- Chris Wood hits quickfire double in NZ World Cup qualifying romp
- Markets struggle at end of tough week
- China tests building Moon base with lunar soil bricks
- Film's 'search for Palestine' takes centre stage at Cairo festival
- Oil execs work COP29 as NGOs slam lobbyist presence
- Gore says climate progress 'won't slow much' because of Trump
- 'Megaquake' warning hits Japan's growth
- Stiff business: Berlin startup will freeze your corpse for monthly fee
- Wars, looming Trump reign set to dominate G20 summit
- Xi, Biden attend Asia-Pacific summit, prepare to meet
- Kyrgios to make competitive return at Brisbane next month after injuries
- Dominican Juan Luis Guerra triumphs at 25th annual Latin Grammys
- Landslide win for Sri Lanka president's leftist coalition in snap polls
- Australian World Cup penalty hero Vine takes mental health break
- As Philippines picks up from Usagi, a fresh storm bears down
- Tropical Storm Sara pounds Honduras with heavy rain
- Pepi gives Pochettino win for USA in Jamaica
- 'Hell to heaven' as China reignite World Cup hopes with late winner
- Rebel attacks keep Indian-run Kashmir on the boil
- New Zealand challenge 'immense but fantastic' for France
- Under pressure England boss Borthwick in Springboks' spotlight
- All Blacks plan to nullify 'freakish' Dupont, says Lienert-Brown
- TikTok makes AI driven ad tool available globally
- Japan growth slows as new PM readies stimulus
- China retail sales pick up speed, beat forecasts in October
- Asian markets fluctuate at end of tough week
- Gay, trans people voicing -- and sometimes screaming -- Trump concerns
- Argentina fall in Paraguay, Brazil held in Venezuela
- N. Korean leader orders 'mass production' of attack drones
- Pakistan's policies hazy as it fights smog
- Nature pays price for war in Israel's north
- New Zealand's prolific Williamson back for England Test series
- Mexico City youth grapple with growing housing crisis
- After Trump's victory, US election falsehoods shift left
- Cracks deepen in Canada's pro-immigration 'consensus'
- Xi inaugurates South America's first Chinese-funded port in Peru
- Tyson slaps Paul in final face-off before Netflix bout
- England wrap-up T20 series win over West Indies
- Stewards intervene to stop Israel, France football fans clash at Paris match
- Special counsel hits pause on Trump documents case
- Japan's Princess Mikasa, great aunt to emperor, dies aged 101
- Cricket at 2028 Olympics could be held outside Los Angeles
- Trump names vaccine skeptic RFK Jr. to head health dept
- Ye claims 'Jews' controlling Kardashian clan: lawsuit
- Japan into BJK Cup quarter-finals as Slovakia stun USA
- Sri Lanka president's party headed for landslide: early results
- Olympics 'above politics' say LA 2028 organisers after Trump win
- Panic strikes Port-au-Prince as residents flee gang violence
- Carsley hails England's strength in depth as understudies sink Greece
- Undefeated Chiefs lose kicker Butker to knee injury
RBGPF | 100% | 61.84 | $ | |
GSK | -2.09% | 34.39 | $ | |
BP | 1.65% | 29.05 | $ | |
SCS | -0.75% | 13.27 | $ | |
BCC | -1.57% | 140.35 | $ | |
RELX | -0.37% | 45.95 | $ | |
RIO | -0.31% | 60.43 | $ | |
CMSD | -0.02% | 24.725 | $ | |
CMSC | -0.24% | 24.55 | $ | |
NGG | 0.4% | 62.37 | $ | |
RYCEF | -4.71% | 6.79 | $ | |
JRI | -0.23% | 13.21 | $ | |
BTI | 0.2% | 35.49 | $ | |
AZN | -0.38% | 65.04 | $ | |
VOD | -0.81% | 8.68 | $ | |
BCE | -1.38% | 26.84 | $ |
Colombia's Inirida flower: from 'weed' to emblem for UN meeting
When Ruben Dario Carianil began cultivating the unusual, pointy Inirida flower in the Colombian Amazon ten years ago, his relatives made fun of him for growing "weeds."
Today, the 63-year-old Carianil, of the Curripako tribe, grows tons of the curious blooms on a plot outside Inirida -- the jungle city of 30,000 people from which the flower took its name.
Carianil exports Inirida cuttings to the United States, Europe and Asia, and soon even more foreigners will be introduced to the rare blossom as the emblem of a UN biodiversity conference to be held in Cali from October 21 to November 1.
"I'm very happy," Carianil told AFP of his success, which he sees as helping, not harming, the environment.
"For us, Nature, the forest, is life. We Indigenous people respect it and we live in harmony with Nature without damaging it."
Inirida flowers once grew abundantly in the wild in the region. Over-picking led to a dramatic reduction and the government in 1989 prohibited harvesting.
The ban remained in place until 2005, when the door was opened for Inirida's commercial cultivation as long as wild populations remained untouched.
So far, only Carianil's farm has managed to grow, and get a licence to market, the red flowers with their hard, spikey, finger-like petals.
He was helped in the domestication process by biologist Mateo Fernandez.
At first, Carianil's blooms sold at the local airport, then in the Colombian capital Bogota some 700 kilometers (about 430 miles) away, then further afield.
In 2022, the first box of Inirida blooms was delivered to China from Colombia, one of the world's top flower growers and exporters.
- 'Eternal flowers' -
Carianil runs the business with his wife Martha Toledo and their children.
On a plot of some 20 hectares (49 acres), the Inirida crops share space with a variety of native shrubs and even a patch of undisturbed forest.
From the air, the farm looks very different from the flower plantations abundant in Colombia's Andean regions with their rows upon rows of monoculture, often in plastic greenhouses.
Fertilizers and pesticides are banned on Carianil's farm, and only Indigenous farming methods used.
"When you buy a flower from Inirida, you take a piece of the jungle home with you," said Toledo.
They call the enterprise "Liwi: Eternal flowers" as the buds retain their shape years after being cut, even when dried.
It is this longevity that inspired the choice of the Inirida as the logo for the 16th meeting of the Conference of Parties (COP16) of the Convention on Biological Diversity.
"This is a flower that never dies, its petals never fall apart. We hope that the COP16 in Colombia can help the world to make peace with Nature, so that we can sustain and maintain life on the planet forever," says Environment Minister Susana Muhamad.
The flower is native to Colombia's eastern Guainia department, of which Inirida is the capital, and a part of the neighboring Venezuelan Amazon.
R.Garcia--AT