Moldir Esen became interested in plants. Many of those that grow here, she sees for the first time. The young specialist is very pleased with her discoveries:
– I graduated from the university with a degree in Life Safety and Environmental Protection At the university, many species of plants and fauna were studied only from textbooks. But to see everything with my own eyes in such a beautiful corner of our area is a first time for me. There are many varieties of plants here. We saw foxes, hares, large and beautiful eagles on the way … Seeing all this, you understand in your heart that it is our duty to protect the environment.
“That’s right! – supports the enthusiastic girl N. Latfulin. – When we first came here, we discovered that the nature around us, it turns out, is very rich! At least, the plant world is diverse. There are a lot of plants, and plants that probably not many people know about. Here the birds sing – a lot of birds! After all, we have a lot spelled out and there is an analysis of how well we work, protecting the environment from man-made pollution. All this is good. But it is necessary to see it live in order to measure our work not only with the amount of funds that our company directs to environmental work, but also with the real well-being of nature around us!
… Akkergeshin was left behind. The white dove lives its natural life, just like us, humans, experiencing a series of seasons – autumn, winter, spring, summer … Only he has already done it an immeasurably huge number of times. But on the slopes of white rocks, hedgehogs with fleshy “needles” instead of leaves still huddle in flocks, shrubs and steppe cereals scurry fervently at the foot, swifts and larks scurry fervently between the peaks, and eagles soar majestically high above the white figures. He lives, gray-haired Akkergeshin.
And along the lowland between the rocks, a white ribbon stretches the road, which was paved here by the lord of nature – man …
On the way back, we also visited the highest hill of the Caspian lowland – Mount Iman-Kara, examined on its four-hundred-meter peak the Saka burial grounds dating back to the IX – XI centuries, as well as a man-made cave punched in the belly of the mountain by the famous Nobel brothers at the dawn of the 20th century.
But this, as they say, is a completely different story …