Naturvernforbundet i Holmestrand

Naturvernforbundet i Holmestrand Naturvernforbundet er en frivillig organisasjon. Engasjerte medlemmer og naturvernere er vår viktigste ressurs. Ta kontakt om du ønsker å være med oss.
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25/03/2026

På utkikk etter en klimasmart ferie? Det er ikke ubetydelig hva man lander på.

Reisingen vår står i snitt for rundt 36 prosent, eller tilsvarende 2,8 tonn CO2, av klimagassutslippene fra det private forbruket vårt.

Del med en du planlegger tur med 🗺️

18/03/2026

Folkeforskning, eller citizen science, innebærer at frivillige registrerer observasjoner av planter, dyr eller andre naturfenomener gjennom ulike apper. Det gir oss verdifull kunnskap om naturen, som forskere kan bruke til å kartlegge og forstå miljøet bedre. Forsker på folkeforskning Nå vil e...

Hun var 19 år og kjempet for det hun trodde på! https://www.facebook.com/share/16rbjQpVXC/?mibextid=wwXIfr
16/03/2026

Hun var 19 år og kjempet for det hun trodde på!
https://www.facebook.com/share/16rbjQpVXC/?mibextid=wwXIfr

She was born into a world defined by segregation.

In 1941, in Arlington, Virginia, Joan Trumpauer Mulholland grew up in a completely white environment. Segregation was not debated or questioned. It was simply the way things were.

That began to change when she was ten years old.

A friend challenged her to walk through a Black neighborhood. Just walk through it.

So she did.

What she saw unsettled her. There was fear, distance, and tension between communities. Not because of anything people had done, but because of who they were.

She returned home with a thought she could not shake.

Something is terribly wrong.

That realization stayed with her as she grew older.

At eighteen, she enrolled at Duke University. But sitting quietly in classrooms while injustice surrounded her became impossible. She joined sit ins and noticed the contradiction around her. Many people spoke about love and faith on Sundays while defending segregation the rest of the week.

Eventually, she made a decision.

She left Duke.

In 1961, at nineteen years old, Joan joined the Freedom Rides, a movement challenging segregated interstate travel across the American South.

When one of the buses was firebombed in Alabama, many riders were forced to stop.

Joan volunteered to continue.

In Jackson, Mississippi, she was arrested for refusing to leave a whites only waiting room. Authorities sent her to the Mississippi State Penitentiary at Parchman.

The prison had cleared out death row cells to hold the Freedom Riders.

She was nineteen years old.

She refused to post bail and chose to serve the full sentence. While imprisoned, she endured strip searches and harsh treatment meant to frighten and silence the riders.

But she did not leave the movement.

Instead, she enrolled at Tougaloo College in Mississippi, becoming the first white woman to attend the historically Black institution.

The risks were immediate. Crosses were burned on campus. She received constant death threats.

She stayed.

She worked alongside civil rights leaders such as Medgar Evers and Martin Luther King Jr.

In 1963, during a sit in at a Woolworth’s lunch counter, a mob surrounded the protesters. They shouted “race traitor,” burned her with ci******es, and cut her with broken glass while police watched without intervening.

For a moment, she believed she might not survive.

Just weeks later, Medgar Evers was assassinated.

At another point, members of the Ku Klux Klan surrounded her car with the intention of killing her. She survived that encounter as well.

By the age of twenty three, Joan had been arrested multiple times, imprisoned, beaten, and repeatedly threatened. Yet she continued to stand with the civil rights movement.

Today, she still speaks to young people and offers a simple piece of advice.

Pick the problem that troubles you the most.

Then begin.

Because if a nineteen year old woman from Virginia could stand up to hatred and endure it, others can find the courage to stand for what they believe in too.

16/03/2026

En helt unik mulighet har åpnet seg – og nå trenger vi flere med på laget.

Vi søker etter deg som:
- Vil lære mer om, og har interesse for, naturrestaurering
- Bryr deg om naturen rundt deg
- Ønsker å bidra til å gjøre en reell forskjell for naturmangfoldet.

Som Norges første nasjonale frivillighetsfellesskap for naturrestaurering kan vi tilby:
- Et sammensveiset fellesskap med andre som har lik motivasjon
- Verktøyene og opplæringen du trenger
- Støtte til å bidra der innsatsen virkelig betyr noe.

Bli med oss å bygg Norges første nasjonale frivillighetsfellesskap for naturrestaurering. Les mer om prosjektet på nettsidene våre og hvordan du kan bli med. Link i kommentarfeltet.

https://www.facebook.com/share/1FXzbf3WS8/?mibextid=wwXIfr
16/03/2026

https://www.facebook.com/share/1FXzbf3WS8/?mibextid=wwXIfr

Thirty years ago, the average British garden sheltered hedgehogs crossing the lawn at dusk, swallows nesting under the garage eaves, glow-worms flickering along the hedge in June, common toads patrolling the borders after rain, and house sparrows squabbling over crumbs on the breakfast terrace.

That garden still exists. But it has fallen quiet.

The European hedgehog has declined by 30 to 50 per cent across much of Britain since the 1990s. The cause is not a predator — it is fragmentation. Solid fencing, rendered walls, and unbroken boundary structures have carved the landscape into sealed parcels. A hedgehog needs to travel two to three kilometres each night to feed. A fully enclosed garden is a trap, not a home. Cutting a 13 × 13 cm gap at the base of a fence reconnects an entire neighbourhood.

The barn swallow has lost a significant portion of its UK breeding population since the 1970s. It nests in open barns, garages, and outbuildings — spaces that were routinely left open a generation ago. Today, barns are converted to holiday lets, garage doors are automated, and outbuildings are sealed. The swallow returns each April to last year's nest and finds a closed door. A 10 cm opening left in place from March to September restores the site.

The common glow-worm (Lampyris noctiluca) has disappeared from most suburban gardens. The cause is measurable: artificial light. The female emits a soft green glow at ground level to attract the flying male. A single security light floods that signal with competing photons. The male cannot find the female. Breeding stops. Switching off outdoor lights between 10 pm and 6 am from May to September is enough to restore it.

The common toad (Bufo bufo) returns each spring to the pond where it hatched. If that pond has been filled, paved over, or left to dry out — there is no fallback. A permanent pond of just 2 m², even without fish, re-establishes the breeding cycle within two to three years.

The house sparrow has declined by more than 50 per cent in UK towns and cities since the 1970s according to BTO monitoring. The cause is twofold: loss of nesting cavities as buildings are insulated and sealed, and collapse of the insects that chicks depend on in their first two weeks. A nest box with a 32 mm entrance hole and a patch of unsprayed lawn address both.

The peacock, small tortoiseshell, and red admiral — three butterflies that once visited every British garden — have become scarce in suburban areas. All three breed exclusively on nettles. A garden without nettles is a garden without these butterflies. Leaving one square metre of nettles in a sheltered corner is sufficient.

Solitary bees — mason bees, mining bees, and plasterer bees — need bare, firm soil for their nest tunnels and flowers from March to October. A fully mulched, regularly weeded garden planted with sterile ornamentals provides neither. A south-facing patch of bare earth and three metres of mixed flowering hedge restore both nesting habitat and foraging range.

The violet ground beetle (Carabus violaceus), the large metallic-blue predatory beetle that once patrolled vegetable rows after dark, has been lost from many gardens through slug pellet use and deep digging. Its larvae develop in the top ten centimetres of soil. Ground disturbance destroys them; slug control products harm the beetles that were eating the slugs. A no-dig approach and avoiding all pellets allows the ground beetle to return within two seasons.

The decline is not abstract. Each species that disappeared had an address — your roof, your hedge, your lawn, your pond, your wall. Each cause is identifiable. Each solution is within reach, costs almost nothing, and works within three years.

🦔🐸🦋🌿

10/03/2026

Et stort norsk forskningsprosjekt viser at selv 50–80 år etter en flatehogst finnes det bare halvparten så mye blåbærlyng i kulturskog som i skog som aldri har vært hogd på denne måten.

07/03/2026

Bare 30 prosent av bøndene har logget seg inn i Klimakalkulatoren. Under halvparten av disse har lagt inn nok data til at klimagassutslippene fra gården kan beregnes.

Lenke i kommentarfeltet ⬇️

Adresse

Holmestrandgaten
Holmestrand
3080

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