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A biodiversity-friendly garden / Part 1 Most people look at insects and worms with fear, they usually see the danger in all of them, believe that they can cause some kind of trouble. Their fears are usually unfounded, stemming from a lack of knowledge, wrong knowledge and prejudices. After all, nature does its job, and we would certainly be better off if, instead of chemicals and other practices, we entrusted the limitation of organisms considered harmful to diversity. Because different species limit each other's presence, the population of no species can grow to infinity, not even humans. The lesson from this is that you can't be afraid of mosquitoes and bats, slugs and horse lice, aphids and armadillo spiders at the same time, because the ideal population is created when none of them are disturbed. But why bother them? Do the caterpillars cause harm by chewing the leaves of the fruit tree, and the slugs only harm us? You can get answers to these questions from the first and second parts of the film Biodiversity-Friendly Garden, and you can also be convinced that we can thrive around our house by simply relying on natural diversity, without chemicals and other destructive practices. The film reveals that the diversity of living creatures in our garden is not our enemy, but our friend, and if we want good for ourselves, we do not keep predatory organisms away, but ensure their presence by creating habitats and hiding places. Don't forget Otto Herman's words! "There are no harmful or useful birds in nature, because they are only necessary". Expert: Iván Gyulai The film was produced by: Tamás Péchy, Anikó Vörösmarti Music: Imre Vörösmarti During the narration, you can see the film footage of nature photographer Bence Máté.