Richard St. Barbe Baker

English Biologist & Environmental Activist (1889-1982)

Richard St. Barbe Baker OBE (9 October 1889 – 9 June 1982) was an English botanist, conservationist, environmental activist, and author of several books. He is known for his leadership in worldwide reforestation and soil conservation. He was a vegetarian and a convert to the Bahá'í Faith.

Quotes

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Green Glory: The Forests of the World (1949)

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  • Pause in space and go back in time. Explore the genesis of life on this earth and gain a true perspective. A study of the story of the forests of the past is full of romance. How came they into being?
  • The good forester will place nesting boxes to attract helpful birds, and farmers will do well to plant and protect hedgerow timber to provide nesting places for their feathered friends.
    Birds are great distributors of tree seeds ...
  • Felling big timber is dangerous work, especially when the tops of the mighty trees are entangled with creepers.

Sahara Challenge (1954)

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  • The experience of the nomadic farmer was that he would find fertile land only in the forest and it was natural for him to make clearings, piling smaller bushes around the greater trees to fell them by burning. The wood ash provided rich fertilizer for a season's growth but the land exposed to the elements failed to retain its fertility. So, after reaping a few crops, the nomadic farmer would penetrate ever deeper into the virgin forest ...
    The next stage in forest degradation is so-called orchard bush, with large trees widely scattered. Then comes a type of fringing forest, which in time will deteriorate into savannah. After that there is ever sparser vegetation and sand-dunes, sometimes mobile but more often fixed; then follows the desert floor ...
  • ... during this expedition I was to trudge through sand wastes which had been my forest haunts when I had been in Africa thirty years ago. Here one could actually see all the process of degradation, from high forest through the stages of orchard-bush and savannah to drifting sand.
    When the forest is cleared for farming or other reasons, the debris is sooner or later burned up. Here we were standing on land where the humus which had been accumulated over thousand of years had been destroyed in a single season.

My Life—My Trees (1970)

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  • Through Chief Josiah Njonjo, my righthand man, I called for volunteers, for men who would swear before N'gai, the High God, that they would protect the native forest, plant so many native trees each year and take care of trees everywhere. The volunteers were called the Watu wa Miti (Men of the Trees) ...

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