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Shelby Farms Park’s Earth Day Festival

This Earth Day — well, two days before Earth Day — on Saturday, April 20th, Shelby Farms Park invites all to celebrate the different ways of going green in Memphis at its annual free Earth Day Festival.

“We’re just excited to celebrate the Earth and Earth Day and to focus on sustainability and also just explore and learn in the park,” says Angie Whitfield, the park’s marketing and communications senior manager. 

The day kicks off with a family-friendly, untimed, 2.34-mile fun run around Hyde Lake at 10 a.m. Registration is $22 per person and guarantees an exclusive fun run T-shirt. (Sign up to run here.)

But the fun run isn’t your only chance to get active at the park on Saturday.

“Also that day, we are kicking off our Get Outside! Fitness Classes, where we offer free fitness classes in the spring through the fall,” Whitfield says. “So there’ll be a preview of each one of the classes.”

That means adult yoga at 9 a.m., kids yoga at 9:30 a.m., mental fitness at 10 a.m., HIIT boot camp at 10:30 a.m., functional fitness for older adults at 11 a.m., mat Pilates at 11:30 a.m., and Kidokinetics sports fun at noon. 

From 10 a.m. to 3 p.m., more than 25 organizations will set up learning stations and booths to share their approaches to sustainability with interactive opportunities and activities.

“Park visitors and the folks at the festival can go by and learn and talk to the people there at the booths, learn what they’re doing, what their efforts are, and how to plug in to those organizations,” Whitfield says. 

Photo: Justin Fox Burks

“That’s something important to us — to be able to highlight sustainability and partners where that’s one of their key missions. So we’re excited that they have decided to join forces with us. We like to say every day is Earth Day at the park, but we’ll take one day and have a big festival about it.”

Participating organizations include, among others, Clean Memphis, Compost Fairy, the Tennessee Department of Environment and Conservation, Protect Our Aquifer, Sierra Club Chickasaw Group, and Shelby Farms Park Apiary. Most of them will also offer presentations on the event stage (full schedule below).

The festival will also have appearances by the park’s mascot Bob the Buffalo, a kids zone with inflatables, and lots of yard games, music, and food trucks. Rentals will be open that day for canoes, kayaks, paddle boats, stand up paddle boards, and bikes. Plus, Goat Yoga with 901 Goats will be offered at 1 p.m., 2:15 p.m., and 3:30 p.m. for $25 or $30 with a yoga mat rental. (Sign up for Goat Yoga here.)

As an added bonus, free mulch will be distributed in the southern area of the field west of Farm Road across from the S. Hyde Lake parking lot. Mulch must be loaded yourself and tools and removal equipment will not be provided.

For more information on Shelby Farms Park’s Earth Day Festival, visit here. If you’re looking for other Earth Day-forward activities and events this weekend, check out this blog post from our sister publication Memphis Magazine

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Cover Feature News

Arbor Town

It seems like only yesterday that everything came crashing down around us. Nearly everyone in Memphis this February 3rd was startled at some point by the sound of a tentative, icy crackling, followed by seconds of silence, then the impact of a limb or an entire tree. And there were often other noises: the squeal of crushed metal, the snap of sparking wires, or the crunch of splintered wooden beams, as cars, power lines, and homes fell victim to The Overstory.

In Richard Powers’ novel of that name, the trees speak to humanity, putting such calamity in perspective:

All the ways you imagine us … are always amputations. Your kind never sees us whole. You miss the half of it, and more. There’s always as much belowground as above.

That much was vividly illustrated during February’s storm, when an especially heavy thud, more felt than heard, led me to peek out at the house behind me. An entire tree, unbroken, had been uprooted by the sheer tonnage of ice it had to bear, pulling its roots from the ground, lifting the concrete slabs of a driveway with them as the trunk sank into the roof. Removing it took days, the closing of the street for massive equipment, and untold thousands of dollars.

Ice crackled along branches, threatening to fall, after February’s ice storm. (Photo above / below: Anna Traverse Fogle)

Yet the massive tree damage from that day, and its aftermath in lost power and time, is but one pole in the ongoing dichotomy that Memphis must confront over and over again, caught between damning our trees and praising them. Consider another arboreal moment from less than a year before, when local social media was inflamed with outrage as some beloved neighborhood landmarks “disappeared.”

Last June, local filmmaker and activist Mike McCarthy wrote on Facebook, “If anyone cares to drive down East Parkway right now you can see the removal of every single oak tree from the former Libertyland/Fairgrounds green space.” Indeed, in less than a day, an entire glade had violently vanished, and the comments that followed revealed a deep sense of betrayal: “Atrocious,” “It was depressing,” and “Memphis is owned by developers who DGAF about anything except what money they can make. The mayors and city council members are their enablers.”

Our trees engender both fear and adoration in us, and our endless dance between these two extremes makes one thing clear: It’s time for Memphians to own their overstory, and the best route to that is a deeper dive into the world of urban forestry.

The Unsung Boon of Trees
As it turns out, many Memphians are already taking that deep dive, and those who have cultivated their inner citizen-arborist are quietly leading a minor revolution in tree care and tree cognizance. As with so many things horticultural, the Cooper-Young neighborhood is leading the way. Judi Shellabarger runs the Cooper-Young Historic District Arboretum, and she vividly recalls the day the Libertyland oaks were destroyed.

“That was done in one day,” she says. “They always do it quick. But those trees were valued. They helped keep that area from flooding. That’s one of the main purposes of planting trees, is to prevent flooding and erosion. Plus, they would have given great shade out there, on whatever courts or football fields or baseball fields they’re building. But I was talking to two city council people about that, and one of them said, ‘Trees don’t bring money to Memphis.’ And I thought, ‘Yes they do!’ When that floods all up and down Southern Avenue, they’re going to be sorry. Those roots hold down that soil and collect water as it’s running off.”

Mike Larrivee, another Cooper-Young resident and founder of the Compost Fairy program, also saw it as a biodiversity tragedy. He puts the clear-cutting down to “the confluence of greed and ignorance. That clear-and-grub mentality instead of, ‘What can we save? How can we create economic value in this development?’ Statistically, there’s tremendous value in having mature trees on a piece of property, regardless of its use. Just their presence creates value. And that area around Libertyland was sort of an ad hoc arboretum. There were 43 species of tree there, in that little spot. It was tremendously biodiverse.”

The inherent value of trees is a given among a growing demographic in Memphis that wants to preserve and propagate them, and they contrast the short-term gains of a development deal with the very real benefits that urban forestry studies have proven. A 2017 study by The Nature Conservancy, “How Cities Can Harness the Public Health Benefits of Urban Trees,” detailed multiple studies, including peer-reviewed and longitudinal research projects, that demonstrate the many blessings of an overstory. Those include both mental and physical health benefits, from mitigating summer air temperatures and reducing air pollution, to increasing immune system function and decreasing stress levels.

Trees offer cities more than beauty. (Photo: Jamie Harmon)

Land of a Thousand Arboretums
Many tree aficionados simply start with their beauty and the immediate benefits of shade. Those factors are likely the driving forces behind the community arboreta that have sprung up throughout Memphis in recent years. As the Cooper-Young Historic District Arboretum reveals, setting up such a program is largely driven by the Tennessee Urban Forestry Council (TUFC), and they are facilitating the process wherever they can.

Laurie Williams, of the Memphis Botanic Garden, describes the process: “The TUFC oversees the entire arboretum program across the state. We were the first Level 4 arboretum in the western part of the state, and we then petitioned to be a center of excellence. That means we not only have a Level 4, with all those requirements, but we also help other arboreta become certified. There are different requirements: Level 1 is just 30 trees with labels on them. Level 2 is 60 trees and a map. And Level 3 is 90 trees and other steps, and by Level 4, you have to have a newsletter in addition to all those other steps, and trained people that can give tours.”

With no small amount of pride, Shellabarger describes how that’s played out in Cooper-Young. “This is our fifth year as an arboretum, and we’re now a Level 3. We have over 112 trees altogether, and we’re working toward more. It’s mostly in front of people’s homes, in their front yards. But we do have some trees at Peabody Elementary School, and some at Cooper-Young businesses. And we have a lot up at the Spanish-American War Memorial Park. What we’re doing in the next two years is, we’re working with the City of Memphis Parks Division to redo what we call the Park Annex behind the Spanish-American War Park. There’s an acre of land that was railroad land, and we’ve been trying to get that cleaned up and replanted with native trees on the north side. And on the south side, we would like to have a food forest with fruit and nut trees.”

While Cooper-Young was one of the first arboreta, many more are in the works. Williams rattles off at least a dozen parks, campuses, and neighborhoods that have already curated arboreta or are working on it. But it can be a costly process, and she offers the Vollintine-Evergreen Community Association as a case in point. “We’ve been working with the VECA arboretum since 2008,” she says. “They tried to begin an arboretum, but when you have old trees, you have limbs that need to be taken care of. And it ends up coming down to money. Certified arborists are not cheap when they come out to trim trees. So VECA is really struggling. Of course, we’ve had so many storms, so there are unsafe trees. And the TUFC won’t certify until the main path is clear of dangers. So that’s why VECA is still struggling.”

Memphis boasts several champion trees such as this champion white ash. (Photo: Courtesy Judi Shellabarger)

We Are the Champions
The Memphis Botanic Garden facilitates such community-level initiatives, but there are other, more individualized ways it contributes to the urban forest. Every fall (September 14th through October 12th this year), they team up with the TUFC’s West Tennessee Chapter to host an Urban Forestry Advisor’s Class. As Williams explains, “Eric Bridges, who used to be the naturalist for Lakeland [and] is now the operations director of the Overton Park Conservancy, teaches quite a bit of our classes and talks about wildlife corridors, for example. Instead of everybody having two and a half acres and ripping out the native trees and putting in a bunch of Japanese maples, keep corridors for wildlife to survive, so they don’t have to go into heat islands. Eric does a really good job. And then Wes Hopper teaches quite a bit. We do a lot of tree identification and teach people how to plant trees. And we talk about the arboretum and championship tree programs.”

The latter program is yet another way that the TUFC supports an appreciation of the overstory. “Champion” trees are the largest, healthiest examples of a particular species in the state, and Memphis boasts several. Shellabarger describes the process: “We have a championship tree team here in Shelby County, and we’re not experts, but we’re from the West Tennessee Chapter, and we go out and measure the tree and take pictures of it and mark its location with the GPS and send it to the state. The University of Tennessee will send students down here to measure it for us, and they’ll review all the other trees in the state and pick the winners.”

Cooper-Young boasts several, all identified with signage as per the requirements of a TUFC-approved arboretum. “We have six or seven state champion trees in Cooper-Young,” says Shellabarger. “There’s a champion California incense cedar at 2052 Nelson. My favorite tree, though it’s not a champion, is the Carolina silverbell, and it should be flowering probably in the next two weeks. It has little white flower-shaped bells, and it’s at 1991 Oliver.”

Tree City, U.S.A.
While the TUFC and its West Tennessee Chapter have a hand in many of the arboreal pursuits in this area, the networks of urban forestry activists run on a national and international scale as well. Memphis has officially been designated a “Tree City, U.S.A.,” by the national Arbor Day Foundation, but it was Germantown that nabbed that honor first. Williams explains: “Memphis became a Tree City, U.S.A., a few years ago, and to do that, a city has to have a Tree Board and an Arbor Day celebration. There are some requirements. It takes a long time to achieve that Tree City status. Nashville’s been that way for quite a while. Germantown, also. Memphis was behind that curve. There are some requirements about money, and there are cities that have more money available than others. Because you have to have a certain amount per capita.”

That may explain why Germantown led the way. Hopper points out that “Memphis has had a Tree Board for maybe eight years, but Germantown’s had a tree board for 30. And we are also designated as a Tree City of the World. That was a new program through the Arbor Day Foundation and the Department of Agriculture when I started here. Germantown was the first city in Tennessee to be considered a Tree City of the World, in 2019. The program is managed by the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations and the Arbor Day Foundation.”

Tree Equity
And yet arboreta, Tree City designations, and champion trees are not just for relatively well-off neighborhoods who can fund arborists. A parallel movement is afoot that starts with other benefits outlined in the Nature Conservancy report and elsewhere. These are sociological benefits that show a marked correlation with the amount of tree growth in an area. Wes Hopper, Germantown’s natural resources manager and city arborist, says the current term for this is “tree equity.” As he distills the concept, “If you have a low tree equity in your district, you’re going to have a higher poverty level. If you have a high tree equity, like a rating of 85-90, you’re probably going to have a higher social standing in that area.” The website treeequityscore.org presents an interactive map that shows the tree equity rating of any given locale. Unsurprisingly, poverty-stricken areas of Memphis have scores hovering around 40.

Mike Larrivee is part of a team that’s trying to change that. “There are proven benefits of urban tree cover, like fighting blight and pollution and littering, and discouraging vandalism and vagrancy, that go above and beyond the ecological services,” he says. South Memphis Trees is a local program planning to go beyond arboreta with the planting of new trees on a massive scale. Larrivee and others are trying to fuel that movement. “For the South Memphis Trees project,” Larrivee says, “the Wolf River Conservancy, the Native Plant Initiative, and Compost Fairy/Atlas Organics just co-hosted an event with Urban Earth and potted up 3,500 saplings for the urban tree farm. We’ve put tons of trees in the ground in the last three years that we’ve been working together. Ryan Hall at Wolf River Conservancy is a tank! There’s no telling how many thousands of trees are standing as a direct consequence of his engagement.”

Playing the Long Game
Indeed, champion trees aside, tree-planting seems to be the key to ensuring the role of trees in the city’s future. For one thing, as traumatic as downing mature trees can be, that’s sometimes necessary, leaving new growth as the only possible response. That’s Wes Hopper’s philosophy, as he manages tree-related issues for Germantown, not to mention sitting on both Germantown’s and Memphis’ Tree Boards and being a board member of the TUFC.

“Having all those connections, I ended up working with the forestry division of MLGW, as a liaison between property owners and the MLGW tree crews, trying to help clients understand the importance of having that clearance from the utility wires. The best thing we could do would be to remove a tree and plant a tree somewhere else. That didn’t always go over so well. Tree removals can be a touchy subject for some people, but a lot of times, it’s best just to remove the tree. Because the electricity is going to win. If you plant a big tree by the utility lines, sooner or later your tree’s gonna get whacked.”

Such a long-term approach helps us to understand both the ice storm wreckage and the trauma of losing beloved trees, says Hopper. “Those trees at Libertyland? A lot of them were healthy, but a lot of them had a poor root system,” he says. “I went out to look at the trees, even the big oak trees, and I saw a lot of root rot on them.

“So we have to involve the community,” Hopper continues. “If they have an issue with our urban forest, someone needs to take action. You can go to Parks and Recreation, go to a Tree Board meeting and say, ‘I want to get a Tennessee Agricultural Enhancement Program (TAEP) grant to get trees replanted in place of those that got removed.’ The TAEP grant is an environmental grant through the state forestry division and you apply to plant a certain amount of trees in that area. Sometimes it just takes one person to pull the team together and make it function. You take a person like Judi Shellabarger, that lady gets things done!”

If some find that unsatisfying, such community involvement may also help build on what’s already in place. For now, the Tree Board can make recommendations and suggestions, but a groundswell could elevate the body’s importance. And it will take political pressure to value trees at the level of policy. Mark Follis, owner of Follis Tree Preservation and member of the Memphis Tree Board, served briefly through a period when the city government deemed trees more worthy of attention. “Memphis had a city forester until budget cuts in 2005. But he had no money. He had the position, but no budget. Then for three years, more recently, we had a grant and I was the city forester, but only on a part-time basis while the grant lasted. There isn’t a permanent position now.”

As Mike Larrivee says, it boils down to political will: “Memphis gets compared to Detroit a lot because our demographics and economy are similar. But for years, Memphis did not have a paid arborist or tree team until Mark got that part-time funded position. By comparison, the city of Detroit has a tree team of 20 on the city payroll. Same size city, with the same sort of density and coverage of urban canopy, and they’ve had an urban tree team for 100 years. So we just do not prioritize or allocate resources in a way that’s befitting the assets we have.”

The West TN Chapter of the TUFC will hold its annual meeting at the Memphis Botanic Garden on Thursday, April 21, at 1 p.m. Bill Bullock will speak on battling invasive plants in Overton Park’s Old Forest.

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Opinion The Last Word

Coronavirus: A Dress Rehearsal for Global Warming

Earth Day is upon us, that moment when we take an extra step back to survey our impact on the environment. And in 2020, the view looks rather different: Global carbon emissions have plunged since the beginning of March. According to The Guardian, Delhi, India, the world’s most polluted city, has been enjoying some of the freshest air in decades, thanks to shelter-in-place rules. Closer to home, NASA reports that air pollution in the American Northeast is down 30 percent. As humanity slows its manic drive to move and manufacture, planetary health is enjoying the benefits.

This goes far beyond clear skies. A study just published by the journal Science of the Total Environment reports that nearly 80 percent of COVID-19-related deaths have occurred in areas with a high concentration of nitrogen dioxide, a pollutant generated by diesel engines. Other studies have also shown this correlation, and still more have linked the chemical to lung disease. That those whose immune and respiratory systems have already been compromised will be more vulnerable should come as no surprise, regardless of where scientific consensus lands on the study. Such data echoes the growing realization that our bodily health is intimately bound up with the living cycles around us.

Now, our new wariness of contagion comes with a new awareness of the consequences of everyday behavior. We’re training ourselves to resist that impulse to congregate; we’re thinking in terms of priorities: “Do I really need this?” Given a good century of being told that we should always want — and get — more, such a question seems downright un-American.

And yet our sense of the commonwealth is very much engaged. We think of others, and we make do with less. We make (or should make) the extra effort of reaching out to those most vulnerable in their isolation. To sociologist Eric Klinenberg, writing in The New York Times, there’s a revived sense of solidarity at work, that “motivates us to promote public health, not just our own personal security. It keeps us from hoarding medicine, toughing out a cold in the workplace, or sending a sick child to school.” That’s why we should distinguish between physical distancing and social solidarity, writes Klinenberg. The latter is something we’ll rely on more and more in the years of climate change to come.

Speaking further on the topic with Ezra Klein, Klinenberg notes that these are the very skills we’ll need to hone if we’re to prepare for the present and future world of catastrophic climate change. “When we get to the other side of the pandemic, and the health crisis abates, how do we think about rebuilding and investing in each other?

“What we are seeing in coronavirus in a very fast time frame is just how difficult and expensive, in terms of money, in terms of human lives, it is to wait and deny and deflect and spin, until the thing is right here. And in that sense, I just don’t see how we avoid a confrontation with the big looming threat that is there for all of us after the coronavirus situation abates, and that’s global warming.”

Indeed, what we are living through today is a kind of dress rehearsal for climate change’s emerging world of drought, flooding, famine, and refugees, with all of the public health challenges those imply. Like the coronavirus, the politics of global warming demand that we rally around an amorphous, ever-evolving threat that plays itself out over long stretches of time — for coronavirus, over months or years; for global warming, over decades. Both demand that we embrace scientific literacy, grapple with global forces impacting our lives and, most importantly, face up to our need for solidarity and social support networks like never before.

This need not be “welfare,” even if the public welfare is prioritized. The Green New Deal has plenty to say about creating new jobs. Crucially, it also embodies a profound sense of solidarity in its very tenets, a solidarity that we must embrace in spirit as well as in policy and funding. Combining a Works Progress Administration-like sense of mutual aid and support with policies that unflinchingly address the connection between human and environmental health, the Green New Deal is exactly what we need in this moment.

With our very lives at stake in the face of COVID-19, we are seeing the unavoidable need for large-scale public health coordination and social solidarity, not to mention the positive environmental impact of simply changing our behavior, of weighing our priorities. On this first Earth Day of a new decade and a new era, let’s learn what we can from this and ready ourselves for the long game.

Alex Greene is the Flyer‘s music editor.

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News The Fly-By

Shell on Earth

For years, the rainbow on the Overton Park Shell served as a backdrop for the city’s annual Earth Day festival. Before the city shut down the shell in 2004, the outdoor amphitheater also served as home to peace marches, pagan pride days, and other events for the environmentally conscious.

In keeping with the shell’s “green” theme, the group in charge of restoring the crumbling structure hopes to make the renovation process environmentally sustainable.

“We think it’s very important to show people we can do it responsibly and ecologically sound and reuse everything we possibly can,” says Barry Lichterman, president of the Friends of Levitt Pavilion Memphis, Inc. (FLPM), the local group trying to bring the shell back to its former glory.

Three years ago, the shell was closed after falling into a dangerous state of disrepair. The Mortimer Levitt Foundation, a national group that has revived shell theaters across the country, then offered to pay a quarter of the cost to repair it.

“We’re using sustainable techniques. We’re reusing the old concrete bench stanchions and making walls out of them for privacy and sound,” says Lee Askew of Askew Nixon Ferguson Architects, the firm responsible for the design. Plans were finalized this week.

Rather than demolish the metal wings on both sides of the stage, they are being donated to a private citizen for reuse. The citizen will pay for the removal, and smaller wings will be erected in their place.

The foundations under the wings will be pulverized and used as gravel in the parking lot adjacent to the shell. The current wooden seating will also be removed but will be reused in other parts of the project.

The renovated shell, to be renamed the Levitt Pavilion for the Performing Arts at the Overton Park Shell, will also get sound-system, lighting, and restroom upgrades.

As part of the city’s agreement with the Mortimer Levitt Foundation, the shell will host 50 free concerts possibly beginning as early as fall 2008. The performances will focus on regional family-friendly music, such as rhythm & blues, Latin, zydeco, American roots, and jazz.

As for events such as the Earth Day festival, Lichterman says the venue will be available for rental if organizers are interested.

The renovation will cost an estimated $1.25 million, half of which will be funded by the city. The Mortimer Levitt Foundation will donate $250,000, and Lichterman says the rest will come from donors and sponsors. Construction is slated to begin in September of this year and to be completed by August 2008.

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Down to Earth

Fed up with politicians’ lack of environmental concern, the late Senator Gaylord Nelson founded the first Earth Day in 1969 in hopes of building a grassroots citizen movement to save the planet.

Here in Shelby County, citizens are keeping that cause alive in an attempt to “green Greater Memphis” by improving Shelby Farms Park and building bike and walking trails along the Wolf River and the city’s abandoned railroad tracks.

Join in on the movement this Earth Day with two green events sponsored by the Shelby Farms Park Alliance. On Saturday, April 21st, at 6:30 p.m., don your emerald best and head to the Green Shoe Gala at Patriot Lake. They’ll be auctioning off items such as jewelry, fishing trips, and even green shoes to raise money for park improvements.

But don’t drink too much wine, because you’ll want to wake up bright and early for Sunday’s Hip To Be Green Day fest at the park. Various local organizations will be planting trees and shrubs, painting fences, and working to improve Shelby Farms.

Local profit and nonprofit groups will be handing out information on how ordinary citizens can help the Earth. There will also be crafts for kids, live music, and screenings of environmentally themed films.

Don’t want to burn gas to get there? A bus will be shuttling folks back and forth from the Central Library all day.

Green Shoe Gala, Shelby Farms Park, Saturday, April 21st, 6:30 p.m., $250 per person.

Hip to Be Green Day, Shelby Farms Park, Sunday, April 22nd, 9 a.m.-5 p.m., Free. For more information, call 767-PARK.