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Let There Be Light

Light of my life, fire of my roasted chestnuts. My spirit, my cheer, ’tis the season of approaching the light, not the light — this isn’t a Charles Dickens’ story — but the twinkling lights. And boy, oh boy, does Memphis have the twinkling lights for you, but time is ticking.

For starters, the Memphis Botanic Garden has brought back its Holiday Wonders, this year with an updated layout covering eight acres and featuring larger-than-life characters from the “Alice’s Adventures” exhibition. Only this time, the large sculptures will be covered with lights, instead of greenery and flowers. Guests will also enjoy interactive activities, and on December 22nd, dogs are welcome to take in the spectacle, too. Holiday Wonders lasts through December 23rd.

Meanwhile, the zoo is hosting its annual Zoo Lights, on select nights through January 1st, with gorgeous displays, new and old, from the classic Twinkle Tunnel to the brand-new Chinese lanterns. Guests can take a ride on the Ferris wheel and a spin on the ice rink. Plus, Magic Mr. Nick will make an appearance or two, and so will some of the animals for meet and greets.

And, of course, no Memphis holiday would be complete without a drive through Shelby Farms Park’s Starry Nights, where millions of lights will dazzle you in creative displays. The event also happens to be Shelby Farms’ largest fundraising event, with proceeds going to support daily operations at the park and the Shelby Farms Greenline. On Tuesday, December 27th, the attraction will be closed to cars for a Walk + Bike the Lights Night, where guests can take a walk or ride their bikes through the glowing nights. Starry Nights runs through December 30th, concluding with the annual BuffaGLO run. The BuffaGLO run is a family-friendly 2.25-mile fun run, with strollers and leashed dogs welcome. For more information, visit shelbyfarmspark.org.

Holiday Wonders at the Garden, Memphis Botanic Garden, through December 23rd, 5-8:30 p.m., $10-14.

Zoo Lights, Memphis Zoo, Through January 1, 5:30-9:30 p.m., $14-$19.

Starry Nights, Shelby Farms Park, through December 30, 6-10 p.m., $29.95-$35/car.

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Kickstart Your New Year With Shelby Farms’ BuffaGLO Run

With the last two years not being anyone’s year, we’re just going to have to run with whatever 2022 brings. But at the very least, you can start the year on a lighter note by joining in on Shelby Farms Park’s Starry Nights fun with the BuffaGLO Run.

“It’s your last chance to see the lights for this year’s season,” says Rebecca Dailey, the park’s communications specialist. “And it’s a great way to kickstart your new year with some physical activity.” The 2.25-mile race is untimed, so you can stroll and stop and take pictures by the lights or, as Dailey puts it, you can “run at the speed of light.” Either way, the path will be aglow until 9 p.m., so don your favorite glow stick necklaces and neon running pants for this event. Plus, strollers and dogs are welcome, so the whole family can be a part of the fun.

This year’s path will be a bit brighter than previous years with the park’s addition of more displays, including some Memphis-themed ones. “We have a display version of the Hernando DeSoto Bridge that’s lit up like the Mighty Lights,” Dailey points out as an example. Another addition to this season’s run is a new fundraising element. “Runners can personally fundraise or add an additional donation to their registration fee. Even something as simple as registering can help the park stay open 365 days.”

After all, the park is beautiful year-round, even without the allure of Starry Nights. “People don’t think of winter as the peak park time, but it is a great opportunity for anyone who sets fitness goals for their New Year’s resolutions,” Dailey says. “We just want to encourage people to get out and enjoy themselves and use the park for rest and respite which is just as needed, for mental fitness.”

BuffaGlo Run, Shelby Farms Park, 6903 Great View, Sunday, January 2nd, 7 p.m., $25, register online.

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Why Are There So Many Dead Fish at Shelby Farms?

Facebook/Zeina Alwafai

Hundreds of dead shad on the shore of Shelby Farms’ Hyde Lake

Anyone who has been near Hyde Lake at Shelby Farms Park recently, has likely noticed the large number of dead fish in and around the lake — and the smell that comes with it.

What happened to all this fish? Well, it’s not COVID-19, or algae, or chemicals, but the changing temperatures.

Dead fish at Shelby Farms Park from r/memphis

Why Are There So Many Dead Fish at Shelby Farms?


The fish people are seeing are Threadfin shad, Angie Whitfield, marketing and communications manager for Shelby Farms Park Conservancy, said. The fluctuating temperatures are causing a natural die-off of the species, she said.

Park staff are working to remove the fish from the shore, she adds. Meanwhile, the other species of fish in the lake have not been affected and fishing is still open at Hyde Lake and other lakes throughout the park.

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Food & Drink Hungry Memphis

New Restaurants Headed to Shelby Farms

Justin Fox Burks

The front porch of the FedEx Event Center overlooks Hyde Lake.

Two new restaurants are on the way to Shelby Farms Park.

Cheffie’s Cafe owners will open their third location in the grab-and-go space in the First Tennessee Foundation Visitors Center. Owners of Flight and Southern Social will open a new restaurant concept called Coastal Fish Company in the FedEx Event Center.

The moves come after The Kitchen, Kimble Musk’s fine-dining concept, closed in the FedEx Event Center in November.

“Shelby Farms Park Conservancy had the opportunity to select a new partner for food service at the Park, and we’re excited to welcome not one, but two new local restaurant partners to Shelby Farms Park,” said Jen Andrews, CEO of the Shelby Farms Park Conservancy. “Many Park visitors told us they were interested in fast-and-fun, family dining options for active park users, and many were also interested in special occasion and fine dining options capitalizing on the one-of-a-kind sunset views across Hyde Lake.

“We’re thrilled to be able to offer two distinct dining experiences that create a wide range of options for our visitors.”

Tom Powers and Russ Graham, owners of Flight and Souther Social, are currently at work to open a new concept, Porch & Parlor, at Overton Square. The Shelby Farms concept will be the fourth restaurant in their portfolio, according to Shelby Farms.

Southern Social/Facebook

The filet at Southern Social.

The new concept will be announced soon. It will serve dinner daily and brunch on Saturday and Sunday. The 4,792-square-foot restaurant space is located on the east end of Hyde Lake next to the FedEx Event Center. It has an additional 3,200 square feet of patio space.

The restaurant space opened in 2016 along with the $52 million “Heart of the Park” capital project. The restaurant space is designed to generate revenue for the nonprofit Shelby Farms Park Conservancy (SPFC).

The Kitchen’s closing came as the company’s “national business strategy evolved,” according to a Shelby Farms news release. The conservancy began searching for a new operator in January and a team interviewed more than a dozen local operators before offering the opportunity to Powers and Graham.

Flight/Facebook

the Flight dining room.

“We immediately recognized the unique opportunity to provide an excellent dining experience in a signature Memphis setting at Shelby Farms Park,” said Graham. “The beautiful sunset views overlooking Hyde Lake will be the perfect complement to the exceptional hospitality, service, and cuisine we will deliver to our guests.”

Cheffie’s was chosen as the grab-and-go vendor to “ensure a wider range of dining options and price points to serve both destination diners and active park visitors and families.”

Cheffie’s Cafe/Facebook

A wrap and chips plate from Cheffie’s.

“At Cheffie’s Cafe, we serve fresh, healthy and delicious food in a casual, family-friendly environment,” said Cheffie’s spokesman Matt Wilson. “These choices are just what Shelby Farms Park visitors are looking for.

“We already know a lot of the Shelby Farms Greenline users from our High Point Terrace location, and we look forward to making new friends at our Shelby Farms Park location.”

Cheffie’s at Shelby Farms Park will offer breakfast, lunch, and dinner selections daily. The 950 square-foot, grab-and-go cafe has indoor seating, along with outdoor seating on the AutoZone Front Porch.

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Shelby Farms Park Conservancy Names New Executive Director

Jen Andrews

Jen Andrews, the first employee of Shelby Farms Park Conservancy back in 2006, has been named executive director of the organization, following the departure of long-time head Laura Morris.

Andrews, 32, was hired in 2006, when the conservancy was called Shelby Farms Park Alliance, and she soon became the director of development and communications. She’ll move into the executive director position on March 21st. Morris, who had served as executive director since 2010, announced her retirement last October.

The conservancy is currently leading a $52 million “Heart of the Park” plan to transform the 4,500-acre park with a larger Patriot Lake (expanding from 52 to 80 acres), a new visitors’ center, an event center with a restaurant, a music pavilion, wetland and forest walks, and more.

“This is my heart’s work. It’s a project I’ve been committed to for a long time and to be selected after an exhaustive national search process is a great honor,” said Andrews. “I’m excited to lead the park’s outstanding team, and my top priority is to make sure we deliver on the promises made in the master plan and on our community’s hopes and dreams for this treasured public asset.”

Tom Grimes, chairman of the conservancy board of directors, said: “Shelby Farms Park is a world-class park and deserves a world-class executive director. We are very pleased that the best candidate turned out to be the park’s own Jen Andrews. Her knowledge of the park is unrivaled, and her thoughtful, inclusive, and transparent leadership style is well-suited to lead Shelby Farms Park as the country’s next great urban park.”

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News The Fly-By

The Kitchen Raises Ire and Questions

Tempers flared and questions arose when news surfaced last week that a new restaurant concept called The Kitchen was coming to town.

Multi-millionaire Kimbal Musk owns the Boulder, Colorado-based restaurant chain and plans to open The Kitchen inside a new visitors center at Shelby Farms Park in 2016 and a more casual concept called The Kitchen Next Door at Crosstown Concourse in 2017.

Many Memphians looked beyond local stories that heralded the chain as “acclaimed” (The Commercial Appeal) and “renowned” (Memphis Daily News) and found a long feature at medium.com about Musk’s plans headlined “The Musk Who Wants to Change the Way We Eat.”

The story painted an ugly picture of Memphis, going beyond the typical “fattest city” designation to call Memphis “a toxic combination of cholesterol and poverty.” Musk saw these problems as an “opportunity for change,” and he and The Kitchen were the ones to bring it, according to the story.

Shelby Farms Park Conservancy

Rendering of new Shelby Farms Park visitors center

In fact, he said coming to Memphis wasn’t about the money, even calling the move “questionable” as a financial decision, according to the story. “If we didn’t have the social aspect, we would go to Las Vegas, New York, Los Angeles, places like that,” Musk was quoted as saying. It was this idea that rubbed many the wrong way.

“Musk has an interesting vision and plan, and I hope he succeeds,” Memphian Caroline Mitchell Carrico wrote in the Medium story’s comments. “However, I also bristle whenever my city is portrayed as a backwater that is dependent on outside saviors.”

Backlash like this (and worse) permeated social media at the end of the week. It even prompted local entrepreneur Taylor Berger to pen a blog post called “Kimbal Musk Is Not An Asshole,” a sort of backlash to the backlash.

“Take it on faith, y’all, that Kimbal Musk is not here to pillage our city,” Berger wrote. “He is exactly the kind of person, with the kind of vision and power to execute, that we need right now if we have any hope of becoming a world-class city.”

Musk is widely credited for shepherding the farm-to-table dining movement and said in a news statement he is “thrilled” to bring it to Memphis.

“Memphis is a vibrant and diverse city that is on the verge of a Real Food (sic) renaissance,” Musk said in the statement.

That raised the ire of Tsunami chef and owner Ben Smith, who has been locally sourcing ingredients since 1998 and hosting a farmers market in his parking lot for the past three years.

“My initial reaction was, Wait a minute, man, there are some people who have been here for a number of years that have really focused on this farm-to-table thing,” Smith said. “The interaction and relationship between farmers and Memphis restaurants is already well-established and well-supported.”

Questions also arose about The Kitchen’s locations — both in taxpayer-supported venues — that could have gone to local talent.

Shelby Farms Park Executive Director Laura Morris said her group issued a request for proposals, made a presentation to the Memphis Restaurant Association, and formed an ad hoc committee to “spread the word” about the opportunity. But the park never got a deal on the table from local restaurateurs, she said.

The Kitchen did not get a special deal or special incentives, she said.

“Looking at the lease, I’d say it’s a little bit above market for the park,” Morris said. “We did pretty well.”

The Kitchen will lease the restaurant and the grab-and-go counter at Shelby Farms for $172,260 for the first five years, according to the lease. Rent will rise slightly in the next five years.

Morris said she was aware that not everyone is excited about bringing in an outside operator, “but it’s not like we put a Cheesecake Factory at the park.”

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Treetop Adventure Course To Open March 21st

On the first day of spring, Memphians will have the opportunity to swing from the trees — literally.

Go Ape, the city’s first treetop adventure course, will open March 21st at Shelby Farms Park. The course has six zip lines, two Tarzan-style swings, ropes, ladders, bridges, and trapezes. The 42 obstacles included in the course are set up 40 feet up in the forest canopy. The course takes two to three hours to complete.

Go Ape’s Shelby Farms location will be its eighth in the country since it launched in 2010. It’s the first Go Ape location in Tennessee.

“Go Ape is an exciting addition to Shelby Farms Park and a perfect compliment to the current and planned recreational amenities in the park” said Shelby Farms Park Conservancy’s Executive Director, Laura Morris. “Our vision is to give rise to a celebrated 21st century park, and through this partnership with Go Ape we are taking fun to new heights.”

Scene from a Go Ape course

  • Scene from a Go Ape course
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News The Fly-By

Sierra Club Proposed Alternatives to Shelby Farms Parkway

Each weekday, rush hour traffic backs up along Walnut Grove and Farm Road inside Shelby Farms Park, turning part of the city’s largest urban green space into a busy and congested thoroughfare.

The proposed $38 million Shelby Farms Parkway, which is currently under review by the Federal Highway Administration, would divert that traffic around the western edge of the park. But members of the local Sierra Club Chickasaw Group say they have a simpler solution that would save the city millions of dollars and solve traffic problems sooner.

The Sierra Club opposes the Shelby Farms Parkway plan because they believe it takes away too much park land and feels too much like an interstate.

Last week, the Sierra Club held a series of public rallies near Shelby Farms to bring some awareness to the alternatives, which were first proposed by national traffic engineering consultant Walter Kulash of the Center for Humans and Nature in Chicago. Kulash was invited to Memphis last year by the Sierra Club to study alternatives to Shelby Farms Parkway.

Courtesy of Sierra Club

Right: Farm Road with right turn lane added

Those alternatives include: 1) building a longer left turning lane onto Farm Road from eastbound Walnut Grove, 2) building a longer left turning lane for southbound Farm Road traffic turning onto Mullins Station or adding a right turning lane, 3) creating a westbound auxiliary lane from Farm Road to Humphries, 4) extending the northbound merging lane from Farm Road to Walnut Grove, and 5) making adjustments to signal timing.

“When you are headed east on Walnut Grove and you get to Farm Road, that left turn lane is not long enough. It doesn’t hold enough cars, so cars end up waiting to turn left in a lane that should be a travel lane,” said Dennis Lynch, transportation chair for the state and local Sierra Club.

City engineer John Cameron said the Sierra Club’s proposals may provide some short-term relief but that they would only be a “Band-Aid for the situation.” He says traffic counts through the area will rise in the future and that the larger Shelby Farms Parkway project will be needed.

“If the parkway project moves forward, we don’t want to put a whole lot of money into Farm Road. What the Sierra Club is proposing would cost between a half-million and a million dollars just to turn around three to five years later and take it all out,” Cameron said.

Under the Shelby Farms Parkway plan, Farm Road, will be closed to through traffic and used as a pedestrian route. The Memphis City Council delayed a funding match for the parkway plan earlier this year, but Cameron said they’ll be seeking funding from the council again next year. Cameron said the parkway could be fully constructed in three to five years.

Laura Morris, executive director for the Shelby Farms Park Conservancy, said the conservancy is backing the most recent parkway design, which wraps the new road around the western edge of the park. Morris says it does not “damage the park and also relieves traffic.” Morris said she doesn’t oppose the Sierra Club’s ideas, but she doesn’t believe they’ll solve congestion in the future.

“We don’t disagree that temporary fixes like this could relieve some of the pressure right now, but we know that won’t be enough,” Morris said. “It might fix today’s problems but only by a small measure.”

Lynch doesn’t agree.

“We don’t think the parkway is needed and anything that can be done to keep it from being built is a good thing,” Lynch said. “I calculated that the cost to the people stuck in congestion. The value of their time plus the extra gasoline they’re using over five to six years comes to $32 million to $58 million. But it would only cost the city $1 million to make the improvements.”

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Current Entrance to Shelby Farms Park Set to Close Permanently

Screen_shot_2014-07-15_at_3.59.32_PM.png

On Monday, July 21st, the Pine Lake Drive entrance to Shelby Farms Park will close forever as part of the park’s master plan. Park users will instead enter Shelby Farms through a new entrance a quarter mile north of the old one, off Farm Road.

On the same day, construction of the expanded Patriot Lake will begin, so construction equipment will occasionally be crossing Farm Road. That may affect traffic for about six months, according to Shelby County Mayor Mark Luttrell’s office. Although access from Farm Road will remain open throughout construction, drivers may expect delays.

For more on the Shelby Farms Park master plan, check out Chris Davis’ Flyer cover story.

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News The Fly-By

Farm Futures

Four generations — some old enough for their AARP cards and others too young to drive — gathered at Shelby Farms Visitor’s Center Saturday, December 1st, to brainstorm about the future of Shelby Farms Park.

At 1 p.m., about 30 adults, ranging in age from late 20s to early 80s, gathered at the center as part of a series of public input sessions. Later in the day, nearly 30 teens met in the same room for the same purpose, but their ideas couldn’t have been more different.

“I don’t want to see more development,” said Travis Handwerker, a middle-aged man who frequents the park to walk his dog. “I want to see the naturalness enhanced. I don’t want to see hot dog stands.”

Another man at the early-afternoon meeting echoed his concern: “I’d hate to see vendors come in.”

But hours later, several teens pitched the idea of opening a “green café” serving coffee and healthy snacks.

“How close is the nearest restaurant? And I’m not talking about a McDonald’s,” said 17-year-old Nick Finlayson of Middle College High School.

The Shelby Farms Conservancy asked attendees to place suggestions on notecards. The ideas will be compiled in a report and presented to the three design firms selected as finalists in the Shelby Farms master planning process.

Hargreaves and Associates of San Francisco, Berkeley-based Tom Leader Studio, and New York City’s Field Operations will use the input in their master plans. Those plans will be unveiled to the public in March during another set of input meetings.

“Many people are concerned about overdevelopment. They don’t want the park to lose its natural feel,” said Laura Adams, interim director of public engagement and development for the Shelby Farms Park Conservancy.

Adams said the most common requests have been more bathrooms, improvements to the outdoor amphitheater, and adding rustic camping sites. Sustainable energy, such as solar panels on the visitor’s center or windmill energy, are also recurring themes.

At the teen meeting, suggestions were a little more far-reaching. In addition to an eatery, teens would like to see a ropes course, a rock-climbing wall, a seasonal ice-skating rink, and a swimming pool with a water slide. One teenager even suggested a water park.

“Change is always good. That’s something that people [in the adult meetings] may have a problem with, but you have to develop this park to get teens to come out and use it,” said 17-year-old Brandon Asemah, president of the Shelby Farms Youth Alliance. “Memphis is not very teen or kid-friendly. Why do you think we have so much crime?”

Finlayson agreed. Though he lives in Midtown, he says he rarely visits nearby Overton Park because there’s nothing to do.

“Parks just being parks aren’t that appealing to teens,” said Finlayson.

But the adults and teens did agree on a few things: They’d like to see the park stay open later with nighttime family activities, such as live music or astronomy programs. And everyone seemed to agree that the restrooms could use an upgrade.

Said Memphis University School senior Chris Bloodworth: “It’s not groundbreaking or revolutionary, but how about some real bathrooms at this place?”