Category: community

  • Growing with Dana

    While I am doing my best to keep my day job and this passion project separated, there is, as is the case for most college faculty, I think, a consistent fluidity between professional and personal pursuits, as is certainly the case for me with B Buckets. 

     

    This post celebrates the end of the “Growing with Dana” series. I co-organized these workshops and lectures on native habits and habitats, with Peter Helfrich, chairperson of our Bee City USA affiliate, Beecatur (and part of the B Buckets team). The series was a public program of the Building on Dana project (2024-25), whose culmination is the exhibition Building on Dana / Patterns in Space, Dalton Gallery, Agnes Scott College, on view through May 19.

     

    This project/exhibition has been a once-in-a-career opportunity, not just because I have, as architectural historian, been able to study the building in which I have worked for more than two decades AND I have worked with a colleague (Nell Ruby) who helps me dream large and risk big (B Buckets, of which Nell is also design/advocate, for example) AND we have been successful in our goal to establish the Dana Fine Arts Building in architect John Portman’s early career AND we have realized it with our students in the most ambitious professional-success initiative (for them) I will ever materialize BUT, most of all, because the people who have joined as collaborators — within and beyond our campus — are incredible.

     

    AND we have started the third organic demonstration garden at Agnes Scott, in the greenspaces of the Dana Fine Arts Building, removing more than 60 invasive shrubs in August and beginning to re-establish native, pollinator-friendly plants in April. 

     

    The final program was a discussion of Integrated Pest Management. I am being clear and transparent about my (personal) goal and efforts to help encourage and support the City of Decatur, the City Schools of Decatur, and Agnes Scott College to create and implement ecologically-safe, pollinator-supportive, proactive plans (which do not, if you are unfamiliar with IPMs, prohibit chemical controls, but they put non-toxic solutions in place first, with definitions, thresholds, PLANS). I don’t think any of us is against the idea of IPMs, which Bee City USA- and Bee Campus USA-accredited communities are required to have. But IPMs take a lot of research and coordination, in advance and in process. They are dynamic documents that have to be considered and changed, to meet new challenges.

     

    Our conversation tonight gave me hope that we are on the cusp of moving beyond imagining to creating: building on and growing with all of the efforts and steps already taken, together. 

    Peter Helfrich, Chairperson of Beecatur and co-organizer of “Growing with Dana,” on IPMs (May 7), in preparation for our conversation
    Corey Wilson, Facilities Manager at Agnes Scott College, and Eliza Crofts ’22, lead gardener, at our celebration
    Mykle Williams ’26, bee researcher, People for Pollinators member, Sustainability resident
    Eliza Crofts ’22, lead gardener for the Building on Dana project, on foraging (April 23)
    Molly Embree, outgoing Director, STEM Mentored Research & STEM Scholars Program, Agnes Scott, on soil health (April 23)
    Kay Evanovich, Arborist, City of Decatur, on tree biology and care (April 9)
    Susan Meyers, Monarch Watch, on monarch butterflies (March 26)
    Allison Ericson, Urban Naturalist, City of Decatur, on native plantings (March 12) {Mary Jane Leach, Beech Hollow Wildflower Farms, not picture, was co-leader of this session]
    Peter Helfrich, Chairperson of Beecatur, and Katherine Smith, Professor of Visual Practices/Co-curator of Building on Dana / Patterns in Space [and now bucket slinger] on mosquito buckets (Feb. 26)
    Peter Helfrich, Beecatur, on native bees (Feb. 12)
  • Community Day

    We were thrilled to join Community Day, the City of Decatur’s Earth Day celebration at Legacy Park sponsored by the Environmental Sustainability Board. We had a great time talking to those at the festival about our buckets and goals. Mayor Patti Garret bought one of our DIY buckets (special for in-person events — choose 5 elements and make your own composition of native plants and pollinators).

    Leslie Inman of Pollinator Friendly Yards on Facebook, one of those who inspired me to start this bucket-making intiative, stopped by! It was a great public debut. We sold all but one bucket. 

  • Understanding Mosquito Sprays with The Xerces Society

    April 12: I just came across an online conversation, which included this resource from Xerces Society for Invertebrate Conversation. I found their answers to questions about the safety of organic oils and mosquito sprays helpful and succinct so I am sharing them here.

    April 17: The webinar, whose recording is available here, was fantastic, as expected.  Aaron Anderson talked about the research study in 2023, completed in three cities where mosquito sprays, are prevalent, including Decatur.

    He called Decatur a “rockstar” Bee City USA community, and acknowledged our “really wonderful work to reduce mosquito spraying in [our] district.” Congratulations, Beecatur and Peter Helfrich! 

    The study was able to gather data about types and levels of insecticides in sprayed yards that spray as well as in neighboring yards. They found high risk to pollinators in sprayed yards and some risk in others (up to 24 to 34 times, in two separate yards, the lethal dose of concentration for honey bees).

    He also addressed mosquito buckets and said that he would rather everyone dump water every 7-10 days to disrupt the eggs since it takes about a week for mosquito eggs/lavrvae to hatch. Bti, according to Aaron, kills several species of small flies so there is some risk to target insects/pollinators beyond mosquitos, but much less toxic to sprays, which harm all the pollinators in the yard, especially when companies include synergists, which I had never heard of, that help the chemical sprays persist and make them more harmful! 

     

  • Agriculture Appreciation Week

    Agriculture Appreciation Week seems like the perfect time to get ourselves going since we can’t have successful agriculture without pollinators.

    And if you haven’t already, please call Gov. Kemp and ask him to veto Senate Bill 144 that the legislature has approved, which protects companies from disclosure of ingredients or responsibility for harm, including, as I understand it, several examples of chemicals banned in the countries of manufacture and on the market here. 

    While it seems unlikely to me that our agricultural state will stop this bill, it seems potentially harmful — for our farmers especially, but for all of us!

    Gov office phone 404-656-1776

    Be polite, and be clear; ask the staff person how they are or express some kindness. They are working hard answering phones, even if you don’t agree with their office’s positions.

    Here is a potential script:

    “This is _________ calling from __________ to register my concern and to ask Gov Kemp to veto Senate Bill 144.

    Please protect Georgia farmers and consumers by giving us access to accurate label information on herbicides/pesticides and ensuring the companies’ accountability for their products, some of which are already banned in their countries of production. I would appreciate it if you would share my message with Gov. Kemp. Thank you for your time and your efforts on behalf of Georgians.”

  • Restocking Day

    Intown Ace Hardware on Scott Blvd got more buckets today. They were down to only 1 this morning; and they posted our sign with instructions and a QR code to more details on our website. Thanks, Andy (and Decatur/Avondale friends)!

    B Buckets has restocked, too! 

    photo by Andy Jones
    photo by Andy Jones

  • Native Plants, Growing with Dana

    After making buckets, I attended the lecture at Agnes Scott that Peter and I have co-organized: Growing with Dana, part of the Building on Dana project this year at the Dana Fine Arts Building, Agnes Scott College. 

    Allison Erickson, Urban Naturalist at City of Decatur and Mary Jane Leach of Beech Hollow Farms talked about how city initiatives are removing invasives and planting natives and also supporting residents to do the same. Beech Hollow opens this weekend at their shop on Clarendon Avenue in Avondale Estates. They are an incredible source of knowledge and native plants. 

  • Buckets!

    I have spent the last few months ordering different components and testing and researching design ideas to figure out a bucket that is 1) effective 2) minimal [design is everything to me, truth be told] 3) low cost 4) dog and squirrel and soccer ball proof (still crossing my fingers on this one).

    I made the first buckets of the season with a neighbor. Thanks, Molly, for your help and support!

    We are ready to assemble and deliver B-asic Buckets! And Intown Ace Hardware also has everything you need (they sourced hydroponic lids; please thank them — that took a lot of effort).

    Look for the model bucket and sign at the sign at 123 Jefferson Place! I aim to be the first street in Decatur completely covered by buckets!

  • Getting the Word Out

    This initiative is certainly a family affair. My son, who has grown up with education about and advocacy for reducing pesticides, is eager to help spread the word. He was excited to choose and install one of our signs; he selected the one with dog in honor of our pups.

    Among the reasons that we choose not to use pesticides and herbicides on our yard is the higher incidence of cancer in dogs that live in yards that spray (as much as 70% higher). Dogs are also at risk when they go on walks and sniff yards that have  sprayed with pesticides. Pre-emergents are the most toxic, in my understanding.

    If you are a parent and/or pet-loving human especially, please do your own research and understand the risks to people, pets, pollinators, and planet. Here are two good places to start: Non-Toxic Communities and Beyond Pesticides

     

  • A New Bee City in Our Vicinity!

    Avondale Estates just announced today that the community has joined the Bee City affiliates. Welcome!

    Read the full story here.

  • Thanks, Beecatur!

    Thank you, Peter/Beecatur, for including us in your newsletter today. We are working hard to get the site finished and supplies gathered and instructions posted (if you want to purchase them at Intown Ace Hardware on Scott Blvd), aiming for everything to be fully available by the end of the day. Our inclusion in your newsletter is additional motivation! As always, I appreciate your support and expertise, Peter!