Saudi scouts win youth award for agricultural app

The association ranked among the top five youth initiatives in the second competition organized by the Arab Scout Region. (X @scouts_org_sa)
Short Url
Updated 11 November 2025
Follow

Saudi scouts win youth award for agricultural app

  • Al-Harbi will be honored at the closing ceremony of the sixth Arab Scout Youth Forum in Abu Dhabi on Nov. 13, highlighting the importance of innovation in the scout movement and advancing sustainable development goals

RIYADH: The Saudi Arabian Scouts Association won the Arab Scout Youth Award for its innovative project, “Plant and Play.”

The association ranked among the top five youth initiatives in the second competition organized by the Arab Scout Region, the Saudi Press Agency reported on Monday.

Presented by Scout Shahd Al-Harbi, “Plant and Play” is a digital educational app that fosters a love of agriculture through interactive learning.

It guides users step by step in planting and caring for plants while providing games and activities that encourage creativity and discovery.

The project promotes environmental conservation, teaching children eco-friendly habits such as recycling plastic bottles and cardboard boxes to create planters.

It aims to raise a generation that values food, understands agriculture’s role in food security, and cares for the environment.

The app also introduces basic agricultural concepts while promoting responsibility, patience, generosity, observation, and critical thinking skills.

Al-Harbi will be honored at the closing ceremony of the sixth Arab Scout Youth Forum in Abu Dhabi on Nov. 13, highlighting the importance of innovation in the scout movement and advancing sustainable development goals.

 


Fifth beekeeping season begins at Saudi royal reserve

Updated 08 February 2026
Follow

Fifth beekeeping season begins at Saudi royal reserve

RAFHA: The Imam Turki bin Abdullah Royal Nature Reserve Development Authority on Sunday launched the fifth annual beekeeping season for 2026 to empower the local community and regulate beekeeping within the reserve.

The launch supports the authority’s goals of biodiversity conservation, sustainable environmental practices, and economic returns for beekeepers, the Saudi Press Agency reported.

This year’s season includes three main periods linked to spring flowers, acacia, and sidr, with each period’s start date serving as the deadline for participation applications.

The authority urged beekeepers to review the season details and join scheduled virtual meetings to ensure organized participation under the approved regulations.

The beekeeping season also promotes ecotourism by showcasing the reserve’s scenic and pristine environment, reinforcing its status as a unique ecotourism hub.

Covering 91,500 sq. km, the reserve is the Kingdom’s second-largest royal protected area, home to diverse wildlife, plants, and trees, and featuring several ancient historical and heritage sites.