Posts Tagged ‘Trash’

Dolores Park Wins An Award!

September 2nd, 2010

Nominated by Dolores Park Works, Dolores Park has been designated as a Leave No Trace Hot Spot. Woo Hoo! Um, what the heck does that mean? It means that we will receive $2,000 (we need to raise another $8k) plus tons of “expert consultation on solutions and program implementation, training, educational materials, visits from the Subaru/Leave No Trace Traveling Trainers, creation of locally-tailored programs to meet site-specific needs, volunteer support and overall assistance in putting the Leave No Trace program into action.”

Basically, we’re going to get some help from the experts on how to clean up this park and keep it clean, something we can all agree needs to happen.

We are looking for volunteers that represent the diversity of the park to join a LNT working group to help us develop and implement this program. It’s not going to be designed as a “war on fun” but rather creating a culture of “responsible irresponsibleness” (a mouthful isn’t it).

We need to get started soon, so please email me if you are interested. dpw @ our web address.org.

Making Their Case: Weekend Sun=Trashed Park

August 23rd, 2010

The sun is out and I’m so happy that you had fun in dear ol’ Dolores Park. Really. But hey, how about picking up after yourselves?

Leaving a big pile of crap is making the case for the “No Alcohol/No Smoking” signs and for increased police presence.

Hope you enjoyed your gourmet meal!

Is it really to much to ask that you pick up your Bi-Rite & Whole Food bags and put them in the trash can? Apparently it is.

Here’s a lesson: The trash goes IN the trash can, not on, under, around, beside, next to, beneath, above…

If the trash can is full, then you must take your trash home or dump it in an empty trash can (preferably  one owned by the city and not a neighbors).

Trashed Trash Cans

Look, park patrons’, I’m your biggest fan. I really want you to be able to enjoy yourself any way you want to, but you’ve got leave no trace. Ya know, pack it in pack it out. Let’s try again this weekend shall we?

Also, just to throw it out there again, please come to the community meeting on Wednesday, September 1, 6-8 pm at Mission High School cafeteria. You can yell at me there all you want.

Rub My Big Belly!

July 7th, 2010

The Big Belly is here!

That’s right folks, the Big Belly is here. It arrived a few weeks ago but I just didn’t get the blog up.

Rub My Belly!

The size of a conventional trash receptacle like those we see in Dolores Park now, the BigBelly holds 5 times as much trash—125 gallons.

It requires no power source, so can be installed anywhere.

It’s been a long time comin’ and we couldn’t be more thrilled about a trash can if we tried.

Independence Weekend Finale

July 1st, 2010
Let’s go out with a bang!  The DPW team will be coordinating with the San Francisco Mime Troupe to help clean up after the Troupe’s final performance of the Independence Day Weekend, Monday, July 5.  We have been working with Rec and Park and other major event producers to see what can be done to lower the impact these events are having on our park. And have scheduled four clean-up events in the next couple of months, July 25 we will be out after the SF Symphony, August 8, the Sunday after SF Film Night in the Park and again on August 29. By coming out and helping event producers we hope to learn from each other. SF Mime Troupe has been bringing their unique form of theater to our city’s parks for 50 years and can now safely be declared experts in producing shows in our parks. Dolores Park Works is slowly becoming experts in what we need to preserve our unique park. Let’s do this together and have some fun with it!
We need wonderful volunteers – like you – to help keep Dolores looking her best!  Join your the Dolores Park Works team, SF Mime Troupe, your friends and neighbors, in a park clean up and picnic.  Meet up at our information table behind the tennis courts, near 18th street and Dolores, 3pm.  And bring some picnic snacks to share!  If you plan to attend, please RSVP here.
The San Francisco Mime Troupe will be performing in Dolores all this weekend July 3, 4 and 5, starting at 2pm. Throughout this Summer, the Troupe continues to play parks around the Bay area for free and will return to Dolores on Labor Day weekend for three more shows.

Dolores Park Moop Field Guide, Part 1

March 8th, 2010

Update: Thanks for the comments. My apologies to anyone who perceived my intent was to condem or defend particular park communities. I’ve refined the post with your suggestions.

What is Moop?

Moop is a word I heard first on the Burning Man playa. It’s an acronym for “matter out of place” and  is used to signify all manner of misplaced things: trash, recyclables, compostables, bodily waste, leather pants  left on the playa or a burner who slept uninvited in someone else’s tent. Moop matters because it adversely affects others and often attracts more moop.

Garbage Strewn on Hipster Hill

Picnic Piles on Tallboy Terrace

Dolores Park has unique, indigenous moop. If you wander about, play, eat, drink or smoke in Dolores Park as much and often as I do, you must have noticed it. The purpose of this post is to call it out and attempt to name it so that we may address it. For example, if Dolores Park had one dude always seen walking around in a tshirt but nude from the waist down, we might refer to him as a Donald Duck.

Let’s begin.

Picnic Piles

Picnic Piles are the piles of soiled napkins, paper and foil typically from Pancho Villa or Ike’s Place, beer bottles and caps that washed it down and cig butts smoked during sunset.

Occurrences of Picnic Piles are common on Hipster Hill Tallboy Terrace and Church Street bridge picnic tables.

Variations include pint flasks, beer cases, beer vomit, pizza boxes, busted bike parts and burnt Christmas trees.

Corner Garden Tagged

An Overshare at the 18th + Dolores garden

Truth told, Tallboy Terrace revelers are super responsible measured by moop per capita, but the density of bodies is akin to a family of meercats thus meriting Picnic Pile notice.

Overshares

Often people who hate fun, art, life or themselves call it tagging or graffiti, but that lumps Overshares in with the rare and wonderful bounty of inspired street art seen on Mission District walls, alleys and sidewalks. In stark contrast, Overshares are personal expressions often in paint or marker, performed in haste and without inspiration…and self-evidently while wasted. Oversharers are that friend of yours who talks too much about nothing and everybody knows it except them.

Storage Container

Overshare at the storage box

Occurrences of Overshares are common on the clubhouse walls and bathrooms, the garbage/recycling bins, Church Street bridge and the storage container. Somebody overshared on the garden wall at 18th and Dolores recently.

Variations include names written in pee on the hillside weeds near the MUNI tracks.

Wrap It Up

This by no means itemizes all or even most of Dolores Park’s moop, but that’s all from me for now. More to come as revelations manifest or however that works.

What moop do you see in the park? What’s its name? Share with me + others in the comments. Cheers.

Props to Kevin Montgomery at Uptown Almanac for tips that spit-shined this post.