Hello hiver
Hello everyone, how are you
I'm back with a black and white photo of me that you might like and this is my entry #monomad
On my trip to a remote area in Nunukan, North Kalimantan Province some time ago, my eyes were greeted by a vast expanse of oil palm plantations as far as the eye could see.
but my eyes only focused on each huge 80-meter tall tree growing among the palms.
The existence of the tree made me curious and asked Indra, one of the people who accompanied me and the rescue team in North Kalimantan. indra explained that the Menggeris tree is considered sacred by local residents.
No one is allowed to cut down tall trees. If anyone breaks the rules or cuts down the mangosteen tree, disaster will befall, said Pak Indra.
So that the customary rules are obeyed by a number of palm oil companies operating there complying with the customary prohibition of cutting down mills
The mangosteen tree is also a tree known as the honey tree, because it is in this tree that forest honey bees nest and produce.
Fallen trees are allowed to grow tall in the middle of a stretch of oil palm plantations.
The grinding tree is considered sacred by the local community, this is a form of local wisdom inherited from the ancestors
The Dayak community in preserving nature and plants has strength
Mangosteen trees live in lowland forests, but can also be found in temperate plains.