Thanks to my sister Michelle McIlroy for designing the logo!

Welcome!

Ever since I was a child, I have been very interested in nature and the environment. I have a B.S. degree in wildlife biology, and have worked as a zookeeper, wildlife biologist, and ecologist. I am conducting a brief survey of world leaders, government officials, religious leaders, corporate CEOs, environmental groups, wildlife experts, and others regarding nature and the environment. I am also very interested in religious views, customs, and beliefs from around the world, and the interactions between religion, culture, society, and the environment. This is something I am doing out of personal interest, and is not connected to any group or organization. I have been working on this project since the summer of 2006, and hope to eventually turn it into a book and/or documentary. I am hoping to make this into a global project, with responses from all segments of society. Feel free to contact me directly if you have any questions or comments. If you have not already done so, I hope that you will consider taking part in my project, and please spread the word to anyone you think might be interested! Thanks for stopping by!

TAKE THE SURVEY ONLINE HERE http://tinyurl.com/nx4ng7

August 29, 2006

Patricio Novoa

Jefe de Horticultura, Jardín Botánico Nacional, Viña del Mar, Chile [Head of Horticulture, National Botanical Garden, Vine of the Sea, Chile]

Today's Date: 29 August 2006

1. What interaction with an animal and/or nature in your life has had the biggest impact on you?

Cuando tenía 10 años de edad, hacía vacaciones, en el campo de un tío en el sur de Chile y veia la destrucción de los bosques de Robles para abrir terreno para la actividad agrícola y ganadera y esa experiencia de vida en el campo y destrucción de bosques me marcó para toda la vida. [When it had 10 years of age, vacations ago, in the field of an uncle in the south of Chile and veia the destruction of the forests of Oaks to open to land for the agricultural and cattle activity and that experience of life in the field and destruction of forests marked me for all the life.]

2. Did you have a favorite place in the great outdoors during your childhood?

Curarehue, al interior de Pucón, en el sur de Chile. [Curarehue, to the interior of Pucón, in the south of Chile.]

Now? Pucón. [Pucón]

3. As a former zookeeper, I would love to know what your favorite animal is, and why?

no tengo animal favotito. [I do not have favotito animal.]

4. What do you think is the greatest environmental challenge facing us now, and what do you think will be the greatest challenge in the future?

La destrucción de los bosques tropicales y los bosques templados, el gran cambio será de tipo climático. [The destruction of the tropical forests and the forests temperings, the great change will be of climatic type.]

5. If you could give everyone one piece of advice regarding the environment and our natural resources, what would it be?

Hay que socuializar el conocimiento de la naturaleza, de la flora, la fauna y su ambiente a nivel de detalle, especialmente la flora que esta demasiado "underrated" [It is necessary to socuializar the knowledge of the nature, of the flora, the fauna and its atmosphere at detail level, specially the flora that this too much "underrated"]

[translations done using Babel Fish Translations, http://babelfish.altavista.com]

Joep Hendriks

Director - Parque Cóndor, Ecuador

Today's Date: 08/29/06

1. What interaction with an animal and/or nature in your life has had the biggest impact on you?

Seeing a raptor flying.

2. Did you have a favorite place in the great outdoors during your childhood?

Yes, moors, even till now.

3. As a former zookeeper, I would love to know what your favorite animal is, and why?

Peregrine falcon, because it has such a great way of flying.

4. What do you think is the greatest environmental challenge facing us now, and what do you think will be the greatest challenge in the future?

Stopping the destruction of natural habitat; that will be in the future also the greatest challenge.

5. If you could give everyone one piece of advice regarding the environment and our natural resources, what would it be?

Respect your environment and don't waste our natural resources.

Emily Neidigh

Outdoor Recreation Planner / FWS

Today's Date: 08/29/06

1. What interaction with an animal and/or nature in your life has had the biggest impact on you?

There was a creek that flowed under a railroad track near my parent's house. I thought it had such potential for wildlife - if only we could remove the tons of litter that seemed to cover it. We did a bit of work with what we could move and carry as kids. I guess that was when habitat restoration became a love for me - being able to remove some evidence of human impact and make the world look untouched - little miracles that even I can perform.

2. Did you have a favorite place in the great outdoors during your childhood?

My favorite outdoor place was in a tree. Any tree - any place. I read in them, climbed them, ventured to peer into nests and collected leaves as I believed a scientist would - to identify them all. I suppose if I had to choose a specific place, I would choose my grandparent's farm. It was my job to venture as far and through as many barbed wire fences as I could when we visited at Christmastime. I was an explorer - a discoverer – seeing and experiencing things written in my head as an epic journal which would inspire many.

Now? I relied on a lot of different wild places when I was in college – as fortresses from the city. Now I live in rural America and find myself without just one place to choose.

3. As a former zookeeper, I would love to know what your favorite animal is, and why?

I love the dragonfly. Any dragonfly really, and almost any insect. I suppose the overall reason for loving an insect is because so many of them are misunderstood - not being "cuddly" or controllable. Really very fascinating creatures with simple - but powerful - construction such as the dragonfly to the more technical and acrobatic flies. The smallest difference between each species' wing veination indicating their place in the world. And dragonflies.. well, there's a time when that seemingly fragile flier can eat a small fish with alien-like techniques. Such things are fascinating and offer a challenge to the viewer.

4. What do you think is the greatest environmental challenge facing us now, and what do you think will be the greatest challenge in the future?

There are two things - and it can be difficult to accomplish them both. We need people to care about the resources enough to conserve them. But we need people to understand the difference between conservation and management techniques such as harvesting. I think Leopold said it best when he said "One of the penalties of an ecological education is that one lives alone in a world of wounds. Much of the damage inflicted on land is quite invisible to laymen. An ecologist must either harden his shell and make believe that the consequences of science are none of his business, or he must be the doctor who sees the marks of death in a community that believes itself well and does not want to be told otherwise". We need to convince people that economics don't matter if the natural world falls apart. Everything is linked and we need to look far enough into the future to at least try and see what investment will make the most difference.

5. If you could give everyone one piece of advice regarding the environment and our natural resources, what would it be?

When I visit a place that doesn't have the resources to teach children the arts, I feel pain for those children and the beauty that they are missing. I hope that they will be able to develop an appreciation for those things if they ever get the opportunity to experience them. The same is with the outside world. There is something so refreshing - so timeless - so healing - about the outdoors. And everyone should get the opportunity to experience it. So, take the time. Get outside. Consider the life of the ant - of the tree - of the antlion waiting for a meal to slip into their funnel. When you walk a trail - don't focus so much on the wildlife you see or don't see - but imagine the wildlife that's been there and what they may have been doing.

Robert A. Ritchie

Parks Naturalist, The Niagara Parks Commission

Today's Date: 29.August.2006

1. What interaction with an animal and/or nature in your life has had the biggest impact on you?

My parents exposed me (and my siblings) to nature of all sorts through the 1950s, 1960s, and 1970s. My father is/was interested in birds so in searching for birds in the trees for him to observe and identify I was more interested in the beauty, friendliness and sheltering of the trees. It has only been in the latter half of my life that I have come to realize that the web of life that radiates out from “my” central core of trees is really what it is all about, for me.

2. Did you have a favorite place in the great outdoors during your childhood?

In 1956 when I was 8 years old my parents moved us out of Toronto (even then it was a metropolitan area) to a small “hobby” farm north of the city (it was farming country then but is subdivisions and wealthy estates now). I remember thinking it was the worst thing that could happen, leaving all my city “chums” behind, moving from a big city elementary school to a one-room country school with eight grades taught by one teacher; but it was the best thing that could have happened to an 8-year-old boy. The adjacent forest became my favourite place and I got to know about 1000 surrounding acres very intimately – every pond, lake, forest, field, hill, valley, etc., and all the occupants therein. Then came puberty and a driver’s license………………………..!

Now? “Be Here Now” – no one favourite place, but I do spend a lot of time in the Near North of Ontario, especially inside the polygon bounded by Parry Sound, North Bay, Algonquin Park and Huntsville.

3. As a former zookeeper, I would love to know what your favorite animal is, and why?

As I get older I search for the inherent beauty in each and every species (flora and fauna) regardless of the labels and attributes (both positive and negative) that human beings ascribe to them. What makes each of them tick and where do they fit into the greater scheme of things (the web of life)? As a child I had a “koala bear” and a “fuzzy rabbit”; I still have them (hidden away safely in my blanket box, along with the first shoes of my children), although the Koala bear is getting thread bare from love.

4. What do you think is the greatest environmental challenge facing us now, and what do you think will be the greatest challenge in the future?

The greatest environmental challenge facing us now is getting human beings to live within their means as it relates to the overall Carrying Capacity of our individual environments and the planet as a whole, and the survival of all the other species that we threaten with extinction. The greatest challenge in the (immediate/pending) future will be our own survival as a species when The Correction (my emphasis) plunges our burgeoning population to well below the Carrying Capacity that the environment and the planet ascribe to us.

5. If you could give everyone one piece of advice regarding the environment and our natural resources, what would it be?

Examine your “wants” and your “needs”, don’t give in to needless advertising and marketing, give up something each day that you don’t need, “live lightly on the E(e)arth”, and “teach your children well”. “You can’t always get what you want but you just might find you get what you need.” But my favourite quotation is: “Faith is knowing there is an ocean because you have seen a brook.”

DeeVon Quirolo

Co-founder/Executive Director, REEF RELIEF

Today's Date: August 29, 2006

1. What interaction with an animal and/or nature in your life has had the biggest impact on you?

I was born in South Florida and my earliest memories feature swimming at the beach as a young child; I have always lived near the ocean.

2. Did you have a favorite place in the great outdoors during your childhood?

see above

Now? The coral reefs of the Florida Keys were an incredible underwater world when I first saw them in the 1980's. That beauty and diversity and joy made living in Key West at that time an exceptional experience. I could walk around a nearby island to harvest enough conch for dinner in those days and the water was "gin-clear" as they called it.

3. As a former zookeeper, I would love to know what your favorite animal is, and why?

My favorite is the sea turtle; wise and slow and ever moving forward, voyaging around the world.

My other favorite is the dolphin, spritely and free, expressing the joyful abandon of living in the ocean.


4. What do you think is the greatest environmental challenge facing us now, and what do you think will be the greatest challenge in the future?

The decline of our oceans that support our food chain, atmosphere, economy, and quality of life.

5. If you could give everyone one piece of advice regarding the environment and our natural resources, what would it be?

Every journey of a thousand miles begins with the first step; so be the change in your own life; make a small difference every day by adopting an ecofriendly lifestyle that respects all the diversity of life around you and encourage others to be respectful as well. Resist the mainstream mindset that accepts the notion that it is ok deplete all our natural resources for our immediate short term pleasure.