At the time of the coronavirus epidemic, we are facing the threat of restrictions again, alive with the second wave. Travel is again less of an option.
More and more countries are introducing new and perhaps even more drastic austerity measures to prevent the spread of the virus. In Hungary, too, mask wearing is mandatory in public spaces and will be increasingly expanded. Another wave has reached Hungary as well.
Perhaps everyone knows this, because it makes the press and the media loud. Precautions for prevention are only one side. On the other side, there are healthcare workers who meet Covid patients on a daily basis. Healthcare workers are definitely heroes of the epidemic period. There is no doubt about that.
Many people try to express their gratitude to those who even expose themselves to the virus, the danger, on a daily basis, and yet the only one controlling them is to help others. The red heart placed in the windows has become a unified expression of gratitude worldwide.
Tourism has not been good for the epidemic, but human life must always be a primary consideration. One of the Maldives’s private islands is home to a luxury hotel.
Boros Resort also thanked all those who deal with coronavirus patients in a special way. Their thanks were expressed in style, in coral. The truth is that they also had time to carry out the project, as the fallen tourism provided the employees of the luxury hotel with seemingly endless free time. As a result, corals were moved from one place to another, all in a well-defined order. The relocated corals were put together into words: Thank You, Heroes, meaning “Thank You, Heroes”.
The relocated corals are broken pieces of the living colony that are no longer viable on their own and do not come to life even after their relocation, they merely come together into words seen from an aerial view. Just because a coral is no longer alive doesn’t mean life can’t settle there. As a result, life has already appeared there, it is flourishing more and more, but it still takes years for the special ecosystem to fully cover the word-giving framework that has been placed on the bottom.
Baros is already doing a lot to save and regenerate the local natural corals, so the words just formed will give the island a new settlement.
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(Source: marmalade.co.hu | Pictures: pixabay.com)