A Dangerous Distance

Angelou Ezeilo builds creek side trails on MLK Day 2015. Photo by Bill Head

Angelou Ezeilo builds creek side trails on MLK Day 2015. Photo by Bill Head

I knew only enough to be intrigued when long time friend Angelou Ezeilo asked me to interview her about her new book at a public book signing party.

When I read an advance copy of Engage, Connect, Protect I was all in. Her work in Atlanta helping to build the BeltLine, the South Fork Conservancy and PATH foundation trails is the backbone of the tale.   

“It was the warmth and kindliness of old black ladies that first opened my eyes to the dangerous distance between people of color and the environment.” That’s the opening line and it only gets better.

This Spelman woman, gorgeous and full of life, drove all over Atlanta buying land for these non-profit foundations building trails and parks for the public good. Much of the land she needed to buy was owned by people in majority black neighborhoods who trusted her too much. “They’d tell me ‘Oh baby, whatever you think I need to do, you go ahead and do that.’ I’d be thinking, Noooo! I need to negotiate against you!”

The ethical conflict, she writes, waked her to the need to educate people of color, the revelation that “my people were the victims of a massive information gap.” The awakening led her to form the Greening Youth Foundation, the nation’s largest organization connecting under-represented young adults to the outdoors and careers in conservation. 

When we arrived for the book signing party at Georgia Power’s headquarters in midtown, I knew we’d have some fun. The crowd was familiar, the hors d’oeuvres healthy and delicious. When we settled into armchairs for the interview, I hoped our friendship would smooth any potential awkwardness of the racial conversation. And it did.  Now she and the growing staff at the Greening Youth Foundation are educating, by example, the value of being outdoors, working in green jobs and sending entrepreneurs of color into that still mostly white world.  The trails she helped to build help Atlantans connect across cultural and geographic divides.

But her story begins with her own pleasure in being outside, in trusting that nature itself is a good place to be. The BeltLine coming through Morningside connecting a ring of neighborhoods to each other is a reality because of her early work. We can read her book, published by New Society publishers in Canada. And then we can take a walk outside, in the parks and nature preserves she helped to create, and be grateful for her work.

Sally Sears December 2019

Good at Waiting? A Very Big If

Morningside Elementary 5th graders show their sprouts. April 2014

Morningside Elementary 5th graders show their sprouts. April 2014

Atlanta, GA January 2020 A slow experiment is unfolding not too far from Morningside Elementary School on Rock Springs Road.   We are tantalizingly close to learning the results. And if you, like me, can barely remember what you ate for lunch yesterday, imagine a high school senior remembering a six year old science project from elementary school!

In 2014, patient science teacher Valerie Taylor invited foresters to bring advanced hybrid American chestnut seeds to her second floor classroom. These scientists told fifth graders the tragedy of the Asian chestnut blight that felled as many as 4 billion American chestnut trees. 

If these advanced hybrids grew, they promised, the students could be part of a national experiment to restore the beloved tree... and maybe even roast chestnuts from these very seeds before they finished high school. How's that for a Big If?

That fall, students and Boy Scouts from Haygood United Methodist Church transplanted seedlings into the banks of the South Fork of Peachtree Creek. When some of the scouts hunted them two years later, half the trees were missing, lost under a tangle of choking vines. But more than a dozen were growing. 

A national author included the Morningside Elementary experiment in her new book  Champion: The Comeback Tale of the American Chestnut Tree by Sally M. Walker.

Mark Stoakes and John French with The American Chestnut Foundation share pleasure in the growth. Sept. 26, 2019

Mark Stoakes and John French with The American Chestnut Foundation share pleasure in the growth. Sept. 26, 2019

Now? Fall 2019, five years after the Morningside seedlings found a home on the South Fork, the foresters returned. In the years since that first experiment hundreds of volunteers restored other native plants and trees to fragile creek bank.  Searching beside poplars, beech and redbuds, the scientists spotted one tall chestnut. Thriving, towering over them they seized the slender trunk and shook it with obvious delight.

On a higher bank, they found five more growing tall.  The scientists pinched the branches, measured their growth and predicted some are likely to flower in the spring of 2020.   That success helped foresters agree to plant more native chestnut hybrids upstream closer to Morningside Elementary School in Herbert Taylor Park, off Johnson Road at Noble Drive.  A new group of Friends of Herbert Taylor Park is finding room and volunteers to restore native trees this fall on the banks of the South Fork of Peachtree Creek.  

So what about that six year old promise in the Morningside Elementary School classroom?   If these trees flower in the spring of 2020, they could produce chestnuts in the fall 2020. Just as those fifth graders are high school seniors.  If so, it will be a promise kept. Will many of those fifth graders come back as seniors to see the results of an experiment they may have forgotten they began? Now that's an entirely different experiment in memory.

Red in Tooth and Claw

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Photo by Steven Rushing

Photo by Steven Rushing

by Sally Sears

In the rustling leaves at the edge of the creek running through Morningside, I put my foot down carefully. Very very carefully.  A chipmunk skittered away, her stripes zig- sagging in the afternoon sun.

A few steps farther I heard a faint splash.  On the far bank beyond the sandbar I could barely see a Vee of water pointing my way.  Nothing but a bright black nose  made the bank, then slipped up into the woods. Before he vanished the sleek bends of an otter shook the creek water from his chocolate pelt.

The creek’s nature corridor linking Morningside parks always rewards me with more than I expect in the middle of Atlanta’s 5 million people.

The trails and parks are brilliant in June’s early heat, before the bushes leaf out and obscure the view.  I keep my feet on the trail in the summer. Year round, really, after a close encounter with a big, coiled copperhead during Zonolite Park’s trail building.  Georgous, mottled and sitting calmly just at the edge of the trail.

Yesterday a news story caught my ear about dogs and snake bites.  Most happen when dogs are off-leash, leaping on top of a startled snake. This year’s wet spring makes our Morningside underbrush thicker, making off-leash dogs leap higher.

Veterinarians at the Briarcliff Animal Hospital are seeing their share of doggie snake bites this time of year. They reminded me it’s important to get the best look you can at the snake, to decide if it is venomous.  But the vets’ best advice? Keep your dog on a leash. It’s not just the law. It’s safety for dog and snake, too.

Two weeks ago, on a sidewalk near my house, two large dogs bounded onto a little dog on a leash, terrifying the owner and almost killing the little dog. In the wild, in the woods, where dogs are less predictable? Even more important to keep dogs leashed, veterinarians tell me.

Over years of working to conserve and restore Atlanta parks and creek side trails, I’ve seen nature red in tooth and claw when dogs meet, one on and one off-leash.

Often, a dog or walker gets scared, jumped on, bitten or worse.

In the creek at Deepdene Park, one of the Olmsted Linear Parks on Ponce de Leon, the problem worsened until regular park users began speaking up. Asking somebody to use a leash may sound rude to the Southern ear, but it is safer for people and pets than waiting for public safety officials to enforce leash laws.

I saw a  better- matched contest for nature lovers at a park cleanup on MLK Day 2019. Photographer Steven Rushing trained his lens on a magnificent red-shouldered hawk.  The bird swooped in circles across the meadow, missing scampering rodents by inches. Then, on a last pass, the hawk found dinner.

English poets remind us nature is red in tooth and claw. Find proof yourself along the creek trails through Morningside.

Will the new bridge on Briarcliff build better connections?

Carol Long lives a block off Briarcliff Road. She is a nurse practitioner in an office less than two miles away on Briarcliff Road.  Walk to work? Ride a bicycle? Not a chance. She drives to work because she says she has to. She blames increasing traffic and the absence of safe sidewalks or bicycle lanes on Briarcliff.

Olive Evans and daughter Alice live near the Briarcliff Road bridge over the South Fork. Their daily walks could include a creek trail and sidewalks along Briarcliff. Photo Kathryn Farrell

Olive Evans and daughter Alice live near the Briarcliff Road bridge over the South Fork. Their daily walks could include a creek trail and sidewalks along Briarcliff. Photo Kathryn Farrell

“It will only get worse unless we push for better solutions,” she told a committee of neighbors meeting since January to find ways to improve neighborhood connections.

Carol fears Briarcliff Road traffic will worsen as the Georgia Department of Transportation replaces the aging bridge over the South Fork of Peachtree Creek starting in 15 months.

Plans to make better connectivity part of the G-DOT bridge project won support from a collection of neighborhood groups meeting monthly since January 2019.

The South Fork Conservancy led the brainstorming with representatives from DHCA, Emory Village, Victoria Estates and Briar Hills. Carol Long went house to house, finding people unaware of the bridge project and eager for trails and sidewalks linking them to Sage Hills, Emory, Peavine Creek and the CDC.

Over a hundred homes surveyed on Anita Place, Carol Lane, Briar Hills Drive and Poplar Grove Drive were enthusiastic about safer connections and off road trails to Emory and downstream to Herbert Taylor Park.

Six months of meetings led the group to adopt these three ideas.

1)   Create an attractive and safe surface storm water retention area which can be used as a green space park and trail, similar to the Old Fourth Ward park in Atlanta.  Commissioner Jeff Rader is asking DeKalb Parks to move this project forward.

2)   Build access from the bridge corners to the new park and trails along the South Fork of Peachtree Creek. G-DOT consultants say they are considering how to connect at least one corner of the bridge to trails underneath.

3)   Build sidewalks and cycle lanes along Briarcliff Road, from North Decatur Road to Johnson Road. DeKalb County traffic engineers say this project is included in the current T-SPLOST funding.

Druid Hills Civic Association’s executive Committee voted unanimously in favor of the proposals in May, 2019. 

SIDEBAR ON NEW BRIDGE:

Bridge built in 1939. Signs of scour indicate need to replace.

To be replaced in stages, 240 feet long by 49.52 feet wide

Briarcliff Road will remain open to 2 way auto traffic through construction.

Sidewalks and bicycle lanes will be included on both sides

The project area includes Kay Lane south to Carol Lane.

Construction expected Dec. 2020, completed in 18 months.

Source: G-DOT

Peavine Creek’s Rebirth: Emory Village Celebrates Wildlife and Community

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Work by the South Fork Conservancy and Volunteers Continues to Restore Neighborhood Waterway

ATLANTA, GA (October 28, 2018) – Rubber ducks raced through Peavine Creek on Sunday as part of the 6th annual Open Streets event in Emory Village. People gathered on the bridge across North Decatur Road to see which three lucky ducks would win. The event “was a celebration of the successful ongoing restoration of Peavine Creek and the reemergence of the creek as a central component of this neighborhood,” said Kimberly Estep, Executive Director of the South Fork Conservancy, the group which has spearheaded much of the creek’s revival.

In fact, before Sunday, many residents were not even aware of Peavine Creek’s existence. Likely named after the wild peas that grew in patches along the creek during the time of European settlement, this small tributary flows into Peachtree Creek and then the Chattahoochee, ultimately emptying into the Gulf of Mexico. Peavine’s urban headwaters, although subject to past conservation efforts, have recently fallen into disrepair. Kudzu has festooned creekbanks and trash has floated in this small waterway.

Along with community members and partners from Boy Scout Troop 18, Cub Scout Pack 6 and Glenn Memorial United Methodist Church, South Fork Conservancy has been working to clean up this neglected waterway. Kudzu removal and trash pickups have helped to make the area friendlier to wildlife. As people watched the duck race during Open Streets Emory Village, they also appreciated the revival of an important urban waterway.

South Fork Conservancy staff and community members were on hand to judge the winners of the race and to make sure that all rubber ducks were safely collected from the creek. One of the judges was Becky Evans, the State Representative-elect for the district that includes Emory Village; many attendees enjoyed seeing their elected official knee-deep in the water, catching stray ducks. Approximately 60 people participated in the duck race, taking a break from other festival activities that included model trains running throughout Emory Village.

While the Peavine duck race was a success, there is always more work to do. “We hope more property owners along Peavine will allow our volunteers to remove invasive plants and improve wildlife habitat along the waterway,” said Estep. West of Emory Village, Peavine joins the South Fork of Peachtree Creek, along which most of the Conservancy’s trails run. Estep added: “Our celebration of Peavine is part of our broader vision for a connected, healthy watershed enjoyed by all Atlantans.”


Creek Clean Up: Crime Wave Sends Atlanta Police Into the Woods

Join journalist (and South Fork Conservancy board member) Sally Sears as she reports on recent cleanup of urban camps along Peachtree Creek, and aid to the homeless persons living there. Reporting from the scene of the cleanup, Sally showcases the o…

Join journalist (and South Fork Conservancy board member) Sally Sears as she reports on recent cleanup of urban camps along Peachtree Creek, and aid to the homeless persons living there. Reporting from the scene of the cleanup, Sally showcases the ongoing efforts to maintain safe and accessible trails along Peachtree Creek’s North Fork. Working in partnership with the Atlanta Police Department, HOPE Atlanta, and others, South Fork Conservancy will continue to maintain and preserve these creek trails.

Atlanta wild: How to coexist with deer, coyotes and urban wildlife

By Thomas Bell for the AJC.
See the full story here.

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I first heard heard a rustling: unhurried, sustained and substantial. I was standing quietly by the creekside in Zonolite Park, a little patch of meadow and forest behind an old industrial park that now holds a Crossfit, a Pilates studio, an indoor gun range, and Floataway Cafe. The noisy rush of Briarcliff Road was two blocks away but lost in the water and breeze. The sounds of crunching leaves and snapping twigs came from the brush and trees on the creek’s other side, and they were getting closer.

And from the green emerged a coyote, and then another, the two walking atop the steep creekbank, assured and elegant. They paused and turned their heads across the creek to me. I was still. We looked at each other for a careful while, then they turned away, disappearing into the green.

It wasn’t my first coyote encounter in Atlanta, but it was the one that most vividly revealed to me a parallel Atlanta, one with many residents living in a wilder place. Such experiences are becoming increasingly common.

Scott Burland, a pharmacist and musician, sees that wild Atlanta when red-shouldered hawks hunting for prey descend to his deck in North Druid Valley.

Deborah Tawil, a neuromuscular therapist, hears it in the frequent fox cries that echo in the night in Pine Lake.

And many Atlantans experience that wilder world through deer. Filmmaker Kelly O’Neal finds them early in the morning in a neighborhood park off of Lawrenceville Highway. Marketing director Stacey Lucas sees them strolling down her street off of Briarcliff Road. And neuromuscular therapist Rebecca Leary Safon sees them in Morningside/Lenox Park.

Where the wild things are — now

When creatures with talons and fangs appear so near our strip malls and streets, it may sometimes feel like an invasion. But Atlanta was wild for eons before the first railroad spike or even the first Cherokee. We are the new arrivals, with our concrete and cars, and our encounters with wildlife are largely as trespassers surprised to find the residents still home.

“Over many decades now we have kept building and building, and we’re constantly moving people and homes and businesses into areas that were wild until recently,” says Scott Lange, executive director of the AWARE Wildlife Center, which rehabilitates injured and orphaned wild animals and educates for the peaceful coexistence of humans and wildlife. “And so that has steadily increased the number of encounters that people have with animals.”

“The sheer numbers of encounters are increasing because of the expansion of the urban footprint,” says Drew Larson, a wildlife biologist with the Georgia Department of Natural Resources. For example, as metro Atlanta expands northward, it moves into stable black bear populations on the Piedmont, leading to a rise in black bear encounters over the last five years.

As we move into the habitats of native wild species, Larson says, “some don’t do as well in urban environs, and others do exceptionally well.” Deer, coyotes, foxes, and certain birds like mockingbirds and cardinals all thrive in Atlanta’s greener urban environments. Cliff-dwelling peregrine falcons even adapt to downtown skyscrapers. Wild turkeys and bobwhite quails do not adapt as well. Neither do black bears, but, says Larson, “that’s mostly from a human side where the presence of bears in and around those environments aren’t as welcome by the human inhabitants.”

The coyotes are somewhat new, at least on the scale of ecological time. “Forty years ago we wouldn’t have seen coyotes in populated or developed areas,” says AWARE’s Lange. “Now they are found in every neighborhood in Atlanta.”

“The coyote is here because we as humans wiped out the red wolf,” says Chris Mowry, founder of the Atlanta Coyote Project, which studies coyotes and offers strategies for peaceful coexistence. “It easily allowed the coyote to move into that vacant niche.”

Fear of fang and claw

Most of us encounter wildlife every day in Atlanta, without taking much notice of the squirrels and songbirds. More often the unfamiliar catches our attention: the erroneously perceived threat or the exceedingly rare occasions when the animals fight back.

“I was asked a few months ago about owls that had interacted with humans,” says Adam Betuel, conservation director of the Atlanta Audubon Society. “A couple had scratched the head of a passerby or gone after a pet.” The stories made the news in ways that the far more common “owl hit and killed by car” or “owl’s home cut down to make way for a condo complex” never would.

For an owl or other bird of prey to attack a human or pet is “very, very rare,” Betuel says. “It’s nothing really to worry about. We’re a huge and scary thing for most birds. … And the overwhelming majority of our pets are too large for raptors.”

Todd Schneider, an ornithologist with the Georgia Department of Natural Resources, says that most bird attacks are really just “bluff charges.” Hawks and owls might fly at a human or pet, then pull up, almost always because they’re protecting their nest or their young.

Atlanta’s great horned owls are large enough to view smaller cats or very small dogs as prey, but Schneider says that such attacks are highly uncommon. The largest of Atlanta’s owls, they typically weigh no more than five pounds, so even larger cats are more than a match for them.

Snake bites are somewhat more common, with Georgia Poison Control receiving a few hundred reports statewide each year. According to Larson of the DNR, only six of Georgia’s 46 species of snake are venomous, including the copperhead, which is the only one common in Atlanta.

“Out of the venomous snakes that are native to Georgia, they are the least venomous,” Larson says. And, while venomous snake bites can be serious medical matters, fatalities are extremely rare, with the Centers for Disease Control reporting a nationwide average of only five snake-related fatalities each year.

Even coyotes are no substantial threat to humans. Adult coyotes in Georgia generally weigh 25-45 pounds, about the size of a medium dog. While they are opportunistic omnivores, in healthy ecosystems they feed mostly on rodents and other small mammals, insects such as grasshoppers, and fruit. Some may eat fawns and, less commonly, adult deer. They will, however, take advantage of opportunities to eat food waste, roadkill, pet food, and — on rare occasions — outdoor cats and small dogs.

There are isolated reports of coyotes attacking humans, most of them in California. A report out of Ohio State University’s School of Environmental and Natural Resources documented 142 coyote attacks between 1960 and 2006 in the U.S. and Canada. That’s an average of about three per year. Contrast that with approximately 4.5 million dog bites annually in the U.S. alone, as estimated by the CDC.

The Atlanta Coyote Project’s website has a form for reporting coyotes. The form includes a choice to report a “sighting” or an “encounter.”

“An encounter is more of a conflict,” says Mowry, and “those are really rare.” When encounters do occur, “they don’t involve coyote-human conflict. They’re generally with pets, if and when they do occur.”

A peaceable kingdom?

We can, in fact, coexist peacefully with coyotes as readily as we already do with songbirds and squirrels. We can coexist with owls and hawks, with foxes and deer, with turtles and snakes.

“Very easily,” Mowry says. “It requires the desire to do so.”

AWARE’s Lange says, “It’s almost always possible and really the best course of action to at most deter an animal like a coyote from coming in your yard, but not to do more than that, not to take violent action.”

If you spot coyotes in your neighborhood, keep a respectful distance from them and leave them alone. Don’t threaten them, and they’ll almost never threaten you. If they come too close, make lots of noise, and they’ll likely run away. In the extremely unlikely case that a coyote becomes aggressive, enter safe shelter if immediately available, fight back if you have to (you’re much bigger than them), and call 9-1-1.

The best way for us to coexist without conflict is to preserve the unbuilt spaces and natural ecosystems in our city, so that wild animals have less reason to enter our back yards and roadsides.

“Maintaining greenspace is one of the best things we can do,” Larson says. “It can’t be all concrete and brick.” And avoid “providing any situation that would invite wild animals in to potentially cause a problem.”

Keep food waste in closed garbage cans or secure compost bins. Don’t overfeed your backyard birds, leading to excess seed left on the ground. Don’t feed your pets outside, where pet food may attract scavengers.

And as tempting as it may be, don’t leave out food, water, or salt licks for deer, which may become too habituated to human contact and reliant on the easy supplies. This may lead to more nuisances for humans and more car-related accidents for deer.

If birds attack, Schneider advises avoiding the area of the bluff charge and being patient while their young mature. “It’s just like people growing up,” he says. “When people are toddlers, we’re very protective of them. By the time they’re teenagers, you’re ready to get them out of there.”

And as for the safety of pets, don’t leave very small dogs unsupervised when they’re outside, and keep your cats indoors. This is not only safer for the pets, but, says Betuel, it’s safer for the smaller birds, which are being decimated by domestic cats hunting outside.

Keep Atlanta wild

In an ongoing study that the Atlanta Coyote Project plans to publish soon, Mowry says, “we’re seeing amazing biodiversity in parts of town where coyotes are found.” He explains that “a healthy ecosystem that has a top predator — which the coyote is filling that niche — now helps keep other species in check so that none becomes too numerous.”

Birds serve such purposes as pollinating flowers, spreading berry seeds and cleaning roadsides of animal carcasses. “If we didn’t have hawks and owls, we’d be overrun with mice,” Schneider says. “If we didn’t have songbirds, insects would just go crazy.”

“I would argue that every plant, animal, and microbe has a role in the environment whether we’ve identified that role or not,” Larson says. “They fill a niche and likely provide some ecological benefit.”

About 200 species of birds have been documented in Dekalb, Fulton, and Cobb counties.“We’re so lucky here in Atlanta because we have this amazing tree canopy,” says Betuel, “and we’re situated in this great spot just below the Appalachians … at the confluence of eastern fly-ways.”

And there are less tangible benefits too. Urban wildlife can delight and inspire us.

“We’re part of nature,” Larson says. “It’s one thing to go on a hike. It’s another thing to go on a hike and see some turkeys strutting or see a deer fawn nursing with its mother. Those are encounters that really enhance time in the outdoors.”

Singer-songwriter Kristen Englert-Lenz wrote to me about a late night when she returned home on the eve of her birthday. “After the car turned off, something caught my attention in the periphery,” she says. “I looked to my right. Sitting on top of the mailbox, about one foot away, was an adult barred owl staring directly at me. I started to cry. It’s one of the most powerful interactions with any kind of wildlife, let alone urban, I’ve ever experienced.”

Imagine Atlanta as the birds see it: the stretches of unbroken canopy, the lifeline of the Chattahoochee River. See Atlanta as the turtles do: a network of creeks and rivers, the summer sun quickening their hearts. Prowl Atlanta like a coyote or fox, on the hunt through patches of forest, traversing the bank of a creek one hot afternoon and coming upon a man. Atlanta is so much more than what we have built, more than how we fill our human days. Look to urban wildlife to show us Atlanta, the wild city.

Insider tips

If you see what you believe to be an injured or orphaned wild animal, contact AWARE or a similar wildlife rescue organization before intervening in any way. Humans with the best of intentions sometimes separate baby animals from their parents, who may simply have been waiting for the humans to leave. awarewildlife.org

For more ways to coexist with Georgia’s native animals, see the resources on the Georgia Department of Wildlife’s “Living with Wildlife” page. georgiawildlife.com/nuisancewildlife

Eagle Scout Projects Improve Zonolite Park

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ATLANTA, GA (August 9, 2018) – Since 2014, South Fork Conservancy has been working with community partners to restore the woods and waterways of Zonolite Park, a former industrial site surrounding part of Peachtree Creek. The project has had a long list of successes, including the creation of a thriving meadow, a community garden, and numerous trails throughout the wooded park. Now the Conservancy has helped to bring another addition to the park: three cedar benches that offer views of the creek and meadow.

Built by Eagle Scout Robert Weimar, the benches are located at three key points throughout the park. The first sits by the park entrance, allowing for easy viewing of the meadow and community garden. The other benches overlook Peachtree Creek’s south fork at two idyllic spots further within the park. The benches, said Weimar, “provide an inviting atmosphere for this newly restored area as well as a practical place to sit.” 

Each bench is decorated with South Fork Conservancy’s distinctive chevron, with a color palette intended to reflect the dyes Native Americans made from the clay of Peachtree Creek. South Fork Conservancy hopes that these benches will allow people to sit and enjoy the natural world while also reflecting on the human and natural history that has made the creek what it is today.

Zonolite Park is named after the insulation company that once used the site for manufacturing. Abandoned by the company in 2009, the land was unused until South Fork Conservancy and local property owners contacted the EPA to clean up and preserve the future parkland. Following a $2 million settlement, the polluters paid for the cleanup and Zonolite Park was born. Since the successful restoration of meadow and riverine habitats, South Fork Conservancy has continued to spearhead efforts to support local wildlife and make the park accessible for everyone in the community.

 

 

South Fork Conservancy celebrates 10 years, looks to more creekside conservation

By David Pendered for the Saporta Report
June 3, 2018

The South Fork Conservancy has entered its second decade of protecting the natural environment along the South Fork of Peachtree Creek with plans for a new pedestrian bridge over the creek – and money in the bank to pay for building the bridge and other projects.
Confluence Bridge

The concept design for the planned Confluence Bridge shows a bridge covered by planks, with a safety rail to protect visitors. The bridge is to span the place where the North and South Forks of Peachtree Creek come together.

The project is another major step for a grassroots organization that was started in 2008, during the depth of the Great Recession. The SFC’s efforts represent a textbook example of taking many right steps to achieve an objective, despite an uncertain economy and the challenges it presents to non-profit organizations.

See the full story here.