Public Gardens Should be More Accessible
The Public Gardens should be open 365 days a year. HRM continually hides behind the excuse that damage would occur to fragile flora and fauna if stampedes of people were to frequent the Gardens between Nov. and April.
This is simply incorrect. HRM is merely saving money by locking the gates. The Gardens are in deplorable condition. There is no maintenance during the winter and there is no concise plan to protect the plant life. Leaves are not raked, dead branches are strewn everywhere, garbage is stuck in every corner, and there is an unsightly branch, gravel and topsoil storage area in plain view of the main gate on Summer St. The main stock of vegetation is native and poorly maintained. Dead branches are not pruned, shrubs have brown patches, the grass is pieced together and filled with weeds and pathways are uneven and washed out. A few weeks ago vandals knocked over a concrete statue dating back to the 1800's and broke the arm and base. A few urns were knocked over as well. Incredibly the statue and urns are still lying on the ground in their broken state. Only in Halifax! |
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It would be nice to use the gardens more effectively. You can imagine many winter uses. If we ever get cold winters again, maybe you could skate on the pond (don't know how it freezes since I've never been in there in the winter). You could do tree lighting around Christmas. Challenge the business and institutional community to decorate them to keep HRM's cost low and then let them compete for the best display. I would think walking through a decorated gardens would be a good fit for its formal setting.
FYI. In your photo, the toppled statue was the work of scumbags. It was 125 years old and vandals tipped it over one night a few weeks back for no reason at all. Real assholes. Can't really blame HRM for that one. Some people just have no sense. |
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Similarly HRM can spend millions on perennial studies but cannot reinvest a tiny percentage of the tax money they collect from the most important commercial streets. It's clear what regional council's priorities are. They talk about how nice it would be to invest in the urban core but at the end of the day all of that is meaningless without spending. |
Does Boston's garden stay open through the winter? No idea... Just curious if anyone knows.
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Yes, Boston's Public Gardens is open in the winter (the horror). Apparently the Boston Public Gardens also has a strong citizens movement that actively contributes towards its upkeep in terms of finances and in volunteer hours for planting and pruning. It's too bad we don't have something like that here. I think the will in the community is there since the money just poured in after Hurricane Juan.... or maybe something like that does exist here and I've just never heard of it. I bet many of our seniors who have moved into condos to get away from maintenance would enjoy dabbling in some gardening a few times a year as volunteers. Would probably appeal to others too and would strengthen people's bond with the gardens. Could probably work on the Dartmouth side too at the Dartmouth Common. There is a seniors building right next door to it!
http://www.friendsofthepublicgarden.org/ Edit: Seems we do have a volunteer society here too. They do fundraising, garden tours and promotional stuff. Seems like there could be a window for more active volunteer gardening! If Boston can do it, why can't we? http://www.halifaxpublicgardens.ca/m_1.asp |
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http://www.centralparknyc.org/visit/...rams-2010.html I don't think Moncton has a park but if they did it would be open all winter. Where is the #$%^% STV when you need them? |
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Yeah I figures Boston must have theirs open. Good info to know for future reference. :-) |
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Didn't the HT or the "friends" group speak out against winter access?
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For what reasons are they against winter access? |
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The Public Gardens should be open 365 days a year and there is no compelling argument to negate that.... There has never been a study from the "City of studies " to prove that the Gardens should be closed....[only in Halifax] |
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Centennial Park in the city's west end has lighted and groomed cross country ski trails in the winter and they maintain a skating oval on the pond there. They also flood and maintain an outdoor skating rink at City Hall in the winter as well. They have decorative lighting on the surrounding trees too. It can be quite festive! :) My two cents - there is no reason why the Public Gardens can't be kept open in the winter (as long as they can keep people off the grass). The gardens is one of my favourite places in Halifax. :tup: |
I previously found a photo on the NS Archives which showed the first covered skating rink in Canada, which was located on the Public Gardens site. Here is some information that I previously posted - http://forum.skyscraperpage.com/show...&postcount=100. I wasn't able to find pictures of the interior of the Public Gardens covered skating rink but a 1880's photo from the NS Archives showed people skating at the old Royal Exhibition Hall on Tower Road. Both structures could be seen in one old photo.
I think it would be great to have the Public Gardens open all year long. Perhaps it just needs to be closed for a month or so for maintenance. |
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In terms of parks for downtown Moncton: I dream of the riverfront getting relandscaped, especially now that the Petitcodiac is widening. :yes: If I was the landscaper in charge, I would mainly use white birch trees to embrace what is the most common species found in Moncton's marsh areas around Wheeler -- and what you find along the riverfront on Dieppe's side. It would provide a nice, rich, white scattered border for the downtown! And not to again criticise Moncton's addiction to sprawl, as I remember seeing a community garden project in Truro that utilised mature trees from newly deforested areas in Bible Hill, but Moncton's future infrastructural projects mostly involve clearing large portions of land; essentially, there would be plenty of opportunity to relocate healthy, mature specimens to the riverfront -- saving on the cost of new trees. |
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