THE GUARDIAN

The rivers we see, the lakes we sail on, the swamps we get stuck in - they are where they are because of the physical geography surrounding them.



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Naivasha, Rift Valley, Kenya
A young lady passionate about nature

Wednesday, May 9, 2012

Saving water is securing our future


Saving water is securing our future
 Story By Wanyua Mary.

Every day, millions of people across a spacious swathe of Kenya struggle to get access to clean and safe drinking water. Lack of which continues to claim the lives of millions of people every year while condemning millions more to a life of poor health and diminished prospect.
There is no resource more precious than water. However, this is the most misused, abused, misallocated, and misunderstood resource in Kenya. Safe drinking water, healthy and intact natural ecosystems, and a stable food supply are a few of the things at stake as our water supply is put under greater and greater stress.
Many people have had water-saving etiquette pumped into them time and again, so hopefully we can make a good case for conserving our water through everyday water-saving strategies as well as putting in place long term measures that will ensure that Kenya will never go dry.
Let’s not wait to be educated by our government and or local organization but lets take the initiative of seeking the solutions facing us. If every Kenyan can learn how to use water sustainably as well as take the initiative of conserving and protecting our catchments, lack of water can be history.
As we have all witnessed, many people still don’t value our catchments hence the increased cases of forest fires. Unless strict measures are put in place our forest, wildlife and water will all be a done deal condemning us to a life of misery.
As we celebrate the World Water Day, I urge all Kenyans to mark this day by planting an indigenous tree as an effort to compensate for the ones lost by the Mt. Kenya inferno.

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