It’s no exaggeration that as someone raised on the island of Cyprus, I was astonished by how green the cities looked from above when I first travelled to Europe.
- @agrammatic This is incredible. It’s a Mediterranean city, so one would expect there would be all sorts of specific vegetation there, with no exception inside the city. - I cannot emphasize enough the mind-boggling culture around urban vegetation in Cyprus - something that only became apparent to me once I experienced other countries. - This is normal in Cyprus. It’s common for residents to defend it by saying that fallen leaves are a nuisance, and that mature, tall trees facilitate pests entering higher floors of buildings. - At the same time, more than half of the year is unbearably hot in Nicosia, and walking, cycling, or waiting at public transport stops between 08-20h is indeed incredibly challenging. - @agrammatic@feddit.de wrote: - fallen leaves are a nuisance - What? No, they’re not. Not for me, at least. And not a bigger one than garbage thrown all over the place (but that is just speaking from a Romanian who has do deal with all this, oh well). - and that mature, tall trees facilitate pests entering higher floors of buildings. - I heard this argument as well. You can just, you know, clean their house, get some poison for bugs and all sorts of pests… there are solutions. - And ultimately, pests also attract all sorts of predator animals, like birds - keeping these in check. - People are just too afraid of nature… - What? No, they’re not. Not for me, at least. - I had truly internalised that one up until my late 20s. In Cyprus, we do see leaves on the ground as trash that needs to be cleaned. Having a lot of trees means a lot of leaves and you need to keep cleaning your yard/balcony and municipal services needs to keep cleaning the streets. Too much work, it gets expensive. You stop doing it, the people start complaining that the area is getting neglected. - It wasn’t at least I was made fun of by Europeans for asking “so when is the city coming to clean this” in my first autumn outside Cyprus, that I realised that it’s not a universal fact that “leaves = trash”. 
 
 
 



