Thaddeus
Smith and his mother, Tamya
Kids
help make a neighborhood garden
A group of city
kids and their Big Brothers, Big Sisters partners have made
a new neighborhood garden from a litter-filled vacant lot.
How they did it
is a good example of cooperation among groups trying to improve
neighborhoods in the City of St. Louis.
The kids and adults
from the Big Brothers, Big Sisters of Eastern Missouri did
the first work on the garden. The garden site is in the Benton
Park West neighborhood in south St. Louis.
After getting
the garden established, the Big Brothers, Big Sisters group
turned it over to neighborhood residents. They will maintain
it and develop it further.
But, the Big Brothers,
Big Sisters kids and adults plan to come back in the fall.
They'll help residents plant flower bulbs that will bloom
next spring.

The
Big Brothers, Big Sisters and neighbors who helped to build
the garden.

Laying
out boundaries with new dirt for the gardens.
Fourteen-year-old
Thaddeus Smith is one of the neighborhood kids who also worked
on the garden in the beginning. His mother, Tamya, is one
of the neighborhood residents who have agreed to keep up the
garden.
The Benton Park
West garden isn't a vegetable garden. Rather, it is an ornamental
garden with statues, walkways and seats set among the borders
of herbs and decorative plants.
Thaddeus is a
ninth grader in Lindbergh High School. He, his father and
mother joined with 30 adult-kid pairs from Big Brothers, Big
Sisters to make the garden.
Since his mother
is the garden's caretaker, Thaddeus said he sure he'll be
working on garden improvements in the future. One improvement
will be the addition of a wrought-iron fence.
Neighbors also
want to put in a permanent water source so they can keep the
garden green and growing. Right now, a next-door neighbor
lets gardeners hook their watering hose to a faucet at the
house.

Little
Sister Patrice with friends planting flowers.
Tajuani Shelton
is the program manager for Big Brothers, Big Sisters of Eastern
Missouri.
She said the group's
kids and adults did more than work on the garden. They also
brought money.
The group received
a $2,500 grant from Team St. Louis. That's part of the St.
Louis 2004 organization that's planning a big 100th anniversary
celebration of the 1904 St. Louis World's Fair and Olympics.
Team St. Louis
gives mini-grants to groups for local community development
projects. The Benton Park West garden project is just the
type of effort that group likes to support. And Big Brothers,
Big Sisters was the right type of group to get the money.
(If you'd like
to know more about Team St. Louis grants, log on to the St.
Louis 2004 website at www.stlouis2004.org.)
The money helped
provide decorative extras for the garden, such as an arched
trellis, a concrete serpent and other statuary along with
seats where visitors can relax in the shade.
Ninth Ward Alderman
Ken Ortmann got the city to put in a new sidewalk. City work
crews donated two big truckloads of wood mulch to make garden
pathways.
Michael
Wasileski, Benton Park West block link facilitator; Tajuani
Shelton of Big Brothers, Big Sisters, and Kristin Lindner
or Gateway Greening.
Also involved
in the garden project was Gateway Greening. That's a branch
of the Missouri Botanical Garden that gives advice and other
help in establishing community gardens. Kristen Lindner is
the volunteer coordinator for Gateway Greening and helped
with the Benton Park West project.
(For more information
about Gateway Greening, you can log on to its website at www.gatewaygreening.org.)
The garden project
needed plenty of cooperative effort because the original lot
was a mess. A building on the corner lot had been torn down
but the area was littered with weeds, bottles and broken concrete.
There was even an abandoned ping-pong table.
But, now the lot
is a beautiful addition to the neighborhood, which includes
a number of newly-built homes.
Big Brothers,
Big Sisters of Eastern Missouri usually involves one-on-one
friendships between an adult and a kids. They do things together.
Big
Brothers, Big Sisters volunteer Angie Tabash (front left)
and Terrase (back) with his sister Nicole, 5, and brother,
Joseph, 7.
Eleven-year-old
Terrase is a 6th grader at Dunbar Elementary School. His Big
Sister for the last two years has been Angie Tabash.
Terrase said,
"We go places together like a Rams football game or a
Cardinals baseball game. We also may go to a movie."
Angie said they
usually get together about twice a month for some special
outing.