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Letter From The Editor Opinion

Winds of Whimsy, or Whither Went He, Wandering Wallaby?

As I write these words, the Memphis Grizzlies have not yet played game two of their playoff stint against the Minnesota Timberwolves. By the time anyone reads this column, in print or on the Flyer’s website, game two will be over, and the Grizzlies will have won or lost. I know most Memphians don’t even like to consider the possibility of a loss from Memphis’ most winningest team, but statistically speaking, it is within the realm of possibility.

Of course, I hope the Griz devour the Timberwolves, that the loss in game one of the playoffs is the only one the team has for the rest of the year. I’d be lying if I said I was anything resembling a devout sports fan, but like any Memphian, I have a possibly more-than-healthy dose of hometown pride. Besides, everyone in Memphis seems to have a little more strut to their step when the Grizzlies are on a winning streak. If a clip of a particularly gravity-defying dunk by Ja Morant is circulating on social media, there are sure to be a few more smiles gracing local faces. It’s a beautiful thing, but it puts a lot of pressure on the Grizzlies, though, doesn’t it? It must be hard to fly so high while simultaneously carrying the collective weight of a midsized American city’s hopes and dreams.

That’s why I was beside-myself excited — gleeful, even — about last week’s wandering wallaby news. The story was a flash in the pan, a two-day whirlwind as seemingly everyone in the city followed the news of the mischievous marsupial’s disappearance from his home in the KangaZoo exhibit and mercifully quick subsequent discovery in a service yard on zoo property. It took social media by storm, I heard people talk about it in the store, and I brought it up while sitting in the optometrist’s chair and getting my eyes tested. Weird as it was, the story lasted just long enough for its more ardent followers to begin to worry, then, bam!, it delivered a happy ending, complete with the wallaby’s reunion with his fellows in the zoo.

I love the absurdity of it. We needed a feel-good story, and to really hit Memphians in the feels, there had to be an element of “Wait, say what?” to the tale. After a month or so of increasingly dire news from the Tennessee legislative session, with tornadoes every other week just to add a little danger and destruction to the mix, the fugitive marsupial story felt nothing less than heaven-sent.

What makes the story even stranger, is that I don’t think the news would have gotten out if I hadn’t asked two zoo employees wading through Lick Creek what was going on.

“A kangaroo escaped,” one employee told me, confusing the missing wallaby for its larger and more famous marsupial relation.

“We haven’t seen a kangaroo,” he continued, “but we did see a beaver. It was this big.” He held his hands about three feet apart. I nodded my head, mumbled something about a beaver, and almost twisted my ankle running inside to call Jessica Faulk, the zoo’s communication specialist, for confirmation.

The details of the story came together (the fugitive mammal was a wallaby, not a kangaroo), people kept their eyes peeled for a glimpse of the creature, and the rest, as they say, is history.

Maybe it was the storm from the day before that cleared the air, but whatever it was, we needed it. Sometimes the monkeys have to escape Monkey Island, if I may reference another local legend.

So, as long as Tennessee legislators are gracing the home page of The New York Times website for things like child bride bills and praising Hitler as an example of turning one’s life around after a period of homelessness, we need the occasional lighthearted “WTF?” story to break the tension.

I propose a new Memphis rule, one to help us shoulder the embarrassment of being located in Tennessee and to take some of the pressure off our basketball team, at least as long as we’re also still in a pandemic. (Well, we are, even if we’re sick of talking about it.) Every so often, a prominent Memphis tourist destination needs to rock the news cycle with a preposterous story. The responsibility shouldn’t all fall on the zoo, either. Take turns getting in on the action.

So I’ll leave you with this question: After the next two or three times Tennessee makes national news for embarrassing reasons, who’s going to borrow Isaac Hayes’ Cadillac from the Stax Museum and go joyriding down 3rd Street?

Categories
News The Fly-By

MEMernet: The Runaway Wallaby and #MEMthis

Memphis on the internet.

Walla B.

Last week, a wily wallaby escaped from the Memphis Zoo. The animal’s first order of business was to set up a Twitter account and record its exploits out on the town.

Walla B. (JA’WALLAMANE) cracked jokes about local breweries, wanted to hook up for drinks at Overton Square, went to Huey’s, hinted at a run for county mayor, asked to be a duck master at The Peabody Hotel, and asked if Malco was playing Kangaroo Jack.

Posted to Twitter by @MemphisWallaby

#MEMThis

Last week’s #MEMTHIS had the MEMernet talking on Twitter. Created by the Memphis Grizzlies, it was meant to hashtag the team’s playoff run.

“Whoever made the decision for #MemThis ……. Bruh, WHY do we need brand new, forced ‘tag lines’ for the playoffs?” tweeted @JBthegiant.

@Isaac_Rivals explained, “You read it like Mem This. Sort of like ‘take this’…we’re going to put Memphis in your face & you gotta deal with it type of energy.”

But even the explanation was roasted. @jmtigers1974 tweeted, “I’m not brilliant at marketing/advertising but…If you gotta explain it to Joe Public, then it isn’t any good.”

To it all, @jonah_kaufman tweeted, “It’s easy to get, it’s just awful.”

Categories
News News Blog

Wandering Wallaby is Found!

The Memphis Zoo announced this morning that the missing wallaby has been found in the service yard near Rainbow Lake on zoo property.

Wallaby tracks. Photo courtesy Memphis Zoo.

“Zookeepers spotted new wallaby tracks this morning which led them to him,” said the release on social media. “The wallaby is back with his group at the hospital under observation and will be examined by our senior veterinarian before everyone returns to their exhibit! Thank you to our community for supporting us and celebrating his safe return!

We will update this story as more information becomes available.

Categories
News News Blog News Feature

Wallaby Escapes from Memphis Zoo

The sounds of splashing and voices echoing down Lick Creek, the small stream that meanders through the Vollintine-Evergreen neighborhood, alerted me to the sound of people wading past my house this morning.

I expected to find high school-aged teenagers playing hooky to try to sneak into the Memphis Zoo, but what I saw when I looked over the embankment was two zoo employees wearing rubber boots and shining a flashlight into a concrete-covered section of the creek.

“Are you looking for someone?” I asked, thinking I was just being a bit of a smart aleck.

“A kangaroo escaped,” one employee told me. The other person turned back to the creek and spoke to someone via a walkie talkie. I didn’t hear the entire exchange, but I did catch “didn’t make it this far,” apparently referring to the fugitive marsupial.

“We haven’t seen a kangaroo,” the first employee told me, “but we did see a beaver. It was this big.” He held his hands about three feet apart.

Lick Creek runs beneath the zoo and through Midtown Memphis, and I often see schools of small fish flitting through the shallow water. Ducks paddle along the creek, and I’ve seen a hawk hunt along the creek by day. That’s on a “normal” day though, when the water flows slowly and placidly. Yesterday, Memphis was hit by severe thunderstorms, high winds, and tornado conditions, and the waters of the creek rose to the height of its banks. One wonders if kangaroos can swim.

“We had trees down here and there, but our KangaZoo flooded really bad,” said Jessica Faulk with the zoo, when I reached out for comment.

Because of the storm, the zoo staff had team members relocate the kangaroos from their habit and to the animal hospital where they were quarantined. The zoo has three wallabies they had not yet announced, as the animals were still getting accustomed to the environment. When the zoo staff did a head count after the relocation process, they realized something was wrong.

It wasn’t a missing kangaroo — it was a fugitive wallaby.

“We had one wallaby missing,” she said. “They’re assuming it’s in Overton Park somewhere.”

She continued. “Our teams have been actively searching for him all morning. As far as we know, he’s alive and well and eating grass on the golf course.”

In a post to their social media page, the zoo said this: “Memphis Police Department is helping the search for the missing wallaby. If anyone spots the wallaby, please report it by calling the Memphis Zoo at 901-333-6500. Please include the location and time of the sighting in your message. Wallabies are smaller in stature than kangaroos. They are gentle animals … If spotted, please do not approach, and immediately call the number above.”

We will update this story as more becomes known.

Categories
News News Blog News Feature

New Deal Saves Greensward, Adds Parkland, Forest Land, and Zoo Parking Spaces

The Overton Park Greensward is kept whole in a new plan that will permanently end parking there, add 17 acres of forested parkland, add 300 parking spaces for the Memphis Zoo, and, perhaps, finally solve a decades-old problem. 

Leaders with the city of Memphis, Memphis Zoo, and Overton Park Conservancy (OPC), announced the new plan Tuesday afternoon. In it, properties will be reshuffled and repurposed to fit the needs of all involved. 

For decades, the zoo has used the 12-acre Greensward for overflow parking. The issue simmered until 2014 when Citizens to Protect Overton Park (CPOP) organized the “Get Off Our Lawn” campaign that brought the issue into focus and to the fore. By 2016, OPC and the zoo joined in mediation to find a solution. 

That solution aimed to reconfigure the zoo’s main parking lot to add 415 spaces, a number mandated by the Memphis City Council. This plan was paused to explore the cost of a new modular garage that would have been built on the surface lot on Prentiss Place. 

In 2021, projections put the cost of the garage at $5 million, above the $3 million both the zoo and OPC had committed to the original plan to reconfigure the main parking lot. In October, the groups announced they’d scratched the plan for the garage and would revert to the plan to pave the lot and take 2.4 acres of the Greensward. As construction was slated to get underway, this plan was halted late last year to explore other options.  

The new plan will:

• convert the zoo’s current maintenance facility (on the north side of the zoo on North Parkway) to zoo member parking

• add 300 new parking spaces for the zoo

• renovate and re-stripe the zoo’s current main lot (without expanding it) 

• vacate the city’s general services maintenance lot (about 12 acres on East Parkway) 

• add zoo maintenance facilities to that space on about six acres

• the remaining six acres will be converted to park space for visitors

 • this space will have a new access point to the Old Forest trails

•  establish a new walking trail around the north side of the Greensward, marking the separation from the field and zoo parking 

• return 17 acres of forest land to the Overton Park

• this land was held by the zoo for future expansion, particularly an exhibit called the “Chickasaw Bluffs”

• return a few acres of land close to Rainbow Lake from the zoo to the park 

• the zoo will give OPC $400,000

“This is a solution that we think works for everyone,” said Memphis Mayor Jim Strickland. “It adds significant new park space for Memphians, about 20 to 25 acres. 

“It preserves 17 acres of old forest and provides the zoo with the parking it needs as the top attraction in Memphis. It provides the zoo a quality maintenance area for its operations. It also provides both the conservancy and the zoo the opportunity to avoid spending for what has become an almost $2.5 million expansion of the existing lot.”

Some were shocked and disappointed when the garage idea was retired. However, Doug McGowan, the city’s Chief Operating Officer, said the project was more an exploration than a dedicated plan. When asked if this new plan was guaranteed to stick, McGowen said, “I guess it’s about as guaranteed as you’re going to get.” 

“You have all three organizations coming together saying this really brings us closer together in alignment, and that it forges the same vision of the park in the future,” McGowan said. “And the mayor and the council are behind it.”   

Strickland said work on the project will begin as early as this fall, when some fences begin to come down. The city won’t leave the general services area until summer of next year, however. This means the zoo can’t move its maintenance operations and Greensward parking will continue at least through this year and probably longer.  

When asked how the agreement came about, Tina Sullivan, executive director of the OPC said the groups simply continued to work on it. 

“Our organizations have come together to create a plan that sees them as parts of a united whole,” Sullivan said. “The zoo and the conservancy share a common focus on conservation. Today reflects a convergence toward our shared mission and our community partnership.”

Zoo president and CEO Jim Dean called the agreement “transformational” for the zoo. 

“The city’s General Services facilities will vastly improve our infrastructure at the zoo,” Dean said. “When completed, this project will not only solve our short-term parking requirements and help traffic flow. It will also provide a solution for our long-term parking needs.” 

Once the work is finished and the last car leaves the Greensward, Sullivan invited “all of you to a picnic and a very competitive game of volleyball on that space.”  

Categories
News News Blog

Zoo Babies, Botanic Garden Updates, and a Missing Horse

Memphis Zoo Welcomes Two New Babies

The Memphis Zoo recently welcomed two new babies around the new year, a dik-dik and a bongo. 

Hinata (pronounced Hee-nuh-tuh), which means “sunny place,” was born on New Year’s Eve. The female dik-dik was born to first-time mother, Willow, 2, and father, Mike, 10. Once the weather warms up, Hinata will be found in the Zambezi Hippo River Camp, where the dik-diks share an exhibit with an okapi and a helmeted Guineafowl. 

Zito, a male bongo, was the first animal born in the zoo this year. His name means “clumsy” – which the zoo claims he is – or big. “Once you see his ears, you’ll understand,” says the zoo. Zito was born to mother, Marley, and father, Franklin. 

Mother and baby will be on display in the African Veldt section of the zoo, weather permitting. 

New at the Garden

(Credit: Memphis Botanic Garden)

Two new projects are scheduled to open this summer at the Memphis Botanic Garden.

A new section of the Woodland Garden “is set to become the Garden’s premier showplace of native plants,” says the Garden. Improvements will also be made to better connect the Sara’s Place event venue with the Woodland, to include a new boardwalk, stone pathway, seating, and a scenic overlook. A new sculpture installation will also be part of these improvements. 

The Water Garden, first gifted by the Memphis Garden Club in 1965 and largely untouched since then, is going to get a complete makeover. When complete, this space will become accessible to the public during all operating hours. It will feature a water feature, new public art piece, seating for quiet reflection, and all new plantings. It will also be able to convert to a small event or pre-event space.

The improvements are part of a $6 million campus modernization project that began at the Botanic Gardens in 2019. 

Missing Horse

(Credit: Agricenter International)

UPDATE: Evelyn, the missing horse, was found dead Thursday morning, Agricenter officials said in a statement.

“We thank the Shelby County Sheriff’s Office, Memphis Police Department, and the Mid-South community for their assistance and outpouring of support in the search for Evelyn,” reads the statement. “We extend our sincerest condolences to the owners and their families during this time.”

Officials from Agricenter International’s Show Place Arena are asking the public to help locate a missing horse. 

The horse, Evelyn (above), is a three-year-old Palomino quarter horse standing 15 hands high, about five feet. She was last seen in her stall in the early morning hours of Saturday, January 15th. She and her owners had competed in the Battle in the Saddle competition at the arena. 

Those who see Evelyn are asked to contact the Shelby County Sheriff’s non-emergency line at (901) 222-5500 and provide her current location. Be cautious and avoid trying to catch her on your own. Keep an eye out for potential dangers to the horse or others.

Owners Jamie and John Osborne can be reached at (901) 734-5064 or loves2barrelrace@hotmail.com, in addition to Agricenter International at (901) 757-7777.

Categories
News News Blog Uncategorized

Zoo to Open AquiFUR Splash Pad This Spring

A new splash pad is on the way for the Memphis Zoo in the spring. 

The AquiFUR is now under construction in the area that once housed the zoo’s hippos before they were moved to the Zambezi River Hippo camp in 2016. 

The splash pad will be an immersive, zero-depth water play area with slides, dump-buckets, interactive water toys, and a special section just for toddlers, according to the zoo. It will also feature luxury cabanas and party rooms “great for families, groups, birthday parties, and other events.” The AquiFUR will be for children 10 years and younger. 

“Over the years our visitors have repeatedly demonstrated that they enjoy the few water features at the zoo,” reads a statement form the zoo. “We wanted to be a safe place that can be enjoyed by all even during the extremely hot days we experience in Memphis. AquiFUR should provide a great oasis for our younger visitors and their parents to cool off while spending a fun filled day at the zoo.”

The splash pad will have an Egyptian theme, “as a tribute to the very beginning of our city.” The AquiFUR gets its name from the Memphis aquifer, according to the zoo, and has a “playful spin for our animals.” 

Categories
News The Fly-By

MEMernet: Frogs, Oranges, Duck, and the Little Rock La Quinta

Memphis on the internet.

Behind the Curtain

Here’s how it works: Memphis Zoo researchers issue a paper in the journal Conservation Science and Practice titled, “Post-release comparisons of amphibian growth reveal challenges with sperm cryopreservation as a conservation tool.” The zoo issues a press release headlined, “Memphis Zoo Research Team Finds Out How to Build a New Wild Population.” We present it here like, “Heh. Look. Frogs doin’ it.”

Orange ya?

Posted to Nextdoor by Martin Rosenblum

Martin Rosenblum caught this display of mandarin oranges at the Sanderlin Kroger last week.

Well, are you?

Posted to Nextdoor by Diane Martin

“Hi,” Diane Martin said on Nextdoor. “Are you missing this duck?”

Tweet of the Week

“If you think 3 floors of a swinger’s convention at the Little Rock La Quinta is a sight to behold, you, dear sir or madam, have not seen the side show of wonder and grotesquerie that is checkout time at aforementioned La Quinta,” tweeted Cory Branan.

Categories
Opinion The Last Word

Memphis Artist Illustrates Battle for the Greensward

Memphis artist Martha Kelly brings her talents as a painter to the fight to protect the Greensward at Overton Park.

Martha Kelly is a Memphis artist who is passionate about the city’s public green spaces. She has followed the struggle to protect the Overton Park Greensward, which has been ongoing for years. Martha maintains a home gallery of her paintings and prints in Midtown Memphis. To see more, here’s her website.

Categories
At Large Opinion

Greensward Redux

Let us hearken now to those halcyon days of 2016, back to the difficult final months of the Great Battle of the Greensward. For those of you new to the history of the Kingdom of Memphis, let me share the tale: The Memphis Zoo — led at that time by a rather intransigent fellow named Chuck “You and the Horse You Rode In On” Brady — had begun to allow increasing numbers of cars to park on the Overton Park Greensward, a large, flat, grassy field used by park patrons for Frisbee football, soccer, picnics, and the occasional drum circle.

Over several years, the zoo kept expanding its parking footprint, finally going so far as to set up temporary fencing across the middle of the Greensward — usually on nice weekend days. On one side of the fence were people doing the aforementioned park things. On the other side were cars, SUVs, trucks, and the occasional bus, which left dead grass, mud, and deep, rutted tire tracks in the Greensward, rendering it useless for recreation even when it wasn’t being parked on.

Things started getting really heated in 2014. Park lovers formed groups: Get Off Our Lawn (GOOL) and Citizens to Preserve Overton Park (CPOP). Activists stood on nearby street corners urging zoo patrons to park on nearby streets, rather than despoiling the Greensward. Aerial photographs were taken that showed just how much of the people’s parkland was being taken over by a private entity. The pictures got national attention. Protestors were arrested. Houses all over Midtown bore signs urging Memphis to save the Greensward. Then the zoo cut down some trees. Some activists threatened to begin spray-painting cars. A zoo sign at the park entrance was defaced. Things were tense.

And then, in the winter of 2016, newly elected Mayor Jim Strickland managed to get both sides into mediation. After months of costly negotiation, a compromise was struck. The zoo would be allowed to enlarge its lot to 415 spaces, taking some of the Greensward, but with the great majority of the land being preserved. The zoo subsequently announced that it would build a parking garage on nearby Prentiss Place and wouldn’t need to expand its lot. Huzzah! Parking on the Greensward was a thing of the past. Peace reigned in the Kingdom.

At least it did until last Friday night at 5:06 p.m., when the zoo and city issued a joint press release stating that the Prentiss garage project was being scrapped because it was too expensive and that the zoo would go back to the lot-expansion plan, and, oh, while it was being expanded, the zoo would once again be letting its customers park on the Greensward. Enjoy your weekend. Nothing to see here.

This is some seriously tone-deaf policy and very stupid politics. The zoo has amply demonstrated over the past five years that it can operate without parking on the Greensward. The zoo has also amply demonstrated that it has the resources to raise millions of dollars from its patrons and funders. Now it can’t afford a parking garage? There’s an aroma of fish here. You don’t do a Friday night news dump unless you know you’re doing something that doesn’t bear scrutiny in the light of day.

Activists are already meeting and planning. This move is not going to play well with those who went through all this drama five years ago. And I need not remind those who’ve lived here a while that Overton Park has been under assault before, and that its supporters (then derided as “little old ladies in tennis shoes”) once managed to defeat the mighty U.S. government when it announced plans to split the park with Interstate 40 more than 50 years ago. Overton Park is the only place in the country where I-40 was stopped and forced to take a detour.

The force is strong in this place, this Old Forest, this people’s park. There is a history here, and the Memphis Zoo and the city of Memphis would be wise to take a cue from it.