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John Elkington

John Elkington

A world authority on corporate responsibility and sustainable development.

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John Elkington

Our Lady Of Kalymnos

John Elkington · 30 May 2022 · Leave a Comment

By now we have met our two expert guides, Dr Michael Metcalfe and Nota Karamouna. They prove to be extraordinary, their expertises highly complementary, and their interactions wonderful to behold.

Today we get to know Pothia, capital of the island of Kalymnos, among other things meeting the Lady of Kalymnos in one museum and dipping into the history of sponge diving in another.

One story about The Lady is that she came from Asia Minor rather than the local seabed, which might account for her state of preservation, but that’s a matter for archaeologists and art detectives. Another account is that some fisherfolk know were she was found locally, but are staying mum because there could be more treasure down there on the sea floor.

Later in the day, we set sail for Patmos.

Kalymnos cat
The Lady of Kalymnos
Looking well, after all those centuries immersed in salt water
Sponges
In the Sponge Museum
Elaine heads back to the boat, with captain on far left

Aegean Clipper, Bodrum

John Elkington · 29 May 2022 · Leave a Comment

A couple of days ago, on 27 May, we arrived in Bodrum, Turkey, after a nightmarish passage through Gatwick, with immense waiting times, though EasyJet was fine once we were actually aboard. We had decided to take a Peter Sommer expert-led cruise around the Dodecanese Islands in a gulet called the Aegean Clipper.

The trip involved 10 of we travellers and a crew of some 5-6, with the captain understudied by his daughter, one of several of his children now captains, or en route to taking the helm.

The photographs in this series are clustered in 12 postings, from 29 May when we first boarded the Aegean Clipper, to 12 June, when we got back to Bodrum – though that would prove to be quite another adventure.

The Aegean Clipper is somewhere in there, among the forest of masts
Street awnings billow like sails in Bodrum market
Stone threshold in castle shows signs of generations of hooves passing through
Peacock in frisky mood on the castle’s battlements
Down to earth
A technicolor version
Bodrum Castle, from a poster in the old chapel, looking like a battleship
A carved Janus head, but with alien eye holes drilled through – no idea why
Cactus flowers
View past Serpentine Tower
Distorted panorama, but rather how my right eye sees after recent operation for detached retina
Speaking of eyes
Looking across the chapel-turned-mosque to harbour
Jugs chatting in Castle museum
Raw glass dredged up from the Glass Wreck
A glass Humpty Dumpty, but stuck back together again
Ditto
Model of the Glass Wreck, above a sea of the sort of cullet it was carrying
African boy and diving suit
Amphora and WWI mine
Saying goodbye to Bodrum as the Aegean Clipper sallies forth

Rewilding Chelsea

John Elkington · 25 May 2022 · Leave a Comment

Rewilding Britain Garden (detail, with beaver dam)

How wonderful that the judges decided that the best garden of the 2022 Chelsea Flower Show was the Rewilding Britain Garden. Even before I knew it had won the top award, it was the one I picked when asked by a Royal Horticultural Society guide for my favourite stand.

And how wonderful, too, to be invited to the Chelsea Flower Show last night, by the RHS – for their President’s dinner, hosted by Keith Weed, former head of sustainability at Unilever.

This was towards the end of a day that began with a car ride out to the Four Seasons Hotel in Hampshire with Volans colleague Charlene Cranny, to kick off a session on ESG agenda for private equity firm Oakley Capital. Fascinating, broad-ranging exchange. Torrential rain as we returned suggested the Flower Show could be damp at times.

Sculpted stag and post van in grounds of Four Seasons
Boxing hares
Charlene’s hot chocolate as we waited for cab home

Elaine and I had seen the Gardener’s World programme coverage of the gardens earlier in the week – so it was beyond wonderful to be able to walk into some of our favourites. Among mine was the RAF Benevolent Fund exhibit, though obviously with Battle of Britain pilot father I had something of a vested interest. The extraordinary story behind the sculptor, John Everiss’s, involvement is told on the linked webpage.

Also loved the Bees for Development stand, where we talked about the organisation’s evolution and work with the founder, Dr Nicola Bradbear. Walked off with their 2021 impact report and will follow up. Fascinating to see beekeepers becoming champions of environmental restoration in Africa.

A parallel venture is Honey Care Africa, whose triple bottom line mission attracted me to them when I first encountered their founder, Farouk Jiwa, at the World Economic Forum some twenty years ago.

Blocks of beeswax on Bees for Development stand
One of the first stands we visited at the Flower Show
A familiar figure pours tea
Part of installation our daughter Gaia was involved in
Queen goes to pots
Wheels within wheels
Rain sluicing down, to general cheer
My ancestor Charles II holding court
Watchful statue in support of the RAF Benevolent Fund
Prey’s eye view of predators
Wooden horses
Girls, with water trickling through right hand one’s hands
Battersea Power Station across the Thames
RAF statue, ever watchful, on our way out

Hazel Henderson, R.I.P.

John Elkington · 24 May 2022 · Leave a Comment

I can’t now remember quite when I first met Hazel Henderson, who sadly died on 23 May, though it was certainly some time in the 1980s. Perhaps around The Other Economic Summit (TOES) time? In any event, it was a huge privilege to have her as a friend – and to serve for quite some years on her global advisory board at Ethical Markets, and on the judging panel for her EthicMark awards for advertising promoting sustainability values. This obituary in The Washington Post is better than anything I can do.

Hill House Celebration

John Elkington · 16 May 2022 · Leave a Comment

A study in ageing, a Dalí tree
Christina’s car and Sarah’s
By the back door: before and after pictures of Tim and Pat, and one of Olive
Toby Adamson
Feeding frenzy: Gabriel, Caroline, Tessa, Isobel, Paul, Trisha, Robin, Gray
Paul diagnoses an elderly mandolin
Paul and Marina
Hania, Gene and Jake
Some of Caroline’s paintings on the old oak stairs
Elaine ready to leave for Bledington

Back this morning from a celebration yesterday of the lives of Pat and Tim Elkington, our parents, and Olive Adamson, Pat’s sister-in-law. Fitful weather, but a gloriously memorable day with friends and cousins including Adamsons, Griffins and Millses. Plus friends ranging from Jean Lane opposite, through one-time local gallery owner Martin Riley, to Robin Niblett of Chatham House, his wife Trisha and their daughter Marina.

First time we have been to Hill House for a couple of years, thanks largely to the pandemic. Wonderful catering by local caters, The Traveling Kitchen. More guitars in the house than you would see at a typical Rolling Stones concert. Tim’s large greenhouse has been taken down behind the barn, leaving an aching absence.

Gaia drove us across in a rented car, first to Little Rissington for the party, then to Bledington where we stayed at the King’s Head to relieve pressure on Hill House and rest our weary heads, a roiling swirl of swifts overhead, then back to Little Rissington in the morning, and onward to London.

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Introduction

I began this blog with an entry reporting on a visit to the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution on Cape Cod, on 30 September 2003. The blog element of the website has gone through several iterations since, with much of the older material still available.

Like so many things in my life, blog entries blur the boundaries between the personal and the professional. As explained on this site’s Home Page, the website and the blog are part platform for ongoing projects, part autobiography, and part accountability mechanism.

In addition, my blogs have appeared on many sites such as: Chinadialogue, CSRWire, Fast Company, GreenBiz, Guardian Sustainable Business, and the Harvard Business Review.

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About

John Elkington is a world authority on corporate responsibility and sustainable development. He is currently Founding Partner and Executive Chairman of Volans, a future-focused business working at the intersection of the sustainability, entrepreneurship and innovation movements.

Contact

john@johnelkington.com  |  +44 203 701 7550 | Twitter: @volansjohn

John Elkington

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