Proud people of their countries stay there unless they go out for business or short vacations ! but never leave it to live somewhere else ! it becomes not yours anymore .
I am one of the luckiest to visit and work in syechelles and experienced the island life with picturesque view and friendly locals.. its fun experienced i must say.. 😊😊 its one of the most beautiful island on earth..
Amazing, interesting and sad documentary, as I just came back 1,5 weeks ago from the Seychelles. It was an amazing experience there and learn about their work to preserve the nature and see what nature caused (eg the dead corals).
13:56 I know that woman, She goes to, or at least used to go, to my parents' cafe every morning, in fact a table is always reserved for her. Such a sweet lady that is always working and studying.
I went there 33 years ago. Absolutely unimaginable such groups roaming around. I stayed there 21 days 14 of which in Silhouette. You needed to book a boat to go there and there was a little boungalow hotel. Now I learn you con go by helicopter and there is a Hilton hotel instead😢 Thanks to God I have that time memory, not the obscene tour business all destroying images in my mind. 😐
It's truly sad when corporate organizations take over such incredible beauty and disrupt they fragile environment they're trying to save. Sounds like your trip was one in a lifetime with incredible memories.
several paradisiacal islands across our planet have already been claimed by the ocean, including five of the Solomon Islands and a handful in Micronesia. Seychelles, Palau, Kiribati, Maldives, and Torres Strait Islands are on their way too.
When the islands you have mentioned as being ‘on their way to disappearing’ remain in whole, or in part intact, please admit your error. As for those islands which exist at, or near sea level, the loss of such islands will be regrettable.
In Colombia we lost Isla Maravilla about 10 years ago, and we are on route to lose Isla Panda and Isla Mangle, also Isla Ceycen is being torn in 2 halfs by the sea. Its really depressing considering about 60% of our domestic energy source is renewable
Great documentary congratulations to the newlywed. We have the same island vibes in my country. When I was young I still saw many monkeys, deer and exotic birds in our mountains now you can hardly see them. Hope humans will continue to preserve this beautiful islands and its inhabitants.
@@Landauh they never said that where are you getting this from? They were listing some animals (like monkeys) they commonly saw on their island vibe kind of country, that they weren’t seeing as often anymore. They never said Seychellois people were monkeys
Don't forget that Seychelles is popular for off-shore financial brokers LOL. They are cracking down on them more now, but there are so much pump and dump financial brokers on those islands.
A president like you have in Seychelles is the rarest of all kinds. I salute you for being a true leader for the people and the world. May we all aspire to live and walk with God in our hearts and nature in our minds.
Seychellois you are blessed to have this beautiful place, responsible citizen and good president. may we can do something about climate change to preserve lives. God bless!
You make a film about losing the islands to the sea when its the rich westerners causing the bloody problem in the bloody first place which you omit to mention
@@McYeroc Yeah kick those Western Companies out. They are manufacturing and producing for locals to consume domestically anyways. Make the West produce what they want to consume themselves
As always this remarkable documentary exhibit how we reach a point let small countries like Seychelles on the brink of disaster .it time for powerful nations to take steps back before it would be there is no course reserve specially for beautiful places like Seychelles.
Your country is beautiful and the people are blessed. The preservation of the environment is essential. Climate change is the greatest threat that the entire world faces and cannot be ignored. Good luck to you, Seychelles!
My beautiful lovely Seychelles, I've visited the Seychelles 6 times so far in my life . First time 1987 and last time 2019 .. the beauty holds its own still . But I wonder if the nuclear tests in the Indian ocean have started to take their toll on my beautiful paradise island.
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Wow I found where my native tongue came from. I’m Haitian & honestly don’t know my roots so it’s interesting to know Creole speaking ppl in Africa. 😮🥰🥰🥰
It looks to me that the coastguard is funded by the same EU mass fishing companies. They create the rules and regulations that they enforce on everyone except themselves. They don't give smaller local companies a chance to grow. Underground colonialism..
Europeans be like, we polluted and looted everyone for centuries and now we want you to stop polluting and adopt our expensive methods that you can't afford.
@Us1997 who says I don't blame them as well? Everyone of us is looted by politicians in their own country. But the root cause of poverty in majority of our countries was Europeans. And so your point isn't much valid with that respect.
I just get married in Seychelles six months ago. I missed the beach and the mountain so much. It has isolated vibe ,clean and tidy everywhere.I think Seychelles government does a good job to protect natural environment , especially when you talk of its location-one part of Africa. I currently staying in Senegal,one country in west Africa with great Atlantic Ocean view. Unfortunately, some beaches in Dakar and Saint Louis are covered by life trashes.
@@winnersclub6836 I know but I can handle myself on that I just need a way to get a work over there or can i just enter the country and start a work because it's visa free for Nigerians so please guide me on that thanks
So why do they actually collect the seaweed? To use it as fertilizer? On the other hand they are boosting erosion of the beaches and the sea floor. At first they say that we need to protect the sea meadows but soon they are destroying them. I don't get the logic.
The seaweed is usually washed up onto the beaches and they will die off and dry up by the sun this is when it is used for fertiliser. What the ladies were collecting in the sea will also eventually get washed up onto the beach
Those seaweeds are washed on our beaches and if not collected they just rot away . They don’t collect those in the sea and not detached. If you visit one day you’ll get the picture.
2 года назад
@@lisachangty-seng1052 wouldn't the dead seaweed make the soil better for new weeds to grow on
@ Those washed on the beach are used as substrate to feed other plants . Those in the sea grow through means of spores ! And also there are other islands where the scientists grow them too right in the ocean !
I knew, I just knew that not long into this film 'climate change' would be mentioned as a contributor to 'paradise under threat'. And right after that the narrator stated travel/vacation expenses increased to, you guessed it. . . to help fight 'climate change'!
THANK YOU for this wonderful content .. cheers to the producer but PLEASE have the majority of the content to be biodiversity related. i appreciate the work but other critics may not rate this highly without much coverage of the Coral Reefs itself.