Showing posts with label bee. Show all posts
Showing posts with label bee. Show all posts

Friday, 26 June 2015

Lamma Pet Nanny



Credit: Lamma Pet Nanny

If you’re anything like me, you’d be thinking about your pets at home every time you travel. It doesn’t matter how much good food you get to satisfy your insatiable appetite with, and it surely doesn’t matter how many great people you meet. So you may be awe-struck by the spectacular landscape but as you return to your space of accommodation at night, thoughts for your fur babies will always fill your mind. You’d find yourself wondering about their well-being, knowing that they’re thinking of you too.

Of course, you can always get a friend to drop by your house but that’s only if you’ve got an animal-loving friend who doesn’t mind spending hours playing and petting your pet; normally though, that charitable friend would only feed your pet, take it out for a walk, or clean the litter box and be gone.


As pet parents, you’d be envious of Lamma Island residents for they have the Lamma Pet Nanny, who has years of professional experience as a clinical veterinary nurse, and is experienced with taking care of animals with special needs. As a member of both Pet Sitters International and Hong Kong Veterinary NursingAssociation, Bee is also a Lamma Island resident, and owner of two cats, a dog, and a hamster. To put pet parents’ mind at ease, Bee also provides daily updates, medical support, grooming services, and complimentary simple housekeeping alongside professional pet sitting. The best thing of all? She charges only HKD150 per day, and HKD50 extra for each additional pet per day!

Friday, 22 May 2015

Save the Bees with One Billion Wildflowers



 Credit: Inhabitat.com

You’d be no stranger to posters of supermarkets void of fruits and vegetables, or various collective efforts the world over in saving the bees. In case you didn’t know of Colony Collapse Disorder, which sees the bee population dwindling at a staggering rate, partly as a result of lack of diversity or availability in pollen and nectar sources, look it up now. The possibility of losing this adorable and resourceful little creature – and depletion of food resources – is a depressing prospect, but fret not, there’s quite a lot you can do on an individual level to help bring back the bees, such as what a couple in Bay Area, the United States, is doing.

Determined to combat Colony Collapse Disorder, Chris Burley and Ei Ei Khin have come up with the ambitious plan to plant one billion wildflowers, and they are making it easier for keen individuals to join by creating the rainbow-coloured Seedle seed-bombs. Consisting of native, non-GMO-certified seeds, compost, clay and natural dyes, the colourful pellets of seed bombs can practically grow themselves – all you need to do is to throw them in the soil and grow them. As the fruit of the couple’s 18-month experimentation in their backyard, which eventually won USD11,000 of funding on Kickstarter, these seed bombs are designed as a solution to ensure a sustainable food system for the future generations.

If you’re looking at more instant, local solutions to help save the bees, find out what Hong Kong’s first urban bee keeper Michael Leung is doing with his HK Honey