TIMEX Celebrates Earth Day planting 2,500 Mangrove Seedlings in Liloan, Cebu

 
TIMEX employees planting bongalong mangrove seedlings during Earth Day 2013 at Brgy. Cotcot, Liloan, Cebu, Philippines
Maria Christina Buo | July 11, 2013

TIMEX Philippines (MEPZ-1) and the Coastal Conservation and Education Foundation, Inc. (CCEF) partnered in a mangrove-planting activity in Sitio Sulima, Brgy. Cotcot in Liloan, Cebu last April 27, 2013.
TIMEX has celebrated Earth Day with CCEF’s mangrove-planting activities for the fourth year now, since 2009. It is the company’s initiative to support CCEF’s Adopt-A-Mangrove Project which organizes mangrove-planting trips to designated mangrove nurseries or reforested areas in Aloguinsan, Barili, Bantayan, Borbon, Cordova, Dalaguete, Lapu-lapu City, Liloan, Medellin, Moalboal, Naga, Sibonga, Talisay City and Tuburan.

CCEF Executive Director Atty. Rose Liza Osorio praised the consistent effort and involvement of TIMEX and the cooperation of the local officials and volunteers of Barangay Cotcot in Liloan to the cause of the environmental preservation.

“When we plant trees, it impacts seven generations,” Osorio says. She added that we all need to safeguard the natural inheritance of our children and their succeeding generations.

Over a hundred staff from TIMEX, Barangay Cotcot local folks and volunteers planted 2,500 “bongalon” (Avicennia sp.) seedlings within the CCEF pilot site, in Sitio Sulima, alongside a river tributary in Barangay Cotcot, in Liloan, Cebu.

The theme of this year’s 43rd EARTH DAY Celebration is the Face of Climate Change. The emphasis, according to Analeh Patindol, coordinator of CCEF'S Adopt-A-Mangrove Project, is not how many trees you plant, but how many trees you grow. She says it’s important to sustain the growth of the mangroves trees that are planted. The mangrove planting site is monitored regularly by the Bantay Dagat watchers in Cotcot, Lilioan. CCEF’s Adopt – A-Mangrove is a one-year project which covers 2 hectares of land, each hectare to be planted with 10,000 seedlings. It is an offshoot of the “One Million Mangroves for Cebu” program of the government.

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