• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar
John Elkington

John Elkington

A world authority on corporate responsibility and sustainable development.

  • About
    • Ambassador from the future
  • Past lives
    • Professional
      • Volans
      • SustainAbility
      • CounterCurrent
      • Boards & Advisory Boards
      • Awards & Listings
    • Personal
      • Family
      • Other Influences
      • Education
      • Photography
      • Music
      • Cycling
    • Website
  • Speaking
    • Media
    • Exhibitions
  • Publications
    • Books
    • Reports
    • Articles & Blogs
    • Contributions
    • Tweets
    • Unpublished Writing
  • Journal
  • Contact
  • Show Search
Hide Search

John Elkington

April Days In Deià

John Elkington · 29 April 2018 · Leave a Comment

View across Deià from garden of Es Molí
Taking a leaf out of a new book
Beetle damage in a palm trunk
Knights snicker on open-air chessboard
Naranjas
Postbox
Possibly a once-linked van
Spiked, one hopes
Memorial to an archaeologist
Elevation, inside the church
Shuttered
Nama
Bottlebrush flowers
View across Deià from Graves house side
By the back door of La Casa de Robert Graves
Artichoke in the Graves garden
Carob tree
Greenhouse
Hat rack
Curtain in the hall
Robert Graves’ desk
Lemons in the hall
La Muleta Cove
Elaine, ditto
Where we sat, in the ‘prow’
Amphora from seabed in Sóller Museum
Similar patterning on a Picasso plate in gallery by station
As I enter
Slightly lunar
Next to a lewd exhibition
Miró painting, through glass
Part of a sculpture near station
Moonrise on the last morning
Walking down to the sea
Gate along the way
Path
At the Cala de Deià
Agave in process of blooming
The construction site below the hotel – and a stream of motorbikes on road below
Panorama from hotel terrace (click on image to expand)
Friendly pine borer beetle – a pest

Returned yesterday from a 6-day trip to Deià, Mallorca, staying at Es Molí – on a recommendation from Hania and Jake. Lovely pool and smell of orange blossom. One day we went across to the hotel’s private cove, La Muleta, to find ourselves just about the only people there. Perfect.

Remarkable meal at Nama, an Asian restaurant in the centre of town. And a delightful visit to Robert Graves’ house, where we were alone for most of the visit. One of the most evocative museums I have enjoyed to date.

On the reading front, I raced through three Eric Ambler novels: Journey Into Fear (1940), A Kind of Anger (1964) and The Mask of Dimitrios (1939) was the order in which I read them, though I liked the first best.

A trip into nearby Sóller was notable for exhibitions of Picasso ceramics and works by Miró, but a rattle across to the port by tram was something of a disappointment. We stepped off the tram – then immediately stepped back on for the trip back to the town centre.

One thing that struck me was that the skies around Deià ached for birds of prey – and I keep a constant eye out for any. Only caught sight of a buzzard, twice, on the penultimate day – and then Elaine spotted what I think was a Lesser Kestrel as we were taxiing back to the airport.

A high point was standing in the stream of bees going into what I at first thought was a wild hive as we walked across to Cala Deià. But then I saw that the hive may have been partly concocted by a beekeeper, cut into the rock. Not sure, but it was a joy to see them – and on the same day that I learned that the European Parliament had voted for a near-total ban of neonicitinoid insecticides.

Had orange juices in the Ca Part March restaurant that featured in The Night Manager, but then the cove began to fill up, so we turned on our heels and walked back to town.

The bee news had me thinking back too my collision many moons ago with the top man of a major company that makes neonicotinoids. Once again, an example of a major industrial concern staking its case on its version of the science, only to find the science shifting seismically under its feet.

And was reminded how wildly wrong one’s own instincts can be when I was quite literally befriended by an amazingly metallic-looking and quite substantial beetle. It turned out to be a pine borer, and a considerable pest. I let it go. And then, later, we encountered an equally extraordinary beetle, which turned out to be a palm weevil, another pest – whose depredations are obvious in the trunks of many of the palms in the area. Again, we let it go about it pestilential ways.

Huge numbers of seriously dressed pedal cyclists passing through Deiá this week – culminating in many thousands streaming along the road under the hotel yesterday morning. Car drivers seemed well behaved in the circumstances.

Back to a very cold London, after bumping into a couple of very interesting people on the flight back to Heathrow.

Ave Bunny

John Elkington · 21 April 2018 · 1 Comment

Vanda Ianthe Millicent Palmer, aka Bunny
It rains – and umbrellas instantaneously blossom to protect the food
Then the skies clear and conversations resume
Inter-species conversations among them
Guys Farm: home from home
Tim chats with Emma Parsons (seated, right)
Poring over the family albums
Tim, with Debby (right)
Cally, Tim, Debby, Jane
Tim, with Cally, Jane and Debby
Ditto
With added Tessa
Elaine with Glyn (Davenport)
Molly (Plexico) opens gate so trouble-maker can be escorted off the premises by Ian (Keay) and Tessa: 97-year-old Tim with the devil of age on his back
Study in blues: Nigel with Grey and Elaine
Shadowed as we walk back to collect the car

Some will find it passing strange, but I have always preferred (most) funerals and memorial services to (most) weddings, largely because people are more human, more reflective at the former.

And my unified field theory was confirmed in spades today when we drove across to Little Rissington and then to nearby Icomb for the memorial service for Bunny Palmer.

Held in the exquisitely dressed St Mary’s Church, with a huge bumblebee droning back and forward across the flowers and celebrants (Pat said later that, in her experience, funerals often attract bumbles, although I wonder if it’s the flowers), we remembered and gave heartfelt thanks for Bunny (aka Vanda Ianthe Millicent) Palmer.

One of the most wonderful women I have met. And hovering somewhere overhead throughout, her husband (Judge) Jack Palmer, who died perhaps 25 years ago. Without him no them – and without them no Guys Farm as we have known it.

Raised in the sugar cane region of Queensland, Australia, Bunny’s was an extraordinary story, brilliantly captured by her son Nigel – who paid moving tribute to his sisters Cally (Feichtinger) and Debby (Plexico), who did so much to care for Bunny in her waning years.

Conducted by the Reverend Richard Rendall and with an address by Timothy Royle, the service open with Cally’s son Daniel reading Psalm 23 and then came All Things Bright and Beautiful. (If only Christianity had embraced Nature throughout as the hymn suggests it should have done.)

Always beautiful, bright and caring, Bunny was forever and always a joy to know, to talk to, to be with.

Part way through the service, Ave Maria was sung from the back of the church – with Ave a term used to express wishes on meeting or, as in this case, parting.

Though no Christian, I found the hymn Lord of the Dance moving. If the Internet is to be believed, it was composed as recently as 1963. Cally’s career in ballet and choreology came to mind as the congregation sang the words, “I danced in the morning when the world was begun, And I danced in the moon and the stars and the sun …”

As Elaine and I walked back to Guys Farm from the church after the service, I spotted beehives through a neighbour’s window. Asking him how the bees were doing, he said he had lost both hives in the recent cold weather.

So was he going to buy new colonies? No, he said, not when it might cost £200 per hive – instead, he was planning to wait until a swarm turned up somewhere like a local school playground. He then planned to race across and scoop it up.

A reminder of a very different Icomb – and a very different world. A world where most people in the village worked on nearby farms, in the post office or school.

As we drove across from Little Rissington to Icomb, we passed the hilltop house in which the Hanks family once lived – and where I first met Jane Keay (now Davenport), around Christmas of what I suspect was 1963. The very year, it seems, that Lord of the Dance was composed.

Jane still dances a wonderful Charleston in memory while, at the time and not much of a dancer me, I sat, watched and recovered from a very recent appendisectomy. I was perhaps 14, she 16. Love at first sight, at least for me – and a true delight that she and Elaine have long been close friends.

Jane’s brother, Ian, and our Jesus-haired best man when Elaine I married in 1973, had flown in from San Francisco for the thanksgiving service. Others who were there today, and who played key parts in those halcyon days, were Emma Parsons, Stephanie Judson, Mark Watson and Irene Lopez-Cardoso (as was).

Through the Keays we would quickly meet the Palmers: the matriarchs, Bunny and Diana, were sisters. Like the Elkingtons, the Keays and Palmers had moved around the world as the Empire waned, backgrounds that probably helped us bond.

Yet, at least in my case, multiple homes in early life also drove a process of deracination. And, in retrospect, that made the anchoring of worlds in Hill House (Elkingtons), The Lawn (Keays) and Guys Farm (Palmers) even more important. Homes from home.

As became abundantly clear during the day, Bunny was an ever-warm heart of that inter-familial dance. Non-judgemental, as Nigel put it in his honouring of his mother, and always fascinated to hear more about whatever it was that you were up to.

As the hymn says, “It’s hard to dance with the Devil on your back,” but there were a fair few much older people there today, wrestling with the indignities of age. Among them, Tim –  yet somehow in his element, surrounded by the surviving generation of beautiful, bright, loving women.

I just wish that Pat, in bed at home with Caroline riding shotgun, could have been there to say goodbye to her much loved friend. Images of the two of them sitting in their gardens quietly chatting over cups of tea swirl through the mind. The chink of china, the laughter.

And all about us the next generation tripped, chattered and danced across lawns and flowerscapes that Bunny had conjured over the decades.

Thank you Bunny – and thank you all.

Passing Shots

John Elkington · 20 April 2018 · Leave a Comment

Paul and Gaia arrive at Karen restaurant in the City
Clover (Hogan) and Louise (Kjellerup Roper) huddle in the office
Hannah Jones & Friends

Tidying up my desktop, I came across these photos from recent days and weeks, reminders of ongoing family adventures, the evolution of the Volans teams (with Yinka Awoyinka and Clover Hogan have recently joined) and a delightful evening at the V&A on Friday 20 April.

Hannah Jones, Chief Sustainability Officer at Nike, who I have known for some 20 years, gave an excellent talk at the V&A on sustainability and fashion. Early on, she called out our role in launching the Triple Bottom Line all those years ago. Nice opportunity afterwards to catch up with people like Andrew Morlet of the Ellen MacArthur Foundation and Solitaire Townsend of Futerra, and to meet some new folk.

Weather quite hot for Britain at the moment, so when we arrived children were splashing around in the water feature at the heart of the V&A’s inner court. Was tempted to join them.

But recalled what happened many years ago when I was photographing young black children dashing in and out of a water future in Atlanta, when I was taking a break from a coffee conference where I was due to speak. A bicycle cop rode up to say there had been questions raised – though when he heard by British accent he laughed and pedalled off.

Flyknit image featured large

Costa Rica And Back

John Elkington · 12 April 2018 · Leave a Comment

Miami Airport
Fish restaurant on final evening
Across the street – not how I’m feeling

Just in from a super-rapid trip to Costa Rica, where I keynoted a conference celebrating the tenth anniversary of the sustainability initiative at the major regional bank BAC Credomatic. Literally dozens of invitations to come back – and very much minded to do so. Wonderful people, wonderful model of what the rest of Central and South America could do to raise their sustainability games.

Four flights were a welcome opportunity to catch up on reading: James Wolff’s Beside the Syrian Sea; Robert Olen Butler’s Perfume River; and Robin Robertson’s The Long Take.

All remarkable in their own ways and, now I think about it, all to do with the direct or indirect effects of war: The Long Take WWII, Perfume River the Vietnam War, and Beside the Syrian Sea the war that has raged for years in one of my favourite countries.

Latest GreenBiz And Fast Company Pieces

John Elkington · 11 April 2018 · Leave a Comment

Growing Underground lab coats
Manual cutting of herbs with kebab knife – due to be superseded with mechanical cutters
Life blood of the system
Richard and Richard
Herbs a-growing, possibly garlic chives
A different crop
Vista

Am in Costa Rica, having keynoted a BAC Credomatic conference today, celebrating the 10th anniversary of their sustainability initiative. Meanwhile our work has been going live today in GreenBiz, my story about our visit last week to Growing Underground, and in Fast Company, the latest in our series of breakthrough blogs – this one on Carbon Productivity.

  • « Go to Previous Page
  • Go to page 1
  • Interim pages omitted …
  • Go to page 90
  • Go to page 91
  • Go to page 92
  • Go to page 93
  • Go to page 94
  • Interim pages omitted …
  • Go to page 283
  • Go to Next Page »

Primary Sidebar

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.

Recent Comments

  • John Elkington on The Hill House Elkingtons
  • sally fitzharris. (Rycroft) on The Hill House Elkingtons
  • Thomas Forster on Reminder of Glencot Years

Journal Archive

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

Copyright © 2026 John Elkington. All rights reserved. Log in