Holiday Lights (Luminarias, which are candles in paper bags) in Barton Hills Return December 22 to 24, 6-9 pm, Briargrove Drive
Thanks to the wonderful dedication of John Luther and his Briargrove neighbors, we will renew a beautiful tradition in Barton Hills for the holidays this year.
Briargrove Drive (off of Barton Hills Drive just south of the Barton Hills Market) will be transformed by luminarias into a glorious community of lights. The luminarias will be on display from 6:00 to 9:00 pm, December 22 to December 24. Walking and fellowship are encouraged; please park your cars outside of Briargrove and enjoy the lights with a walk in the clear night air.
To help celebrate the return of this luminous tradition, we will have caroling and hot chocolate the first night, Wednesday, December 22, from 6:30 to 7:30. Neighborhood Boy Scouts and Girl Scouts will help lead the chorus, strolling house to house. Long before the Trail of Lights in Zilker Park, Barton Hills? holiday lights were a much-anticipated annual celebration and this year will inspire an even greater celebration of luminarias next year. A special thank you to
Sun Harvest and
Walgreens for their generous support.
So please mark your calendars for this holiday cheer. Bring your friends and neighbors, especially for the first night celebration.
Look forward to seeing you there.
Don Long
President
Barton Hills Neighborhood Association
# posted by Glenn : 9:11 PM
Read and feel proud of our accomplishments! Stan Ostrum coordinated the October work day and wrote up the following report. The great news is that some of the work that we have done over the past year and a half helped hold the integrity of the trails through these past two floods. Our sidebars on the trailsides , footbridge, and large boulder steps onto the stone flats passed the test of 18 foot high raging water. We're asking trail users to send us suggestions for trail repair to put on a master list for future work day projects.
OCT 16 2004 GREENBELT GUARDIAN WORKDAY SUMMARY REPORT
Stan Ostrum, substitute coordinator
The 7th quarterly BHNA Greenbelt Guardian workday, held on Saturday October 16, was yet another big success. Nice weather and a great turnout helped to make the day both productive and pleasant, especially in comparison to the oppressive heat and humidity that we suffered through during the last workday in July. And despite the absence of our founder and coordinator Glee Ingram, things went smoothly and a lot got accomplished. With 6 successful workdays already under our belts, a solid infrastructure in place, and a lot of experienced volunteers, it took very little in the way of coordination from me to make things happen.
We had 28 neighborhood volunteers (including a few from outside Barton Hills), 14 community service volunteers from Travis Co. Juvenile Probation, 3 Travis Co. supervisors, and John Cook and Crystal from the City Parks and Recreation Dept. for a total of almost 50 participants! 138 trail work hours were logged and over 20 hours of volunteer effort went into advance planning and preparation for the workday.
The workday focused on the area around the Homedale Access to the Barton Creek Greenbelt. Major accomplishments included:
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Cleanup of the upper Homedale access trail (between the street and the kiosks). Grass was removed along the trail edges, displaced rocks were replaced along the trail border, the entire area was mowed with a weedeater and raked, weeds and invasive species were removed, and the trail surface was raked smooth and blown clean of debris.
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Invasive species removal. MANY specimens of invasive plants, trees, and shrubs were removed by hand, with weed wrenches, or with a chainsaw. Work was performed all along the trail - from the street down to the creek and along the trail and creek bed going towards the bridge. Large ligustrums were the major victims, but hackberries that were too close to the trail, as well as some nandinas and chinaberries were also removed.
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Ragweed removal. In response to a last minute request from PARD, volunteers pulled several large pickup truck loads of ragweed plants from around the Spyglass access trail on the other side of the creek and loaded them into a city truck for disposal. Those of us who helped load the truck in the afternoon paid for it for several hours afterwards. It took a long, hot shower and a lot of hydrocortisone to get the itching to stop and the welts to go down. I don't know how they managed to do it, but a team of volunteers spent the whole morning pulling the stuff and stacking it in huge piles along the trail. It was a nasty job, but the trail in that area looks a lot better now.
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Stonework. Construction was started on a rock retaining wall along the bank next to the steps leading from the trail down onto the rock flats above Campbell's Hole.
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Refurbishment of the kiosks. Old cork was removed, the glass was cleaned, the interiors were painted, and new maps and informational flyers were installed.
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Seed gathering. Seeds from native species were gathered, bagged, and
labeled for use in future greenbelt revegetation projects.
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Trash pickup. As always, a disgusting amount of trash all along the trail
was collected and disposed of.
There were several things that we had planned to do but weren't able to get to due to time and /or resource constraints. These included:
- Repair of the stone retaining walls at the bridge.
- Repair and refinement of the upper woodlands trail edging.
All in all, it was another great Greenbelt Guardian workday but, as always, there's still plenty of stuff left for us to do the next time.
I'd like to thank all the great volunteers who showed up to contribute their time and energy, Robin McKeever, whose experience and organizational skills were invaluable in making the day go smoothly (she also wields a mean weedeater), John Cook and the CoA PARD for taking care of our beloved greenbelt 365 days a year, and last but not least, Glee Ingram, whose hard work and vision have built our Greenbelt Guardian program into the award-winning success that it is today. YOU GUYS ROCK!
# posted by Glenn : 10:31 AM