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The Latest

#179 April 2024/Environment/gardening/Urban Nature

Author and entomologist Doug Tallamy talks about what we can all do to make our yards more welcoming to wildlife

So you want to save the world? Start small: save your backyard. That’s the message University of Delaware professor Doug Tallamy has been trumpeting for decades. His work in the Department of Entomology and Wildlife Ecology fuses scientific scholarship with rhetorical flair, packaged into practical advice for everyone who owes their life to an ecosystem

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April 1, 2024
5 mins read
#179 April 2024/Community/Environment/Food/gardening/Urban Nature

Community gardens are growing food for themselves and for local wildlife

Gardening was woven into Victor Young’s life at an early age. His mother and aunt introduced him to the concept of growing your own food as he helped them in their gardens as a kid. The West Philly resident tried to carry these lessons into adulthood — but not without hitting some obstacles. “I was

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April 1, 2024
5 mins read
#179 April 2024/Community/Environment/gardening/Urban Nature

A network of habitats for birds and bees is blooming in Southwest Philadelphia

Most mornings, Victoria Miles-Chambliss walks down the street from her home in Kingsessing to the Cecil Street Community Garden to drink a cup of coffee. Among the newly-planted native trees and echinacea plants, she sees something that was once a rare sight in her neighborhood: birds. “Our block has really changed since we put in

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April 1, 2024
6 mins read
#179 April 2024/Environment/gardening/Urban Nature

Putting sustainability over profit, these landscapers are planting native

Bekah Carminati spent her childhood making mud pies and inspecting insects in her backyard in Montgomery County. When she grew up, she took up landscaping as a way to channel her love for craft and nature. But there was a problem. The company she worked for insisted on applying black dyed mulch, planting annuals and

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April 1, 2024
4 mins read
#179 April 2024/Environment/gardening/Urban Nature

Patio Pollinators: Even the smallest backyard can be a big help for local wildlife

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April 1, 2024
1 min read
#179 April 2024/Editor's Notes/Politics

Editor’s Notes: What Lies Beneath?

In mid-February, Grid requested an interview with Carlton Williams, the newly announced head of Mayor Cherelle Parker’s flagship “Clean and Green” initiative. After receiving no reply, we repeated the request a few weeks later. This time a communications official acknowledged the email, but that’s it so far. Fortunately, we’ve got other source material to examine:

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April 1, 2024
2 mins read
#179 April 2024/Community/Environment/Urban Nature

The 2024 City Nature Challenge is upon us!

From April 26 to April 29, Philadelphia and its adjacent counties will be competing against cities around the world to recruit the greatest number of people to find the most species in their regions. Using the iNaturalist app as a tool, the City Nature Challenge encourages us to explore and document the biodiversity right where

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April 1, 2024
1 min read
#179 April 2024/Water

Fixing the chronic flooding in Northwest Philadelphia will be a major undertaking. In the meantime, residents live with the danger and expense

Carla Robinson is the editor of the Chestnut Hill Local. This story was produced in partnership with the Chestnut Hill Local. Kyle Bagenstose contributed to this report. Rev. Chester Williams has been dealing with floods in his basement since the fall of 1969, when he returned from service in Vietnam and bought his house in

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March 28, 2024
12 mins read
#178 March 2024/Fashion/Feminism

Grid publisher Alex Mulcahy talks with author Sofi Thanhauser about the history of clothing, and about how some of the industry’s thorniest problems haven’t changed

It would be nice to imagine that all the clothes in our closets and dressers — let alone the endless items lining the shelves of countless retail shops — spring forth fully formed. Or, if that fantasy goes too far, to at least believe that our clothing is manufactured with some level of respect for

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March 1, 2024
5 mins read
#178 March 2024/Community

Government program offers counseling, guidance and community for grieving Philadelphians

Within minutes of stepping onto McGee Island off the coast of Maine for a writing residency, I learned through a phone call that my son, Manuel, my only child, had died. Dogged by alcohol, cough syrup, schizophrenia and half-cured pneumonia — he left the hospital against medical advice — he succumbed in his room at

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March 1, 2024
5 mins read
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