tv ZDF Bauhaus Deutsche Welle February 15, 2021 1:00am-2:01am CET
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rivers rich. but in europe there's a sharp warning whoever accept money from the new super powers will become dependent on it looking the other shaky the chinese state has a lot of money at its disposal. and that's how it's expanding and asserting its status in position in the world to be physical but more. china's gateway to europe short february 19th on d w. this is due w. news and these are our top stories germany has banned travel from regions in neighboring austria and the czech republic that's after a surge of infections involving more contagious variants of the corona virus in some border regions checkpoints have been set up and rail services suspended only
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essential travel and trade is allowed the move has drawn criticism from the e.u. and some businesses. western embassies in myanmar urging the military to refrain from violence against demonstrators this comes as security forces reportedly opened fire on anti protest is in the country's north and vehicles were seen in city streets a watchdog said the internet had largely been shut down. the west african nation of guinea has declared a new outbreak of ebola with at least 3 people dying in a town near the liberian border it marks the 1st time the disease has emerged in guinea since it ravaged the country from 2013 to 2016 the world health organization says it's rushing assistance to the region. this is d.w. news from berlin you can follow us on twitter and instagram instagram a d w news or visit to w dot com. this
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man eats a whole box of chocolates every day good just for professional reasons that is because clever grown there is one of belgians top so can i get more on that topic let's get 1st a very warm welcome to new edition of your i'm max let's see what else we have lined up for you in the show. high quality paper from the italian city of florence is still made concrete by cans and mother child break from britain has not only written a book about from the complaint even grew some minutes and 8. this
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season skiers cannot always hit the slopes due to the coronavirus pandemic many ski resorts in europe are closed or her for strictures on the number of visitors but there are still ways to still have fun in the snow how would you like to be pulled troops know we landscapes on skis by a horse we travel to frogs to take a closer look at an exciting woods a sports. this is a sports center has originated in scandinavia with reindeer or dogs it was made popular using horses in the early 20th century but in france it was largely forgotten until jacques affinia tourers reintroduced it there about 30 years ago. i'm still passionate about it because we're always out in nature always in an element that is constantly changing because the snow is never the same be hard or soft or like powder it could be the snow of spring it's always
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a different experience. jack. in the french alps near the resort of he saw reviving the sport here as a way of combining 2 passions. i got into city because i was working for 10 years on ski patrols that monitor the trails and avalanches and take care of those who are hurt if. you don't doubt my legs at the same time i had an equestrian center and my horses had nothing to keep them busy during the winter. so i said i needed to find a way to combine 2 things i love. skiing and horses. does require some skill participants don't have to have much knowledge of horse riding because the animals respond to basic commands through the reins but writers do have to have a certain level of skiing experience. as long as they can people of all ages can
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take part. and watch the horse. watch the horse watch the horse that is very good. perfect very good. ski joran comes from the norwegian term for ski driving its original purpose was to. transport goods today it's also a competitive sport. so what did you feel whilst enjoying the only freedom in the nature of the snow everywhere and silence great experience really awesome. and allusion horse here on the left in a norwegian fjord are among the 3 horses jack has specially trained for ski joining he wanted to relaunch the sport in france after seeing an old postcard with skiers being pulled by horses but he had to start from scratch.
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i told myself it was necessary to find a way to ski behind horses he said but i did the research and couldn't find anything no equipment existed and that's how i started to develop my own equipment . the result of that was this special harness which is mounted on a horse and designed to minimize pressure on the animal go to feel like you're driving ok we don't touch the horse's mouth that only happens when i want to give a command right to go right or left to go left or pull both handles back to break oh yeah for. the cameras part of the harness protects the driver from the flying snow. the rings controlled by the handles stay stuff while. we do the thing about this sport that motivates me is the feeling of freedom all the time it's really a grand feeling of freedom or
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a sense that the horse isn't imprisoned not constrained but you are letting it follow its natural behavior and you become one with him as you glide behind him. that's something you only experience when ski touring and also. thinks to shock and his horses tourists have yet another way to enjoy the great outdoors in france. valentine's day is coming once again and because my husband is such a hopeless romantic he sent me all these presents in the studio well actually that's not true he doesn't even text me something nice on valentine's day but for people who do like to celebrate florence high in paper is just the thing to wrap all those nice presents. the in chinese city of florence is the center of arts and culture it's also home to paper making traditions the date back centuries from
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sheets and cards to book pages and binders handmade florentine paper can still be found in a few places here these pay for is now called a florentine paper. even if the caret region is mob old pay for it's a very old to me of decorating paper but it was used a lot in florence in a book by ending process mostly so always related to books and printing. maria owns. a feed the oh a family business now in its 6th generation. it's florence's all this marvel paper maker and one of the few places where it's still handmade. maria also holds workshops on how to make marble paper i'm going to to make it to prepare the
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model paper so. and. just spreading some callers on to the jelly thing gelatine and step by step i will create a pattern. and i will lay the paper on till and you'll see what the paper sold they how the paper is that correlated. the process is interested and time consuming with lots of attention paid to detail. from start to finish maria needs about 20 minutes to make one sheet of paper. for each new sheet she has to repeat the entire process using new colors. the end result is always unique. this is quite different from the machine printed paper which is largely taken over
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here at the ross the paper making factory the company also specializes in foreign team designs but they've been using machines to print their paper since 1931. in this factory we agree that we have old machines as well. using old machine the same as last century but the renew it with their new technologies these the printing machine can produce 20001500 sheets our. the process wasn't always so fast this is original press from the late 19th century could only print certain items one at a time. and. this is the 1st machine and. the beginning of these company. my grandfather on don't you know it will start the
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with these oppressor printing or some carts putting the people here and in this place. laurel patterns in the use of striking colors including gold are characteristic of florentine decorative paper its substantial weight makes it good for binding books creating stationery and covering boxes. these items are popular with both the tourists and locals alike. marbled paper is said to have originated in japan around the 12th century it came to europe during the 16th and 17th centuries and was used for important documents as a way of preventing forgeries and arranged today its top kill or. it's a gift. people are looking for something that it's handmade and it's unique it's
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just one of a kind and they can have a spirit known for you know colors or do uniqueness of a piece of paper. the techniques for making decorative florentine paper may continue to evolve but the patterns remain steeped in history and tradition. i've just on rep one of the presents and found some they taste prayer lives we don't know who invented them some say it was a german chef back in the 17th century adverse believe it was a pharmacist draw your house from belgium legends as he was trying to find a way to make his medicines go down easier with talk less but whoever invented them today they are a treat belgium is famous for world wide and we visited a chocolate in brussels to find out more about how they are made.
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learned tried chocolate i decided to make some myself because it was love at 1st sight. just see for they were all the credit they got on dad chocolates here i make railings every day and i make chocolate every day and i eat it every day and i love it so. it's chocolate is very simple it's not complicated there are 2 or 3 ingredients cocoa mass for dark chocolate with some cocoa butter and sugar. the you see. the way that up of them what you see here is pistachio mars a palette is all things so artisans like us have 2 main techniques for making the green lanes. and all of us. we 1st do the filling that. i did and then cut it and finally we surround it with chocolate and that's the coating on.
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i'm decorating it with a fork. it's a little it's a very traditional way of decorating to push it it is over 100 years old. the 2nd step is the molding holder chicago you take some chocolate with or without coloring you temper it and then you put it in a spray gun and apply it to them i want to make this give shine and color. the theme push the fine layer of chocolate here is very important so it can't be too thick or too thin if it suits and it breaks if it's too thick it's unpleasant. and then from the home you know we're filling the molds with caramel salted caramel and that's done with a machine that machine the whole piece it fills the mold to about 90 percent to leave a bit of space solar moon want to sit up front finally the chocolate so but not too
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much the most when you eat a prey it's essential not to have too much empty space when biting into it it has to be a small a small civil. suit here. because we have 17 different kinds of crazy ideas that. there's a whole seed for aliens with basal was the most freshman's or time the. only thing we also use a lot of spices such as a cardamom. star a nice or chimeric. mole to be honest i've been eating a box of prey leans a day forever to fool. you know this here is liquid caramel. and. one last of all those deep that's cool it tastes wonderful because you have the crunchiness of the chocolate. and then you have the tasty filling in which you
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build your miles along busy a lot of us and then you have the freshness of the raspberries. so. you have to find peace it's like smoking a good cigars i know that's not good but you have to take time to smoke a good cigar you have to enjoy it otherwise it's not worth that. amount of popular valentine's day gift per few but finding the right one to suit your personal taste is not always easy anyone looking beyond mass produced fragrances can have their individual sense created by purview may move it hits he does his magic in the city of paris in east germany we watch closely as he makes an exclusive perfume from natural ingredients.
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give you a sense of happiness. fragrances can be appealing. says can change your life 5. my name is hashish and to me fragrances mean life love happiness relaxation and passion. in his perfumery stores thousands of fragrances all made from natural ingredients by distillation for instance of blue spruce needles. sandstone can be extraordinary too. and earth can contain unique fragrances as well. there are other ways to get this earthy scent. like using beetroot. and that's how you can make connections and tell
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a story. sells his perfumes to customers around the world including european nobility elaborate perfumes can cost up to several $1000.00 euros. and there are many perfumers in the world there are actually fewer perfumers than astronauts. when you're good at it. people will come to you. has been commissioned to create a perfume in remembrance of kala. an entrepreneur from. inspiration beside the river. to tell the life story of this colorful 19th century industrialist and perfume. and the willows here have taken in the scent of the meadows along the river and
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that's what we're going to use. there are always different ways of extracting the fragrance. with willow bark distillation or mass aeration can be used by. we use if you are alcohol and we just insert it and the alcohol will absorb the essential oil we're basically making and extract could last. up to 150 of these extracts are used in one perfume hellish to also creates custom made one of a kind perfumes. plus . there's nothing more intimate than perfume you wear it directly on your skin and it even enters the skin it doesn't get more intimate than that why would you use a mass produced perfume i think
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a good fragrance should reflect your personality. as legacy to the people of dresden was this palace this is sighing in charge of its preservation commission to move ahead much with creating a perfume reflecting the lavish lifestyle of the businessman and. perfume or made 3 different fragrances. the fragrance family is a green composition. the fragrance pyramid results from elba meadows. peppermint candy masqueraded rose bushes fresh grass. and leather and the theater to all. its island and i don't see how it's more elegant than the 1st one no definitely you can really picture a ballroom with a couple who were actually in the ballroom right now so that's fitting couples dancing yes exactly. at the palace they've chosen the more sporty elegant
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version and move a hellish is already experimenting with fragrances for his next project a perfume that will help you concentrate. how about something nice to read for valentine's day we met up with one man whose latest book is currently a best seller in britain often merlin sheldrake invites us into the fascinating world of funky with his award winning work called and tango life how funky makes. this you know that song essential for all life on earth to find out more on the topic we met with the charismatic young author in london. london based biologist merlin sheldrake is out hunting for specimens it's part of his job as a mycologist
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a scientist devoted to the study of fungi and fun guy are far more than meets the naked eye so these attender fungus or horseshoe fungus humans have used it for thousands of years as a tender material a pump to carry a spark or a co it's also what's known as the vital. it has many medicinal uses. it's antiviral agents have been effective in combating the demise of be calling us . from here a kingdom of life which is this broader category of animals or plants and we think of mushrooms for me think of fungal but most funky don't actually produce mushrooms or the ones that do produce mushrooms to spread their spores some mushrooms are a kind of fruit in fact fungi are everywhere in the ground in the air in our bodies and they are indispensable for all forms of life in fact they
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make life possible on this planet but how do they live exactly the most fun to live most of their lives as my syria which is the name given to branching fusing networks of jupiter cells which is how funky feed my celia can be microscopic existing only as tiny mold fun guy on specks of dust but they can also be huge one of the world's largest organisms is a network of my silja over 2000 years old in oregon in the united states it covers an area of more than 9 square kilometers 33 year old sheldrake says fund can change our minds and shape our futures in his book titled entangled life how fun guy make our world i want to talk not just about mushrooms and mushroom forming funky but also the fun you don't for mushrooms that are harder for us to notice. but which had played such key roles in the story of life and so i spend a lot of time thinking about the networks of funky which directly perceivable to us
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and yet make up so much of the world that surrounds us by means of an experiment sheldrake groups that are mushrooms can pop up anywhere he dipped his book in my seat and grew oyster mushrooms on it as they grow the sounds they make are recorded by using electrons his brother used to the recordings to compose a song called entangled like. the mushrooms go right out of the book and into the frying pan and then he enjoys them. the biologist also investigates the phenomenon of fermentation. fund i and other microorganisms are key players in this natural preserving method. making. a for men to dream called beetroot yes i like fermenting in general because i find it a helpful way to. come closer to the microbial world. and understand
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a little bit more intuitively what is taking place in a much more complex environments like the soil. sheldrake explores various avenues to better understand and explain the complex world of fungi he regards music as a point where art and science meet and provide new food for thought. it's really hard to understand what life might be like for a fungus to have bodies and their environment set challenges to opportunities are so different from us so i've really had to explore different metaphors different ways of thinking about what it might be like to be a fungus of course i can never know. but it's worth trying i think it's good for. human centered next to try and put ourselves in the shoes of other organisms even if with destined to fail. his book has become
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a bestseller and won several awards as merlin sheldrake introduces more and more people to the fascinating world. that's also this time you can find more on topics about life style and culture in europe on our website there you can also find out how to and sell our current draw and take a step add receiving our backpack full of goodies see you again next time until then bye bye and thanks for watching.
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a stable income. 3 times a. doubling. country where anyone can. start their religion the united states the land of opportunity for mystics self-proclaimed feelers and chimamanda life coaches that. they promise of a better life. but it comes at a high crime scene. america's news. poll 35. dollars. people knocking for coverage. there are many answers.
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there are many reasons. there aren't many alternatives to. make up your own mind to. make for minds. and welcome to global 3 thousands. in china children of migrant workers are missing out on early childhood stimulation. in mexico farmers are trying to increase biodiversity amidst monocultures but 1st can the u.s.
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reboot efforts to age conservation and to counter the climate crisis. returning the u.s. to the paris climate accord was one of joe biden's 1st official acts as president climate activists everywhere breathed a sigh of relief along with other industrial nations the u.s. is a major culprit in the accelerating climate crisis in 2019 that emitted 5300000000 tons of c o 2. goals around bishop says he wants the us to achieve carbon neutrality by 25th time is pressing the us itself is increasingly feeling the effects of climate change that mantic hurricanes are becoming more extreme and more common in 2020 lone 30 hurricanes caused damage along the u.s. coast drought and wildfires are also on the rise the u.s. government agencies estimate that last year's events caused $95000000000.00 worth
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of damage. and that doesn't take the a measurable damage to nature into account. green sea turtle gently off the u.s. coast they make their home around a reef near the florida keys. are becoming ever more rare. because the green sea turtle is endangered with less than 100000 nesting females worldwide 'd there used to be millions of them. sherry crilly is on a mission as part of the organization save a turtle she patrols the reef looking for injured turtles. they frequently get tangled up in fishing nets or buoys or get injured by boats we ask really why they're so important to her. i just think sea turtles are in and make mad they've
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been around longer than almost any animal on earth. they are magnificent creatures they're beautiful they way hundreds and hundreds and hundreds of pounds yet they're graceful but another threat to the sea turtles is climate change as water temperatures rise more females than males are being born that's a problem for the procreation of the species sherry crilly is glad that under president joe biden america has rejoined the power supply mean agreement but her husband roger is convinced biden's election was fraudulent and he regrets the decision to rejoin the paris agreement i'm not happy that mr biden and president biden support us back into it. i mean more aligned with the view is troubling ministration to be out of it. america was cleaning up. and taking care of their environment and doing all the right things without actually having to spend all the
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money to. the parents quite a bit. so does the couple argue about it. cherie and i we don't talk about it at all so i want to talk about it and try to keep it to myself as soon as she could locate sick or injured turtles she takes them straight to the turtle hospital they often arrive by special ambulance the clinic is well equipped there's even an x. ray department. frieda is beset with tumors the doctors in the operating theatre are weighing whether or not an operation could save her tumors are in demick amongst the sea turtle population in this region of florida betty circle back blames the problem and human activity. so it's something that most likely has to do with runoff from the land this particular species a sea turtles there the herbivores so their natural diet is sea grass and algae and
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you think about it when things run off the land then they settle into the sea grass beds and this particular species is the species we see the most tumors it freezes tumors of metastasized to her organs the doctors finally decide that an operation would be pointless but these others have better chances of pulling through most of their shells damaged by boats losing a chunk of their arm or put them out of balance the hospital used counterweights to even things out and it least they don't have to scavenge for food here. occasionally the hospital manages to return turtles to the wild but they face new challenges. since humans have been on the planet. the development on the coastlines it's in crossing on their best sinking areas sea turtles come up once the fields to lay their eggs it's hard to find a sandy beach on key west it's
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a tourist haven with hotels lined up along the shore and even the less frequented islands are seeing nesting problems residents are increasingly building landing stages in front of their properties the water is too shallow here to tether a boat it's mostly about status harry and jennifer apple are also active in the save a turtle organization they say the landing stage is not only prevent turtles from laying eggs they also pose another hazard. the turtle goes. goes forward it collapses because of the land and the turtle starts that they can only go forward and it gets trapped and actually there. the 2 activists have filed a lawsuit against the government for failing to prevent the piers over sea turtles are recognized as an endangered species president trump at least environmental
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regulations harry and jennifer apple hope the new administration will do a u. turn here as well is the reason they both voted for biden. vote with my heart i vote with my head. you know i care about the environment i always have and i've always been a republican for many years i switched. it's it's eye opening for some people you know. on the surface the florida keys are a paradox but a closer look shows how vulnerable nature is slime a change water pollution and rampant construction aren't only problems in florida they're a challenge world wind the green sea turtles will serve as a barometer of how well the local politicians can turn words into actions. to children 2 continents. one giant problem and move
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it in no limit or seem. to be going to lose power. how will climate change affect us and our children. g.w. dot com slash water. we also look at the effects of human actions on wild. i found the climate's in this week's global ideas monoculture farming which uses species diversity and agricultural chemicals are highly polluting. but there's hope farmers in the mexican state of me cho a can making more room for nature again and everyone is benefiting. easy to do that i mean it is works 8 hectares of land and grows only strawberries
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$850.00 tons of strawberries every year to be precise the state of nature can is mexico's main strawberry growing area but the farming has taken its toll on the land. water levels in the river here have dropped the soil is depleted of nutrients so i mean us had to change his farming methods he bought up more land and installed a new irrigation system. using technology has made the strawberry plant more beneficial in rural areas especially it takes many leaders of water to grow one kilogram of strawberries but if you use this type of year a geisha you only need around 30 percent of the volume. and improving water management is one of the main goals of model each era a program that supports hundreds of small scale strawberry farmers it is to secure
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a reliable income for farmers while not harming the environment it brings together nonprofit organizations like techno serve and international food giant down and down incomes regularly to collect large quantities of strawberries saving farmers the cost of transport easy to his farm now employs $40.00 people some of them even returned from the u.s. attracted by the good pay. if we are not just creating our own income now we're even able to employ others. it's not backwards to stop people leaving this region to go to the cities or other countries we want people to gain a foothold here in their home country and produce something that right would be. he and his son get ready to show us another new development on the farm.
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beehives placed on grass verges between the fields and gun now makes his money as a beekeeper. the family only recently created these green islands which also ensure their strawberries are well pollinated. if you know that we have our own pollinators and that means we are sustainable it's clear where there are abuse there is pollination and that means there is life the fact that there are abuse here shows that we're using you know an aggressive chemicals which are not good for mental to the environment we could use herbicides but we don't because the weeds help prevent soil erosion so that when it rains the soil doesn't wash away. the other. that the. the beehives in the green verges are just
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a 1st step he also plans to alternate the crops he plans to allow the soil to recover. as has already introduced crop rotation alternating between onions strawberries and different varieties of beans rodriguez only farms 2 hectares but the crop rotation has boosted his harvest considerably. he's also started using insect traps in the greenhouse to cut down on the use of pesticides. we had the problem that our plants were diseased sometimes we just had to guess what it could be. we are now we don't know what was wrong now techno service provided us with insect traps to identify the pests it's helpful we want to use products that are not harmful to the environment. but.
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the mad program also aims to improve standards of hygiene for example proper toilets have been installed near the fields. that's very new for our back to rodrigo's is a farming app it's designed to optimize water consumption and reduce the amount of fertilizers and pesticides needed you register the area say one hector and how much product was used that information is stored it will be useful next year when we create a register of which products help with which pasts are. ones harvested the strawberries must be processed quickly while they're still fresh the app is helpful to customer down and keeping track of the entire production schedule and allows the company to ensure their supplier is sticking to sustainable practices. dan ins regional sourcing manager. says everyone benefits the farmers the company and the
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environment. with them and we think the value chain can be transformed into a prosperity chain we benefit from being able to use various supply lines which limits the amount of risk for the company while at the same time ensuring the farming methods are sustainable. but the big question is can a monoculture be genuinely sustainable rodriguez has his doubts he's an ecologist at the biggest university in latin america. if we plant just one species of crop over large areas of land we'll feel the effects even pandemics like the one we're experiencing right now can be traced back to model cultures but there are ways to convert model cultures so that. is preserved. in the case of the strawberry
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monoculture and can it seems to be working. the market share project has sought to bring everyone on board young and old alike there's now also a daycare center so that farmers and workers can drop their kids off when they go to work. easy to do that i mean it is loves to collect his granddaughter he hopes that she too will later opt to stay in the current another incentive to take care of the environment for future generations. all children should have a good start in life it's a basic right and one of the un's 2030 sustainable development goals the w.h.o. agrees it says the development of social competencies motor skills and cognitive abilities are integrity to a person's future a long ways good health and nutrition as
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a result many nations have set up programs to promote good early childhood development among them china but these efforts reach few of the children of the country's almost 300000000 migrant laborers they're typically left behind in rural villages often with their overstretched grandparents. too little her grandmother don is like a mother the 2 of them live together. the 3 year old's parents visit them in the village for only a few weeks of the year. we 1st pay them a visit a year ago. the single grandmother would spend her days looking after the vegetable fields the household and her granddaughter then aged to. the wall i thought. if i need to spend more than 3 hours out in the fields a relative in the village looks after her but once in
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a while i just go get vegetables when the little ones asleep. like millions of other children in china go. war lives in a rural village without her parents who left their home province of jan she to live and work in the country's industrialized south. once a week a social worker comes to see grandma dong and her grandchild. his leave always brings along new books and games she has completed a few simple tasks. he is part of a research project that supports childhood development in rural areas. grammar dung learns that even something as simple as sorting scraps of colored paper is beneficial to war it helps develop her motor and problem solving skills as well as concentration now and as i just love the older people here in the countryside think all children need is enough to eat and clothes to wear and that that's enough they
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never think about things like play so i have to explain it to them over and over and over and over you. go cause mother is on the phone. she works in a factory 900 kilometers away and only gets 3 weeks holidays a year to visit home. it's hardly surprising global shows little interest in the woman on the screen. development project is being conducted by a team at the university in the provincial capital nanchang professor the war has been doing research in rural provinces for years he and his students want to show their junk she's children have a lot of catching up to do. people who are raised by their grandparents often don't develop enough knowledge and skills xiv here. miss here good for means they're less well equipped later in life for work and the demands of our cities and
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the future. but this mall suitcase is meant to change that one. interview was students one tyranny shows how games can be used to measure early childhood development. she's also visited other poor rural areas here in junk she the students are assessing some 1400 village children with tasks such as these. wangs field research began with grandma dung and book war. so how has been progressing the 2 year old has had a weekly play visit for a year now. have they had an effect. oh boy it's not intimidated by the visitors or their experiments. everything is
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recorded for later analysis. during a speech test points to body parts here are the feet and the doll is full she says touching the toys barely. known for what i think out of she can say a few words and even some full sentences already have a good impression of other children who aren't in the program probably wouldn't be able to verbal express themselves as well while moving around at the same time. he why he when she grows up i hope she'll get a good education and maybe study at university one day called basketball. but it's a long road from here to university an estimated 25000000 children under the age of 3 live in rural china statistic that doesn't include their older siblings what is the impact on a child when grandparents are the sole caregivers when the child is not encouraged
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to play. that's the case with jihan she's also being tested for the research project today but she belongs to the control group she doesn't have special play visits or receive support. one tierney notes g. hands weaker results she still can't perform simple tasks like matching shapes. and she barely speaks a word. her grandmother is understandably unhappy. a year on we're back at work was house she's now 3 years old compared to the neighbor's child she's making a lot of progress. the social worker has been coming for 2 years now with games and tasks even during the coronavirus lock down. how big she can express
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herself very well much better than the neighbor child. language development and her whole way of communicating are more advanced. what was grandmother knows she has a part to play. and it does my granddaughter good in the past i didn't give her much attention now i know what's important to spend more time with her. case confirms what professor previous studies in poorer provinces had already shown. me it's clear that children who participate in the program develop much better than children without support they're significantly more advanced in cognitive and motor skills as well as in speech and language. grammar don knows that if she continues to play with work well on a regular basis she'll be giving her a head start for the future.
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times capital bangkok is remembered for its chaotic traffic. yet amidst all the noise and bustle raincoats equally renowned street food stalls offer a myriad of tasty curbside delicacies. 55 year old. john has run her stand in bangkok center for 30 years her specialty is. a crispy pancake top with sweet or savory in greed as you like it.
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i have the recipe from my relatives but i had to adjust it a bit to make it my own because they didn't tell me everything it's a secret. her cousin helps her prepare the snack. i start my day at 4 am when i whip the cream and prepare the dough. i leave home at about 8 am after all the preparation is done but i always prepare the salty coconut and the sweet egg flakes the day before and after i finish working on the street in the morning is for the dough and the cream i couldn't get it all done in the morning and. the toppings are added shortly before they're taken from the griddle.
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the customers roll up in the cars or on foot. business people students or just simply passers by walking through town. now. that. it's a hugely popular delicacy. some kids. and her cousin are kept busy all day . but i love i love the taste the dog was so crispy i've tried others but these are the best even if you don't eat them straight away they stay really crisp about mumbai and all he walks me about that i always come here i never buy anywhere else. but i do eat other snacks around here but this one is
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a high price of america's new good news. poll $50.00 d w. eco india. in a secluded valley in the himalayan mountains many people still live with al electricity. hydroelectric power is meant to solve the energy problem but these coming in power plants are destroying local agriculture. and the population is starting to fight back. in 60 minutes on t.w. . bloodlines us is holding its way to bring you more conservation. on how do we make see the screeners how can we protect habitats we can make
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a difference googling genius environmental series again global 3000 bondy w. and all mind imagine how many portions of lunch us road out in the uk right now climate change is an awful story. vicious life lesson ways from just one week. how much work can really do. we still have time to ask i'm going. it sort of says. it subscribes. to children to come to them it's. one joint problems and when you're a kid in no mood to see the best year you. leave the drinking if you can't believe. how will climate change affect us and our children.
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and e.w. dot com slash water. this is the w. news live from berlin fears grow of a possible crackdown on protests in myanmar military rulers cut internet services and deployed troops around the country hours after security forces opened fire to disperse demonstrators also coming up shining a light on russia's political.
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