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		If marathons weren't hard enough already: strap a tree to your back
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		 [September 16, 2019] 
		By Katharine Houreld 
 NAIROBI (Reuters) - This Sunday in South 
		Africa, an accountant, an entrepreneur and a boxing executive are among 
		20 friends running the Cape Town marathon - with saplings strapped to 
		their backs.
 
 The group are promoting the planting of native trees amid a nationwide 
		push to replace invasive species with indigenous one to cope with 
		drought and climate change.
 
 Last year, Cape Town suffered its worst drought in a century, nearly 
		running out of water and forcing authorities to enforce severe water 
		rationing and set up public water points.
 
 Spooked businesses put $3.7m into a fund to eradicate invasive 
		water-hungry trees around Cape Town, a move that would top up reservoirs 
		with billions of liters of water.
 
		
		 
		Activist and treegrower Siyabulela Sokomani, who is running carrying a 
		wild olive, said the group of friends is raising cash to plant 2,000 
		trees in Khayelitsha, one of Cape Town’s biggest townships, where many 
		of them come from.
 The 34-year-old entrepreneur attended school there and was inspired by a 
		teacher who started an environmental club.
 
 “There were no trees in the township where I grew up,” he said. Now 
		Sokomani has tattoos of his favorites - the Coral Tree, Speckboom and 
		Acacia - twining across his shoulder.
 
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			Activist and treegrower Siyabulela Sokomani celebrates as he 
			approaches the final stretch of the Cape Town marathon, in South 
			Africa September 15, 2019. REUTERS/Mike Hutchings 
            
 
            The Speckboom is a favorite at Sokomani’s Shoots and Roots nursery. 
			Spekboom can grow almost anywhere and absorbs carbon dioxide from 
			the atmosphere faster than most other trees in dry conditions, the 
			United Nations says.
 Last year Sokomani went back to his school to plant 67 trees on 
			Mandela Day, symbolizing the 67 years that Mandela spent in public 
			service. He co-founded Township Farmers in 2017 to teach children 
			about agriculture and plant trees in schools.
 
 From 2001 to 2018, South Africa lost 1.34 million hectares of tree 
			cover, equivalent to a 22% decrease since 2000, according to Global 
			Forest Watch, a monitoring organization run the Washington-based 
			thinktank World Resource Institute.
 
 (Editing by Toby Chopra)
 
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