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Plant for Your Future
"Urbs in Horto"--City in a Garden--has been Chicago's motto for more than a century and half. Volunteers always have been an important part of preserving and expanding the city's natural beauty. With many years of recognition as a "Tree City USA," Chicago takes pride in its millions of trees on public and private lands. |
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Nurture the Trees in our Urban Forest
A neighborhood group worked with local merchants to plant new trees throughout shopping areas where traffic, road salt, and neglect had taken a toll on earlier plantings. Adopt a Place in Your Neighborhood The city encourages block clubs and community groups to plant and care for trees and flower beds. The Department of Environment's GreenStreets program, 312-744-5714, helps coordinate public-private partnerships for tree planting projects around schools, vaulted sidewalks, and major thoroughfares, such as Lake Shore Drive and State and LaSalle Streets. The Bureau of Forestry, 312-744-4380, also runs "Adopt-a-Flowerbed" and "Adopt-a-Boulevard" to help community groups tend flowerbeds along streets and median strips. More than 300 community groups receive free seeds, plants, and bulbs four times a year through "Citywide Distributions Days," 312-744-8691. The Department of Streets and Sanitation also offers free parkway trees, 312-744-5000. |
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Make "Greening" a Year-Round Effort Many community groups have beautified their neighborhoods with the extensive help of the Community Greening Program, a joint effort of the city and the University of Illinois Cooperative Extension Service. Every year volunteers rejuvenate nearly a hundred gardens or landscape areas. Help from Many Corners Representatives of more than 100 community groups a year attend five Community Greening workshops to learn how to improve city landscapes or create new gardens, 312-744-8691. After the workshops, the groups get soil, plants, and tools to carry out their plans. With the help of labor from the Green Corps Program, 312-744-8691, community members work on building raised beds, planting, weeding and mulching. Other resources for neighborhood gardeners include: the Chicago Botanic Garden's Horticulture Department, which helps community groups with planting projects over a three-year period, 847-835-8254; the Urbs in Horto Fund, a special fund administered by the Chicago Community Trust that awards grants to block clubs and other groups for tree and plant projects, 312-372-3356; Treekeepers, a seven-week program to teach people about tree care, in which participants are expected to volunteer 36 hours to community tree care in Chicago, 312-427-4256; and the Chicago Park District conservatories in Lincoln and Garfield Parks, which offer free gardening classes, 312-638-1766. |
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