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Meet & Green

When Greening Greater Memphis (GGM) hosted a public meeting last February, they learned a
valuable lesson: Always, always reserve space for sponsors and VIPs.

The meeting and manifesto-signing, held at the Memphis Botanic Garden, drew an overcapacity crowd of more than 1,000. Parking overflowed onto Cherry Road, and there’s no telling how many people were turned away.

“We were really shocked by the response,” says Laura Adams, director of development for GGM-member organization Shelby Farms Park Conservancy. “We kept saying maybe we’ll have 200 [people]. If we get lucky, we’ll have 400.

“To have more people than the Botanic Garden could handle … We came to understand quickly that this was more than just an event. This is a movement.”

Adams won’t say which VIPs couldn’t get in but thinks that local politicians took notice, even if they had to hear about it the next day.

“People want walkable, bikeable communities. They want well-funded park amenities,” Adams says. “They want clean, green cities.”

GGM will take its next step Thursday, September 27th, with the Green Volunteer Expo, a chance for interested community members to “shop” for volunteer opportunities and learn about various green groups.

“It took a little while to come up with a next step,” Adams says. “Most of the comments we heard were: Okay, what comes next? How do we get involved? What can we do?”

Environmental activist Nancy Ream is something of a professional volunteer. She works with several of the GGM organizations and is the volunteer project manager for the expo.

“We’re trying to get the entire community involved. People say this isn’t about the whole community. Well, yeah, it is,” Ream says.

Greening Greater Memphis is composed of the Shelby Farms Park Conservancy, the Wolf River Conservancy, the local Sierra Club, the Greater Memphis Greenline, and the Botanic Garden. More than 30 green groups will be in attendance at the expo, including the Tennessee Urban Forestry Council, Healthy Memphis Common Table, and the Coalition for Livable Communities. Groups that specialize in roof-top gardens and solar power will also be there.

“People can take a look at these different groups and see what they’re doing and where they’d like to volunteer,” Ream says. “Maybe they want to help with bike lanes. Maybe they want to work in community gardens.”

The range of volunteer opportunities is indicative of the movement’s broad focus. Though the February event included signing a statement to support improving public parks, “green” means a lot of different things to different people.

“People came for different reasons,” Adams says of GGM’s February meeting. “Some were involved in the parks movement, some were involved in the greenways movement. Some people are more interested in recycling or clean water and air.”

Adams anticipates GGM will become more focused in the coming months. Immediately after the expo, GGM plans to host another meeting, this one with the leaders of the green groups already in attendance.

“The leadership is going to talk about where GGM goes next,” Adams says. “One thing we’re talking about doing is bringing in a national authority on walkable, bikeable communities to instruct us on how we can develop those kinds of opportunities in Memphis.”

In time, Adams would like to see GGM function as an umbrella organization for other green groups. “I would love to see this organization with a 501(c)3 and be an advocate and a fund-raiser, something like an ArtsMemphis.”

On a more grassroots level, Ream hopes the expo will drive momentum. “It may be small in the beginning,” she says. “There are changes that every person can do. You can change the lightbulbs in your house to more energy-efficient ones. Eventually your utility bill will go down.”

Like February’s meeting, the volunteer expo will be held at the Botanic Garden. GGM plans to open up another parking lot this time, and they’ll definitely be saving space for the event’s sponsors and VIPs.

As for everybody else, plan on showing up early.

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News

Memphis Green Volunteer Expo Thursday at Botanic Gardens

More than 20 local environmental and outdoor recreational groups will host Memphis’ first “Green Volunteer Expo” from 5:00-7:30 p.m. this Thursday, September 27th, at the Memphis Botanic Gardens.

The first “Greening Greater Memphis” meeting attracted more than 1000 people, letting city and county officials know that there was great interest in environmental issues in this city and county.

Event organizers are touting Thursday’s meet-up as a chance to “work with green groups and thinkers, share ideas and find out how you can help in the next step of Greening Greater Memphis.”

For more info, check out the Greening Greater Memphis’ website, or call (901) 767-PARK

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News

Fresh Produce For Sale at Memphis Botanic Gardens

When you’re craving a juicy summer tomato, Saturday can’t come fast enough. That’s the day when local farmers peddle hot-off-the-garden-plot produce at the Memphis Farmer’s Market downtown.

Now, there’s a mid-week option.

Every Wednesday from 2-7 p.m., many of those same farmers sell their fresh goods at the new Farmer’s Market at the Memphis Botanic Garden. The market runs weekly through November 14th.

For more, go to the Botanic Garden website.

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We Recommend We Recommend

Branch Office

For a lot of people, art is a mysterious, half-smiling woman without eyebrows. For Catherine Blackwell, art also includes a tea party at a compost pile.

On Saturday, July 14th, Blackwell, a Memphis College of Art graduate student, will unveil her latest work at the Memphis Botanic Garden. But “Fallen From View” does not incorporate traditional pieces of art. Instead, Blackwell will lead a series of environmental tours on Saturday mornings and Tuesday evenings. As she explains, “The tour itself will be the artwork.”

Consisting of several stops, each tour will last approximately 45 minutes. Blackwell will talk about the environment, touching on topics such as invasive plant species and tree diseases caused by global warming.

The tour ends with a tea party near a compost pile, something Blackwell calls “totally ironic.”

Blackwell realizes that her idea of art might raise a few eyebrows.

“It’s very nontraditional, and I welcome debate on whether it’s art at all,” she says. “I’m all for discourse. I’m trying to offer lots of vantage points to let people make up their own minds on environmental issues.”

Blackwell will lead day and night tours, with the latter showing something people rarely see: the Botanic Garden after hours.

Blackwell says, “I hope my tour will allow people to understand the environment a little more. Information is half the battle.”

“Fallen from View,” Memphis Botanic Garden, Saturday tours at 10 a.m. Tuesday tours at 9 p.m. July 14th-August 28th (no tour on August 18th). $2. For more information, call 576-4100.

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Letter From The Editor Opinion

Letter from the Editor: Memphis’ Chance to Go Green

A friend of mine says hiking is just walking where it’s okay to pee. If that were true, then I’d be hiking when I walk to lunch down the alley behind our office building.

The difference between hiking and walking is more than semantics. I take a walk around my neighborhood. I walk the dog. If I’m hiking, I want to be in a natural setting, sans concrete and power lines. I want to experience natural surroundings without the rush of traffic noise.

Next Thursday, February 8th, Memphians will get the opportunity to take a first step toward making this city a better place to hike. In the process, we’ll have the opportunity to make this a better place to live.

The opportunity will take place at the Botanic Garden, at a meeting called “Greening Greater Memphis.” Memphis is one of the few major cities without greenway or greenline enhancements. That’s the bad news. The good news is that Memphis already has in place all the elements to put one of the finest park and greenway systems in the country.

Imagine being able to hike along the Wolf River from east of Collierville to the Mississippi River. Imagine being able to bike a green, tree-lined trail from downtown to Shelby Farms. The pieces are in place. All we need is for people to show an interest and help connect them.

Unlike such “top-down” proposals as a new football stadium, this is an affordable, doable, grass-roots project that will cost much less and provide a real quality-of-life improvement for citizens of Memphis. It will improve housing values in nearby neighborhoods. It will make our city more livable. It will make moving here more desirable.

I have long been amazed at the number of natural oases in our urban landscape. Lakes and forested land are everywhere — alongside interstates and in neighborhoods most of us never venture into. The possibility for linking them together and making them more accessible is an exciting one.

The Greening Greater Memphis meeting begins at 5 p.m. next Thursday. Go to GreeningGreaterMemphis.org for more information. Please try to get there, even if you have to walk.

Bruce VanWyngarden

brucev@memphisflyer.com