November Headwater Highlights

Bob Wins Cox Conserves Hero Award

Bob and his wife Cindy immediately after the announcement sitting next to a very happy Sally Sears. We are thrilled Bob received the recognition he deserves and that we have received such a generous donation. One of the best parts about this is…

Bob and his wife Cindy immediately after the announcement sitting next to a very happy Sally Sears. We are thrilled Bob received the recognition he deserves and that we have received such a generous donation. One of the best parts about this is that it was really all thanks to you for your vote!

And the winner is Bob Scott! A studio full of environmentalists cheered the South Fork hero as he took first place in the annual Cox Conserves Hero award  Tuesday night at Channel 2 WSB TV. Scott and his wife Cynthia beamed at the huge $10,000 prize for his charity of choice... The South Fork Conservancy.

"This is a great asset right in our backyard," Scott says of the Cedar Chase and Confluence trails he's faithfully mowed for years. The picture of Scott pushing a 22" mower caused Cox sponsors to suggest the prize include a riding mower one day.  He recommends using the money to help expand the trail connections from the BeltLine to Emory University.

 Competition for the top prize included Joy Carter, whose work with the Audubon Society includes bird identification along South Fork Trails, and Barry Henson, testing and restoring north Georgia forest waters.

The Cox Conserves Heroes program was created through a partnership between The Trust for Public Land and Cox Enterprises, the parent company of Channel 2 WSB-TV, to honor local conservation volunteers.  


Chest-nutty

By Sally Sears

I took clippers and a friend to help me with some Chestnut Guilt Sunday afternoon. 

A year ago I helped scouts and students plant 18 chestnut saplings on a slope by the South Fork, on the Confluence trail. All  spring long I hiked the trail and watched the newcomer trees thrive. Proud Midwife! But the hot summer and fast-growing vines kept me from leaving the trail to check on the chestnut babies. Before long, I could not see them. By August my guilt was as hot as the sun, strangling like a honeysuckle vine. I ignored it. Only now, after a first freeze, was I ready to see how many survived their first summer of inattention. Jane came with me. We climbed  to the top of the orchard, past a stray Bradford Pear, dodging thorny hybrid rose canes. There we  found our first chestnut. 

Twelve months in the ground, small and the leaf was dead. But the pencil sized trunk was limber and alive. Jane pounced on the vines that overgrew it. I searched for another. A big one, maybe two feet high, full of chestnut colored leaves, stood in a charmed circle. We enlarged the circle. Another smaller tree up by the DOT fence was covered in broom sedge. Cleared! So we worked our way down the slope. My guilt eased with each yank of a honeysuckle root. 

I remembered the bright young man who led the project in fourth grade, at Morningside Elementary.  Thomas Rudolph and his classmates put nuts in pots in a window and watched them spring to life.  Special nuts with some immunity to Asian Chestnut Blight.  Two dozen nuts survived the classrooms' experiment and Thomas visited them over the summer at Tony Powers' Hardware Store greenhouse. 

Then he led the planting of the 18 saplings which made it through the summer. WABE Radio did a news story on returning chestnuts to the South Fork.   Then I sort of stopped paying attention. I know Thomas had a big first year in Middle School.  

It takes patience to raise an orchard, and hot work fighting invasive non-native vines. I'm not there yet.   So finding a tree growing quietly under a tangle of vines was inspiring. Jane and I celebrated each little twig we found.  Six. Seven.  I chopped down the Bradford Pear.  Beside it was Chestnut Eight. And then nine. 

There may be more, but that was enough for today. My guilt on hold, we  scrambled down to the trail. Nine out of eighteen?  I want to call Thomas and the boy  scouts who  helped to plant them. We are batting five hundred. I will take that. I bet they will, too.

Cheshire Farm Trail Transformed

As GDOT’s best laid plans continue to unfold, the Cheshire Farm Trail has gone from gravel gorge to winding woodland, almost overnight! The trail reaped serious seasonal rewards this fall with extensive plantings along the footpath’s edge. Why not take a crisp stroll and try our tree scavenger hunt- which of these can you spot?

  • Kudzu
  • Tulip Poplar
  • Red Maple
  • Deodar Cedar
  • Willow Oak
  • Sassafras
  • Loblolly Pine
  • Nellie Stevens Holly
  • Overcup Oaks
  • Black Gum
  • Winged Sumac
  • River Oats
  • Japanese Hops
  • American Chestnut
  • Poison Ivy (look out!)
  • Silver Bell

While you’re at it, take a look at our completed prototype trailhead sign on the Meadow Trail (see Warner McConaughey’s article below).


Invasives Fade From View In Parkwood Park

Parkwood Park replaced the lush green of summer with an abundance of fall colors!  We are enjoying the bright yellow & crimson of the spice bushes and sweet shrubs.  The red  winterberries are especially abundant this year and I can see the birds eyeing the bright purple berries on our beauty berries. Installation for Meredith Judlicka’s, Garden Designer with Plants Creative Landscapes planting plan is due to begin in the south end of the park in the next few weeks.

We are especially thankful for what is missing in our park—the war on the English ivy is almost won.  The few remaining privet, amur honeysuckles, and liriope won’t be around this time next year.  Parkwood Garden Club members continue to support the restoration with their generous donations so we can continue our efforts in 2015.

warner painting sign.jpg

A Sign of Things To Come

By Warner McConaughey, SFC Board Member

Atlanta’s trail builders follow different approaches. The PATH Foundation builds bike trails, inviting users onto broad ribbons of concrete traversing the city and surrounding countryside. The Beltline’s vision centers around a train track and in-fill housing. 

The South Fork is different. Our goals aren’t focused on man-made infrastructure. Our paths follow existing sewer easements, highway right-of-ways, parks and residential backyards as they pass through first-growth forests, meadows, floodplains and urban settings. Through a network of 31 miles of trails, our vision aims for connectivity, restoration, and watershed repair.

The trail’s design is unique in that it’ll be dictated by the wants and needs of the various neighborhoods through which it travels. Just as every neighborhood is unique with its own flair and appeal, each trail segment will reflect the local sentiment and personality. Some stretches will consist of a small footpath, others will be built for bikes and joggers, and perhaps others for wheelchairs and strollers. 

In a dynamic riparian environment, however, we need a unifying element to link all the different segments. Instead of infrastructure and concrete, South Fork trails will be unified by trailhead signage and wayfinding markers. The branding will represent the South Fork’s vision: it will help visitors feel connected, guides and informs them, and increases their safety and security.  

Developing the branding and signage of such a grand project has been a daunting and yet exciting process. We started by looking at signs at other parks, trails and historical sights. It was easy to see what we didn't want: obnoxious signs that stood out of place, and signs that were counterintuitive to their message. We also found that horizontal signs seemed to do more to hide the site than promote it, and did not blend in well to the natural setting.

One cannot deny the strong links to the past and the many Indian influences along our creeks and trails--in fact the confluence of the North and South Forks is the site of an important Indian village. We also wanted to be respectful of our natural aesthetics, so our obvious choice for our signs were to make them out of natural materials--wood and rusted corten metal. Nature is better represented by vertical elements, so we looked at doing tall, subtle, vertical signs that would better blend into nature. By using a linear look, a bundle of sticks, almost like a totem pole, we think we have created a signature look that is representative of our mission.

The South Fork is delighted to have installed its first prototype sign. Please come check out our sign on the Meadow Loop Trailhead at Lindbergh Drive and let us know what you think! Comments and suggestions are welcome!

Sewage Contaminates The South Fork

On Wednesday, October 29, 2014, bad news poured in from creek watchers.  Atlanta Watershed spokeswoman Scheree Rawls confirmed that raw sewage poured into the South Fork of Peachtree Creek after a rain. Debris in the creek is the cause probable of the 5,500 gallon spill, from damage to a new sewer pipe near the CSX Railroad tracks just upstream from Taqueria Del Sol at Cheshire Bridge Road.

Emergency crews worked quickly to repair the system, adding signs alerting nearby neighbors to the unsanitary conditions.  Rawls says the city reported the spill to the Georgia office of Environmental Protection.

The spill is near a large tank built to hold sewage during rainstorms. Atlanta is completing a court-ordered repair of its sewer system, and in June installed a ten million gallon tank to store raw sewage off Cheshire Bridge at Liddell Drive. The tank is designed to take pressure off two sewer lines on either side of the creek. 

Clearly, rainstorms are part of the problem. The Watershed Department's website says the Liddell Tank is intended to prevent spills during storms. The following was taken from the city’s website peachtree-creek-capacity-relief-project: "System capacity is sufficient to convey dry weather flows but is compromised when conveying peak flows generated during wet weather."

Planting day was a blast! Photo of Dean Sprinkle, courtesy of Marianne Skeen.

Planting day was a blast! Photo of Dean Sprinkle, courtesy of Marianne Skeen.

Community Creates Native Forest at Ira B Melton Park

By Valerie Boss, Chairperson, Friends of Ira B Melton Park

A couple of years ago, the entrance to Ira B Melton Park at Desmond Drive was so overgrown with privet that most people didn’t realize the place was there. Then, the South Fork Conservancy got the ball rolling; the neighbors got fired up and formed a Park Pride Friends group, and the Boy Scouts threw in many helping hands.

And now? The privet’s gone. Same for a tangle of English ivy and Asian honeysuckle. Thanks to a Park Pride Small Change Grant, some generous matching funds (from the Clairmont Heights Civic Association, Medlock Area Neighborhood Association, South Fork Conservancy), wonderful planting layouts by Ainsley Waken of Awaken Landscape Designs, and a tremendous amount of hard work by the local community, Friends of Ira B Melton Park replaced the invasive species with thriving Georgia natives.

This extensive planting project received some much appreciated cash and in-kind donations along the way from the following: M. Cary and Daughters, Tony Powers at Intown Ace Hardware, Sally Sears, Lola Halpin, Denise Hartline, and Ron Smith (all members of the Georgia Native Plant Society).

The trail loop got some TLC, too. Thanks to Boy Scout Troop 534 and neighbors with strong backs and willing spirits, the south section near Glenn Creek was graveled. No more sinking ankle-deep in mud after a heavy rain! And Cub Scout Pack 6 of Den 7 Webelos II did a great job clearing out trash deposits in the park interior.

Looking forward to 2015, DeKalb County’s Parks Department promises  a stepping-stone crossing over the South Fork of Peachtree Creek. It will connect Ira B Melton and Mason Mill Parks with an innovative method of keeping feet dry and water flowing between large stepping stones. The idea is funded, projected for completion in September 2015.

October Headwater Highlights

Vote for South Fork Volunteer Hero

A sweaty-gloved Bob Scott maintains the Confluence Trail.

A sweaty-gloved Bob Scott maintains the Confluence Trail.

We need your help voting to honor a quiet hero. Bob Scott on Armand Road is a steady presence on the confluence trail with his dogs and his 22" push mower. He's up for a $10,000 prize from Cox Conserves. "I was completely surprised," Bob says. I had no idea - they left a voice mail and at first I thought it was a sales call. I had to listen to it twice before it really registered!" Hear his own words on a 2 minute video here.

He inspires confidence, encourages trail users and opens the creek to new admirers with his daily routine.

Cox Conserves, the national sustainability program of Cox Enterprises, chose him as a finalist for their Hero Award. If you help us vote him the winner, he promises to give the $10,000 prize to the Conservancy.

Vote now- Make Bob our Cox Conserves Hero. Deadline is November 3rd.

After you vote, please share this video with your friends and neighbors. Your vote honors Bob's dedication and helps us raise $10,000 for the connected vision he supports.


Sunny Open for Cheshire Farm Trail

The ribbon cutting crowd gathers for a group trail tour. Joseph Cheshire leads the way. This pictures was also featured in the AJC's piece on the ribbon cutting

A new trail for urban nature lovers drew a cheering crowd on September 29. Partners snipped a kudzu ribbon to let 75 supporters explore the new Cheshire Farm Trail and bridges.

From Left to Right: SFC Board Chairman Bob Kerr, SFC Executive Director Sally Sears, Councilman Alex Wan, Sustainability Director Denise Quarles, Dept of Parks and Rec Commissioner Amy Phuong. Photo courtesy of Eric Bowles' Photography

The crowd stood beneath the 80 foot GA 400 ramp, celebrating the half mile trail created by a partnership of Georgia DOT, the City of Atlanta, The South Fork Conservancy, Lindridge Martin Manor Neighborhood and the Lindbergh LaVista Corridor Coalition.

 "What I found so exciting about this event was the number of people who showed up from all over the city representing so many different neighborhoods," notes LLCC President Henry Batten. "It was almost like a family reunion."

The kudzu cutting was so successful, it was repeated at the end of the event, with Home Depot friends with clippers.

From left to right: Home Depot Lindbergh Store Manager David Sharpton, Lieutenant Jeff Baxter APD, Director of Sustainability Denise Quarles, newly appointed commissioner of City of Atlanta Parks and Recreation Amy Phuong, Home Depot Regional Manager Jabarr Bean, Atlanta Council President Ceasar Mitchell, Center Forward Planning's Heather Alhadeff. Photo courtesy of Eric Bowles' Photography

... (to read the whole story, sign up to receive our printed newsletter). View more  of Eric Bowles' fantastic Ribbon Cutting Photos. 


SCAD To Create Confluence "Guardian" Art Under The Bridge 

I-85 overpass on the Confluence Trail

I-85 overpass on the Confluence Trail

Gregor Turk's sculpture class from the Savannah College of Art and Design (SCAD) paced beneath the hulking I-85 overpass on the Confluence trail, seeing a brighter future for this sometimes forbidding area. The students' idea?  Paint some of the columns linking them to the nearby creek. Use Georgia clay as paint base; then stencil images of water, native leaves and insects.

 

These beautiful installations will usher walkers through the underpass and on to the Confluence.

The idea took off. Students took it to neighborhood trail users, the local planning unit NPU F. Support grew quickly.

Today, a year after Gregor Turks' class examined the underpass, property owner Georgia DOT  said yes to the project. Now, all that stands between the students and their concrete canvas is fund raising. $20,000 needed for supplies, oversight and equipment.

A gift of dollars will make a scary space a treat to visit! Do you want to help bring these plans to life? Reply to this email or donate here. 


Old, New Cedars to Flourish On Trail

 

Alcoa employee Matthew Miller preps the trail side for the Deodar sapling.

Alcoa employee Matthew Miller preps the trail side for the Deodar sapling.

Dozens of stately Deodar Cedars have new baby relatives sheltering the Cheshire Farm trail, thanks to Trees Atlanta and volunteers from Alcoa.

The trees were almost invisible to motorists on I-85, hidden with 20 years of ivy and kudzu infestation. Trail builders got an up-close view of the tall cedars, native to the Himalaya, and noticed several were dead or dying.

Trees Atlanta's Brian Williams found five tall saplings, and led the volunteers to plant them close to the Lindbergh Drive trail entrance. 

Got clippers? Ivy Cut!

Got clippers? Ivy Cut!

 

The group also began freeing the older trees from the debilitating clutches of English Ivy. Planting trees and clearing vines is hard work, and we're immensely grateful to this cheerful team for accomplishing so much. Also, here's a BIG shout out to Trees Atlanta for donating the saplings and leading the effort.

Cedrus deodara are hardy, slow growing trees with a broad canopy, fat cones and richly scented needles, likely to provide shade for generations of hikers. 


The Cheshire Family: History Lives In The Present

by Celia Lismore

The Cheshires attend the Cheshire Farm Ribbon Cutting. From left to right: Curtis Cheshire, Joseph Cheshire, Barbara (Bebe) Cheshire

I grew up driving up and down Cheshire Bridge Road, never knowing the Cheshires were not only still around, but full of life. When I sat down with Bebe, Curtis, and Joe Cheshire, I hoped I was in for a treat- I wasn't disappointed. Bebe, full of energy, launched immediately into a lively discussion.

"When I heard about what you all were doing down there on Peachtree creek, I got so excited," says Bebe. "If I had a million dollars, I'd use it to clean up Peachtree Creek." An avid historian, Bebe deeply recognizes the significance of the creek, especially within her own family.

The two sons of Hezekiah Cheshire and Sarah Goodwin Cheshire, Napoleon and Solomon Jerome (born in the early-mid 1800s), settled their families on either side of the North Fork of Peachtree Creek. They built a bridge to provide access to each others' homes, inspiring the name Cheshire Bridge Road. Napoleon's classic 18th Century home commanded the hill adjacent to the Cheshire Farm Trail Head until the death of his maiden daughters, Cora and Carrie Mae, in the 1940s (information gained from Bebe's book The Spirit of Rock Spring).

Napoleon Cheshire's Farm House (used to stand across the street from the Cheshire Farm Trailhead on Cheshire Bridge Road)

"Oh they were just the cutest old maids there ever could be," remembers BeBe. Cora and Carrie lived in the house until their death, leaving it nearly unaltered. Growing up in the shadow of this grand house, Bebe, a daughter of Wright family, grew up playing in the creek with the Cheshire kids.

 "Our mother forbid us from playing in the creek, so we had to sneak down there," recalls Curtis Cheshire. "But she always found out. We asked her how she knew and all she would say was that 'A bird told me.' This bird mystified us for years until she admitted our dirty socks were what gave us away."

 These families were tied together by their membership at Rock Spring Church on Piedmont Road. More than a church, the building was and still is a community center. Bebe, active at Rock Spring and in the Atlanta community, says she'd love to do what she can to support the effort to restore Peachtree Creek.


Summer's End On The South Fork

By Donna Davis, Cedar Chase Association

Golden Rod in its glorious bloom

I have a routine.  Every day when I get home and get changed, my dogs and I rush outside for a round of fetch and a treasure hunt on the Confluence trail.   While we've all been busy enjoying the cooler days of Autumn, the insect life has been working hard on the trail ensuring we'll have a colorful season and a brilliant spring.   And, those treasures?? Much easier to find in the Autumn when the vivid hues of summer are fading to a softer more mature palate providing just the right back drop for the jewels popping up along the trail these days.

In recent days, I've come across eye poppingly gorgeous clumps of Goldenrod so heavy they bend the stalks supporting them.  Check out this dazzling display resting softly on a fallen log just waiting to be discovered and appreciated!  

Bee enjoying argeratum

 

Just a few steps ahead I stumbled upon some very busy bees at work pollinating late summer Ageratum, preparing it for next year's stunning entrance.   Doesn't the purple remind you of an early Autumn sunset?

And, if you're worried there might not be any flowers for you to see, the trees always provide a cornucopia of delightful secrets for you to find.  I just LOVE Autumn.... Not only do our trees provide beauty and grace, they also shelter some of the most delicate and hard-working inhabitants of the trail.

So grab your gear...whatever that is (kids, dogs,  cameras...) and go treasure hunting while Autumn is still working hard to make it worth your while!   Happy Hunting!