SEEDS Msia

SEEDS Msia

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10/05/2026

30 April 2026
Thank you to lecturers and 80 students from Centre of Studies for Building Surveying, College of Built Environment UiTM Shah Alam for your academic visit and fieldwork to SEEDS Malaysia and Kebun Komuniti TAS. May you be inspired to take active roles in environment conservation, biodiversity and climate change 🌳💚💙

Photos from SEEDS Msia's post 27/04/2026

What an extraordinary and inspiring 3 days at the .

A dream more than a decade in the making.

What began as a vision first mooted in 2015 has now grown into a living movement bringing together nature-based practitioners, conservationists, regenerative farmers, Indigenous leaders, educators, policymakers and sustainability experts from across Malaysia and beyond.

Over the years, the idea of building resilience through food forests has taken root through passion, perseverance and partnerships.

And today, we witnessed that very vision come alive.

Together, we shared knowledge, sparked collaborations and explored bold solutions for a more resilient future through food forests and nature-based solutions.

Over the three days, participants engaged in meaningful conversations on:

🌿 Food forests and regenerative agriculture
🌿 Indigenous seed sharing and food sovereignty
🌿 Conservation through education
🌿 Urban resilience and rewilding cities
🌿 Healing landscapes and forest pharmacy
🌿 Building community resilience through nature-based solutions

From inspiring keynote sessions…
to thought-provoking panel discussions…
to meaningful partnerships and MoU signings.

…the movement continues to grow stronger.

One of the proudest milestones during the forum was the launch of .

A first-of-its-kind directory connecting nature-based practitioners across Malaysia, strengthening collaboration and creating a stronger ecosystem for conservation and regenerative action nationwide.

Because when roots connect, forests thrive.

We extend our heartfelt gratitude to our incredible co-organisers and collaborators namely Urban Hijau, Project MARS, Sarawak CSO SDG Alliance and UTAR Kampar for believing in this shared vision.

To our sponsors and partners, thank you for investing in this movement.

To our volunteers the unseen roots of this event, thank you for your dedication and hard work.

And to every speakers, participants and supporters, thank you for showing up, sharing your wisdom and being part of this journey.

This is more than a forum.

This is a movement.
This is Connected Roots.
This is only the beginning.

18/04/2026

Shaping the Future of Food Forests

Justine Vaz will be joining us at Food Forest Forum 2026 bringing, deep expertise in conservation, sustainability and environmental education in Malaysia.

As CEO of The Habitat Foundation, she has been instrumental in advancing efforts to protect natural ecosystems while engaging communities in meaningful action-driven work.

At the forum, she will lead the session:

“Growing the Future: Scaling Up Our Food Forest Mission.”

A timely conversation on how we move from small initiatives to landscape-level impact.

Our Shared Habitat, Our Shared Destiny.

This powerful idea reflects the essence of her work that our future is deeply interconnected with the ecosystems we protect and the food systems we build together.

We are also grateful to The Habitat Foundation for supporting this shared vision and advancing the momentum behind Food Forest Forum 2026.

📍 Join us in Kampar
🗓 24–26 April 2026

Where ideas take root and grow into action.

29/12/2025

Just a dot to look after !

After spending 178 days aboard the International Space Station, astronaut Ron Garan returned to Earth carrying something far heavier than space equipment or mission data. He returned with a transformed understanding of humanity itself.

From orbit, Earth doesn’t look like a collection of countries, borders, or competing interests. It appears as a single, radiant blue sphere suspended in darkness. No lines divide continents. No flags mark territory. From 250 miles above the surface, every human conflict suddenly looks small — and every human connection looks unavoidable.

Garan described watching lightning storms crackle across entire continents, auroras ripple like living curtains over the poles, and city lights glow softly against the planet’s night side. What struck him most wasn’t Earth’s power — it was its fragility. The atmosphere protecting all life appeared as a paper-thin blue halo, barely visible, yet responsible for everything that breathes, grows, and survives.

That view triggered what astronauts call the “overview effect” — a profound cognitive shift reported by many who see Earth from space. It’s the sudden realization that humanity shares a single, closed system. No backups. No escape route. No second home.

Garan began questioning humanity’s priorities. On Earth, economic growth is often treated as the ultimate goal. From space, that hierarchy collapses. He argues that the correct order should be planet first, society second, economy last — because without a healthy planet, neither society nor economy can exist.

He often compares Earth to a spacecraft. A ship carrying billions of crew members, all dependent on the same life-support systems. And yet, many behave as passengers rather than caretakers, assuming someone else is responsible for keeping things running.

From orbit, pollution has no nationality. Climate systems ignore borders. Environmental damage in one region ripples across the entire globe. The divisions we defend so fiercely on the ground simply don’t exist from above.

Garan’s message isn’t abstract or idealistic. It’s practical. If humanity continues to treat Earth as an unlimited resource rather than a shared system, the consequences will be universal.

Seeing Earth from space didn’t make him feel small. It made him feel accountable.

Because when you truly understand that we’re all riding the same fragile spacecraft through the universe, the idea of “us versus them” quietly disappears — replaced by a single, unavoidable truth:

There is only us.

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