby Black Pearl Beach and upstream in the Mimba River. In addition to our friends from Livingseas Asia, the women were also able to persuade locals to help them clean up. They ended up with a combined total of 166 kilograms of trash! The resulting waste was disposed of accordingly, and the girls were delighted to be able to clean up their community, with wider community support!

 

Grace Easteria

We want you to share this article, which is licensed under Creative Commons Attribution-Non Commercial-Share Alike 4.0 International (CC BY-NC-SA 4.0). This means you are free to redistribute our material for non-commercial purposes. All we ask is that you give appropriate credit and link to this content, indicate if changes were made, and distribute your contributions under the same Creative Commons license. You must notify us if you repost, reprint or reuse our materials by contacting info[at]globallandscapesforum.org.


Leave a Reply

Supporting partners 2023

Supporting partners

The Restoration Stewards program provides funding, mentorship and training to deepen the impact of youth-led restoration projects. The year-long program is run by the Youth in Landscapes Initiative (YIL) and the Global Landscapes Forum (GLF) under the banner of Generation Restoration to support and highlight the work of eight young restoration practitioners and their teams in 2023.

During the program, the Restoration Stewards and their teams are  supported to further develop their project and serve as ambassadors at both global and local levels. Globally, the Restoration Stewards share their journeys in a series of vlogs and blogs documenting their stories of inspiration and challenges and participate in different international events to showcase their work. Locally, they are sparking a restoration movement, mobilizing local communities and creating pathways to connect, share, learn, and act for livelihoods and landscapes.