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Ecologist Ferdinand Grigoryan to Take Home Know-How for VanadzorNurs

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  • Ecologist Ferdinand Grigoryan to Take Home Know-How for VanadzorNurs

    Ecologist Ferdinand Grigoryan to Take Home Know-How for Vanadzor Nursery
    By Daphne Abeel

    Armenian Mirror-Spectator
    September 25, 2004

    WATERTOWN, MA--Massachusetts' forests, farms, nurseries and arboretums have
    proved a fertile research laboratory for Armenian ecologist Ferdinand
    Grigoryan, who is in the US for seven weeks, to learn and collect
    information for Tsiatsan (Rainbow), the environmental NGO which he founded
    in 1997.

    Now working in partnership with the Armenia Tree Project (ATP), Grigoryan
    has visited Levon Kachadoorian's Everlast Nursery in Leicester, Concord's
    Walden Pond, Harvard's Arnold Arboretum, Mahoney's Rocky Ledge Nursery in
    Winchester, various supply stores and talked to a local Armenian-American
    farmer, Krikor Soujian, about his corn crop. Each visit has been an
    opportunity to study planting and cultivation techniques, or to learn about
    how small retail nurseries work.

    What he has absorbed he will take back to Armenia where Tsiatsan's main
    project will be to develop a 15-acre reforestation nursery in Vanadzor, in
    the Lori district, which by 2006, is hoped to have the capacity to produce
    one million trees a year. The goal is to plant trees that are indigenous to
    Armenia such as maple, oak, linden, walnut and beech.

    "Mainly, I am learning about how people care for the environment here," said
    Grigoryan in an interview at ATP's headquarters. "The idea of protecting the
    environment is still new in Armenia. There is a lot that needs to be
    grasped, not just about protecting the environment, but new growth
    techniques that can be applied in agriculture."

    Grigoryan will be taking seeds home for testing as well as books and some
    specific implements such as sprinkler heads, which will be used in the
    irrigation system at Vanadzor. But, it is education that will ensure the
    long-term success of environmental and reforestation projects, he said.

    "Trees were being cut down at a great rate in the early '90s, due to the
    energy crisis. But people have learned that deforestation leads to
    degradation of the soil and to erosion. We now have a program in the Lori
    schools about environmental protection. We want to educate the students to
    become stewards of the land," he said.

    To reach people who live in rural areas outside of Yerevan, Grigoryan plans
    to produce a series of television programs on the environment to air twice a
    month on community stations free of charge.

    "We especially need to train people who are dependent on the land. If they
    cut down a tree, we are teaching them to plant a tree to replace it," said
    Grigoryan. "In this way, we can change people's psychology. Someone who has
    planted a tree is much less likely to cut it down."

    There are signs that Armenia is beginning to pay more attention to its
    environment, said Grigoryan. "Some legislation has been passed, and the
    Armenia Forestry Agency has been transferred from the Ministry of
    Environmental Protection to the Ministry of Agriculture. All of these
    ministries have a limited budget. But, as an NGO, Tsiatsan can have access
    to the top professionals in Armenia, in topography and many other fields."

    Also, Yerevan State University and more importantly, community colleges are
    beginning to teach courses on ecology and protection of the environment. And
    the Armenian Volunteer Corps (AVC) is encouraging their members to help with
    environmental education in the schools.

    He added, "The Armenia Tree Project has done a tremendous job in Armenia.
    They are a great partner for us. There is no organization like it."

    Grigoryan said he had a special appreciation for what has been accomplished
    at Walden Pond.
    "I wanted to learn how natural forests are being protected," he said. "There
    is no cutting of trees there and when erosion occurs, the problem is
    addressed immediately. I admire the way the area has been conserved, and
    there is a relationship there between the animals and people that I haven't
    seen before."

    While he was here, Grigoryan visited St. Stephen's Armenian Elementary
    School and invited the students to come to Armenia, meet students there and
    work on the Vanadzor planting project.

    Beyond planting trees, Grigoryan said, care and maintenance are extremely
    important. He cited a recent case of the fir trees planted at Echmiadzin in
    honor of all previous catholicoses. The trees died soon after as a result of
    neglect.

    "The NGO involved in the planting should have been responsible for the
    maintenance. The trees were not watered properly. Yes, people should have
    been educated to take care of them, but there should be accountability," he
    said.

    Grigoryan concluded, "Each tree I plant is for the future and for future
    generations. And each generation can do this. It's very important. This is
    the most important work of my life."


    Photo: Left to right, Ferdinand Grigoryan with Chris Adanalian of Armenia
    Tree Project and Everlast Nursery owner, Levon Kachadoorian

    Photo: The irrigation pipeline at Tsiatsan's nursery project in Vanadzor
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