si tous les humains étaient=comme EUX
la terre serait=1=vrai=BONHEUR
ALORS que nous=détruisons tout
les animaux ne peuvent plus
=pour certains y vivre
l'animal le PLUS NUISIBLE=NOUS
son vrai nom SERAIT=PLUTOT
=bête
=QUI=NE=SAIT=QUE=CASSER=TUER
MERCI A🌍CEUX👨👨QUI L'ONT PRESERVEE
In 1962, newspaper editor Brendon Grimshaw bought the uninhabited island of Moyenne in the Seychelles, where no human had set foot for fifty years, for thirteen thousand dollars...
He began to live on the island like a real Robinson, eventually being joined by a man named Rene Lafortin.
Over thirty-nine years, Brendon and Rene planted sixteen thousand trees with their own hands and built over three miles of road.
In 1996 Brendon wrote a book about himself and the island called Grain of Sand.
A documentary of the same name was made about Grimshaw and the island in 2009.
Rene Lafortin had died in 2007 and Brendon was left alone on the island after that. He was 81 years old at the time.
During his lifetime, he attracted 2000 new bird species to the island and introduced more than a hundred giant tortoises, which were about to become extinct, to the world including the Seychelles.
Thanks to Brendon's efforts, the once deserted island is now home to two-thirds of the Seychelles fauna.
An abandoned piece of land turned into a real paradise.
At one point, the prince of Saudi Arabia offered Brendon Grimshaw $50 million for the island, which Brendon politely declined.
“I don't want the island to become a favorite vacation spot for the rich.
"Let it be a national park where everyone and animals can live and have fun freely."
He finally achieved his wish.
In 2008, the island was indeed declared to be, "Moyenne Island National Park."
Grimshaw remained the sole resident of the island until his death in July 2012.