"Michael Bowles...
a patch of spindly green tubes.
"Tipularia discolor," Bowles announces... as he fingers the delicate plant.
"It's a native orchid, and this grouping of about 3 square feet? It's 
between 30 and 40 years old."
...
The cranefly orchid won't bloom until summer. By then, Bowles or other 
volunteers in Chamblee will have rescued it from one of the PATH 
Foundation's latest bike trails.

As residents in one DeKalb County neighborhood battle a PATH trail through 
their wooded sanctuary near Emory University, those in Chamblee are 
embracing another.
...
In Chamblee, the foundation must slice through a forest and ravine in the 
city-owned Keswick Park for a half-mile trail linking the park and Johnson 
Ferry Estates. Volunteers there have spent their weekends clearing the 
trail of clogging privet, a kind of evergreen, and saving the native species.

They will tend to the native plants in a temporary nursery, set up across 
the park, before replanting them when the trail is in by year's end. They 
also hope to have cultivated enough native plants to add them throughout 
the 45-acre park.

"Whether it's Mother Nature, Father Time or God-Given, it's what was here, 
and we have an obligation to maintain it," said Leslie Robson, a city 
councilwoman who has helped organize the volunteers, as she hiked along 
with Bowles. "We view PATH coming in as our opportunity to make these woods 
look like they used to."

City officials kicked in $10,000 to build and maintain the nursery...

PATH... thinks the project could be a model for its operations.
"We've worked with the Georgia Native Plant Society in the past, but we 
would love to replicate this sort of grass-roots effort," said foundation 
Executive Director Ed McBrayer. "We want to work with communities to make 
better trails. When it gets adversarial, we all lose a little bit."

In Chamblee, the self-described "plant nuts" get dirty every Sunday. Bowles 
has studied plant sciences and worked as a volunteer orchid specialist in 
the Atlanta Botanical Garden. Jean Oteness, another volunteer, is a 
backyard gardener whose home is adjacent to the park.

"The more you learn about what plants should be there, the more you notice 
them," Oteness said. "It's fascinating to go through the woods and be aware 
of all the little things."
...
the cranefly orchid. The plant has spread along the ground where PATH will 
build the boardwalk to rise over the wetlands and Nancy Creek.

Healthy, the orchid will grow several inches tall and entice the moths it 
needs to pollinate...

Robson notes where the plant is, so it can be rescued, and begins mixing 
native dirt with potting soil for the day's other rescues."

URL :

http://www.ajc.com/services/content/metro/dekalb/stories/2008/05/16/chamblee_0516.html?cxtype=rss&cxsvc=7&cxcat=13

**************
Regards,

VB


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